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Sunak urged to sack minister ordered to pay back £1,367 after expenses breach

The Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority found Paul Maynard had used a state-of-the-art printer for campaigning purposes.

Nina Lloyd
Thursday 16 May 2024 18:10 BST
Paul Maynard is the Conservative MP for Blackpool North and Cleveleys (Richard Townshend/UK Parliament/PA)
Paul Maynard is the Conservative MP for Blackpool North and Cleveleys (Richard Townshend/UK Parliament/PA) (PA Media)

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Andrew Feinberg

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Prime Minister Rishi Sunak faced calls to sack minister Paul Maynard after he broke expenses rules by using a taxpayer-funded printer to produce “overtly political” material for the Tories.

The Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (Ipsa) said the pensions minister should repay £1,367 after he used a state-of-the-art device for campaigning purposes.

It also found he had under-reported use of his constituency office by his local Conservative Party association.

But Mr Maynard was cleared of wrongdoing over his “higher than average” claim of £106,000 for printing and related costs since 2010, with the watchdog saying a “comprehensive audit” of the relevant period was not undertaken because of “resource constraints”.

Labour said the Prime Minister should “remove” Mr Maynard from his government role.

The Blackpool North and Cleveleys MP previously told the Sunday Times, which broke the story, that he believed he had the proper arrangements in place for using the resources but would abide by any Ipsa findings.

A report by Ipsa’s compliance officer published on Thursday said: “The MP reasonably believed he had put in place an agreement with Ipsa to allow for the occasional use of his constituency office for non-parliamentary purposes and made regular payments to Ipsa for this purpose.

“However, the compliance officer considers the frequent use of Ipsa-funded office equipment such as the Riso printer went beyond the bounds of this agreement, even if some of the costs of use were covered by the local Conservative Association.

“In addition, it is reasonable to assume the constituency office was used for storage and preparation of party-political material at various times which are not accurately reflected in the log of use maintained by the MP’s office.”

It added: “On the assumption, the Riso (printer) has been used 10% of the time for non-parliamentary purposes it would be appropriate for the MP to reimburse Ipsa the sum of £1,257.28.

“In recognition of the possibility of inaccurately logged usage of the constituency office for party-political activity, the MP has also agreed to an additional repayment of £110.”

I welcome his report, which makes no direct criticism of me or of my office, and accept the findings

MP Paul Maynard

Mr Maynard said he had paid back the recommended sum.

“I am grateful to the compliance officer for his time in considering this matter,” the MP said.

“I welcome his report, which makes no direct criticism of me or of my office, and accept the findings.

“I have implemented his recommendations and already reimbursed Ipsa the sum recommended.

“I also agree with Ipsa that despite our best intentions, navigating the dual use of a constituency office can, at times, be inherently complicated. I have now ceased this arrangement.”

But Labour Party chairwoman Anneliese Dodds said: “Rishi Sunak promised professionalism, integrity and accountability at all levels. Since he took office we’ve seen bullying scandals, lobbying scandals and a prominent donor using vile racist and misogynistic language.

“Rishi Sunak should remove Paul Maynard as a minister, but the country also urgently needs change. We need a general election.”

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