home.social

#privileges-committee — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #privileges-committee, aggregated by home.social.

fetched live
  1. CW: UK Politics

    This is really not a good look for any backbench Labour MPs who vote not to investigate #Starmer over whether he misled Parliament over #Mandelson.

    If they truly believe he did nothing wrong, then surely an investigation is the best way for him to clear his name?

    And if they don't believe that, then they are voting for a cover-up, and transparently so. Voters will notice.

    bbc.co.uk/news/live/ce35dwddev

    #UKPolitics #PrivilegesCommittee

  2. CW: UK Politics

    If I were #Starmer, and if I were confident that I had acted properly and not misled Parliament, then I would absolutely welcome an inquiry by the Privileges Committee so that I could clear my name.

    The way he is so strongly fighting against this inquiry being allowed to happen tells you everything you need to know.

    bbc.co.uk/news/live/ce35dwddev

    #Mandelson #PrivilegesCommittee #UKPolitics

  3. Privileges Committee hears all sides over Charity Commission breaching Parliamentary privilege on Ombudsman’s sex abuse reports

    A rare but virtually unreported public hearing by the Privileges Committee on Budget Day revealed a sharp divide between the Parliamentary Ombudsman and the Charity Commission over the role of charities in safeguarding children and adults who have been sexually abused.

    The hearing was sparked off by Parliament unanimously reporting the Charity Commission to the Privileges Committee after Stephen Hoare, the chair of the Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee, decided the Commission had breached Parliamentary privilege by wanting to delay publication of the reports until after a judicial hearing being called by the Commission. I did a report here .

    The reports which Parliament compelled the Ombudsman to publish with final conclusions covering complaints of a recent adult sex abuse case – Miss A – and a historic child sexual abuse at a school -Mr U.

    Mr U later contacted my blog and waived his anonymity to give me a detailed account of what had happened at a Roman Catholic school in Blackburn when it was run by a paedophile priest. The blog about this is here.

    Saira Salimi, the Speaker’s Counsel

    The hearing began with a statement on the issue from Saira Salimi, the Speaker’s Counsel.

    She told the hearing: “This is quite a difficult case, because it does raise difficult questions about
    the relationship between parliamentary and legal accountability. There is a power conferring a discretion on a public authority to report in certain circumstances, and the report is made to Parliament. Although it looks at first glance like a function that might be reviewable by the courts, the interaction of parliamentary and legal accountability may mean that the decision is not justiciable.”

    She said that if the issue of privilege had not been the raised the Parliamentary Ombudsman would have been inhibited from laying the reports before Parliament.

    She added:” this is an unusual case where Parliament and the courts are on the same territory at the
    same time. That is not unprecedented but is unusual, because of the self denying ordinance that the House normally maintains in relation to matters before the courts under the sub judice resolution. It is my hope that our intervention in this case will assist both the courts and Parliament in carrying out their respective roles, which are constitutionally distinct ands equally important.”

    Karl Banister, Director of Operations, Legal and Clinical and Deputy Ombudsman at Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman (PHSO). gave evidence.

    He told MPs: “the[ charity] commission should have an independent person review Mr U’s case to consider whether the reasoning was adequately accounted for; consider whether the outcome would have been different; look for learning on how it engages in such cases;[and] look at
    its risk guidance;” Similar recommendations were made in Miss A’s case.

    It is these recommendations that the Charity Commission is objecting to and says that the Ombudsman exceeded her powers and that such recommendations are unlawful.

    He revealed considerable attempts were made at mediating the dispute.

    “My assessment was that it was better not to provoke the commission to issue legal proceedings. It is obviously unattractive for two public bodies to be litigating. Were they to do so, they would likely get an injunction, and that would be an additional cost to the public purse.”

    However in the end the Charity Commission decided to go ahead with a judicial review. it said:”“a declaration that the decision of 14 March 2025 is unlawful”—that is, our decision that it was
    not compliant—“that the 14 March decision is quashed, that the defendant pay the claimant’s cost of the claim or any other order the court considers appropriate. That is what the judicial review sought.”

    The Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee were informed and the Parliamentary Ombudsman stuck to its point that the Charity Commission had not fully complied with decision. It was then taken out of their hands and Mr Hoare, the committee chair, decided to raise the privilege issue and compel the reports to be published so the committee could consider them.

    David Holdswoth, chief executive of the Charity Commission

    The Charity Commission brought a team of people to hearing headed by the chief executive David Holdsworth.

    He told MPs:”The decision of the PHSO in its letter of 14 March—that we should reinvestigate criminal matters already investigated by the police, the CPS or the wider criminal justice system but deemed not able to proceed—has grave implications, in our view, for anyone involved in running a charity and, indeed, for wider citizens’ rights under the criminal justice process.
    It is also our view that the ombudsman cannot retake regulatory decisions made by the commission to force a different conclusion, replacing our judgment with its own. It is for those reasons that we reluctantly sought to clarify matters through the courts.”

    It soon became clear – and this was reinforced during the national Child Sex Abuse inquiry – that the commission regards the Commission as primarily an administrative and registration authority not an investigatory authority.

    It was also clear MPs and the Speaker’s Counsel thought that the matter could have been cleared up at a meeting of the PACAC committee without going to the courts.

    But Felix Rechtman, head of litigation at the commission said:”: We are not saying that the PHSO decision is just inappropriate. We go further: we say it is unlawful, and matters of law are
    reserved to the courts under our constitutional arrangement.”

    It is quite clear this issue is going to run and run. The courts have not given the Charity Commission a date for a judicial review hearing yet. The commission will first have to get permission to bring the judicial review and then have a hearing. The next stage will be the Privileges Committee report on whether the Commission has committed a contempt of the House.

    Make a one-time donation

    Your contribution is appreciated.

    Donate

    Make a monthly donation

    Your contribution is appreciated.

    Donate monthly

    Make a yearly donation

    Your contribution is appreciated.

    Donate yearly

    You can also donate via Paypal on the link below.

    https://www.paypal.com/ncp/payment/865JAS3QJ3C

    #charityCommission #mps #parliamentaryOmbudsman #privilegesCommittee

  4. Jakey Sleaze-Bogg: “A man stuck in an imagined Oxbridge of his youth.”

    “Then came Andrea. She at least had a legitimate defence. She was too stupid to remember what she had and hadn’t said and so she couldn’t apologise for anything.”

    #Partygate #Inquiry #PrivilegesCommittee

    theguardian.com/politics/2023/

  5. A concise, clear, fact-based report from the Privileges Committee.

    Unfortunately, the Committee itself cannot recommend sanctions against miscreants like Rees-Mogg or Dorries. It will be for the HoC to decide on whether to adopt its procedural recommendations, or to initiate a further inquiry into the actions of the BoJo Brigade.

    #Partygate #Inquiry #PrivilegesCommittee

    theguardian.com/politics/2023/

  6. The #PrivilegesCommittee was tasked by the House of Commons with whether Johnson misled the House of Commons.

    They produced a preponderance of forensic evidence BUT some members of the House of Commons did not judge their findings to be true.

    Can you fix my car?

    Yes, I can fix your car.

    Kindly fix my car.

    I have fixed your car, look it goes.

    I do not believe you have fixed my car.

  7. 🔵 The seven MPs who voted against the Boris Johnson Partygate report

    Some Tory MPs still backed the former Prime Minister after the damning report by the Privileges Committee

    #UK #News #Politics #BorisJohnson #Conservatives #PrivilegesCommittee

    nationalworld.com/news/politic

  8. CW: UK Politics

    Hello Tory MPs.

    You may be feeling very virtuous after voting for the #PartyGate report yesterday.

    But you're not fooling anyone. You don't get to claim to be suddenly in favour of integrity when you were perfectly happy to support Johnson at the time he was lying.

    Waiting until you get caught before you come out in favour of integrity doesn't count.

    #BorisJohnson #Integrity #PrivilegesCommittee

    bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-659

  9. I see both Rees-Mogg and Lia Nici, who both spoke strongly against the #PrivilegesCommittee report, abstained in the vote. Having their cake and eating it.

  10. Caroline Lucas @CarolineLucas

    This #PrivilegesCommittee report is about more than just one rogue PM - it's a vital part of the fight back against post-truth politics. What's at stake is nothing less than the democratic principles at the heart of our political system - abstention is complicity.

    nitter.net/i/status/1670821469

  11. I differ from Peter Bottomley on virtually everything. But to hear him say that back in 1985 he is on record in Hansard for saying 'I made a mistake. I apologise' and recommend that's how all MPs should behave was actually very moving. #PrivilegesCommittee

  12. Yvette Cooper looks truly sad listening to Thangnam Debbonaire enumerate Johnson's failings. #PrivilegesCommittee

  13. I suspect Penny Mordaunt is doing herself no harm by sitting alone on the front bench for the #PrivilegesCommittee debate. Makes her look a lot more honourable than her absent 'right honourable' cabinet colleagues.

  14. Caroline Lucas @CarolineLucas

    Just heading into House of Commons for #PrivilegesCommittee debate. Any Tory MPs not turning up or abstaining in this debate - one which goes to the heart of defending democratic principles in this country - is guilty of not just cowardice, but
    complicity in Johnson’s contempt.

    nitter.net/CarolineLucas/statu

  15. @davidallengreen
    As Peter Oborne points out in this article, the rules against lying to parliament as not stood up well in the Johnson era. The commons speaker does not see it as his role, so perhaps the commissioner for standards could be given the role of asking ministers and MPs to correct the record I.e. check for lies and misinformation given to Parliament. #BorisJohnson #Lying #Standards #accountability #PrivilegesCommittee
    middleeasteye.net/opinion/uk-b