Assisted Dying, Here's Where It...
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Taxpayers are to pick up a record breaking bill of £10 million when the 66 Tory Mps stand down at the general election . Each of these departing Tory MPs will each trouser an average £19,000 to voluntary stand down. IPSA is even claiming it can take up to as much as £116 ,000 for the cost of managing the departure of just one single MP.When you take all those things into account .What things? We know Who's account it will go to
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Rememeber 2010 gulliver?
This election had an unusually high number of MPs choosing not to seek re-election, with more standing down than did so at the 1945 general election (which on account of the extraordinary wartime circumstances came ten years after the preceding election).[17] This has been attributed to the 2009 expenses scandal and the fact there was talk that redundancy-style payments for departing MPs might be scrapped after the election.[18]
In all, 149 MPs (100 Labour, 35 Conservatives, 7 Liberal Democrats, 2 Independents, 1 Independent Conservative and 1 member each from the SNP, Plaid Cymru, the DUP, and the SDLP) decided not to contest the election.
100 Labour MPs stood down. They could see the writing on the wall, but a bifg factor was the fear that redundancy payments might be scrapped in future. Wonder how many millions that cost UK tax payers
Apart from the 66 Cons who are eligible for 'redundancy' pay, it'll be interesting to see how many of the other 36 MPs who are standing down (including 17 Labour) will refuse thier redundancy pay,
Hymie- I doubt they'll struggle to find work, The chances are they'll get a role that pays more than an MP's salary
gulliver, this is where a link might help. Some (not me of course ) might think you're telling porkies or have misunderstood again because 66 x £19000= £1.2 million, not 10 million. Maybe you could explain the 10 million figure and clarify whether it's all Cons or also includes non-Cons like Margaret Beckett or Harriet Harman.
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"Official estimates suggest it costs an average of £116,000 per MP when they decide to stand down.
The sum covers staff redundancy, the cost of closing down an office, secure disposal of documents and winding-up payments to MPs - akin to redundancy.
The severance payment was doubled last year to more than £19,000, with MPs to be paid for four months instead of two while they close their office and manage the departure of staff."
"'The House of Commons Library has already produced a tracking spreadsheet of those who have said they are standing down,' she said.
Notwithstanding any changes through a general election, that list is already at 100, so that is £10million to start off with.'"
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