Select Committee on Standards and Privileges Eighth Report


Conduct of Mr Martin Salter and Mr Rob Wilson



Introduction

1. We have received a memorandum from the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards concerning a complaint against Mr Martin Salter, Member for Reading West, by Mr Rob Wilson, Member for Reading East, and a complaint against Mr Rob Wilson by Councillor David Sutton, the Leader of Reading Borough Council. In both cases, the complaints relate to the contents of reports funded out of parliamentary allowances, circulated by the respective Members to their constituents.[1] The Commissioner's memorandum is reproduced at Appendix 1.

2. In accordance with our usual practice, we have shown both Members a copy of the Commissioner's memorandum, and they have each subsequently submitted a memorandum to us. Mr Salter's observations are reproduced at Appendix 2 and Mr Wilson's at Appendix 3.

3. In the remainder of this report, we deal in turn with the specific complaints made against each Member, and then comment on some of the wider issues they raise.

The Complaint against Mr Salter

4. There are three basic elements to Mr Wilson's complaint against Mr Salter:

5. We agree with the Commissioner that the first element of the complaint should be upheld.[2] Mr Salter accepts that he should not have used pre-paid envelopes for the relevant mailings, and has apologised to us for doing so. As the costs of the mailings remain a proper charge on parliamentary allowances, he intends to reimburse the costs of the relevant stationery from the appropriate allowance for the current financial year.[3] Mr Salter has also raised concerns about the clarity of the rules concerned, and we return to this subject in paragraph 21.

6. We also agree with the Commissioner that the second element of the complaint should be upheld, and welcome Mr Salter's undertaking that he has taken steps to ensure that a correct imprint is used in future. We share the Commissioner's view of the technical nature of this breach of the rules.[4]

7. We agree with the Commissioner that, in all the circumstances, the inclusion in Mr Salter's report of a photograph of a councillor is unlikely in practice to have promoted in any material way their candidature when standing for re-election at the May 2007 local elections. We therefore agree with the Commissioner that this element of the complaint should be dismissed.

8. We accept that Mr Salter did not set out to breach the relevant rules, and has been careful in the past to seek advice on the use of pre-paid envelopes. As he has apologised for his failure to comply with the rules, and is reimbursing the cost of the stationery and pre-paid envelopes which he improperly used, we do not recommend any further action.

9. We welcome Mr Wilson's apology for his oversight in failing to notify Mr Salter of his complaint. As the Guide to the Rules makes clear,[5] this is a basic courtesy which Members should always follow.

The Complaint against Mr Wilson

10. Councillor Sutton's complaint against Mr Wilson also consists of three elements:

11. The Commissioner recommends[6] that the first element of the complaint be dismissed as Mr Wilson had taken steps, for the most part successfully, to seek to avoid distribution of the report during the local election campaign and more fundamentally, there is nothing in the rules of the House restricting the timing of the distribution of such reports. We agree with the Commissioner that this element of the complaint should be dismissed.

12. The Commissioner also recommends[7] that the second element should be dismissed on the ground that on balance he doubted that any significant personal or party advantage was gained from the publication of the photograph in question.[8] We accept the Commissioner's analysis and agree that this element of the complaint should also be dismissed.

13. As to the third element, the inclusion of party material with the report when it was delivered clearly heightened the risk that the Parliamentary report would be seen in a similar light, particularly as it also carried a specific reference to the local party name—'Reading East Conservatives'.[9] Mr Wilson has apologised for the fact that a number of copies of the report were delivered along with copies of a Conservative Party survey with the parliamentary material not separated from the party material, as Department of Finance and Administration (DFA) guidance requires. We agree with the Commissioner that this element of the complaint should be upheld, but do not recommend any further action.

14. The Commissioner has also drawn attention[10] to a matter not raised in the original complaint, namely the prominent reference to 'Reading East Conservatives' on the front page of Mr Wilson's report. In the Commissioner's view, this particular choice of words heightened in all the circumstances the risk of the impression being gained that the report was a party rather than a parliamentary publication. This risk will have been further enhanced in those wards where the report was physically accompanied by party material. The Commissioner considers that the inclusion of these words crossed the line between Parliamentary and party political material, and that their inclusion therefore breached the relevant guidelines.[11]

15. Mr Wilson has raised two concerns about this conclusion[12]. First, he has asked whether it is appropriate for the Commissioner to reach a conclusion on a point which was not included in the original complaint. Second, he has suggested that, in circumstances such as arose in this case, Members who had followed the correct procedures and acted in good faith on DFA advice should be able to rely absolutely on the fact that they had done so in the event of their conduct being challenged. We consider each of these points below.

16. On the question of whether it is appropriate for the Commissioner to comment on matters which emerge in the course of his investigation of a complaint, but are not raised directly in that complaint, it has been the practice of successive Commissioners to do so, and of successive Committees to reach decisions on them. We believe this to be right in principle. Public confidence in the complaints process would undoubtedly be eroded if, in the face of clear evidence of a breach of the Code, the House declined to take action on the technicality that the conduct concerned, although it emerged in the course of an inquiry into a complaint, was not the direct subject of the complaint.

17. On Mr Wilson's second point, we acknowledge that he had submitted an electronic copy of his draft report for approval by the DFA, and had acted on the suggestions it made.[13] He submitted the final proof and received written confirmation that "the whole publication met the relevant criteria that would allow costs to be met from the IEP".[14] DFA, for its part, accepts that, as a result of difficulties handling the electronic submission, it failed to notice the use of the expression 'Reading East Conservatives'.[15] Had it done so, it would have asked Mr Wilson to remove the expression.

18. As Mr Wilson points out,[16] the Director of Operations at DFA did not feel that Mr Wilson could be held responsible for the Department's mistake in failing to spot the inclusion of an expression that could give the impression that it was promoting the local Conservative Party, and we agree with him in that respect. Nevertheless, we agree with the Director of Operations and the Commissioner that it was wrong to include a reference to 'Reading East Conservatives' in the report, on the grounds that it could be construed as implying that the publication was promoting the local party.[17] We note that there were also two display references to 'Conservatives' elsewhere in the report.[18] We do not accept that, regrettable though it was, the fact that the Directorate failed to notice all the references absolves Mr Wilson from responsibility for including them in the first place.

19. However, we acknowledge that Mr Wilson took all reasonable steps to ensure that his publication complied with the rules. As the Director of Operations said, he "was entitled to take the Department's approval of the newsletter as a whole at face value".[19] It would therefore in our view be inequitable for him to suffer any penalty in this respect.

20. We hope that the DFA will look carefully at the implications of this unfortunate case for its arrangements for reviewing parliamentary reports, and if necessary modify them to prevent a reccurrence. While Members must retain overall responsibility for the contents of publications they submit for approval, it is vital they can have complete confidence in the advice they receive in this respect from DFA.

General points

21. Mr Salter drew attention to what he saw as a lack of clarity in the rules and guidance relating to the use of postage-paid envelopes.[20] It is clear to us that the changes introduced in 2005, which re-classified newsletters and calendars as unsolicited items and hence ineligible for inclusion in pre-paid envelopes in any circumstances,[21] was, in substance, a significant change in the rules. It would, in all the circumstances, have been helpful to Members if this guidance had been included, together with the relevant rules, in the stationery catalogue. We recommend that, in future, all the relevant rules and guidance are included in the Members' stationery catalogue.

22. One element of the complaint against Mr Wilson related to the non-separation of parliamentary and party material in the distribution of material to constituents. We take this opportunity to remind all Members of the need to ensure that those responsible for distributing parliamentary material on their behalf understand that such material must always be clearly separated, by a suitable envelope or cover, from any party material they may be distributing at the same time.

23. The Commissioner has drawn attention to two related general points raised by various aspects of these complaints. The first[22] arose from the distribution of a leaflet during the local election campaign in Reading which could be seen as seeking to pre-empt our decision on one of the complaints. We agree with the Commissioner that the House's apolitical standards enforcement system must not be drawn into party political controversies.

24. The second[23] relates to the political dimension which undoubtedly underlies both complaints. As the Commissioner points out, this can lead to political parties and those associated with them seeking to use the complaints process as another institutional means of pursuing their objectives. While we would in no way wish to discourage the submission to the Commissioner of well-founded complaints, it is particularly important for those involved with the political process to exercise a proper sense of proportion. We share the concern of the Commissioner about the scope for damage both to the credibility of the complaints process and to the standing of Members and the House in general if the complaints system is misused for pursuing what are in reality political arguments.

25. As the Commissioner points out,[24] both complaints raise some general issues about the rules relating to newsletters funded out of parliamentary allowances, including the timing of their distribution in relation to local election campaigns, and the appropriate use in them of distinctive Party emblems such as logos and party colours. We welcome the fact that he proposes to return to these matters in the context of a later report.


1   See WE 2, p. 30-33 and WE 5, p 36-39 respectively. Back

2   Appendix 1, para. 56. Back

3   Appendix 2, p. 52. Back

4   Appendix 1, para. 57. Back

5   Guide to the Rules relating to the Conduct of Members (HC 351, Session 2005-06), para. 85. Back

6   Appendix 1, para. 63-4. Back

7   Appendix 1, para. 66. Back

8   Appendix 1, paras. 65-6. Back

9   A similar description also appears on the survey form circulated with some copies of the report. Back

10   Appendix 1, paras. 68-9. Back

11   Appendix 1, para. 69. Back

12   Appendix 3, p. 53. Back

13   Appendix 3, p. 53 and Appendix 1, para. 38. Back

14   Appendix 3, p. 53. Back

15   Appendix 1, para. 38. Back

16   Appendix 3, p. 53. Back

17   Appendix 1, para. 39. Back

18   In the heading on the right-hand inside page and in the left-hand column of the back page. Back

19   See Appendix 1, paras 39 and 69. Back

20   See WE 10, p. 45. Back

21   Appendix 1, para. 25. Back

22   Appendix 1, para. 70. Back

23   Appendix 1, para 73. Back

24   Appendix 1, para. 71. Back


 
previous page contents next page

House of Commons home page Parliament home page House of Lords home page search page enquiries index

© Parliamentary copyright 2007
Prepared 17 October 2007