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Outrage as MPs’ £35,000 worth of debt owed to taxpayers WIPED by parliamentary watchdogs

IPSA says costs prevent it taking legal action to reclaim debts owed by 15 politicians who lost their seats in last General Election

OUTRAGE erupted last night as parliamentary watchdogs revealed they have written off £35,000 of debt owed by MPs to the taxpayer.

The Sun can reveal that the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (Ipsa) has given up chasing expenses owed by 15 MPs who lost their seats in last year’s General Election - because of the legal costs in chasing them.

 Ipsa has cited legal costs as the reason for taking no action against the debt-riddent MPs
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Ipsa has cited legal costs as the reason for taking no action against the debt-riddent MPsCredit: PA:Press Association

The revelation comes just days after MPs sparked fury by voting through a new code that will grant politicians anonymity for expenses wrongdoing and sexual harassment.

The £35,000 of debt was 12 times as much as MPs owed the previous year.

In 2016/17 a total of £4,000 of debt owed by 10 MPs was written off.

MPs owe the money from when they used their Parliament-issued credit card to claim personal or political purposes - such as hotels in London or for bills that fall outside strict spending rules.

 James Price of the Taxpayers' Alliance says people will rightly be 'furious' about the news
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James Price of the Taxpayers' Alliance says people will rightly be 'furious' about the newsCredit: BBC

Ipsa can recover the money from their salary if MPs fail to repay the debt but that becomes harder after MPs are booted out by voters.

An Ipsa source said: “We’re no longer able to recover those costs and the cost of legal action doesn’t make it viable.”

Ipsa said it would only name and shame the former MPs in November.

But campaigners said it was scandalous that while ordinary Brits are harassed and put in prison for debt and unpaid taxes, MPs get away scot-free.

James Price from the Taxpayers' Alliance fumed: “This is a classic case of one rule for them and another for the rest of us, and people will rightly be furious with such unfairness.

“If ordinary taxpayers don't pay their taxes they will be put in prison; if former MPs don't then they get away with keeping our money!

“It is this kind of behaviour that makes people so distrustful of politics and politicians, and these ex-MPs should repay the money they owe immediately.”

Construction firm Carillion has announced it will go into compulsory liquidation after the Government declined to use taxpayers' money to bail them out


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