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  • 2019-07-17 (xsd:date)
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  • What can MPs claim on expenses? (en)
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  • MPs get free housing. MPs can claim for rent or hotel accommodation as well as expenses for a second home if they are not already receiving rent free London accommodation through any ministerial post, and provided that their constituency is outside London. MPs get free travel. MPs can claim expenses for official travel. For example, MPs with constituencies outside London can claim for travel between their constituency and Westminster. MPs get free alcohol. MPs cannot claim expenses for alcohol but can drink in parliamentary bars and restaurants which are effectively subsidised with public money. MPs get free breakfast and dinner. MPs can claim for food expenses if they are travelling away from London or their constituency. Also, MPs can eat in parliamentary bars and restaurants which are effectively subsidised with public money. MPs get free iPads. MPs are able to loan an iPad from the House of Commons. They can also claim computing expenses for their constituency office on expenses. MPs get free phone calls. MPs can claim for phone calls in their constituency offices. MPs eligible for housing expenses can claim for work-related telephone calls at that home. MPs get free holidays. MPs do not receive publicly funded holidays, but can receive hospitality from other organisations and foreign governments. A post on Facebook claims that MPs receive a free house, travel, alcohol, food, iPad, phone calls and holidays. MPs receive an annual salary of £79,468 and in addition can claim publicly-funded expenses for expenditure for parliamentary purposes which cover, in certain circumstances, housing, travel, food, iPads and telephone calls. MPs are also allowed to eat and drink alcohol in parliamentary restaurants and bars which, while not directly subsidised, run at a loss and so are effectively subsidised with public money. However they do not get publicly-funded holidays. Stay informed Be first in line for the facts – get our free weekly email Subscribe MPs are allowed to claim expenses for rent on a second residence or hotel costs if their constituency is outside London and they do not by virtue of any particular office held, occupy ‘grace and favour’ accommodation in London. MPs living in ‘grace and favour’ homes are also essentially receiving free accommodation (for example, Theresa May lives rent free in 10 Downing Street by virtue of being Prime Minister.) Eligible MPs can claim expenses on payments for hotel or rented accommodation. They can also claim for associated costs if they own or rent a second property. Associated costs include utility bills, council tax, and the purchase and installation of routine security measures. MPs can’t claim expenses for mortgage payments on second homes. MPs may also claim for travel costs which are in support of the MP’s parliamentary functions. For example, MPs whose constituencies are outside London are allowed to claim for the cost of travelling between their constituency and Westminster. All MPs are allowed to claim expenses for running constituency offices, which includes telephone costs. MPs who are eligible to claim housing expenses can also claim for telephone calls at their homes. The claim about iPads is a bit more complicated. The House of Commons told us that all MPs are entitled to loan an iPad. The iPads remain the property of parliament and are returned to parliament at the end of its life or when the MP steps down. However MPs also receive an office cost allowance which they can spend on computing equipment. MPs who leave parliament are required to dispose of this equipment. MPs are also entitled to food expenses (up to £25 per night) if they stay overnight outside of both their constituency and the London area, though MPs cannot use their expenses to buy alcohol either in their office or while they’re travelling. However MPs are allowed to eat and drink in parliament’s various bars and restaurants (as are all parliamentary staff and visitors). While this food and drink is not directly subsidised, catering services across the House of Commons run at a loss, meaning that public money is effectively spent subsidising the overall catering operation. All the expenses dealt with so far are paid for with public money. MPs do not get their holidays subsidised by the taxpayer. However, some MPs have been known to get holidays paid for by others. A BBC investigation last year reported that 340 MPs had taken 810 foreign trips collectively worth more than £2 million between May 2016 and June 2018. These trips are paid for, mainly, by foreign governments in more than half of cases. These trips are not in themselves against parliamentary rules, but some MPs have run into trouble for not following the proper processes. In 2013 Ian Paisley Junior, MP for Northern Antrim, went on three family holidays to Sri Lanka paid for by the Sri Lankan government. He was suspended from parliament for 30 days in 2018 for failing to officially declare two of the trips—worth over £50,000. This article is part of our work fact checking potentially false pictures, videos and stories on Facebook. You can read more about this—and find out how to report Facebook content—here. For the purposes of that scheme, we’ve rated this claim as true as most of the claims are broadly correct. Only the claim about holidays is misleading as holidays are not paid for with public money. (en)
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