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Adrian Sanders
Adrian Sanders lost his Torbay seat to the Tory candidate at the 2015 election. Photograph: Johnny Green/PA Archive/Press Association Images
Adrian Sanders lost his Torbay seat to the Tory candidate at the 2015 election. Photograph: Johnny Green/PA Archive/Press Association Images

Tories broke electoral law with leaflet drop, says former Lib Dem MP

This article is more than 7 years old

Adrian Sanders calls for investigation into letter in Torbay as police across UK examine Conservatives’ election spending

A former MP has called for police to launch a new investigation into whether the Conservative party breached electoral law with a leaflet drop last year.

The Liberal Democrat candidate Adrian Sanders has accused the Tories of breaking the rules by delivering letters urging residents to vote for the Conservative candidate in the Devon constituency of Torbay as part of their national campaign for the 2015 general election.

The cost of the leaflet drop was registered under the party’s national campaign budget, but Sanders argues it should have fallen under the local budget – a much smaller limit.

Investigations into the Conservative party have already been launched by other police forces across the country, focusing on whether the Tories breached spending rules before their knife-edge poll win last year.

Sanders, who lost his seat to the Conservative Kevin Foster, said of the leaflet on BBC Radio 4’s Today show: “It’s not a general leaflet. It is a specific targeted mailshot to a voter in a given constituency saying vote for our candidate in that constituency.

“That has to be a local cost, not a national expense.”

A spokesman for the Conservative party said the leaflets made no reference to Foster and were therefore not a local election expense.

He said: “Simply referring to the location where the elector lives does not promote any named candidate. The literature only promoted the national Conservative party.”

Devon and Cornwall police are already investigating other alleged breaches of spending rules along with the Greater Manchester, Cheshire and Leicestershire police forces.

They centre on claims that the Tories listed the costs of bussing activists into key marginal seats under national, rather than local, spending accounts.

The party acknowledges that some accommodation for the activists was not properly registered, but insists the bus tour was part of the national campaign organised by Conservative campaign headquarters and as such did not fall under individual constituency spending limits.

On Thursday, the Conservative party handed evidence regarding the spending controversy to the Electoral Commission.

The investigation has already led to calls for the new police and crime commissioner (PCC) for Devon and Cornwall to stand aside while she is investigated over her part in the campaign.

Alison Hernandez, who was elected PCC last week, was the Conservative agent, responsible for reporting local expenses.

West Midlands police are the latest to confirm they are looking into allegations surrounding the election.

DCI Ed Foster said: “We have received an allegation of improper electoral campaign spending returns in the West Midlands area and are reviewing whether any offences have been committed.

“We will be applying for an extension on time to investigate and continue to liaise closely with the National Police Chiefs Council and the Electoral Commission.”

More on this story

More on this story

  • Tory MPs could learn fate of electoral spending inquiry by Wednesday

  • Devon and Cornwall PCC expenses inquiry file sent to prosecutors

  • Tory election spending: MP admitted to police some claims were wrong

  • The Guardian view on Tory election spending: it’s a scandal

  • The inside story of the Tory election scandal

  • Q&A: what is the Conservative election expenses row about?

  • Are British elections being stolen?

  • Conservatives fined record £70,000 for campaign spending failures

  • PM’s chief of staff entangled in South Thanet election spending row

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