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Government concedes 'anti-Ashcroft' law

Michael Crick | 21:46 UK time, Friday, 10 July 2009

The government has been forced to agree to a new law banning people who do not pay UK income tax - or are not liable to do so - from giving money to political parties.

Threatened with a huge rebellion - and possible defeat - in the Commons on Monday, the Justice Secretary Jack Straw has made a dramatic U-turn and withdrawn government opposition to an amendment to the Elections Bill recently passed in the Lords by an alliance of Labour rebels, Liberal Democrats and cross-benchers.

The leader of the Lords rebellion Lord Campbell-Savours has confirmed to me that ministers have now accepted his plan, and this has also been confirmed to me by a senior government source.

The measure is clearly aimed at the Conservative Deputy Chairman and election strategist Lord Ashcroft who has given the Conservative Party millions of pounds in recent years, but who has aroused considerable controversy over whether he pays British tax.

But it is likely to have a significant effect on donations to both the major parties.

Both Labour and the Conservatives are thought to have taken large sums of money from wealthy supporters who are non-domiciled in the UK for tax purposes.

Mr Straw has held a series of meeting with Lords and Commons rebels this week but has finally conceded on the issue in the last 36 hours.

Ministers claimed they were sympathetic to the measure but told rebels there were various legal and technical reasons, and issues of principle as to why it was unworkable.

Some rebels suspected however, that Labour may have been hoping for big donations in the immediate future from supporters who do not pay UK tax.

Ministry of Justice officials will be working frantically over this weekend to overcome these obstacles.

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    CULTURAL CORRUPTION STILL IN PLACE IN WESTMINSTER.

    I have posted before that, in the UK, we do 'well-bred' corruption rather than the grubby sort, found in the rest of the world; but it is corruption none the less. The cash for P&Ks reality was 'redacted' rather than removed and now it rears up in another form. Westminster is rotten to the very core. I call again for Britain to be put into 'Special Measures' under a Junta of The Wise formed by individuals of proven ability in competent governance. They could start by asking Tony 'those' questions on our behalf.

  • Comment number 2.

    is this Ashcroft guy still trying to say he's an ordinary bloke?

  • Comment number 3.

    This is all the proof we need that Labour has not got a penny to spend on an election.

    I expect Mr. Broon will be sending out another letter to people who have been polite to a Labour canvasser; only this time asking for their money as opposed to their vote.

    I am always polite but Mr. Broon has already had all my spare money.

  • Comment number 4.

    My apologies but I haven't seen the legislation. Does this mean that anyone who doesn't pay UK income tax can't donate to political parties here?

    Pensioners who don't pay income tax?
    Students?
    The unemployed?
    UK nationals working overseas?
    Company directors who don't draw a salary?
    MEPs?

    or just Mr Ashcroft?

  • Comment number 5.

    no...just Mr Ashcroft

  • Comment number 6.

    well that's a relief then....

  • Comment number 7.

    Michael, I thought I'd increase your response by 14 percent.
    Are those tumbleweeds I can hear? Or just the Strawman doing another U-turn?

    What chance do you give your lot in the by-election?

  • Comment number 8.

    And people want to abolish the unelected chamber!

    They seem to be more competent than our elected representative in the Commons chamber.

Μύ

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