Appendix 2: Description of the Arrangements
for Regulating Standards of Conduct in the House of Commons
1. Like many other aspects of the United Kingdom
political system, the arrangements for regulating standards in
the House of Commons have developed over time and often in response
to particular events. As long ago as 1695, the House of Commons
passed a resolution declaring bribery of Members a high crime
and misdemeanour. For centuries thereafter, misconduct by Members
was handled ad hoc and often informally as it arose (which was
relatively rarely). In 1858, the House passed a Resolution prohibiting
advocacy for fee or reward and in 1947 a further resolution banning
Members from entering contracts or agreements which restrict their
freedom to act and speak, or require them to act as a representative
of outside bodies.
2. A resolution of 1974 confirmed a long-standing
convention that relevant pecuniary (i.e. financial) interests
should be declared in the House and its Committees, and in communications
with Ministers and officials. The first Register of Members' Interests
was created in 1975 (following the Poulson case). Rules about
registering or declaring interests developed gradually thereafter
and were first codified and substantially revised in 1992.
3. The key features of the present arrangements
came into being in 1995 following recommendations by the Committee
on Standards in Public Life (at the time chaired by Lord Nolan)
and the Select Committee of the House on Standards in Public Life.
These recommendations were for:
· a
new Code of Conduct for MPs;
· an improved
Register of Members' Interests;
· an independent
Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards;
· a strengthened
Committee on Standards and Privileges.
The first Commissioner (Sir Gordon Downey) was appointed
in 1995 and a Code of Conduct for Members was approved by the
House and published the following year.
Principles
4. The nature of the arrangements reflects a
concern to ensure effective machinery for upholding high standards
of conduct, containing a strong independent element, whilst preserving
Parliament's control over its own affairs. For centuries, Parliament
fought to establish its right to control its own affairs, free
from interference by either the Monarch or the courts. This freedom
was confirmed by Article 9 of the Bill of Rights of 1689 which
provided:
"That the Freedom of Speech and Debates or Proceedings
in Parliament ought not to be impeached or questioned in any Court
or Place out of Parliament."
5. The House's right to discipline its own Members
is a central element in this. As the Committee on Standards in
Public Life observed in 1995 when recommending the present arrangements:
"The House collectively has a responsibility
to safeguard the public interest against the possible misjudgements
of individual Members, and it has the ability to do so. It also
needs to reassert forcefully to the public that Members of Parliament,
collectively and individually, have a sense of both the responsibilities
and the dignity of the role with which they are entrusted. We
believe that the House can do this itself, and that the package
which we set out below will help to do so. It is a powerful and
flexible mixture of disclosure and enforcement which will serve
the public interest better than the inflexibility of statutory
procedures." [22]
6. The system for upholding standards of conduct
in Parliament is often described as one of 'self-regulation'.
This is, however, a substantial over-simplification. It is correct
in the sense that the House of Commons retains the ultimate responsibility
for deciding the shape of the system and for disposing of individual
cases arising under it. It is incorrect, however, in so far as
the decision whether to investigate a complaint, as well as a
recommendation on findings, are the responsibility of an independent
Commissioner. The reports of his investigations and the subsequent
reports of the Committee on Standards and Privileges to the House
are published. When the House needs to debate such reports, it
invariably does so in public. The effectiveness of the arrangements
as a whole is also open to periodic review by the independent
Committee on Standards in Public Life.
7. In this context, it is worth noting that the
immunity of an individual Member of Parliament from legal action
in the courts is more limited than the immunity given to parliamentarians
in many other legislative assemblies, being restricted to proceedings
in Parliament (that is, broadly to participation in debates in
the House, in Committees and other forms of proceeding). In other
respects, an MP stands in the same position in relation to the
law as does any other citizen.
8. Members, individually and collectively, are
ultimately and regularly subject to the judgement of their fellow
citizens through the ballot box. As past events have shown, this
can be an effective final sanction.
The Key Elements in the System
1 The Code of Conduct
9. The Code of Conduct applies to Members' public
life, not to their purely private and personal lives. It is relatively
short, incorporating the substance of various resolutions on conduct
passed by the House and the Nolan Committee's 'seven principles
of public life'. Its purpose is "to assist Members in the
discharge of their obligations to the House, their constituents
and the public at large".
10. The text of the Code can be found at www.parliament.uk/about_commons/pcfs.
cfm. In summary, it requires Members to:
· uphold
the law and the Constitution;
· act
always in the public, not their own personal interest, and to
resolve at once any conflict between the two in favour of the
former;
· strengthen
confidence in Parliament, not bring the House or its Members into
disrepute;
· observe
the seven principles of public life, as set out in the first report
of the Committee on Standards in Public Life;
· never
accept a bribe, act as a paid advocate or misuse allowances or
other payments;
· observe
the House's Rules, e.g. as regards the registration and declaration
of interests.
2 The Register of Members' Interests
11. The main purpose of the Register is:
"to provide information of any pecuniary interest
or other material benefit which a Member receives which might
reasonably be thought by others to influence his or her actions,
speeches or votes in Parliament, or actions taken in his or her
capacity as a Member of Parliament." [23]
12. The appearance of an entry in the Register
simply constitutes a record of a registrable interest. It implies
no element of judgement on the substance of the interest. The
purpose of registration is openness, to give other Members and
the public the opportunity to know about interests which may be
thought to influence a Member's actions in his or her parliamentary
capacity, and to make their own assessment of their significance.
The Rules on registrationwhich were comprehensively revised
in May 2002lay down, essentially as an administrative convenience,
10 categories of interest to be registered. They also place Members
under a more general obligation to keep the overall purpose of
the Register in mind when registering or declaring an interest.
13. The obligation to declare relevant interests
in a debate or committee proceeding is not restricted to those
interests which are the subject of an entry in the Register. It
also includes interests which have been held in the recent past
or of which the Member has a reasonable expectation in the future,
and Members are advised to declare certain non-registrable interests
where relevant.
14. The Register is compiled afresh at the start
of every Parliament or following a major revision of the Rules.
One bound, printed edition is published every year and the text
is also available on the web-site at www.parliament.uk/about_commons/pcfs.cfm
or at the House for Members or the public to study. In addition,
the Register is updated every 6-8 weeks to include fresh information
supplied by Members. The text of these updated editions is also
published on the web-site, and is available, by appointment, for
inspection in hard copy form.
3 The Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards
15. The Commissioner is the independent element
in the system for regulating standards in the House of Commons.
Whilst he is an officer appointed pursuant to a Resolution of
the House, he is expected to act independently in discharging
his responsibilities. The duties of the Commissioner are embodied
in Standing Order No.150. The main duties are:
· overseeing
the maintenance of the Register of Members' Interests and the
other registers of interests for Members' staff, journalists and
All Party Groups;
· with
the Registrar of Members' Interests, advising on the registration
and declaration of interests;
· advising
the Committee on Standards and Privileges on the interpretation
of the Code of Conduct;
· monitoring
the operation of the Code and registers and making recommendations
to the Committee thereon;
· receiving,
investigating and reporting to the Committee on complaints against
Members.
The Commissioner is appointed for a five year, non-renewable
term and is not liable to dismissal except on a resolution of
the House.
4 The Committee on Standards and Privileges
16. Standing Order No.149 places on the Committee
on Standards and Privileges the responsibility:
· to
oversee the work of the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards;
to examine the arrangements proposed by the Commissioner for the
compilation, maintenance and accessibility of the Register of
Members' Interests and any other registers of interest established
by the House; to review from time to time the form and content
of those registers; and to consider any specific complaints made
in relation to the registering or declaring of interests which
are referred to it by the Commissioner; and
· to consider
any matter relating to the conduct of Members, including specific
complaints in relation to alleged breaches in any code of conduct
to which the House has agreed and which have been drawn to the
committee's attention by the Commissioner; and to recommend any
modifications to such code of conduct as may from time to time
appear to be necessary.
The Committee is also responsible for considering
specific matters relating to privileges referred to it by the
House.
17. The Committee formally consists of 11 Members.
Following the decision that the Committee should consist of an
equal number of members drawn from the party of Government and
from the Opposition parties respectively, the number actually
appointed has been allowed to fall to 10, five drawn from the
party of government and five from the opposition parties. Its
Chairman is a senior opposition Member.
Does the System Work?
18. The adequacy of the arrangements has been
twice reviewed by the Committee on Standards in Public Life since
they came into being. In its Sixth Report in January 2000, the
Committee expressed confidence that there had been an improvement
in the standards applying to Members and stated:
"We have no doubt that the establishment of
[the office of Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards] has made
a significant contribution to the promotion of, and public's confidence
in, standards in the House of Commons." [24]
19. More recently, the arrangements were the
subject of further extensive scrutiny by the Committee. In its
Eighth Report published in November 2002, the Committee found
that:
". . .standards in the House of Commons are
generally high and that the overwhelming majority of Members seek
to, and in practice do, uphold high standards of propriety."
[25]
It also concluded that:
". . .the fundamental structure of the current
system for regulating standards of conduct in the House of Commons
is sound. . ." [26]
but made a number of recommendations designed further
to strengthen the arrangements, all of which have been, or are
being, acted upon.
22 Cm 2850-1, paragraph 59 Back
23
Select Committee on Members' Interests, First Report, Session
1991-92, "Registration and Declaration of Financial Interests",
HC 236, paragraph 27 Back
24
Cm 4557-1, paragraph 3.2 Back
25
Cm 5663, paragraph 2.7 Back
26
Cm 5663, paragraph 3.23 Back
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