Wednesday, September 12, 2012
How a new whip saved a new minister from an embarrassing rebellion
It was not the ideal first outing for a new minister at a committee
approving new legislation. Justice Minister Helen Grant arrived at the
committee considering two compensation schemes last night to discover
Conservative backbenchers in uproar. None of the MPs had been able to
get their hands on the explanatory notes for the legislation, which
covers the Victims of Overseas Terrorism Compensation Scheme 2012 and
the Criminal Injuries Compensation Scheme 2012. So they did not know,
until they arrived at the evening meeting, that they would be expected
to approve sweeping cuts to compensation for postmen attacked by
dangerous dogs and other victims of crime.
Four Conservative MPs –
John Redwood, Angie Bray, Jonathan Evans and Bob Blackman – started
whispering in horror when they saw what they would be asked to vote on.
Redwood, not the most reluctant when it comes to cutting spending, told
the group he hadn’t come into politics to cut compensation for victims
of crime. When MPs from such opposite ends of the Conservative party as
Jonathan Evans and John Redwood unite on an issue, it’s clear trouble is
brewing, and the whip attending the session, David Evennett, realised
this. He began to pop in and out of the meeting as the MPs demanded some
indications that there would be mitigation for these cuts. Eventually,
he announced that these proposals were going to go back to the Ministry
of Justice for further consideration.
Evennett is one of the new
whips appointed in last week’s reshuffle, but he’s not new to the job:
he served as an opposition whip between 2005 and 2009. One of the MPs
who was there last night tells me that ‘it was lucky we had a whip who
knew what he was doing there: anyone new would have been like a rabbit
in headlights’.
The coverage
of last night’s change of heart quotes a spokesman from the MoJ saying:
‘We have listened to the views expressed in parliament and will now
consider our next steps.’ It’s just as well Evennett was listening to
the views being whispered in the committee, too, otherwise Helen Grant
would have had a very unpleasant introduction to her new job indeed.
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