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A constituency office, also called an electorate office, is an office operated by a local political officeholder, such as a Member of Parliament (MP), within the area they represent. It may be used to have meetings with constituents, or administration for the officeholder. It can serve a similar function to a surgery, but is normally based in a fixed office. Sometimes officeholders may also have offices in or around the legislature they serve in, which may serve a similar function but are normally not in the officeholder's constituency.
Members of the House of Representatives are entitled to between one and three electorate offices depending upon the size of their constituency, while members of the Senate are each entitled to one office. [1]
Some Members of Provincial Parliaments (MPPs) in Canada, for example in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario, maintain constituency offices. [2] [3] [4]
It is common, in Ireland, for TDs to maintain constituency offices. [5] These offices are maintained in the TD's home constituency, and are covered by a "constituency office establishment allowance", [6] [7] and other allowances for some of the costs in running the office. [8]
In January 2024, the constituency office of TD Holly Cairns was reportedly closed due to "safety concerns". [9] [10] In February 2024, the office of Offaly TD Carol Nolan was vandalised. [11] [12]
All members of the New Zealand Parliament are entitled to an electorate office, and two electoral secretaries. [13] [14] Although there is nothing requiring MPs to have an electorate office, taxpayer-funded electorate secretaries are not allowed to work out of Parliament buildings. [14] After her's was attacked in 2022, Prime Minister Jacinda Arden described their use as "they help them [constituents] with housing issues, immigration issues, welfare issues" and that such issues were happening "consistently". [15]
In 1996 Labour list MPs announced that they would begin to set up parliamentary offices. [16]
The establishment of constituency offices was approved by the Tongan Parliament in 2019. [17]
Constituency offices are common in the UK, especially for established MPs. [18] Unlike surgeries, where 'drop-in' sessions are common, some meetings in constituency offices may require booking. [19]
Offices are regulated by the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority, which provides support with rent, deposits, and valuation. Most MPs have a constituency office and a Westminster office, although not all. [20]
Following the murder of Jo Cox in 2016, MPs were reportedly offered access to additional security measures for their homes and constituency offices, leading to an increase in spending on such measures up to 2018. [21]
Members of the devolved Northern Ireland Assembly, Scottish Parliament, and Welsh Parliament can also maintain constituency offices. [22] [23] [24]
If a TD chooses to have an office presence in his or her own constituency they can reclaim some of the costs associated with setting up that office
TDs can claim the cost of their constituency office energy bills [..] It can also be used to pay for utility bills associated with running an office
All MPs were offered panic buttons [..] and emergency fobs at their homes and constituency offices [..] The spending on such measures soared from £170,576 in 2015/16 to £4.5m two years later
This article has multiple issues. Please help
improve it or discuss these issues on the
talk page. (
Learn how and when to remove these template messages)
|
A constituency office, also called an electorate office, is an office operated by a local political officeholder, such as a Member of Parliament (MP), within the area they represent. It may be used to have meetings with constituents, or administration for the officeholder. It can serve a similar function to a surgery, but is normally based in a fixed office. Sometimes officeholders may also have offices in or around the legislature they serve in, which may serve a similar function but are normally not in the officeholder's constituency.
Members of the House of Representatives are entitled to between one and three electorate offices depending upon the size of their constituency, while members of the Senate are each entitled to one office. [1]
Some Members of Provincial Parliaments (MPPs) in Canada, for example in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario, maintain constituency offices. [2] [3] [4]
It is common, in Ireland, for TDs to maintain constituency offices. [5] These offices are maintained in the TD's home constituency, and are covered by a "constituency office establishment allowance", [6] [7] and other allowances for some of the costs in running the office. [8]
In January 2024, the constituency office of TD Holly Cairns was reportedly closed due to "safety concerns". [9] [10] In February 2024, the office of Offaly TD Carol Nolan was vandalised. [11] [12]
All members of the New Zealand Parliament are entitled to an electorate office, and two electoral secretaries. [13] [14] Although there is nothing requiring MPs to have an electorate office, taxpayer-funded electorate secretaries are not allowed to work out of Parliament buildings. [14] After her's was attacked in 2022, Prime Minister Jacinda Arden described their use as "they help them [constituents] with housing issues, immigration issues, welfare issues" and that such issues were happening "consistently". [15]
In 1996 Labour list MPs announced that they would begin to set up parliamentary offices. [16]
The establishment of constituency offices was approved by the Tongan Parliament in 2019. [17]
Constituency offices are common in the UK, especially for established MPs. [18] Unlike surgeries, where 'drop-in' sessions are common, some meetings in constituency offices may require booking. [19]
Offices are regulated by the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority, which provides support with rent, deposits, and valuation. Most MPs have a constituency office and a Westminster office, although not all. [20]
Following the murder of Jo Cox in 2016, MPs were reportedly offered access to additional security measures for their homes and constituency offices, leading to an increase in spending on such measures up to 2018. [21]
Members of the devolved Northern Ireland Assembly, Scottish Parliament, and Welsh Parliament can also maintain constituency offices. [22] [23] [24]
If a TD chooses to have an office presence in his or her own constituency they can reclaim some of the costs associated with setting up that office
TDs can claim the cost of their constituency office energy bills [..] It can also be used to pay for utility bills associated with running an office
All MPs were offered panic buttons [..] and emergency fobs at their homes and constituency offices [..] The spending on such measures soared from £170,576 in 2015/16 to £4.5m two years later