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Question put and agreed to.

Bill ordered to be brought in by Mr. Michael Foster, Peter Bradley, Mr. Alan Campbell, Mrs. Janet Dean, Mr. Parmjit Dhanda, Mr. David Drew and Mr. James Plaskitt.


Buses (Concessionary Fares)

Mr. Michael Foster accordingly presented a Bill to make provision about concessionary fares on buses for elderly person: And the same was read the First time; and ordered to be read a Second time on Friday 15 October, and to be printed [Bill 133].


 
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Business of the House

Motion made, and Question proposed,

1.24 pm

Mr. Eric Forth (Bromley and Chislehurst) (Con): Here we have a piece of business that, I am very happy to see from the Order Paper, can take us through until 7 o'clock this evening. Given the importance of the matter, we may want to take up most of that time, although sadly—not untypically but sadly—the Minister has not seen fit to share with us her view of why the motion is necessary. When we have a motion such as this, which the Order Paper rightly allows us until 7 o'clock to debate, rather too frequently the Minister does not even do the House the courtesy of explaining why it is before us. That puts us at something of a disadvantage. We may have to spend some time speculating as to why the motion is on the Order Paper, because the Minister has not seen fit to tell us. At some stage—who knows?—Ministers may learn that, if they were to do us the simple courtesy of explaining what such motions meant and what their intentions were, the subsequent debate could be correspondingly briefer, but sadly, since the Minister has not sought to catch your eye, Mr. Deputy Speaker, we will have to spend a bit of time speculating as to what it is all about.

I was able to do a modest bit of research on the motion, with, as usual, the help of the Table Office. It was pointed out that the matter is referred to in page 855 of the brand spanking new 23rd edition of "Erskine May", which I strongly recommend to the House. Page 855 refers to

May I quote briefly from that part of "Erskine May", which sets the context for the debate that will follow and that can run until 7 o'clock? It states that

That is on the face of it an explanation of why we have the motion before us. "Erskine May" goes on to say, in its ever helpful way:

In a nutshell, there has been a sad decline in both the ability and, one has to say, the willingness of the House to take these matters as seriously as it should. Ways and Means resolutions have a long history and they usually indicate, or should indicate, that some serious matters are being dealt with. We only have to glance at the Order Paper to see that, following this business, we have three Ways and Means motions—items four, five and six, to which I shall refer in more detail in a moment.

I assume—the Minister may give us some guidance on this, if she bothers at any stage in the debate to reveal her thinking—that, if we were not to pass the business of the House motion, either none or only one of the following Ways and Means motions could be taken today. I assume that the Government have speculatively, in their
 
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usual pushy and presumptive way, put three Ways and Means motions on today's Order Paper, truncated as the debates on them are to 45 minutes—I will refer to that in a moment, too—and that that is contingent on our approving item three.

One is left to speculate. Were we not to pass the business of the House motion—I ask the House seriously to consider not approving it—could only the first Ways and Means motion be taken today? Would one of the three be taken? Could the Minister pick and choose and suggest which one should be taken before we get on to the Finance Bill itself, about which I will also say a word in a moment? That is the first point at issue.

I have been guided by "Erskine May" as to the context of the motion. It indicates that, historically, the House of Commons has always wished to be able to dwell on these financial matters at proper length and in proper detail, which is entirely appropriate because, as we know, historically, one of the main roles of the House has been to represent the taxpayer vis-à-vis the Government of the day and to give proper and serious consideration to matters arising from both taxation and expenditure, which is the whole point of Ways and Means.

Of course, we have before us three Ways and Means motions, although speculatively so, because until we determine the business motion under discussion, we will not know which of those motions we will discuss, or whether we will be able do so. The first is headed, "Rent factoring of leases of plant or machinery", and states:

That strikes me as a matter of some substance and importance, which the House might want to dwell on. Sadly, however, we are constrained to a mere 45 minutes in which to debate it in its totality. That fact alone ought to concern the House considerably.

It appears that the Government want us then to move on rapidly, and to consider motion 5, on "Manufactured dividends and interest". It states:

I assume that my hon. Friends on the Front Bench are champing at the bit to get stuck into these very important matters, and they doubtless have a lot to say about them. But sadly, the House—never mind my hon. Friends—will be allowed only 45 minutes in which to debate them, before it will then perforce be asked by the Government to move on to yet another Ways and Means motion, which is headed, "Gifts etc. of shares, securities or real property to charities". It states:

I do not want to attempt at this stage to go into the detail of these Ways and Means motions, and you would not want me to do so, Mr. Deputy Speaker. Such a discussion awaits a later point in the day—perhaps after 7 o'clock this evening. Bearing it in mind that this debate, quite properly, can take us through until 7 o'clock, my hon. Friends might be able to go off and have lunch, afternoon tea and perhaps an early supper
 
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before they even have a chance to debate the three motions—or perhaps only one of them, should we fail to agree to the motion before us.

I wanted to mention that point to give the House some idea of the way in which we are being asked to consider these important Ways and Means motions. We are being given only 45 minutes to discuss each of them, which is a sad reflection on the extent to which the Government now say to the House of Commons, "Never mind your historic role in protecting the taxpayer, and in overseeing expenditure through Ways and Means resolutions; we are giving you only 45 minutes in which to debate each of these very important financial matters." That is to say nothing of what follows.

We should remember the context as indicated in "Erskine May", which states

That statement is made a nonsense of when we come to the Finance Bill proper, following these Ways and Means motions. On glancing at today's selection list, I see that there are no fewer than 21 groups of amendments and new clauses, of which 14 contain Government amendments and new clauses. They cover matters as vital as anti-avoidance, gifts to charities, overseas pension schemes, stamp duty land tax, disabled persons, individual savings accounts and personal equity plans, and fuel duty, to mention but a few.

The House is faced with the potential for debating a very wide variety of matters, contingent on the motion that we are considering. So we have to ask ourselves whether we are content with the motion before us, which contains the phrase,

In the good old days, the House was able properly to pause between considering such very important matters, to take time for reflection and perhaps for consultation with legitimate outside interests, and to give an opportunity for amendments to be considered. Now, of course, the Government—who are contemptuous, as ever, sadly, of the role of the House of Commons in these matters—want simply to steamroller us through all these motions in very quick succession if, and only if, we agree to the business motion.

It surely would have helped us in considering this motion if the Minister had done us the courtesy of first explaining why we have to compress these matters in the way suggested in the motion. Given that our business here is conducted in the full gaze of the public, I doubt whether I am giving away a great secret by pointing out that a mere glance at the Order Papers of the past few weeks reveals that we are not exactly being hard pressed in terms of the business before us; indeed, the same is true of Order Papers for the weeks to come. The Government's legislative programme seems almost to have dried up, and we have a succession of Adjournment debates. Very welcome such debates may be, but that does not suggest to me that there is enormous pressure on the House's time or on legislative time—quite the opposite.
 
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It was surely incumbent on Ministers at the very least to explain to us why, under the terms of the motion before us, they want to compress the business in this way. There is surely ample time and opportunity, given the totality of the Order Papers for this and succeeding weeks, to consider these matters in the traditional way—


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