Boris Johnson has called for the code of conduct for parliamentarians to be updated to ban MPs from acting as paid political consultants.
As Westminster finds itself rocked by allegations of sleaze, the prime minister has also called for MPs who are prioritising outside interests over their constituents to be “investigated and appropriately punished”.
Under current rules, MPs are allowed to work in second jobs as consultants to private businesses, including lobbying companies. However, they are banned from lobbying ministers on behalf of the clients they work for.
In a letter to Sir Lindsay Hoyle, speaker of the House of Commons, Johnson said: "An MP's primary role is, and must be, to serve their constituents and to represent their interests in parliament.
"Any MP who falls below the standards required can of course be investigated by the parliamentary commissioner for standards."
Johnson's strategy for tackling sleaze has been taken from a 2018 report by the Committee on Standards in Public Life, titled MPs' Outside Interests.
The prime minister has requested two recommendations from the report be adopted.
The first states: "The code of conduct for MPs should be updated to state that any outside activity undertaken by an MP, whether renumerated or unrenumerated, should be within reasonable limits and should not prevent them from carrying out their full range of duties."
The second reads: "The code of conduct for MPs and guide to the rules should be updated to state: MPs should not accept any paid work to provide services as a parliamentary strategist, adviser or consultant, for example, advising on parliamentary affairs or on how to influence parliament and its members. MPs should never accept any payment or offers of employment to act as political or parliamentary consultants or advisors."
The PM's call to change the code comes after MPs voted unanimously today to rescind Tory plans to reform parliament's watchdog.
Earlier this month, an amendment was put forward by Andrea Leadsom in favour of setting up a new standards committee and postponing a proposed 30 day suspension of Conservative MP Owen Paterson, who was found guilty of breaching lobbying regulations. It was voted through by 250-232, despite a number of MPs expressing their discomfort with the move.
But the government was forced to U-turn following cross-party anger at the conflation of reform of the Commons standards committee with the case of Paterson.
The Labour Party had plannes to introduce a motion to the Commons today, also calling for a ban on MPs having second jobs as political consultants.
Opposition leader Keir said that under a Labour government all second jobs for MPs would be banned, with the exception of a select few, such as working as a nurse or in A&E. Under Johnson's plans, MPs are likely to still be able to undertake positions such as directorships of private companies.
Noa Hoffman is a reporter for CSW's sister title PoliticsHome, where this story first appeared