Stuart Bonar

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Which Books Have MPs Made You Buy Them?

Posted: 13/02/2012 00:00

One of the perks of being an MP is access to a wonderful private library: the House of Commons Library. I guess it is kind of like the London Library, but open only to MPs and without the membership fee. Part of what the Library offers is a team of experts on a vast range of subjects. These experts produce research papers on subjects like the military balance in southeast Asia and shorter notes on things like biometric passports.

I know from working in Parliament in the past that MPs can ask for the Library to buy books they are interested in reading. So, curious to know which books MPs have been asking us, as taxpayers, to buy for them, I lodged a Freedom of Information Act request. I wanted to know which books have been requested, and which of those requests have been accepted and which turned down.

I got hold of the list last November and at that point the Library had since the 2010 General Election bought, following requests from MPs, almost 150 books at a cost approaching £3,000. Many of the books - like, say, The Afghan Solution - are perfectly understandable purchases. Some books we've bought MPs however are arguably a little less justifiable.

Did we, for example, need to buy this book on seaplanes from the 1920s to the 1950s? Did we need to shell out almost £65 on The Parliamentary Career of Charles De Laet Waldo Sibthorp, 1826-1855? Or what about this (what looks, to me at least, like an insufferably dull autobiography from a cousin of the Queen)?

The UK's national debt reportedly topped £1 trillion in December, and even now the government continues to spend more money each year than it's bringing in. In other words, there's no spare cash, so we're putting these books on the nation's credit card. We're kind of entitled to ask why.

Several of the books - like this one, this one, and this one - have actually been written by current, serving MPs. Although I have no evidence to suggest they might have done so, I wanted to check to see if any of these purchases had followed a request from one of the MPs who'd written the requested book (a nice way to boost sales a little), but the Commons saw fit to refuse to tell me which MPs had requested which books. Apparently, despite asking us as taxpayers to shell out to buy them books they could buy themselves they're entitled to have their names kept secret.

You would have thought with the expenses scandal and all, the Commons would have learnt to be more open. Sadly not as open as I think they should be.

There is nothing wrong with MPs having access to top-notch information and advice on the big - or even small - issues of the day. That's a good thing, and doubly good that the research papers and shorter notes they have access to are also put on the Parliament website for any interested person to read and use.

When it comes to them asking us, as taxpayers, to dip into our pockets to buy them books however, I believe that the criteria for what's bought and what isn't should be tightened up. By my reckoning, 98 per cent of requests by MPs for the taxpayer to buy a new book for the Library were accepted in the period for which I have figures. The inclusion in that of books about seaplanes from almost a century ago, biographies of obscure parliamentarians from previous centuries (especially when that book cost the equivalent of the VAT added to the price of a 42" Panasonic Viera full HD LCD TV), and dreary memoirs of peripheral members of the royal family (okay, I haven't read the book, but I am sure I'd find it dreary) illustrates the need for change.

This information proves two things to me. That whilst the amounts of public expenditure here are small - admittedly, they are tiny - there needs to be much more discipline over discretionary spending of public money, however modest the amount. After all, if you take care of the pennies, the pounds will take care of themselves. There should also be much more openness; why shouldn't we know which MP asked the taxpayer to buy a book on old seaplanes? Why is that MP entitled to have her or his name kept from the public?

Much more needs to be done in this country before openness and transparency are the norm. In the meantime, let's keep up the pressure.

 

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One of the perks of being an MP is access to a wonderful private library: the House of Commons Library. I guess it is kind of like the London Library, but open only to MPs and without the membership f...
One of the perks of being an MP is access to a wonderful private library: the House of Commons Library. I guess it is kind of like the London Library, but open only to MPs and without the membership f...
 
 
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sabelmouse
my micro bio is emty
14:59 on 14/02/2012
Which Books Have MPs Made You Buy Them?

i don't understand the question. that sentence makes no sense to me.
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15:19 on 14/02/2012
Yeah, that confuddled me too. All becomes clear after a couple of paragraphs though.

"So, curious to know which books MPs have been asking us, as taxpayers, to buy for them, I lodged a Freedom of Information Act request. I wanted to know which books have been requested, and which of those requests have been accepted and which turned down."

So, MPs have been requesting particular books and billing the taxpayer. Stuart decided to find out what they were.
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sabelmouse
my micro bio is emty
17:58 on 14/02/2012
thank you. i see now. i didn't bother with the article. i was so mad at that sentence.
20:15 on 13/02/2012
Good points. Thanks for that.
14:56 on 13/02/2012
I assume this will be one library that will not close due to cutbacks?
14:20 on 13/02/2012
Boy, you really do need to look around you. This rates as lower than one out of a hundred on the 'do I give a shit?' scale. Please save your Freedom Of Information requests (they cost to process y'know) for something with at least a hint of importance.
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15:38 on 14/02/2012
MPs spending three thousand quid on books in a year at the taxpayer's expense isn't worth investigating?
00:29 on 15/02/2012
I simply find it incredible that given the wealth of material available to and investigative journalist he choses something so trivial, especially as the majority of the sum involved is probably legit enough. A single MP's lunch expense bill per week probably amounts to much the same. There are so many bigger fish and £3000/year doesn't even register on the rip-off scale in the current political/economic climate. Maybe start at the top and work down?
13:43 on 13/02/2012
How much did this FOIA request cost us, the tax payers, to process? I know as a LibDem you care little for us but please be more careful in wasting our money in such a hypocritical fashion.
14:10 on 13/02/2012
I believe this information - and much else - should be published as a matter of course, which wouldn't require we to ask in the first place. The logical extension of your argument is that we should get rid of Parliament as that just wastes money on people scrutinising the work of the Government, and what about those expensive elections, maybe you think we should get rid of those too? Scrutiny, openness, transparency save money in the long term by embarrassing those who waste money.
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15:39 on 14/02/2012
Expenses are all computerized, so it doesn't really cost very much at all.
13:21 on 13/02/2012
What a terribly phrased and nonsensical headline. And what on earth is that apostrophe doing there?

And MPs aren't asking 'us' 'the taxpayers' to buy these books. Do they 'ask us' to buy them lunch every day at 12.30pm? Because the parliamentary canteen is subsidised you know?

No wonder the Liberal Democrats are so ineffective. What a waste of the Parliamentary Library's time to have to respond to inane and juvenile Freedom of Information requests like this.
11:50 on 13/02/2012
£3,000 shared between 60 million taxpayers is 0.005p each, or 1p for every 200 people.

And of that £3,000 you even agree that many of the books are relevant.

I'm struggling to muster up any kind of outrage here.
12:34 on 13/02/2012
An attitude you no doubt share with a great many people who spent £1000s in public money on stuff that's not needed without giving it a second thought. Extrapolated out across the entire public sector (beyond just one library) and over a number of years that's probably a big part of why we're in the hole we're in.
13:50 on 13/02/2012
As soon as I read 'extrapolate' I read, 'this person has no idea what they are talking about'.

The 'hole' is to do with a financial crisis not public sector mismanagement as the Tories, and it would seem the Lib Dems now, would have us believe.

Do you know what the cost of fulfilling your FOI request is?
10:08 on 13/02/2012
Anything, anything, anything but finding out who caused this meltdown.
08:08 on 13/02/2012
I clicked the article expecting a list of novels or other frivilous books. It seems just because you personally find them boring or not useful they are a waste of money? Hardly a scandle.
09:27 on 13/02/2012
I do think it's a waste of money, yes, but where exactly do I say this is a scandal? You're criticising me for making an accusation I didn't make.

That said, I think that books MPs ask taxpayers to pay for need to be relevant to their work, and I am not sure some of them are. #justsaying
18:47 on 13/02/2012
I think these books should come out of MP's £60,000 pocket money. Has anyone done any research into how much money a private individual would have to earn in order to live like an MP? Allowances, free office space, free stationery, free telephone calls, i-Pads, subsidised meals and bars, gold-plated bullet proof pensions, a pay-off when they lose their seats. Life really is too easy for these wasters, some of whom treat being a parliamentarian as a part time job.