Moran's claims for expenses 2004–05 were £73,198, higher than those of
Luton North MP
Kelvin Hopkins. However, it was not until May 2009 that the full details of her claims were revealed. These caused Moran to announce she would not stand in the
2010 general election, and she was later barred from doing so by the
National Executive Committee of the Labour Party. Speaking in Parliament, the then Prime Minister
Gordon Brown described Moran's behaviour as "totally unacceptable".
Unsolicited mail and stationery costs Moran had particularly high spending on stationery and postage and on staff costs. The regulations have since changed and there is now a limit on the postage costs an MP can claim for.
Second home allowance On 8 May 2009,
The Daily Telegraph revealed Moran spent £22,500 of taxpayers' money treating
dry rot at her and her partner's seaside house in
Southampton, about 100 miles from her Luton South constituency, only days after switching her "second home" to his Southampton property. The
Telegraph said the expenses "appear to be among the most questionable of any MP," and the
BBC said the claims caused "widespread public anger". Moran had previously switched her second-home allowance from Luton to London and renovated both. On 10 May 2009, she defended her expenses claim in an interview with
Andrew Sinclair on the BBC's
Politics Show, saying she had kept to the rules. According to Moran, "You could argue that I use it to be able to sustain my work. Any MP has to have a proper family life, they have to have support of their partner." On 12 May, just two days after defending using taxpayers' money on her third home, she agreed to repay it, albeit in instalments. In a statement she asserted: "I do understand constituents' anger at the current fees regime, which is why I will be repaying the full amount claimed for my home in Southampton." Despite the repayment, Moran has refused to apologise for her actions and still claims to have done nothing wrong. Moran's local constituency party backed her following revelations over her claims,
Other expense claims On 14 May,
The Daily Telegraph reported that Moran had billed the taxpayer almost £4,000 in respect of an employment tribunal case brought by a former member of her staff. The House of Commons fees office agreed that the bill could be paid out of her staffing budget.
Outcomes On 18 May 2009, television presenter
Esther Rantzen announced that she would stand against Moran in Luton South as an "anti-sleaze" candidate. Rantzen launched her campaign in July 2009, but lost her deposit in the 2010 general election. On 28 May 2009, Moran announced that she would not stand at the forthcoming general election, citing the "bruising effect upon my friends, my family and my health." Subsequently, she was barred from standing in the next general election by a disciplinary panel of the Labour Party. In November 2009, Moran's local newspaper,
Luton & Dunstable Express, launched a "Get Moran Out Now" campaign on its front page. It called for her to resign immediately rather than continuing to claim expenses and receiving a big payoff and large pension by remaining in her seat until the general election. The newspaper was critical of Moran's failure to apologise or explain her conduct to her constituents, saying that she had "behaved disgracefully" and had "fleeced taxpayers quite enough". In December 2009,
Gavin Shuker was selected as the Labour candidate to replace Moran and retained the seat in the general election. He has said that her various expense claims could not be defended.
The Guardian named Moran as one of the newsmakers of the year as a result of her role in the expenses scandal. After the expense revelations broke, Moran stopped attending Parliament claiming that the stress of the expenses scandal had worsened an existing medical condition. Liberal Democrat candidate
Qurban Hussain suggested she had gone into hiding, "leaving her constituents completely unrepresented while continuing to draw her generous salary".
Prosecution On 6 September 2011, the
Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) announced that Moran would face 21 criminal charges: 15 of false accounting and six of forgery. She was summoned to appear at
Westminster Magistrates' Court on 19 September 2011 where she was reported to have wept throughout the hearing. Moran was sent to
Southwark Crown Court for trial on 30 October 2011; she failed to appear and a 'not guilty' plea was entered by default in her absence. A date for the trial of an issue was set for 18 April with a directions hearing set for 15 December. On 15 December 2011, Mr Justice Saunders was informed that psychiatrists considered Moran unfit to plead with the defence contending that the trial should therefore not proceed. In April 2012, after receiving evidence from a number of psychiatrists, the judge determined that Moran was not
fit to plead in person—the proceedings were allowed to proceed in her absence. On 13 November 2012, the trial jury found she had committed the acts alleged.
Attempt to remove expenses scandal from Wikipedia page In 2010 it was reported by
the Daily Telegraph that an
IP address associated with the
Parliamentary estate had been discovered attempting to remove information on Margaret Moran's role in the expenses scandal from her Wikipedia page. As the edits were made from a parliamentary computer, the user received a warning from
Wikipedia. ==
Dispatches lobbyist investigation==