UK parliamentary speaker to step down over scandal

LONDON, (Reuters) – The speaker of Britain’s lower  house said yesterday he would step down after lawmakers from  all the main parties demanded he resign over an expenses scandal  that has tarnished the reputation of parliament.
  
Michael Martin, 63, became the most senior figure to step  down after parliamentarians’ expense claims for everything from  manure to porn films triggered outrage across recession-hit  Britain and opposition calls for an early general election.
  
Prime Minister Gordon Brown said an early election would not  solve the expenses scandal and called for independent oversight  of lawmakers’ pay and expenses in a major break with  parliament’s centuries-old tradition of self-regulation.
  
The government and opposition parties agreed to curb the  worst abuses of the system, saying there would be no more claims  for furniture and appliances, home improvements and gardening.  
“Westminster (parliament) cannot operate like some  gentlemen’s club where the members make up the rules and operate  them among themselves,” Brown told a news conference.  
He insisted the expenses scandal was not diverting him from  tackling Britain’s worst recession since World War Two.
  
“The economic work and all the other work of the government  goes forward. We’re absolutely determined to move this country  quickly out of recession,” he said.
  
Martin, a former metalworker, faced intense pressure to  resign from lawmakers who saw him as an obstacle to reform.
  
In extraordinary scenes on Monday, members of parliament  (MPs) called for him to go and he faced a no-confidence motion  signed by 23 MPs from all major parties. 
 
“In order that unity can be maintained, I have decided that  I will relinquish the office of speaker on Sunday, June 21,”  Martin said in a short statement to a packed parliament. 
 
The last speaker forced from the post was John Trevor, who  lost the confidence of the house in 1695 for taking a bribe.
  
Parliament will elect a new speaker — who could come from  any of the major parties — by secret ballot on June 22. 
 
The speaker is parliament’s most senior official and his  departure escalates the crisis engulfing British politics. 
 
Martin will step down as a lawmaker, triggering a  by-election in his Glasgow North East constituency that may pose  a headache for Brown given the unpopularity of his Labour Party.  
Conservative opposition leader David Cameron, well ahead of  Labour in opinion polls before a parliamentary election due by  June 2010, called for an early general election to allow people  to “pass judgment on their politicians.”  

Brown said an early general election was not the answer.
“Those people who somehow believe that this can be  sorted  out just by a few names changing on a few name plates are  wrong,” he said.  
Brown said lawmakers should submit expenses to an  independent body, rather than parliament. No Labour candidate  would be allowed to stand for election if they broke the rules.  
Brown, Cameron and other party leaders agreed on Tuesday to  impose strict curbs on expenses until an in-depth review of the  system is completed later this year, Martin told parliament.  
Lawmakers would only be able to claim rent, mortgage  interest and utility bills for their second homes in future,  preventing them charging the taxpayer for items such as cleaning swimming pools or repairing tennis courts.
The past four years of claims will be reviewed.  Parliamentary officials will refuse any future claim they think  is unreasonable and publish approved payments online.  
Parliament has been damaged by a series of reports in the  Daily Telegraph newspaper based on leaked information on how  members milked the expenses system to supplement an annual  salary of around 65,000 pounds ($100,700).  
In a rebuff to parliamentary officials who alerted police to  the leak, police said on Tuesday they would not investigate.  
The scandal has damaged all the main political parties but  is hitting Labour hardest after 12 years in power. It may boost  fringe parties at June 4 local and European elections.