Well, let's turn our eyes to another intriguing issue, the mystery of the disappearing All-Party Parliamentary Groups. I suppose we'd better start by explaining exactly what an all party parliamentary group or APPG for short actually is.
00:31:50:01 - 00:32:19:11
Yes, it's a cross-party is, it implies All-Party Group of MPs. They're organized in either subjects, somatic subject areas, something that has all party groups on on countries that are all party groups of diseases or different types of camps or particular subject areas, you know, transport airports. Basically, if you've got a policy area or a campaign that you want to push, raise awareness of it.
00:32:19:12 - 00:32:48:13
A good way is an all party parliamentary group in which a number of MPs and peers who are interested in these issues can meet together and discuss the issues. And of course we talked earlier on an earlier episode with Theodora Clark, the Conservative MP who was leading the all party parliamentary group on baby loss. That was a good example of how she used that All-Party Parliamentary Group to raise awareness of the issue and to have an inquiry into some of the policy and legislative changes that are needed.
00:32:48:15 - 00:33:14:04
The other side of the coin, and it's been going for a long time, is criticism that's made of all party parliamentary groups that they are a back route for foreign influence. So foreign countries, foreign states paying for MPs to go on visits to countries, It's actually takes a group of MPs on that on a five star trip to some exotic place and basically, in effect is attempting to buy their goodwill while doing that.
00:33:14:06 - 00:33:30:04
And then, you know, the MPs go back to Westminster. They're very impressed by it all. And they start, you know, they ask questions, helpful, helpful questions. So it's sort of both both a criticism about how it impacts in terms of parliamentary process and their responsibilities. But also this argument that it's a you know, it's all a bit of a jolly.
00:33:30:06 - 00:34:00:05
The other one is that they are a route for corporate influence, that the secretariats that run and organize these All-Party parliamentary groups are often funded by the corporate sector. They are also funded and organized by charities. But the perception is that it's a way for big business to lobby and exercise influence behind the scenes and that there's not enough accountability. So what has happened is that there was a Standards Committee inquiry into All-Party Parliamentary Groups because there was this concern about potential for them being the next big scandal.
00:34:00:07 - 00:34:22:15
New rules have been introduced which came into effect at the end of March. They're about providing more robust transparency requirements, banning overseas funding, trying to reduce the foreign influence so you've got more enhanced financial reporting cracking down on the number of groups that MPs could be a member of because some MPs were signed up to so many so it clearly wasn't a serious endeavour.
00:34:22:17 - 00:34:38:18
They've got to have a minimum number of officers and MPs can only sit in a maximum of six groups in the next Parliament. That rule will come in in the in the next Parliament. They've got to be much more open about their income and their expenditure and who's running the organization and so on. And all this has had a visible effect now.
00:34:38:19 - 00:35:08:13
Yeah. So this is a story that - we should credit to mySociety, which is the organization you may have heard of them they run this the sites They Work For You, Fix My Street, Write To Them, What Do They Know? Those kinds of sort of active citizenship projects that are allied to using technology to help people engage in democracy. And they've been tracking the All-Party Parliamentary Group register and looking at the number of groups that were registered prior to the rule change and those that have registered this month.
00:35:08:13 - 00:35:31:20
And they have found that there's been a 39% reduction in the number of APPGs. So 288 of the 722 that existed last month, 288 of them appear to have disappeared from the register. In a puff of smoke. But the question is, have they disappeared altogether or have they, as it were, gone underground and stopped being formal All-Party Parliamentary Groups
00:35:31:20 - 00:35:56:11
and now they are some sort of slightly loose, nebulous network out there that doesn't fall foul of this regulation. Yeah, and that's something that the investigative journalist Peter Geoghegan has been looking at. Are they in fact taking on a different form? So they're not calling themselves All-Party Parliamentary Groups. They won't be able to use the Portcullis logo that's permitted for APPGs.
00:35:56:13 - 00:36:19:07
But in order to avoid the transparency and accountability that comes with these registration requirements, they're calling themselves something different, like a parliamentary liaison group for example. So he's been tracking, you know, a number of changes where the groups that were APPGs have now rebadged themselves. Now, you mentioned the logo. Are there any other advantages to being a full scale All-Party Parliamentary Group?
00:36:19:07 - 00:36:38:13
Do they, for example, carry some level of parliamentary privilege? I've been to evidence hearings held by All-Party Parliamentary Groups, where the Chair has started off by saying 'Order, Order' for all the world as if this was a select committee or something. Do they actually have some level of privilege so that, for example, people can't be sued for the evidence they give to an All Party Parliamentary Group?
00:36:38:13 - 00:37:07:04
No, I mean. All-Party Parliamentary Groups are not formal parliamentary proceedings, and they're not formal parliamentary bodies or committees. They have the aura of parliamentary authority and are often reported in that way by the media. But not the reality. For example, parliamentary staff, you know, the clerks of the House of Commons and the House of Lords are not involved in organizing and running them, which is why they need the secretariats organized by external bodies to help run them, or as we found with Theodora Clark's baby loss inquiry
00:37:07:09 - 00:37:31:08
they've got their own, effectively their own parliamentary staff, or perhaps working with with a charity. So no, they don't carry the imprimatur of Parliament itself, but a lot is in the name. Yeah, but clearly once these financial transparency and accountability rules are now biting there's a willingness to lose that and rebadge themselves to kind of carry on and exercise the influence and work in a different way.
00:37:31:11 - 00:37:48:06
Well, this is definitely a space that we'll have to watch. Well, let's take a look at some of the things that are coming up in Parliament in either next week or the near future not least the continuing saga of the Rwanda bill. The Rwanda bill has been through the Commons. It's been before the House of Lords.
00:37:48:06 - 00:38:05:24
The House of Lords has made a number of changes the Government doesn't like and the bill's been bouncing back between the Commons and the Lords and the fabled parliamentary ping pong to get them to agree the details and it's due back in front of their Lordships again this week. It is so I mean, first of all, the Commons have got consideration of Lords amendments on Monday for a couple of hours.
00:38:06:04 - 00:38:26:16
Oh, right. So the Commons have still got a round to go. So the expectation is the Government is going to say no to all the Lords amendments. So one assumes it will go back to the Lords, and the Lords will then face a question are they prepared to put back in the amendments or to some form of amendment of their amendments?
00:38:26:18 - 00:38:47:03
You could sometimes offer a slightly watered down version or a differently worded version, so not insisting on precisely the same thing again, but this is quite high powered stuff about, for example, the legal presumption that the government wishes to create that Rwanda is safe and that all sorts of removals from this country can't be challenged on the basis that Rwanda is not safe.
00:38:47:09 - 00:39:05:13
So the Lords want to take out all those rules that foreclose all kinds of challenges to deportations to Rwanda from that. And it may be that the Lords once again put their changes back in, and it has to be, the Bill has to be sent back to the Commons for MPs to take them out again. And it's a matter of who blinks first.
00:39:05:13 - 00:39:40:13
Yeah, and I think a lot is going to depend, as we've discussed previously, on what's the position of the crossbench peers here. Very cross in this case. But do they want to keep to keep pressing and just having another go and see? Well I don't think they're going to get anywhere with the government, but you know, to to try and put the pressure on the clearly digging into the hills in what classically happens on these occasions is that eventually the crossbenchers say, well, we've tried, yeah, and even if the opposition parties are whipping furiously to try and keep the bill in play, eventually the majority to do that dissolves.
00:39:40:15 - 00:39:57:06
And another thing to watch out for is whether some of the Conservative peers who so far haven't shown up to vote for the government line do eventually come in just on the basis of asserting that at some point the unelected chamber has to give way to the elected chamber. And the other thing to keep an eye on, of course, it's the first day back after the recess.
00:39:57:06 - 00:40:18:10
So will there be any ministerial statements? So yeah, will there be anything in terms of there's been some speculation in the media about whether or not the accommodation that's apparently being paid for to to house the asylum seekers and migrants, illegal migrants that the government wants to send to Rwanda, whether in fact those have actually already been allocated by the Rwandan government to some of their own population.
00:40:18:12 - 00:40:36:08
So possible ministerial statement or urgent question on that. But another thing to keep an eye on is the Public Accounts Committee on Monday has got the Home Office permanent secretary and some of the other Home Office officials back in front them to discuss asylum accommodation. And the UK Rwanda partnership have had a pretty rough handling from the Public Accounts Committee before.
00:40:36:09 - 00:40:57:02
They have and we've discussed on on the pod before that Rycroft, the permanent secretary at the Home Office, has had a very rough ride. I suspect we'll get exactly the same again. These questions about what's happening with Rwanda, accommodation will be discussed. Does anything emerge from that hearing that will play into this wider debate during ping pong in the Commons?
00:40:57:02 - 00:41:14:08
and lords. We'll have to have to keep an eye out.