- Admin
- #1
... he needed so many "early day motion"'s 
Interesting, he was fully available to comment on the Iain Hume incident, despite having openly admitting to having not even seen it

TWO South Yorkshire MPs claimed the maximum £400 allowance for food every month last year, it has been revealed.
Barnsley West and Penistone MP Michael Clapham and Barnsley Central MP Eric Illsley were among 32 MPs who claimed the full £4,800 allowance during 2007/08.
The allowance is intended to support MPs while they are away from their main residence, typically for 150 days a year when the Commons is sitting.
It can be spent on restaurant meals or at supermarkets, although not on alcohol.
Both Mr Illsley and Mr Clapham claimed the money through the entire year, including when the Commons was not sitting, which was still within the rules.
Mr Clapham today defended his claims, saying he was forced to spend a large amount of time in London last summer.
He told The Star: "We normally come down in August and we do some of the decorating down here. At the same time, particularly last year, I had a number of meetings in the summer to do with Vibration White Finger and brought miners down here.
"You cannot buy many meals outside Westminster for less than £20."
Mr Illsley was unavailable for comment.
The generous food allowance was on top of a backbench MP's basic salary of £64,766 and was paid out only "for expenses wholly, exclusively and necessarily incurred" by MPs "when staying overnight away from their main UK residence...for the purpose of performing Parliamentary duties".
MPs have not needed to provide receipts to back up their claims for food.
But the allowance was scrapped last April and replaced with a flat-rate sum of £25 "for any night which a member spends away from his or her main home on parliamentary business".
More than a million receipts were yesterday finally released on to the Parliament website after weeks of highly damaging revelations in the media.
However, a major row broke out as it became clear that masses of information had been blacked out.
The online publication excludes all rejected claims and addresses, disguising the extent to which politicians used the "flipping" tactic to redesignate their second homes to maximise their income.
Heather Brooke, a freedom of information campaigner who has spent five years fighting for the details of MPs' expenses to be revealed, said: "I have seen some original documents and I can say avoiding embarrassment has been the key motivating factor in what has been deleted."
Mr Illsley was unavailable for comment.
Interesting, he was fully available to comment on the Iain Hume incident, despite having openly admitting to having not even seen it
