Stop parliamentarians from taking all-expenses trips paid for by foreign governments
New report finds UK politics wide open to abuse by outside interests
29th July 2018, London – British MPs and Lords should be prohibited from accepting overseas trips that have been paid for by foreign governments – and their lobbyists – in order to protect UK politics against the undue influence by malign outside interests, according to a new report by Transparency International.
“In Whose Interest?” has found the integrity of British democracy is being undermined by some parliamentarians who are, often consciously, helping to launder the reputations of corrupt and repressive regimes through providing political access and lobbying on their behalf. Many have been treated to all-expenses paid trips with either no clear purpose or to major events promoting the country, paid for by the host government or other parts of the regime.
Faced with this threat of undue influence Transparency International is calling on Parliament’s Commissioners for Standards to conduct an inquiry into the conduct of MPs’ and Peers’ roles in legitimising the actions of foreign states. The House of Commons’ Commissioner recently found that Ian Paisley MP had failed to declare the full cost of two luxury holidays paid for by the Sri Lankan Government, and later advocated on its behalf to the British Prime Minister.
To show the scale of this problem Transparency International’s new research has used three country case studies to illustrate how UK parliamentarians have supported corrupt and repressive regimes in Azerbaijan, Russia and Bahrain. It finds:
Duncan Hames, Director of Policy at Transparency International UK, said:
“International visits can certainly aid informed parliamentary debate, but when these trips are offered by foreign governments they undermine the independence of those MPs accepting them.
“Citizens abroad have looked on our parliamentarians supporting their oppressors with anger and hostility, damaging the reputation of the UK abroad as a champion of democracy and human rights. Subsequent advocacy legitimising often brutal, repressive and corrupt regimes can leave people there subject to further ill-treatment from emboldened governments, and abandoned in their struggles for justice.”
“It is time to end the discredited practice of our parliamentarians enjoying generous foreign hospitality and recognise the harm this is doing to our democratic system. Our politicians are elected to work on our behalf, not the interests of foreign states who increasingly have subversive desires. Global scandals have exposed the activity of foreign states meddling in the affairs of others and we need to shore up our defences against this sort of activity.”
Transparency International argues that when British parliamentarians are influenced by foreign interests it can:
“In Whose interest” recommends:
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