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The government is ramping up pressure on Sir Christopher Kelly ahead of the final publication of his review of MPs' expenses later this week.
Gordon Brown is meeting Sir Christopher in a briefing ahead of the report. He is expected to call for the recommendations to ensure poor would-be MPs will not be deterred from standing for parliament.
It follows calls by leader of the House Harriet Harman yesterday on Sir Christopher not to immediately dismiss MPs' spouses.
Leaked conclusions of the review last week had suggested the expenses review would see relatives of MPs banned from working for them, a change to be imposed over a five-year period.
"I don't think there should be any shadow cast over the existing spouses who are working very hard. I think it would be wrong to judge them all to be not doing a good job," Ms Harman told the BBC.
"I do think it would be fair not to sack existing spouses working for MPs. I think if they're going to suggest something it should be for the future - they can't simply say they can't simply be made redundant."
Sir Christopher will publish his recommendations on Wednesday.




WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The pandemic of swine flu may be hitting a peak in the Northern Hemisphere, global health officials said on Friday, but they cautioned it was far from over.