Wednesday 20 May 2009

UKIP and BNP not exposed by Telegraph because they have no MPs

People thinking of following Norman Tebbitt's advice in the European elections on June 4th, should bear in mind the following research by George Turner posted on Liberal Democrat Voice:

The electorate should not be allowed to forget that, out of the 12 MEPs elected on the UKIP ticket in 2004, two have been indicted with fraud. UKIP was forced to throw both out of the party as a result of the allegations being made public.

Ashley Mote, elected a UKIP MEP for South East England was convicted of eight counts of benefit fraud after it was discovered that he claimed £73,000 in benefits between 1996 and 2002 whilst failing to notify the benefits agency that he had begun earning money through various other sources.

Only a month ago, Tom Wise, MEP for the East of England, was charged with having funneled £39,000 of expenses meant to pay his researcher into his personal bank account. Now an independent, the charges relate to a time when Mr Wise was a UKIP MEP.

UKIP may claim that it acted properly in expelling these two MEPs as soon as the allegations were discovered - however, in the case of Tom Wise, this was only after an internal investigation by UKIP had attempted to cover up the evidence of fraud. As for Ashley Mote, his case was pending when he was selected as a Euro candidate.

Other UKIP MEPs are also no strangers to riding the gravy train; unfortunately that train seems not to stop in Brussels. UKIP MEPs Travor Colman and John Whittaker were 765th and 764th respectively out of 777 MEPs in their percentage of attendance at plenary sessions of the European Parliament over this parliamentary session. Nigel Farage, the party leader, came in a more respectable 640th (statistics from www.votewatch.eu).

As so eloquently expressed by UKIP’s founder Alan Sked in a letter to the Daily Telegraph in 2004,

Given that there is little reason to occupy seats and then vote No to everything, one could easily conclude that UKIP candidates are in effect standing for the money - salaries, pensions and expenses.”

The BNP is no better. A report by Searchlight to Parliament in 2007 revealed a long history of financial irregularity within the Party’s accounts.

BNP Councilor James Lloyd was removed from Sandwell council for not attending a council meeting in six months despite having claimed the full allowance for doing so. Other BNP Councilors in Barking claimed their full councillor’s allowance for attending council meetings of £9,810 per year, despite only attending only six meetings.

It seems to me at least, that the only reason why UKIP and the BNP have not been some of the worst offenders in the MPs’ expenses scandal is that they have no MPs.

* George Turner is a Liberal Democrat member, now living in Italy.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

No comments from the Torygraph on either Plaid (Welsh Nationalists) or SNP, can we assume that they are whiter than white?

Frank Little said...

Alex Salmond's food bill has featured in the Daily Telegraph, but I can't recall any other sleaze sticking to the nationalists.

Of course, there was the Plaid MP who used his Parliamentary Communications Allowance (which I hope is one of the first things to be abolished under the forthcoming reforms) to take out large spreads in the local press just before the last Assembly election.