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MPs told to repay £1.1m expenses MPs told to repay £1.1m expenses
(31 minutes later)
MPs should repay £1.12m of their second home expenses, they have been told after an audit of past claims. MPs should repay £1.12m of their second home expenses, an audit of their claims dating back to 2004 has said.
Sir Thomas Legg recommended that 390 MPs - more than half of those audited - should repay £1.3m after going over claims dating back to 2004. Sir Thomas Legg recommended that 390 MPs, more than half, should repay £1.3m after reviewing five years of claims.
Some MPs say the way Sir Thomas carried out the audit was "sloppy" and £180,000 was cut off the total after appeals.Some MPs say the way Sir Thomas carried out the audit was "sloppy" and £180,000 was cut off the total after appeals.
Sir Thomas also said £800,000 has been repaid already - some voluntarily - in the months since the scandal broke. Sir Thomas, who called the expenses saga "traumatic and painful", said £800,000 had been repaid already - some voluntarily - since the scandal broke.
The highest amount recommended for repayment, following the appeals process, is £42,458 - which the BBC understands matches the repayment demanded of junior minister Barbara Follett.The highest amount recommended for repayment, following the appeals process, is £42,458 - which the BBC understands matches the repayment demanded of junior minister Barbara Follett.
WHAT MPs MUST REPAY 7 hotel stays: £4,000208 Mortgage/Rent payments: £208 £71112 food payments: £12,00030 Utilities bills: £10,00059 Council Tax/Rates bills: £35,00035 Telephone & telecoms: £23,00056 Cleaning: £105,00052 Service/Maintenance: £81,00024 Repairs / Insurance / Security: £73,000182 Other: £252,000Total: £1,305,000 WHAT MPs MUST REPAY 7 hotel stays: £4,000208 Mortgage/Rent payments: £711,00012 food payments: £12,00030 Utilities bills: £10,00059 Council Tax/Rates bills: £35,00035 Telephone & telecoms: £23,00056 Cleaning: £105,00052 Service/Maintenance: £81,00024 Repairs / Insurance / Security: £73,000182 Other: £252,000Total: £1,305,000 class="" href="/2/hi/uk_news/politics/8301443.stm">Q&A: MP expenses row explained class="" href="/2/hi/uk_news/politics/8497877.stm">Key points: MP expense repayments
She was paid a total of £34,776.30 from April 2004 to November 2008 for mobile security patrols at her second home and was paid £8,908.36 for six telephone lines at her second home between April 2004 and November 2008.She was paid a total of £34,776.30 from April 2004 to November 2008 for mobile security patrols at her second home and was paid £8,908.36 for six telephone lines at her second home between April 2004 and November 2008.
Sir Thomas's review and report, which cost £1.16m, says the security patrols went beyond rules limiting claims to "basic security measures" and says the number of phone lines was "excessive".Sir Thomas's review and report, which cost £1.16m, says the security patrols went beyond rules limiting claims to "basic security measures" and says the number of phone lines was "excessive".
Ms Follett is thought to have already repaid a large sum after her claims were first revealed in the Daily Telegraph last year.
Three MPs were recommended to repay sums over £40,000 and 56 MPs were asked to repay between £5,000 and £40,000.Three MPs were recommended to repay sums over £40,000 and 56 MPs were asked to repay between £5,000 and £40,000.
A further 182 were asked to repay between £1,000 and £5,000 and 149 MPs were asked to repay between £100 and £1,000.A further 182 were asked to repay between £1,000 and £5,000 and 149 MPs were asked to repay between £100 and £1,000.
MPs were given the option to appeal against Sir Thomas's recommendations and about 70 are known to have done so - 44 were successful in getting the demands either reduced or overturned. MPs' appeals
Conservative MP Bernard Jenkin - who Sir Thomas recommended should repay £63,250, after renting his second home from his sister in law - appealed and had the amount reduced by £27,000. MPs were given the option of appealing against Sir Thomas's recommendations and about 70 are known to have done so - 44 were successful in getting the demands either reduced or overturned.
'Positive side' ANALYSIS Ben Wright, BBC political correspondent Throughout the whole expenses saga there have been plenty of MPs who have felt aggrieved.
They say there was a system in place which they were encouraged to use, yet they are now being punished for doing so.
That feeling of injustice still hasn't gone away - in fact for those who have lost appeals it may be greater now than ever.
But despite this I think we're unlikely to see many - or indeed, any - MPs complaining publicly today.
Sir Thomas is clearly incredibly unimpressed with them, to put it mildly, and I think most will now decide it best to swallow their objections and try to draw a line under the entire sorry mess..
Conservative MP Bernard Jenkin - who Sir Thomas recommended should repay £63,250, after renting his second home from his sister in law - appealed and had the amount reduced by £27,000. The ex-Conservative minister Peter Lilley was also asked to repay £41,057 in relation to a mortgage taken out on a property he had originally bought using a loan from his wife.
Sir Thomas Legg judged that he should repay the mortgage interest claimed back - but the appeals process overturned that entirely.
The judge who ruled on appeals, Sir Paul Kennedy, said each case had to be looked at "on its own merits".The judge who ruled on appeals, Sir Paul Kennedy, said each case had to be looked at "on its own merits".
In his report Sir Thomas criticised the "deeply flawed" expenses system for second homes adding: "In particular, the rules were vague, and MPs were themselves self-certifying as to the propriety of their use of the allowance.In his report Sir Thomas criticised the "deeply flawed" expenses system for second homes adding: "In particular, the rules were vague, and MPs were themselves self-certifying as to the propriety of their use of the allowance.
"Taken with the prevailing lack of transparency and the 'culture of deference', this meant that the [Commons] fees office's decisions lacked legitimacy; and many of them were in fact mistaken.""Taken with the prevailing lack of transparency and the 'culture of deference', this meant that the [Commons] fees office's decisions lacked legitimacy; and many of them were in fact mistaken."
'Culture of deference'
He added: "The saga of MPs' expenses and freedom of information has been traumatic and painful. Public confidence has been damaged, and the scars will no doubt take time to heal.He added: "The saga of MPs' expenses and freedom of information has been traumatic and painful. Public confidence has been damaged, and the scars will no doubt take time to heal.
"But there is a positive side. In responding, our national institutions, including a free press, an independent judiciary and in the end the executive government, political parties and above all the House of Commons itself, are showing that, when things do go wrong, we have together the will and the means to put matters right, heal and reform the systems and the culture, and move forward.""But there is a positive side. In responding, our national institutions, including a free press, an independent judiciary and in the end the executive government, political parties and above all the House of Commons itself, are showing that, when things do go wrong, we have together the will and the means to put matters right, heal and reform the systems and the culture, and move forward."
REPAYMENT REQUESTS 3 MPs - £40,000+56 MPs - £5,000-£40,000182 MPs - £1,000-£5,000149 MPs -£100 - £1,000
The report also notes that two former MPs have not responded to requests for repayments by Legg - which went out last October.
Former Labour MPs John Lyons and Ivor Caplin, who both left Parliament in 2005, were asked for more than £17,000 each.
It is not clear if they can be forced to repay the money. MPs who still have their seats and refuse to pay may have the money docked from their pay or allowances.
Conservative leader David Cameron told the BBC earlier: "What is absolutely essential is that MPs pay back all this money that's been identified - those MPs who refuse to pay it back, they should have it taken off their salaries or their redundancy payments - that's got to happen."
Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg told the BBC he expected Sir Thomas's report would be "uncomfortable reading for a large number of MPs" but added: "I hope it'll be the final chapter in this rotten Parliament so we can look forward to a new Parliament with new rules."