Question Author
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Laws has stepped down from the Treasury but for now is continuing to sit as an MP. In the spirit of the 'new politics' surely he should offer himself immediately for re-election. After all, he didn't steal from the government, he stole from the taxpayers, including his own constituents.
I've never understood why disgraced ministers forced from office are allowed to continue as MPs.
The as yet unanswered question is: who put him in the frame? Was he the victim of political dirty tricks or was he 'outed' by a spiteful homosexual who resents the idea of prominent gays choosing to stay in the closet?
So for all the talk of acting in the national interest, confronted with their first major political scandal the two parties have acted in their own naked self-interest.
There is also the fact that Alexander avoided paying Capital gains Tax when he sold his flat in London by designating it as his main home - even though for the purposes of claiming parliamentary expenses totalling £37,000 he had maintained it was his second home.
That's precisely the kind of behaviour which cost Hazel Blears her job in the last Labour government. She was forced to write out a cheque to Revenue for the tax she had avoided.
As chief secretary, Desperate Dan will now be responsible for trying to implement the Lib Dem manifesto commitment to raise CgT to 40, or even 50 per cent - even though he played the system to avoid paying it himself.
Naturally, he insists he acted within the rules.
Meet the new politics, same as the old politics" (from another press snippet)