Alan and Ann Keen claimed money from second home allowance to which they were not entitled

The Labour MPs Alan and Ann Keen, below, were yesterday ordered to repay £1,500 after breaking the rules over second home allowances.The Commons standards and privileges committee said the couple had claimed money from the second home allowance to which they were not entitled because their main home was empty and uninhabitable.

But the committee said that they should not have to repay all the money they were deemed to have wrongly claimed because the Commons authorities told them twice their arrangements were acceptable.

In a report, the committee also said the pair had been the victims of “malign and sometimes false” reporting in the media.

The Keens started renovating their Brentford home in May 2008. They then lived mainly in their central London flat, which was funded by the second home allowance. In December 2008 they had their Brentford home boarded up. They did not stay overnight again until October 2009 and in the summer of 2009, after press coverage of their case, squatters moved in.

John Lyon, the parliamentary commissioner for standards, launched an inquiry into a complaint that they continued to claim the second home allowance when their central London property had in effect become their main home.

Lyon said that, even though the Commons authorities approved the claims, the Keens were ultimately responsible for what they did and that they had committed “a serious misjudgment”.

The committee said they should have stopped claiming the second home allowance between June and October 2009 and received £5,678 too much. But they only have to repay £1,500 due to “exceptional factors” . Responding to the report, the Keens said: “We accept in full the verdict of the committee, and are grateful that the members acknowledge the strong mitigating circumstances in our case.”


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds



Related articles

  • MPs on expenses charges cite parliamentary privilege
    Labour MPs and Tory peer plead not guilty and say workings of parliament should be dealt with by parliamentThree Labour MPs and a Conservative peer charged with theft over their expenses claims are to fight to keep their cases out of the criminal courts by attempting to invoke a 320-year-old law protecting them under parliamentary privilege.Elliot Morley, David Chaytor, Jim Devine and Lord Hanning...
  • Harry Cohen under investigation over MPs’ expenses
    Investigations will focus on how the MP, who is standing down at the general election, wrongly claimed the second-home allowance for four yearsPolice have launched an investigation into the expenses claims of the Labour MP Harry Cohen who received more than £70,000 in a second home allowance for a house he rarely visited, it was reported last night.Cohen, who was severely criticised last month for...
  • Letters: Fear and loathing in New Labour
    In light of the articles by Simon Jenkins (The bankers lied. And Darling, merely a puppet on their string, knows it, 12 March) and Mehdi Hasan (It's defeatist nonsense to talk of a crisis of leftwing thinking, 12 March), it seems evident that there is the need for a rearticulating of the political discourse. The hegemony of neoliberal thinking has defined the political space for 30 years, so much ...
  • View from the marginals: volunteer Davids get set to do battle with well-heeled Goliaths
    If Labour has given up on some of its marginal seats, as some say, then nobody has told EdgbastonThe Birmingham Edgbaston Labour office is a place kept cosy by conviction – and a small heater. Four of the volunteers are still wearing their coats. Caroline Badley, the enthusiastic campaign coordinator, who is also a volunteer, is even wearing a woolly hat. Two young men are stuffing envelopes, anot...
  • Labour peer Lady Uddin will not face prosecution over expenses
    Labour peer was investigated over claims that she was paid expenses on a flat in Kent that had been unoccupied for yearsLady Uddin, the Labour peer accused of claiming more than £100,000 in expenses for a flat she did not live in, will not face any criminal charges, the Crown Prosecution Service confirmed today.The Labour peer was investigated over claims that she was paid expenses on a flat in Ke...
  • Tories boycott Commons inquiry into Ashcroft peerage
    Three Conservative committee members walk out claiming inquiry is pursuing Labour vendettaA Westminster inquiry into the row over Lord Ashcroft's peerage was thrown into turmoil when the Tory MPs on the committee walked out and said they were boycotting it permanently.In what is understood to be an unprecedented move, Conservative members have withdrawn from the public administration select commit...
  • Labour MPs Alan and Ann Keen ordered to repay £1,500 in expenses
    Watchdog says couple claimed money from the second home allowance to which they were not entitled because their central London property had in effect become their main homeThe Labour MPs Alan and Ann Keen were today ordered to repay £1,500 after an investigation found that they had broken Commons rules in relation to second home expenses.The Commons standards and privileges committee said that the...