Commons committee wants tighter rules for MP gift, travel disclosures
Suggestions come amid intense scrutiny of questionable spending by senators
Members of Parliament would have to disclose more about gifts they receive and the sponsored trips they take under new recommendations from a House of Commons committee.
The committee on procedure and House affairs urges a tightening of the conflict of interest code for MPs to increase transparency — suggestions that come amid intense scrutiny of questionable spending by senators.
- Auditor General Michael Ferguson willing to audit MP expenses
- Ethics watchdog tries again to get MPs to limit their gift bags, travel junkets
Federal conflict of interest and ethics commissioner Mary Dawson carries out confidential investigations of complaints against MPs alleged to have breached the code.
The code prohibits MPs from accepting gifts unless they are routine expressions of hospitality or protocol.
Even then, any acceptable gift worth more than $500 must be publicly disclosed — a value the committee recommends be lowered to $200.
In addition, the committee says any outside contributions above the gift threshold to an MP's travel should also be publicly revealed — a move that would toughen the current reporting standard.