The research shows that Lady Kinnock earned £774,838 during her time as an MEP.
She was also entitled to a daily subsistence allowance worth £505,818 over that time, travel allowances worth almost £1.25million and general allowances worth £577,071.
In addition, she was entitled to secretarial allowances worth more than £2.3million, although these are to pay staff.
She also has a pension worth £67,836 a year, which would require a pot of £950,000 to buy in the private sector.
Lord Kinnock earned £1.85million in salary during his 10 years at the EU and qualified for a residence allowance for living in Brussels worth £276,962, an entertainment allowance worth £64,564, an installation allowance of £25,348 for taking the job, a resettlement allowance of £13,745 for leaving the job and a transition allowance, to help adjust to life outside Brussels, worth £355,143.
He also qualifies for a pension which pays out £83,089 a year and would cost £1.16million to buy in the private sector. The terms require him to remain supportive of the EU project.
In all, the Kinnocks qualified for pay, allowances and pensions worth £10.2million. The lack of receipts required for EU expenses makes it impossible to know if they claimed living allowances on the same home.
Apparently it's the 'certainty' of us staying in the EEC that is one of the biggest pull factors of the Remain campaign
....these figures being one of the 'certainties' of course (multiplied by all the apparatchiks and policy-twonks that are on the Brussels / Strasbourg gravy train)
Apparently it's the 'certainty' of us staying in the EEC that is one of the biggest pull factors of the Remain campaign....these figures being one of the 'certainties' of course (multiplied by all the apparatchiks and policy-twonks that are on the Br