's got a lot of explaining to do.
The Justice Secretary is increasingly being bitten himself by the legislation on party funding which, in 2000, he pushed through Parliament as Home Secretary.
In his new role as Justice Secretary Mr Straw is again responsible for overseeing party finance. Indeed MPs are next expected to debate his new funding bill on 9 February.
Yet Mr Straw himself faces embarrassment on four significant fronts:
1. Lord Taylor
Or more precisely, , whom Mr Straw described last November as "a long standing friend and colleague of mine". As I pointed out on Newsnight on 26 January, Lord Taylor was a major contributor to Mr Straw's campaign funds - giving the Blackburn Labour Party £3,000 at the time of the 2001 general election, and £2,000 during the 2005 campaign. Lord Taylor, you will recall, is one of the four Labour peers who were entrapped by the Sunday Times last week, and was caught on tape telling an undercover journalist that he regularly took payments for influencing legislation.
2. Arif Patel
gave Jack Straw's campaign £2,000 in 2005 through his clothing firm . Last April, police raided the firm's office and arrested nine people in an investigation into suspected frauds reported to be worth tens of millions of pounds, involving VAT and imported counterfeit goods. The police inquiry continues.
3. Westminster International Consultants
This firm also gave Jack Straw's campaign £2,000 in 2005, but there are strong signs that the donation breached his 2000 party funding act. Judging from their published accounts Westminster International Consultants (WIC) does not seem to have traded in Britain, and its address is given as a London law firm which, according to today's Telegraph, knows nothing of its existence. Two of WIC's partners in 2005 were based in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. This raises the question of whether WIC is really front operation to channel money to Mr Straw, which is strictly against the law, which states that money cannot be taken from firms which do not trade. The law would have been doubly broken had the money really come from Saudi Arabia, since that would be a foreign
One of WIC's partners, Siraj Karbhari, who used to be a councillor in Blackburn, told the Telegraph that the £2,000 came from him, not WIC. "I am a UK citizen and this was not a foreign donation. I made a cheque from one of my companies. I can't recollect which chequebook I used. If they have listed a donation from Westminster [International Consultants], that is a mistake."
The Conservative MP Ben Wallace has made a complaint about all this to the Electoral Commission.
4. Canatxx
This American firm gave £3,000 towards the cost of a party at Blackburn Rovers football ground in 2004 to mark Jack Straw's 25 years as an MP. This matters, not just because of the rules, but because has roused considerable opposition in north Lancashire with its attempts to build a gas storage facility. And one of their advisers is Lord Taylor of Blackburn.
Mr Straw apologised for failing to declare the money from Canatxx, but last month .
Now Jack Straw is a wily, intelligent politician. One would expect him to be a little more careful about who his friends are, and from whom he takes money for his campaigns.
Especially when he's still in charge of revising the laws on party funding.
As the Standards Committee remarked:
"Mr Straw is an experienced Member ... As Home Secretary, Mr Straw put the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act ... on the Statute Book. As Justice Secretary, he is piloting the current Political Parties and Elections Bill through the House. Both have as their theme the need for transparency in political donations. Pressure of work may explain why Mr Straw overlooked his responsibilities, but the nature of his job should also have been a constant reminder to him of the need to observe the Code."
Read the rest of this entry