
The Government has suffered a narrow defeat in the House of Lords as peers voted for tougher action on fraud involving public money.
The upper chamber backed by 200 votes to 194, majority six, a Tory bid to give extra powers to the Public Sector Fraud Authority (PSFA) to investigate suspected fraud.
This amendment to the Public Authorities (Fraud, Error and Recovery) Bill allows the PSFA to undertake proactive investigations or recovery operations without requiring a prior request from the body suspected of being scammed.
The Bill had previously only allowed the PSFA to investigate or take enforcement action on suspected fraud against a public authority if invited to do so by that body.
Shadow Cabinet Office minister Baroness Finn said this is an âextraordinary limitation to place on an organisation whose very purpose it is to root out fraud across governmentâ.
She argued that this would create a PSFA that is âempowered and yet toothlessâ, as it would be âhamstrungâ by this restriction, and branded it a âwatchdog told to bark only when askedâ.
Tabling her amendment, Lady Finn said: âTo rely on departments or agencies to invite in the PSFA to look at themselves or their work is, frankly, far too weak.
âThere are obvious disincentives: the reputational risk, the potential embarrassment and the possibility of drawing attention to failings that might otherwise have gone unnoticedâŚ
âAssuming that departments will voluntarily expose their own shortcomings is a triumph of hope over experience.
âIf we are serious about protecting the taxpayer, then the PSFA must be able to act proactively, to initiate investigation where credible concerns arise, not to wait passively for a polite invitation that may never come.â
She argued that her amendment is âclosing a glaring loophole, one that every complacent official and every fraudster will otherwise see coming a mile offâ.
Responding, Labour frontbencher Baroness Anderson of Stoke-on-Trent said: âThe Governmentâs intention is that the PSFA offers a public sector fraud service, collaborating with public authorities which have been attacked by fraudsters to take action to investigate, enforce and recover the funds.
âCollaboration is vital in the Governmentâs fight against fraud.â
She added that the powers given in the amendment are ânot necessaryâ because there is a âmoral and public pressure for something to be doneâ, and argued that the PSFA is âalready workingâ.
Despite her assurances, peers backed the amendment, including 163 Tories, 24 crossbenchers and even one Labour peer.
The change to the Bill will be considered by MPs when the it returns to the Commons in so-called âping-pongâ, when legislation is batted between the two Houses until an agreement is reached.
The draft law seeks to curb multibillion-pound benefit fraud and includes allowing the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) to recover money directly from fraudstersâ bank accounts.
It would also allow the DWP to have the power to obtain bank statements from people they believe have enough cash to pay back welfare debts but are refusing to do so.
Courts could also suspend fraudsterâs driving licences after an application by the DWP if they owe welfare debts of more than ÂŁ1,000 and have ignored repeated requests to pay them back.
Latest official data has revealed ÂŁ9.5 billion is estimated to have been overpaid in benefits in the year to the end of March, with fraud accounting for most of that sum.