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LORD WEDDERBURN, who has been a Labour peer for nearly 30 years, has left the
party benches in protest at Tony Blair’s policies and allegations of cash
for honours.
Wedderburn, a renowned legal expert, has written to Lord Grocott, Labour’s
chief whip in the Lords, saying he can no longer support the party’s
policies and “malodorous practices”.
He is now sitting on the cross-benches, where peers vote and speak entirely
independently. He says the undermining of civil liberties with
anti-terrorism legislation and the decision to invade Iraq contributed to
his decision, but the allegations of cash for honours was the “breaking
point”.
“I can’t follow the whip of people who approve of all that,” he said last
week. “I don’t know whether or not the government has behaved illegally, but
it has created a stench in politics. People are looking at the Lords and are
saying, ‘What the hell is going on?’ “I was in hospital over the summer and
a nurse asked me how I got my title and then she giggled. It made me realise
how many people now see the house.”
Wedderburn said that even before the secret loans scheme was revealed by The
Sunday Times in March this year, he was concerned businessmen were being
given peerages after making large donations to Labour.
He said he did not understand why Lord Drayson, a businessman and Labour
donor, was made a peer and given a job as a defence minister. “There are
people in the House of Lords who find it quite preposterous,” he said.
Drayson was however described as “a man of ability” by Blair aides when he was
made a minister.
Wedderburn said he was also opposed to the undermining of civil liberties with
anti-terror laws and the invasion of Iraq. “Now not even the generals will
defend it. We all know what skulduggery went on with the dodgy dossiers and
Blair was personally involved in that,” he said.
Wedderburn, who has been a member of the Labour party since 1946, says he will
retain his party membership. He promises to fight any attempt to expel him.
“If they try to expel me, they will have a long haul and anyway Blair is
finished,” he said.
Wedderburn is a former professor of commercial law at the London School of
Economics and was employment spokesman for the Labour party for 13 years. He
has taught some of the country’s leading lawyers, including Lord Irvine, the
former lord chancellor.
Detectives are still investigating whether Labour broke any laws in secretly
obtaining loans from 12 businessmen, four of whom were subsequently
nominated for peerages. Blair is waiting to hear whether he will be
interviewed under caution.
It was reported last night that police have discussed with the Crown
Prosecution Service whether any of the suspects in the scandal may be liable
to prosecution for false accounting as well as whether they may have
breached electoral laws or the law against selling honours.
When the prime minister was forced to admit the loans operation, he pledged a
review of party funding. However, The Sunday Times has established that one
of the 12 lenders, Sir David Garrard, has lent the party a further £300,000.
When Labour detailed the loans it had obtained in March 2005, Garrard was
revealed to have lent £2.3m. Electoral Commission documents, however, show
he has since lent the additional money.
Both of his loans are due to be paid back in 2007. Other lenders, like
Garrard, have agreed to extend their loans but there is concern that the
funds might be demanded back if Gordon Brown succeeds Blair.
Sir Hayden Phillips, who was asked by Blair to review political funding, is
expected to publish a preliminary report this week. It is likely to set out
options for wider state funding of parties and possible restrictions on the
size of donations.
Phillips is also expected to propose tougher powers for the party funding
watchdog. Last month he told MPs he believed a more “proactive” and “nimble”
Electoral Commission with the ability to intervene earlier might have
prevented the current crisis. He said the commission had wind of the
parties’ decision to accept large loans, which did not have to be declared,
but it did not act until the scandal became public.
The Commons public administration committee has recommended any honours list
that Blair draws up before leaving office should be vetted by the Lords
appointments commission. It is understood Downing Street has already agreed
to this.
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