Voters were reassured of a serious crackdown on Britain's horsemeat scandal after MPs' own lunches were dragged into the debacle.
The House of Commons confirmed today that its own cafes and restaurants had conducted "precautionary" DNA testing on steak and kidney and beef and onion pies, along with steak and kidney suet pudding and Italian meatballs.
The dishes had been withdrawn before all four items tested negative for horse DNA, a spokesman said.
Environment Secretary Owen Paterson said the food retail industry had assured him they were "absolutely determined" to restore consumer confidence.
But National Beef Association director Chris Mallon blamed the scandal squarely on supermarkets' "bullying culture."
According to him, supermarket buyers had driven quality suppliers out of the market with short-sighted purchasing tactics, but the trend could not continue much longer.
He said: "They adopted a bullying culture aimed exclusively at securing as much farm food as possible for as little cost as possible and the result is tortured supply chains that add so much unnecessary cost that short cuts on quality and traceability, and even cheating by some suppliers, was inevitable."
The news came as Britain's Food Standards Agency said it was expanding its investigations to cover cafe sandwiches, gelatine, stock cubes and other beef-based foods, with more than 500 products now in the spotlight.
Horsemeat was also discovered in school dinners destined for 47 Lancashire schools.
But initial tests returned today cleared school dinners in Worcestershire.
If you appreciated this article then please consider donating to the Morning Star's Fighting Fund to ensure we can keep developing your paper.
Foreign Minister Alistair Burt's admission that the Cameron government has "supported" a survey of attitudes to US drone strikes in Pakistan's tribal areas amounts to a tacit admission of British involvement.
As Britain faces a new housing crisis we can learn from an occasion when tenants banded together to beat their landlord - and won new council housing
Iain Duncan Smith's brainchild came into force at the end of last month. It's bad news for almost everyone

