Parliamentary Commissioner For Standards - History

History

The post was established in 1995 with Sir Gordon Downey as the first Commissioner, serving the newly formed Committee for Standards and Privileges. He investigated the Cash-for-questions affair.

The second Commissioner was Elizabeth Filkin (1999–2002), whose first case involved Peter Mandelson and a large loan which he had failed to declare in the Register of Members' Interests. Her departure was controversial, with some people, notably Peter Oborne, claiming that high-profile MPs had effectively forced her out because they did not not like her investigating them, although her job required it.

The next Commissioner was Sir Philip Mawer. MPs he investigated include George Galloway and Derek Conway. He avoided investigating high-level MPs such as cabinet ministers. Unlike his predecessor he was appointed to a second term, but he did not complete it, as he took up a new post at the beginning of 2008 as an independent adviser on Ministerial Standards to Gordon Brown.

John Lyon, CB, was Commissioner from 1 January 2008 to 31 December 2012. In an article about John Lyon's questioning by the parliamentary enquiry into MPs' expenses, Private Eye described him as 'feeble' and an 'establishment stooge'.

Kathryn Hudson was appointed in September 2012 to serve as Commissioner from 1 January 2013 for a non-renewable five-year term.

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