POLITICIANS leaving Brussels after the upcoming European elections will be handed a payoff of up to ?157,000, it has emerged.
The payoff has been blasted as "completely unnecessary and unaffordable" and an example of "the cost" of being part of the European Union (EU).
Details of the severance package were revealed in a document circulated to MEPs and handed to The Observer.
MEPs who lose their seat will be handed a "transitional allowance" of at least ?39,000.
British taxpayers will be staggered at the level of these golden goodbyes
The maximum an MEP could receive is two years' salary, after leaving their seat in Brussels.
Chief executive of the TaxPayers' Alliance, Jonathan Isaby, told the newspaper: "British taxpayers will be staggered at the level of these golden goodbyes.
"MEPs who either voluntarily step down or are deselected are in no way comparable to somebody being made redundant, because they are affectively on a five-year fixed term contract, subject to renewal by the the electorate.
"This is yet another example of public sector largesse which is completely unnecessary and unaffordable.
"The system urgently needs to be reformed."
The outcry comes hot on the heels of another backlash last week, after it emerged taxpayers will have to fork out ?187million to pay for MEPs second pensions.
Details of the scheme can add tens of thousands of pounds a year to a retired MEP’s income and contribute towards a combined pension of up to ?82,000 a year for the longest-serving.
All the main UK parties in Brussels insist the funding gap should be met without more public money.
But legal documents suggest taxpayers will have to fork out.
Membership can net an MEP as much as ?41,000 a year on top of the main taxpayer-funded basic EU pension of ?13,760 a year for five years’ service.
The European elections will take place on Thursday May 22 in the UK, with a Sunday Times/YouGov poll showing Ukip have surged into the lead, three points ahead of Labour and 12 points ahead of the Tories.
The Liberal Democrats have been warned they face losing all 12 of their MEPs if their poll ratings do not improve.
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