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MSPs’ expenses: £113 for a taxi ride, £61.99 for a book and a £680-trip to Norway

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A knighted Tory landowner charged taxpayers £163 for a night in a luxury hotel and £113 for a taxi ride to an airport, the latest MSPs’ expenses returns has revealed.

Sir Jamie McGrigor, former Conservative MSP for Highlands and Islands, claimed a total of £680 for a trip to Norway in May 2015, final-year expenses for 2015/16 shows.

This included £163 for a night in the luxury Grand Hotel Oslo on May 21 and £150 for two nights in the Thon Hotel Oslo on May 22 and 23.
He then claimed £113 for a taxi to the airport on May 24 – nearly twice as much as his £69 flight home.

The train from Oslo Central Station to Oslo Airport costs about £8.50 and is 10 minutes faster, according to Norwegian state railway operator NSB and Google Maps.

Sir Jamie, who has a sixth share in a £50,000-£100,000 fishing syndicate in Argyll, attended a fisheries meeting and the Norwegian Parliament during his visit.

The Tory – who retired in March this year – earned about £40,000 a year over and above his £59,000 MSP salary, which included up to £25,000 income from a £500,000 flat in London and £5,000 from renewable energy developments on his Argyll farm, according to his final register of interests.

Conservative MSPs topped the expenses list for pricey hotel stays.

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Deputy leader Jackson Carlaw had the most expensive night, claiming £175 for a single night in the Doubletree by Hilton in London in December.

Sir Alex Fergusson claimed £160 for a single night in an unnamed hotel in February and £142 for a member of staff to stay at the Holyrood Hotel in June, and Liz Smith claimed £150 for a night in the Hilton Cambridge in October.

Mary Scanlon paid £384 for two rooms in a hotel in Thurso for her and a member of her staff.

New Scottish Government Europe negotiator Mike Russell claimed £150 in July for a stay in the Colonsay Hotel in Argyll and SNP MSP

Mike Mackenzie claimed £142 for a night in the Royal Hotel Kintyre.
Former acting children’s minister Fiona McLeod, who represented the affluent constituency of Strathkelvin and Bearsden, ate the most expensive – and the cheapest – meals.

She claimed £43.50 for one hotel dinner in Edinburgh in September, £43 for another single hotel meal in January and £40 for a third pricey hotel meal in February.

But she demonstrated she could find a budget dinner if necessary, claiming a £2.85 for a hotel meal in October.

Mark McDonald, who is now childcare minister, also claimed £40 for dinner in Edinburgh in May.

SNP MSP Angus MacDonald claimed £61.99 for a book called Northern Neighbours: Scotland and Norway Since 1800 from Amazon.

The paperback currently costs £23 from Amazon.

The end-year total for all expenses was £12,770,924, representing a 2.18% increase on the previous year’s figure. This is a rise of £272,203 in cash terms.

A Scottish Parliament spokesman said: “Once election-related winding-up costs are taken into account, the rise in 2015-16 expenses is in line with inflation.”