Former Minister Michael Wood should apologise to Parliament after failing to disclose his significant shareholdings, Parliament鈥檚 Privileges Committee has recommended in a report.
The Privileges Committee looked into the affair after the听贬别谤补濒诲听听despite being obliged to declare them to Parliament as an MP and the Cabinet Office as a minister. He only declared them last year, despite being an MP since 2016.
Despite a strongly worded review by Parliament鈥檚 registrar of pecuniary interests, Sir Maarten Wevers, Wood has not been found in contempt of Parliament.
In fact, the committee has recommended that Parliament鈥檚 Standing Orders Committee look at clarifying the rules around how shares held in trusts - as most of Woods鈥 were - should be declared.
The committee stopped short of finding Wood in contempt of Parliament because it believed that Wood had not made the inaccurate declaration knowingly.
The committee鈥檚 report found 鈥渋t more likely than not that Mr Wood was genuinely unaware when making his returns for the years 2017鈥2021 of his personal shareholdings in AIA [Auckland International Airport] and Contact鈥.
鈥淭o make out a finding of contempt, the committee would need to be satisfied that Mr Wood failed to declare these interests 鈥榢nowingly鈥. The facts in this case suggest the opposite鈥攖hat Mr Wood was unaware of his own interests over this period, due to a combination of taking insufficient care to examine his own affairs, and a miscommunication with his investment adviser about his interests,鈥 it said.
The committee disagreed with Wevers鈥 report into Wood, particularly the finding that 鈥渕embers must, under certain circumstances, declare shareholdings held in trust鈥.
The committee said that it did not think that Wood broke the rules in failing to declare the shares he held in the trust.
This is a significant finding because it was the shares held in the trust that saw Wood ultimately leave Cabinet.
The committee said that Wevers鈥 finding that trust holdings needed to be declared relied on guidance from 2008, which found that 鈥渁ll distinct interests must be declared, regardless of whether they are channelled through a trust or third party鈥.
However the committee said Appendix B of the rules 鈥渄oes not itself require this鈥 and another clause 鈥渃learly states that annual returns must include the interests specified in the Appendix鈥.
The Standing Orders Committee will now consider clarifying what should and should not be declared. It will need to hurry. The committee is due to report back its recommendations for changes to the Standing Orders, Parliament鈥檚 in-house rules, soon so that they can be adopted by the next Parliament.
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