The National:

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PEERS living in Scotland have claimed more than £2.1 million from taxpayers over 12 months, up 16% on two years ago – and many of the most expensive were Liberal Democrats.

READ MORE: Who are the Scottish peers in the House of Lords?

The rising costs uncovered by The Ferret have prompted politicians and campaigners to call for peers to cut their “shameful” use of business-class air travel. They are also demanding “radical reform” of the House of Lords.

The peer who claimed the largest total amount was Liberal Democrat, Lord Bruce of Bennachie.

He claimed £64,622 over the 12 months to July 2018 for 152 days’ work. Lord Bruce was formerly an MP for Gordon for more than 25 years before he entered the House of Lords as a life peer.

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According to his register of interests, he also receives payments for acting as consultant to a number of international development organisations. This work includes acting as consultant to the Parliament of Myanmar, funded by the Westminster Foundation for Democracy.

Liberal Democrat peers in Scotland make up six of the top 10 list of most expensive peers, who are all male. The remaining places include two Labour peers, one Conservative peer and one independent crossbencher.

READ MORE: Is this Westminster mess really the best Scotland can do?

Former First Minister of Scotland, Lord McConnell of Glenscorrodale, is the most expensive Labour peer. He claimed the second largest overall amount from taxpayers.

He pocketed £63,842 for 144 days’ work on House of Lords business, including more than £16,000 on air travel. According to his register of interests, he has also been paid to act as chair of the Sustainable Development Fund panel of Scottish and Southern Energy plc. He also has a paid role as as an adviser to the accounting firm, PriceWaterhouseCooper.

Members of the Lords who are not paid a salary are able to claim a taxfree attendance allowance. They can choose to claim a lower rate of £153 or a higher rate of £305. Prior to March 31, 2018, the lower rate was £150 and the higher rate was £300. Peers can also choose not to claim the attendance allowance at all, even if they attend the house.

They are able to claim an allowance for attending meetings or visits outside the House of Lords at the lower daily rate. Business-class air travel is covered by the House of Lords expenses scheme, but first-class rail travel is not.

Another way of analysing the cost of peers is per day worked. By using this measure the crossbencher Earl of Stair, John Dalrymple, remains the most expensive peer living in Scotland, despite cutting his daily costs by 11% compared with two years ago.

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Including travel costs, he claimed £17,523 for 26 days’ work over 12 months. According to the website Public Whip, the earl has participated in 7% of votes in the current session. The hereditary peer owns an estate in Dumfries and Galloway and the Wigtown Free Press, a weekly local newspaper. He is a second cousin of Prince Charles. He declined to comment.

The difference between the daily rate claimed by some peers compared with others is often the amount claimed for travel costs. Collectively the amount claimed for air travel by peers living in Scotland has risen by 23% in two years.

Colin Howden, director of sustainable transport campaign group Transform Scotland, argued that peers could cut costs and their environmental impact by switching from air to rail travel.

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“In a year when the threats posed by climate change became ever more stark, it is shameful that Scotland’s peers have decided to massively increase their use of the most polluting form of transport for travel to London,” he said.

“Many more of these journeys should be being made by rail rather than by air. Not only would this be better for the climate but rail travel provides a much more productive working environment. Rail is also often significantly cheaper than air for business travel to London, so this would help reduce these excessive costs being imposed on the taxpayer.”

Alexandra Runswick, director of Unlock Democracy, said the ever-increasing bill for peers could not be fixed by a “piecemeal” approach to managing costs. Rather than simply putting stricter controls on costs, she argued the whole chamber should be radically reformed.

“The scandal of silent peers claiming vast expenses will no doubt irk the public at a time when the government is tightening its belt in many other areas of public finance. But reforming the House of Lords expenses system would be adding a lick of paint to a building that needs to be demolished,” she said.

The House of Lords was “full to the brim” with party donors, cronies of the party leader and hereditary peers who have seats reserved “by birthright”, Runswick said.

“In a democracy it should be the people that decide, through free and fair elections, who makes our laws,” she added. “The House of Lords is not representative, accountable, or democratic. The public wants an elected second chamber, which political parties have repeatedly failed to deliver.”

The SNP MSP George Adam backed calls to abolish the House of Lords and pointed out that it is dominated by older men: “It is utterly ridiculous that unelected and unaccountable peers think it’s acceptable to spend taxpayers’ money on expensive travel in return for little to no work.

“Not only is the House of Lords undemocratic, it is completely unrepresentative of the population it is supposed to serve – only 25% of peers are women, and just 4% are under the age of 50. The SNP has long called for the House of Lords to go. These new figures show that it’s time that this archaic institution was shut down.”

The Liberal Democrats and Labour were asked to comment on the criticisms of payments to their named peers. In response both parties stressed their support for reforming the House of Lords.

A LibDem spokesperson said: “Scottish Liberal Democrat peers make substantial contributions to public life, voting and speaking regularly. However, our party has long argued that parliament is unrepresentative of the electorate and weak in restraining the power of the government. That’s why we have championed radical reform.”

A Scottish Labour spokesman said: “All Labour peers are now appointed on the basis they will campaign for the abolition of the Lords and its replacement with an elected second chamber.”

The Ferret is an editorially independent, not-for-profit co-operative run by its journalists and subscribers. You can find it at https://theferret.scot/ and can subscribe for £3 a month here: https://theferret.scot/subscribe/