Difference between revisions of "Claire Bassett"
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===Call for her to resign=== | ===Call for her to resign=== | ||
− | On 10 May 2017, Conservative [https://twitter.com/karlmccartney Karl McCartney,] who was seeking re-election | + | On 10 May 2017, the [[Crown Prosecution Service]] announced that no criminal charges would be brought against more than 20 Conservative MPs over the national party’s failure to accurately declare campaign spending on a battlebus tour at the 2015 General Election. One of the MPs under investigation, Conservative [https://twitter.com/karlmccartney Karl McCartney,] who was seeking re-election for Lincoln at the [[UK/2017 General Election]] said the [[Electoral Commission]]’s Chief Executive, Claire Bassett, and her senior management team should resign. If they don’t, Tory MPs after the election will urge the government “to abolish this incompetent organisation”, he said in a statement.<ref>''[https://twitter.com/MrHarryCole/status/862246282550706176 "First call for boss of EC to resign from @karlmccartney"]''</ref> |
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+ | Opposition politicians said the Tories still had questions to answer. Labour leader [[Jeremy Corbyn]] said he was “interested and surprised”. He said the [[Electoral Commission]] and the [[CPS]] were independent, but election laws “must be enforced so that money can’t buy power”.<ref>''[https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2017/may/10/no-conservative-election-expenses-charges-from-14-police-force-inquiries "Tory candidates did nothing wrong on election expenses, May claims"]''</ref> | ||
===Ensuring transparency=== | ===Ensuring transparency=== |
Revision as of 14:49, 10 May 2020
Claire Bassett | |
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Alma mater | Cardiff University |
Member of | Trade Remedies Authority |
Claire Bassett is CEO of Britain’s post-Brexit trade defence agency, the Trade Remedies Authority,[1] which is based in Reading and was created to protect British industry from unfair trading practices after the UK leaves the EU.[2]
Contents
Fining the Conservatives
During Claire Bassett's three year stint as CEO of the Electoral Commission, the regulator contended with the growth of online campaigning, investigated pro-Brexit campaigns for breaking electoral law and fined the Conservatives for busting spending limits in the 2015 General Election.[3] Under her watch, the Electoral Commission warned that British democracy “may be under threat” and called for a raft of new legislation to clarify who is paying for online political campaign material, set new restrictions on who can give to political causes, and substantially increase the level of fines against campaigns that break the law.[4]
The Commission came under scrutiny for the way it dealt with claims of overspending during the 2016 EU Referendum. Following several lengthy investigations, it concluded in the summer of 2018 – almost two years after the vote – that both Leave.EU[5] and Vote Leave had broken electoral law.[6]
The Commission issued fines and reported individuals to the police for further investigation, but Bassett had already said that the maximum £20,000 fine available to her organisation, set by Parliament, meant the penalties imposed were seen by campaigns as a “cost of doing business”.[7]
Both pro-Brexit campaigns accused the Commission of bias and politicising what until recently had been an important but largely obscure organisation. Leave.EU’s Arron Banks described it as a “Blairite swamp creation”.
Call for her to resign
On 10 May 2017, the Crown Prosecution Service announced that no criminal charges would be brought against more than 20 Conservative MPs over the national party’s failure to accurately declare campaign spending on a battlebus tour at the 2015 General Election. One of the MPs under investigation, Conservative Karl McCartney, who was seeking re-election for Lincoln at the UK/2017 General Election said the Electoral Commission’s Chief Executive, Claire Bassett, and her senior management team should resign. If they don’t, Tory MPs after the election will urge the government “to abolish this incompetent organisation”, he said in a statement.[8]
Opposition politicians said the Tories still had questions to answer. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said he was “interested and surprised”. He said the Electoral Commission and the CPS were independent, but election laws “must be enforced so that money can’t buy power”.[9]
Ensuring transparency
On 16 May 2017, Claire Bassett used a letter to The Guardian to emphasise that her organisation’s role was “to ensure transparency on where money is being spent to influence voting, rather than to stop campaigning.[10] Indeed, the health of our democracy relies on the ability for candidates, parties and non-party campaigners to engage with voters in ways that voters find accessible.”[11]
Valedictory thanks
On 20 December 2018, the Electoral Commission tweeted:
Our Chief Executive, Claire Bassett, talks about why she’s grateful for the work elections staff across the UK have put in over the past three years so that voters can mark their ballot paper with confidence.[12]
References
- ↑ "Chair and Chief Executive Designates appointed to UK Trade Remedies Authority'
- ↑ "New trade remedies chief admits to ‘learning curve’"
- ↑ "Conservatives fined record £70,000 for campaign spending failures"
- ↑ "UK democracy under threat and need for reform is urgent, says regulator"
- ↑ "Leave.EU fined £70,000 over breaches of electoral law"
- ↑ "Vote Leave fined and reported to police by Electoral Commission"
- ↑ "UK elections watchdog calls for bigger fines for rule breaches"
- ↑ "First call for boss of EC to resign from @karlmccartney"
- ↑ "Tory candidates did nothing wrong on election expenses, May claims"
- ↑ "Regulation of election campaigning via social media can be improved"
- ↑ "Claire Bassett to step down as head of Electoral Commission"
- ↑ "Valedictory thanks"