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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » William Hill say nobody’s bet on Osbo since the Google tax

SystemSystem Posts: 11,687
edited January 2016 in General

imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » William Hill say nobody’s bet on Osbo since the Google tax row broke out

We don’t know how many bets on Osborne that they’d normally expect in the same period so it’s quite hard to assess the William Hill statement.

Read the full story here


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Comments

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    eekeek Posts: 24,983
    First unlike Osbourne...
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    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,287
    Since nobody should have been betting on him anyway this may merely represent a belated realisation that the odds were far too short.

    He who goes in the favourite to a Tory leadership election emerges a cardinal. And is Osborne is not even a convincing favourite.
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited January 2016
    Osborne has been written off before and his stock has risen again...but the Tories would be very stupid to install him as leader after Cameron. It would be Gordo all over again, albeit probably not quite so disastrous.
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,898
    Lay the favourite market if ever there was one. Lay the second favourite too.
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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    Osborne has been written off before

    He got on a boat, out of a car, onto a train, while eating a burger and crying at a funeral.

    Totally unfit to be PM...
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    SimonStClareSimonStClare Posts: 7,976
    edited January 2016
    "We don’t know how many bets on Osborne that they’d normally expect in the same period so it’s quite hard to assess the William Hill statement."

    Odd choice for a thread then....
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929
    edited January 2016
    William Hill enjoys publicity...

    The average staff at a Will Hills have no idea on political bets either.

    Besides all the political gamblers are balls deep into the GOP nominations.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929
    2-1 is very good odds actually - but I'm already on Osborne.
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    logical_songlogical_song Posts: 9,721
    Scott_P said:

    Osborne has been written off before

    He got on a boat, out of a car, onto a train, while eating a burger and crying at a funeral.

    Totally unfit to be PM...
    Osborne does seem to believe in something, unlike Cameron. Also he only has to beat Corbyn, probably.
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    How dare they call him a fascist! A mouth-breathing moron amongst a whole bunch of mouth-breathing morons maybe..

    https://twitter.com/hopenothate/status/693426906193084416
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    DairDair Posts: 6,108

    Dair I am sure 3 Quidder and his wife can live in connubial bliss for as long as they wish in the UK..but he is having some trembles about it...

    Why should she?

    If we leave, we leave and should reap the claimed benefits from leaving. That means reducing immigration and reducing the number of migrants here, freeing jobs for Brits, reducing the benefits bill, reducing the housing pressures, etc, etc..

    If Leave are proposing a situation where we continue to make the exact same exceptions as remaining in the EU required, then Leave is offering a false prospectus.

    Marriage is one of the biggest methods of forcing migration on the country. If Leave is to be believed and we need to curb immigration then marriages should be the first area to be clamped down on.
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    SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100
    The google tax issue is a general problem when you have large companies with lots of domestic revenue paying little or no tax because of accounting gimmicks that reduce or eliminate their profits on paper.

    It offers a wide opening range of political attacks that is very natural Labour territory at a time that revenue is needed to close the deficit.

    Osborne has not done his homework on the economy and he hopes no one notices or no one cares.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,125
    Scott_P said:

    Osborne has been written off before

    He got on a boat, out of a car, onto a train, while eating a burger and crying at a funeral.

    Totally unfit to be PM...
    Ah, but it wasn't just a boat. It was a yacht. A boat you can survive. A yacht can be career-threatening....
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    SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100

    Scott_P said:

    Osborne has been written off before

    He got on a boat, out of a car, onto a train, while eating a burger and crying at a funeral.

    Totally unfit to be PM...
    Ah, but it wasn't just a boat. It was a yacht. A boat you can survive. A yacht can be career-threatening....
    The source of that is Mandelson, who was also at that russian yacht.
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    Scott_P said:

    Osborne has been written off before

    He got on a boat, out of a car, onto a train, while eating a burger and crying at a funeral.

    Totally unfit to be PM...
    Ah, but it wasn't just a boat. It was a yacht. A boat you can survive. A yacht can be career-threatening....
    But if you are shadow chancellor and get photographed protesting with a load of Islamist extremists and Jahadi's not even worth a mention in most mainstream media outlets.
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    EPGEPG Posts: 6,013
    Scott_P said:

    Osborne has been written off before

    He got on a boat, out of a car, onto a train, while eating a burger and crying at a funeral.

    Totally unfit to be PM...
    Like it or not this is the kind of crap that makes ordinary people believe Corbyn is not fit to be PM, and they believe it about Osborne, too
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited January 2016
    EPG said:

    Scott_P said:

    Osborne has been written off before

    He got on a boat, out of a car, onto a train, while eating a burger and crying at a funeral.

    Totally unfit to be PM...
    Like it or not this is the kind of crap that makes ordinary people believe Corbyn is not fit to be PM, and they believe it about Osborne, too
    No the stuff about Corbyn that makes him unfit is stuff like being a terrorist sympathiser. Osborne has lots of faults and quite a lot of baggage, but we have no suggestion that he likes to spend his time cozying up to terrorists and weekends with Islamic extremists.
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    SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100
    Since it's 2 days till Iowa, a GOP delegate simulation by Princeton:

    http://election.princeton.edu/2016/01/13/full-simulation-of-gop-nomination-rules/

    "Under GOP rules, 30% before Iowa/New Hampshire implies a delegate majority: Simulating the “proportional” rules"

    Sam Wang @SamWangPhD
    Nearly all GOP primary states disproportionately reward the first-place finisher.
    Even those states that say they are "proportional."
    NH rules: if vote=Trump 30%, Rubio 14%, Kasich 13%, Cruz 11%, Christie 9%
    delegate outcome:
    Trump 12, Rubio 3, Kasich 3, Cruz 2, Christie 0.
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,798

    EPG said:

    Scott_P said:

    Osborne has been written off before

    He got on a boat, out of a car, onto a train, while eating a burger and crying at a funeral.

    Totally unfit to be PM...
    Like it or not this is the kind of crap that makes ordinary people believe Corbyn is not fit to be PM, and they believe it about Osborne, too
    No the stuff about Corbyn that makes him unfit is stuff like being a terrorist sympathiser. Osborne has lots of faults and quite a lot of baggage, but we have no suggestion that he likes to spend his time cozying up to terrorists and weekends with Islamic extremists.
    Osborne is considered not PM material by many for different reasons (fair or not), it doesn't matter if they are not as bad as the ones about Corbyn.
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited January 2016
    kle4 said:

    EPG said:

    Scott_P said:

    Osborne has been written off before

    He got on a boat, out of a car, onto a train, while eating a burger and crying at a funeral.

    Totally unfit to be PM...
    Like it or not this is the kind of crap that makes ordinary people believe Corbyn is not fit to be PM, and they believe it about Osborne, too
    No the stuff about Corbyn that makes him unfit is stuff like being a terrorist sympathiser. Osborne has lots of faults and quite a lot of baggage, but we have no suggestion that he likes to spend his time cozying up to terrorists and weekends with Islamic extremists.
    Osborne is considered not PM material by many for different reasons (fair or not), it doesn't matter if they are not as bad as the ones about Corbyn.
    None of them anything to do with crying at a funeral or eating the wrong type of burger was my point. They are much more related to actual decisions he has taken over the past 6 years.
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    PaulyPauly Posts: 897
    Anyone who thinks Osborne isn't tougher on tax avoidance/evasion hasn't been paying attention. He's the most ambitious yet - although the predecessors where abysmal admittedly.
    The Finance Bill 2016 contains a whole raft of new measures, not to mention the fact that HMRC have repeatedly been recording record low tax gaps as a percentage at a time when HMRC's headcount has been slashed dramatically. (It was once as high as 90k, now it's sub 57k if I remember correctly.)

    There is no way this will stick long term.
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    Just been to see 13 hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi. Worth going to see if only for the action. Very tense.

    The interesting thing is, like Iraq, Afghanistan, nobody really knows why they are there.

    Leaving Dictators' in place, is the lesser of two evils in my view.
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    richardDoddrichardDodd Posts: 5,472
    Dair 3Q and his wife are already married..why should that become a problem.....
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    flightpath01flightpath01 Posts: 4,903

    Osborne has been written off before and his stock has risen again...but the Tories would be very stupid to install him as leader after Cameron. It would be Gordo all over again, albeit probably not quite so disastrous.

    In which case someone has to step up pretty quick and show they would be better. The likelihood is that everyone's suggestion will merely reflect their prejudice.
    I see no comparison with Gordon Brown. Osborne has been clearing up Browns mess. He is officially the effective deputy PM. He was Cameron's campaign manager he is not Cameron's opponent as Brown was Blair's opponent. He has been supporting Cameron and govt policy not trying to run his own policy and undermine the PM like Brown and just take a look at say Lawson who's shadow Deutschemark/ERM policy and desire to get in the ERM was totally contrary to what Thatcher wanted.

    Anyone who thinks that the chancellor who has to strictly control and ration out spending is not the most difficult job in government is delusional. The main grip about Osborne as far as I can see is that he does not look like some matinee idol.


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    perdixperdix Posts: 1,806
    Speedy said:

    The google tax issue is a general problem when you have large companies with lots of domestic revenue paying little or no tax because of accounting gimmicks that reduce or eliminate their profits on paper.

    It offers a wide opening range of political attacks that is very natural Labour territory at a time that revenue is needed to close the deficit.

    Osborne has not done his homework on the economy and he hopes no one notices or no one cares.

    "Not done his homework"? Stupid remark.

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    richardDoddrichardDodd Posts: 5,472
    runnymede...Cameron puts his deal on the table..we all take a look at it..then we vote..I cannot think of anything more simple than that..If the Majority feel ok with it then we stay..if it fails.. then we leave..simple
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    SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100
    edited January 2016
    Issues when conducting polls by phone:

    Seth MeyersVerified account ‏@sethmeyers 2h2 hours ago
    I polled Iowans for 3 hours and the result was 3 Hillary, 3 Trump, 1 Rubio and 200 hang ups https://youtu.be/-jILUZDtmVs

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    AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    Pauly said:

    Anyone who thinks Osborne isn't tougher on tax avoidance/evasion hasn't been paying attention. He's the most ambitious yet - although the predecessors where abysmal admittedly.
    The Finance Bill 2016 contains a whole raft of new measures, not to mention the fact that HMRC have repeatedly been recording record low tax gaps as a percentage at a time when HMRC's headcount has been slashed dramatically. (It was once as high as 90k, now it's sub 57k if I remember correctly.)

    There is no way this will stick long term.

    In general it seems that Osborne is pleasingly tough on tax avoidance/evasion against individuals and small businesses but has been generously opening doors to large multinationals.
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    Speedy said:

    The google tax issue is a general problem when you have large companies with lots of domestic revenue paying little or no tax because of accounting gimmicks that reduce or eliminate their profits on paper.

    There's no accounting trickery in this. They're not pulling a clever sneaky loophole at the behest of evil genius accountants and lawyers.* They're not hiding their profits "on paper". They're not even obeying "the letter but not the spirit" of the law. They're simply doing exactly what the law says, indeed exactly what the law as it stands encourages them to do, and by "the law" I don't mean British law specifically but a whole network of international tax treaties. Essentially, an Irish company is flogging stuff to the UK, and the sales are legally contracted in Ireland and it's the Irish company which generates the profit which gets taxed by Irish corporation tax. And it's not as if the Dublin office is a mere nameplate on a deserted office block, a ruse to con us all out of our tax due, it's a major European HQ far larger than the London office. The stuff we are taxing Google for in the UK is quite different - and unfortunately for us, worth rather less money.

    The way those things work is currently working against it, but the kind of anti-avoidance measures that are being talked up at the moment won't resolve the issue. The more radical "tax sales not profits" idea that Lord Lawson is pushing for would actually address this, but whether it is politically viable (it has some economic disadvantages and it's not really something that the UK can unilaterally impose so political viability means finding agreement with other countries, and I can't see why big net exporters would be very keen on the idea) is a different issue.

    Basically if you want Irish exporters to pay tax on their "profits" in the UK you need to rip up the whole system of international tax treaties and start over again. Would involve major changes to the EU as well, I would imagine. Moreover. you'd have no right to complain when a stereotypically British company tells you that, since production here is a major cost in the UK but most of its revenue comes from exports, that in UK-only terms it's making a loss so won't be paying any corporation tax (but instead will be paying it in the countries it exports to but has no production centres, therefore is insanely profitable). Is that the way you want stuff to work?

    Anyone who thinks there is an easy answer to this whole issue is missing something quite fundamental. And if it were so easy, why wouldn't Osborne (or Brown, for goodness sake, in fact any Chancellor since the 1960s) have "fixed" it all already?

    * Yes, there is such a thing as Double Irish with a Dutch sandwich, but that's not the heart of the issue with Google.
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    Danny565Danny565 Posts: 8,091
    edited January 2016
    #LabouritesForOsborne
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    EPGEPG Posts: 6,013

    EPG said:

    Scott_P said:

    Osborne has been written off before

    He got on a boat, out of a car, onto a train, while eating a burger and crying at a funeral.

    Totally unfit to be PM...
    Like it or not this is the kind of crap that makes ordinary people believe Corbyn is not fit to be PM, and they believe it about Osborne, too
    No the stuff about Corbyn that makes him unfit is stuff like being a terrorist sympathiser. Osborne has lots of faults and quite a lot of baggage, but we have no suggestion that he likes to spend his time cozying up to terrorists and weekends with Islamic extremists.
    No
    The first impression they have about Corbyn is that he is a bad impersonator of a mediocre schoolteacher who cannot dress himself
    The first impression they have about Osborne is that he is an awkward blinking posho who doesn't know when to smile at the humans
    Google/terrorist sympathiser is secondary, it's like worrying about any particular policy Ed Miliband had, rather than the impression he made
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    flightpath01flightpath01 Posts: 4,903
    perdix said:

    Speedy said:

    The google tax issue is a general problem when you have large companies with lots of domestic revenue paying little or no tax because of accounting gimmicks that reduce or eliminate their profits on paper.

    It offers a wide opening range of political attacks that is very natural Labour territory at a time that revenue is needed to close the deficit.

    Osborne has not done his homework on the economy and he hopes no one notices or no one cares.

    "Not done his homework"? Stupid remark.

    Its a lot more than stupid - he says ' that is very natural Labour territory at a time that revenue is needed to close the deficit.'
    Who allowed the deficit to rise who ran up the debt who failed to collect the tax for 13 years!

    https://www.gov.uk/government/news/uk-leads-international-efforts-to-clampdown-on-tax-avoidance
    Why only now and not 15 years ago?
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    stodgestodge Posts: 12,864
    Evening all :)

    The problem with Google and similar companies is simply the perception in the wider electorate they are not "paying their way" or "doing their bit". It also weakens the already-battered notion of "we're all in this together". Well, yes, and if you can hire decent accountants and lawyers you don't have to be in it as much as everyone else.

    Perceptions rather than facts dominate whether on tax avoidance or immigration it would seem.

    David's piece this morning (for which, as always, many thanks) and this piece aren't that far apart. For any aspiring successor to Cameron, the question becomes "how do I stand out from the crowd ?". Among the group of selling platers lining up to succeed Cameron, there has to be a decent handicapper.

    The notion that REMAIN has the EU Referendum in the bag already (aided by Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan's money and LEAVE's inability to do or say anything coherent) is possibly preventing anyone sticking their proverbials above the parapet but, on the assumption Cameron peddles his thin gruel as some meaningful reform, there will be a lot of unconvinced people out there, some of whom will be in the Conservative Party.

    So does some senior Conservative have the cojones to challenge Cameron by opposing him on the EU argument and publicly backing LEAVE ? It's a gamble, a huge one but if LEAVE wins, said individual will be in a very powerful place and almost certain, whether Cameron likes it or not, to be the next Prime Minister. Even if REMAIN wins (and let's assume it grinds out an unconvincing Sindyref win rather than a convincing Avref win) this time, LEAVE won't leave, as it were, and it won't be bad to be distinctive as parties rarely choose John Jackson to follow Jack Johnson.

    Boris has flip-flopped more than a plane-load of holidaymakers, Hammond makes the Invisible Man look obvious and May seems paralysed by her own fear of losing the Home Office while the rest of the claimers in the Cabinet aren't seemingly willing to break cover at this time.

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    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,287
    EPG said:


    No
    The first impression they have about Corbyn is that he is a bad impersonator of a mediocre schoolteacher who cannot dress himself

    Oi! Would you please withdraw that remark? No schoolteacher, no matter how mediocre, deserves to be compared to the Jezziah. Even Woodhead wasn't that bad.
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    perdix said:

    Speedy said:

    The google tax issue is a general problem when you have large companies with lots of domestic revenue paying little or no tax because of accounting gimmicks that reduce or eliminate their profits on paper.

    It offers a wide opening range of political attacks that is very natural Labour territory at a time that revenue is needed to close the deficit.

    Osborne has not done his homework on the economy and he hopes no one notices or no one cares.

    "Not done his homework"? Stupid remark.

    The same Osborne who preferred political tourism to preparing his 2012 Budget properly.

    The same Osborne who was too busy yachting with oligarchs in summer 2008 to notice that the economy was in recession.

    The same Osborne who though the Irish economy was the place to 'look and learn' from.

    Osborne has a history of not doing his homework.
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    NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,344
    Clinton seems to be pulling away in Iowa - 7 to 11 points ahead in the latest polls. The final Des Moines poll for the GOP is out at 5.45pm local time, which is 11.45pm our time.
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    Clinton seems to be pulling away in Iowa - 7 to 11 points ahead in the latest polls. The final Des Moines poll for the GOP is out at 5.45pm local time, which is 11.45pm our time.

    That's from before the latest e-mail revelations.
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    stodgestodge Posts: 12,864
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-35447152

    This was a line being peddled by the TPA the other day and it was a pretty persuasive argument on the basis Corporation Tax has failed to keep up with the evolution of business and the global economy.

    If the TPA proposal brought in as much if not revenue, was harder to avoid and easier and cheaper to administer, it would seem to tick all the boxes.
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    Danny565 said:

    #LabouritesForOsborne

    GGICIPM!!
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    From Osborne's 2010 Budget speech:

    " Growth in the UK economy for the coming five years is estimated to be: 1.2 per cent this year and 2.3 per cent next year; Then 2.8 per cent in 2012 followed by 2.9 per cent in 2013; Then 2.7 per cent in both 2014 and in 2015. "

    Actual GDP growth:

    2010 1.5%
    2011 2.0%
    2012 1.2%
    2013 2.2%
    2014 2.9%
    2015 2.2%

    http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/datasets-and-tables/data-selector.html?cdid=IHYP&dataset=pgdp&table-id=PREL

    And significantly worse on a GDP per capita basis.

    I dare say that Labour supporters might point out that the economy did better than expected the year Osborne took charge but worse than he predicted in four of the following five years ;-)

    By comparison the six years after the 1980-81 and 1991 recessions saw these GDP increases:

    1982 2.1%
    1983 4.2%
    1984 2.3%
    1985 4.1%
    1986 3.2%
    1987 5.6%

    1992 0.4%
    1993 2.6%
    1994 4.0%
    1995 2.5%
    1996 2.7%
    1997 3.1%
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    stodge said:

    Evening all :)

    The problem with Google and similar companies is simply the perception in the wider electorate they are not "paying their way" or "doing their bit". It also weakens the already-battered notion of "we're all in this together". Well, yes, and if you can hire decent accountants and lawyers you don't have to be in it as much as everyone else.

    Perceptions rather than facts dominate whether on tax avoidance or immigration it would seem.

    David's piece this morning (for which, as always, many thanks) and this piece aren't that far apart. For any aspiring successor to Cameron, the question becomes "how do I stand out from the crowd ?". Among the group of selling platers lining up to succeed Cameron, there has to be a decent handicapper.

    The notion that REMAIN has the EU Referendum in the bag already (aided by Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan's money and LEAVE's inability to do or say anything coherent) is possibly preventing anyone sticking their proverbials above the parapet but, on the assumption Cameron peddles his thin gruel as some meaningful reform, there will be a lot of unconvinced people out there, some of whom will be in the Conservative Party.

    So does some senior Conservative have the cojones to challenge Cameron by opposing him on the EU argument and publicly backing LEAVE ? It's a gamble, a huge one but if LEAVE wins, said individual will be in a very powerful place and almost certain, whether Cameron likes it or not, to be the next Prime Minister. Even if REMAIN wins (and let's assume it grinds out an unconvincing Sindyref win rather than a convincing Avref win) this time, LEAVE won't leave, as it were, and it won't be bad to be distinctive as parties rarely choose John Jackson to follow Jack Johnson.

    Boris has flip-flopped more than a plane-load of holidaymakers, Hammond makes the Invisible Man look obvious and May seems paralysed by her own fear of losing the Home Office while the rest of the claimers in the Cabinet aren't seemingly willing to break cover at this time.

    Trying to pick the next tory leader is rather like trying to pick the winner of the grand national. None of the runners seems very likely to win but one must. I looked at the list of cabinet members and out of 21 one is a peer, three are bonkers, one is an airhead and one has a beard. That gets it down to 15 but then I noticed there are some more about 7 who also at end cabinet meetings though not members. And in that group there are a few who I would guess might also have a chance including one or two I rather like.
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    stodge said:

    Evening all :)

    The problem with Google and similar companies is simply the perception in the wider electorate they are not "paying their way" or "doing their bit". It also weakens the already-battered notion of "we're all in this together". Well, yes, and if you can hire decent accountants and lawyers you don't have to be in it as much as everyone else.

    Perceptions rather than facts dominate whether on tax avoidance or immigration it would seem.

    David's piece this morning (for which, as always, many thanks) and this piece aren't that far apart. For any aspiring successor to Cameron, the question becomes "how do I stand out from the crowd ?". Among the group of selling platers lining up to succeed Cameron, there has to be a decent handicapper.

    The notion that REMAIN has the EU Referendum in the bag already (aided by Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan's money and LEAVE's inability to do or say anything coherent) is possibly preventing anyone sticking their proverbials above the parapet but, on the assumption Cameron peddles his thin gruel as some meaningful reform, there will be a lot of unconvinced people out there, some of whom will be in the Conservative Party.

    So does some senior Conservative have the cojones to challenge Cameron by opposing him on the EU argument and publicly backing LEAVE ? It's a gamble, a huge one but if LEAVE wins, said individual will be in a very powerful place and almost certain, whether Cameron likes it or not, to be the next Prime Minister. Even if REMAIN wins (and let's assume it grinds out an unconvincing Sindyref win rather than a convincing Avref win) this time, LEAVE won't leave, as it were, and it won't be bad to be distinctive as parties rarely choose John Jackson to follow Jack Johnson.

    Boris has flip-flopped more than a plane-load of holidaymakers, Hammond makes the Invisible Man look obvious and May seems paralysed by her own fear of losing the Home Office while the rest of the claimers in the Cabinet aren't seemingly willing to break cover at this time.

    Trying to pick the next tory leader is rather like trying to pick the winner of the grand national. None of the runners seems very likely to win but one must. I looked at the list of cabinet members and out of 21 one is a peer, three are bonkers, one is an airhead and one has a beard. That gets it down to 15 but then I noticed there are some more about 7 who also at end cabinet meetings though not members. And in that group there are a few who I would guess might also have a chance including one or two I rather like.
    Out of curiosity which ones are bonkers and who is the airhead ?
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929
    What is the problem with Google's tax bill. They're headquartered in Ireland and I don't even think it is about "clever lawyers and accountants" at all.

    My company's biggest project last year was in Turkey. We paid zero to the Turkish exchequer.
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    I'm always surprised as to how little mention the tourism data gets in the media given the tens of billions of pounds and millions of people it involves.

    Needless to say the massive UK tourism deficit continues with expenditure overseas up 8% this year while revenues from abroad are flat.

    http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/dcp171778_431580.pdf

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    OmniumOmnium Posts: 9,786



    Trying to pick the next tory leader is rather like trying to pick the winner of the grand national. None of the runners seems very likely to win but one must. I looked at the list of cabinet members and out of 21 one is a peer, three are bonkers, one is an airhead and one has a beard. That gets it down to 15 but then I noticed there are some more about 7 who also at end cabinet meetings though not members. And in that group there are a few who I would guess might also have a chance including one or two I rather like.

    Out of curiosity which ones are bonkers and who is the airhead ?
    The next Tory leader has to be on the winning side in the EU referendum. It's an interesting dynamic.

    If it wasn't for the referendum then Osborne would be much shorter.
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    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,212
    If @ Roger is about: This is what - on the previous thread - he claimed I said:-

    "Sexual violence-according to Cyclefree-is the result of immigrants being brought up in repressive misogynistic Muslim countries. How do we explain these Scandinavian neo-Nazi thugs. The Vikings?"

    And this is what I actually said at 08:03 am:-

    "It is undoubtedly the case that sexual assaults on women didn't start with the arrival of migrants. And if there were no migrants such crimes would still happen.

    But it is curious - actually, repulsive would be a better word - that those who claim to be concerned about sexual crimes against women are so sanguine about inviting into the country those from mysogynistic cultures and, as a result, with a propensity to commit such crimes (though that does not apply to all the individuals from those cultures, of course).

    It's as if such concern is only useful if it can be used against certain groups and that concern for women is dialled up or down - or into nothingness, in some cases - depending on the perpetrators.

    Repulsive."

    @Roger: you are free to disagree. But do not misrepresent what I have written. You do it repeatedly. And it is tiresome.
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    NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,344

    Clinton seems to be pulling away in Iowa - 7 to 11 points ahead in the latest polls. The final Des Moines poll for the GOP is out at 5.45pm local time, which is 11.45pm our time.

    That's from before the latest e-mail revelations.
    Meh. If you were a voter who preferred Hillary to Sanders, would the news that she was once careless with some emails make you vote Sanders? If she was actually prosecuted it'd be awkward, but that won't happen before Monday.
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 39,035



    Clinton seems to be pulling away in Iowa - 7 to 11 points ahead in the latest polls. The final Des Moines poll for the GOP is out at 5.45pm local time, which is 11.45pm our time.

    That's from before the latest e-mail revelations.
    Meh. If you were a voter who preferred Hillary to Sanders, would the news that she was once careless with some emails make you vote Sanders? If she was actually prosecuted it'd be awkward, but that won't happen before Monday.
    If the accusations are right, then she was more than 'careless'. That's quite a staggeringly dismissive thing to say.

    And even if she was 'careless', someone who is so careless should be allowed nowhere near any sensitive information.
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,101
    edited January 2016
    Pulpstar said:

    What is the problem with Google's tax bill. They're headquartered in Ireland and I don't even think it is about "clever lawyers and accountants" at all.

    My company's biggest project last year was in Turkey. We paid zero to the Turkish exchequer.

    Does your company have a great big office and employ hundreds/thousands of people in Turkey ?

    I don't think its regarded as a problem if a company is seen to pay its 'fair share' of tax 'somewhere'.

    But when tax havens and accounting tricks are believed to be involved its not well thought of.

    Now I don't know the details of Google's tax arrangements but after Starbucks with its Luxemburg transfer pricing and Kraft with its Channel Islands 'loans' all such globalised businesses have become tarred with the same brush.

  • Options
    NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,344
    Agree with Stodge that the first vaguely familiar Cabinet name to join Leave will have a big chance of being PM. As we've seen in Scotland, even losing a referendum doesn't necessarily stop the losers from piling in at the next opportunity.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,798



    Clinton seems to be pulling away in Iowa - 7 to 11 points ahead in the latest polls. The final Des Moines poll for the GOP is out at 5.45pm local time, which is 11.45pm our time.

    That's from before the latest e-mail revelations.
    Meh. If you were a voter who preferred Hillary to Sanders, would the news that she was once careless with some emails make you vote Sanders? If she was actually prosecuted it'd be awkward, but that won't happen before Monday.
    If the accusations are right, then she was more than 'careless'. That's quite a staggeringly dismissive thing to say.

    And even if she was 'careless', someone who is so careless should be allowed nowhere near any sensitive information.
    Perhaps they shouldn't. And yet that dismissive response seems quite probable from many people nevertheless. That they shouldn't be won't stop them being so.
  • Options
    stodgestodge Posts: 12,864



    Trying to pick the next tory leader is rather like trying to pick the winner of the grand national. None of the runners seems very likely to win but one must. I looked at the list of cabinet members and out of 21 one is a peer, three are bonkers, one is an airhead and one has a beard. That gets it down to 15 but then I noticed there are some more about 7 who also at end cabinet meetings though not members. And in that group there are a few who I would guess might also have a chance including one or two I rather like.

    While I'd like to agree with the racing analogy, parties choosing leaders while in power is in fact much simpler and on that basis Osborne does have a clear chance.

    After defenestrating Margaret Thatcher, the Conservative MPs chose effectively the "continuity Thatcher" candidate as it seemed at the time. Major went on to basically re-constitute the previous Cabinet but brought back Heseltine and managed to convince the electorate there had been a change of Government whereas all there had been was a change of Government style.

    Osborne isn't Cameron and would struggle if he tried to be but the problem is that while Thatcher had become significantly unpopular, Cameron so far isn't and hasn't. To replace a popular Prime Minister isn't easy and it becomes much harder if you appoint an unpopular successor but who else among the platers would match Cameron for public trust and confidence ?

    Boris perhaps but reading the Conservative members on here suggests they aren't that convinced. The takeover of suburban rail franchises around London by TfL is back door re-nationalisation and a reversal of the privatisation agenda which doesn't sound very Conservative to me and is more like a power grab for the Mayor's office.

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    O/T
    Looking at reports of the demos in Dover today.
    Generally described as Anti-Immigration rally and Anti-Racism rally.
    Why the difference?
    Should it not be Anti and Pro immigration etc.
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    kle4 said:



    Clinton seems to be pulling away in Iowa - 7 to 11 points ahead in the latest polls. The final Des Moines poll for the GOP is out at 5.45pm local time, which is 11.45pm our time.

    That's from before the latest e-mail revelations.
    Meh. If you were a voter who preferred Hillary to Sanders, would the news that she was once careless with some emails make you vote Sanders? If she was actually prosecuted it'd be awkward, but that won't happen before Monday.
    If the accusations are right, then she was more than 'careless'. That's quite a staggeringly dismissive thing to say.

    And even if she was 'careless', someone who is so careless should be allowed nowhere near any sensitive information.
    Perhaps they shouldn't. And yet that dismissive response seems quite probable from many people nevertheless. That they shouldn't be won't stop them being so.
    I think that the only thing that would really hurt Hillary with the emails would be if security of agents had been compromised rather than been at risk.

    Otherwise she is home, and any of the Hair Bear Bunch that the Republicans are choosing from would not be able to beat her.

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    AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670


    There's no accounting trickery in this. They're not pulling a clever sneaky loophole at the behest of evil genius accountants and lawyers.* They're not hiding their profits "on paper". They're not even obeying "the letter but not the spirit" of the law. They're simply doing exactly what the law says, indeed exactly what the law as it stands encourages them to do, and by "the law" I don't mean British law specifically but a whole network of international tax treaties. Essentially, an Irish company is flogging stuff to the UK, and the sales are legally contracted in Ireland and it's the Irish company which generates the profit which gets taxed by Irish corporation tax. And it's not as if the Dublin office is a mere nameplate on a deserted office block, a ruse to con us all out of our tax due, it's a major European HQ far larger than the London office. The stuff we are taxing Google for in the UK is quite different - and unfortunately for us, worth rather less money.

    The way those things work is currently working against it, but the kind of anti-avoidance measures that are being talked up at the moment won't resolve the issue. The more radical "tax sales not profits" idea that Lord Lawson is pushing for would actually address this, but whether it is politically viable (it has some economic disadvantages and it's not really something that the UK can unilaterally impose so political viability means finding agreement with other countries, and I can't see why big net exporters would be very keen on the idea) is a different issue.

    Basically if you want Irish exporters to pay tax on their "profits" in the UK you need to rip up the whole system of international tax treaties and start over again. Would involve major changes to the EU as well, I would imagine. Moreover. you'd have no right to complain when a stereotypically British company tells you that, since production here is a major cost in the UK but most of its revenue comes from exports, that in UK-only terms it's making a loss so won't be paying any corporation tax (but instead will be paying it in the countries it exports to but has no production centres, therefore is insanely profitable). Is that the way you want stuff to work?

    Anyone who thinks there is an easy answer to this whole issue is missing something quite fundamental. And if it were so easy, why wouldn't Osborne (or Brown, for goodness sake, in fact any Chancellor since the 1960s) have "fixed" it all already?

    * Yes, there is such a thing as Double Irish with a Dutch sandwich, but that's not the heart of the issue with Google.

    The heart O the issue is that they negotiate the sales of advertising in their London office yet their contention that their London office is not a permanent residence in the UK has never been challenged.
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    flightpath01flightpath01 Posts: 4,903

    stodge said:

    Evening all :)

    snip

    Trying to pick the next tory leader is rather like trying to pick the winner of the grand national. None of the runners seems very likely to win but one must. I looked at the list of cabinet members and out of 21 one is a peer, three are bonkers, one is an airhead and one has a beard. That gets it down to 15 but then I noticed there are some more about 7 who also at end cabinet meetings though not members. And in that group there are a few who I would guess might also have a chance including one or two I rather like.
    The coalition removed 5 potential cabinet posts to budding conservative PMs. On top of which there have been few reshuffles to bring in others. And on top of that it is mostly right wingers who showed themselves to be idiots - eg Fox - and got thrown out due to their own stupidity. Mitchell was stitched up but was plain stupid after that.
    And of course one well known alternative was so stupid that he walked out of the shadow cabinet on a pretext even before the election. So through no real fault of the PM there are not many names pushing themselves forward.
    So it would take quite a bit of lateral thinking to come up with an alternative to Osborne.
    In the same way as doing something scary and radical like walking out of the EU into ... ? ... well where, so then choosing a new party leader never mind incumbent PM is fraught with danger.
    Fraught. Fraught is a word that should scare the bejeezus out of every tory MP and voting party member. Fraught is not a word to be toyed with. I'm guessing that the PCP have taken on board the cavalier approach to 'fraught' which beset the Labour 2015 intake, as will the membership.
    What I think we will see is one or two serious younger names being put forward as markers for the future and one fruity loop Corbynesque right wing nut job, oh and Osborne. Osborne himself would be about 49 in 2020; Theresa May will be about 64.
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 39,035

    kle4 said:



    Clinton seems to be pulling away in Iowa - 7 to 11 points ahead in the latest polls. The final Des Moines poll for the GOP is out at 5.45pm local time, which is 11.45pm our time.

    That's from before the latest e-mail revelations.
    Meh. If you were a voter who preferred Hillary to Sanders, would the news that she was once careless with some emails make you vote Sanders? If she was actually prosecuted it'd be awkward, but that won't happen before Monday.
    If the accusations are right, then she was more than 'careless'. That's quite a staggeringly dismissive thing to say.

    And even if she was 'careless', someone who is so careless should be allowed nowhere near any sensitive information.
    Perhaps they shouldn't. And yet that dismissive response seems quite probable from many people nevertheless. That they shouldn't be won't stop them being so.
    I think that the only thing that would really hurt Hillary with the emails would be if security of agents had been compromised rather than been at risk.

    Otherwise she is home, and any of the Hair Bear Bunch that the Republicans are choosing from would not be able to beat her.
    If proved, I look forward to others who do similar acts being treated so laxly. After all, it would be hard for her to know at the time she broke the law whether agents would be compromised or just put at risk.

    Agree with your second paragraph.
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    SimonStClareSimonStClare Posts: 7,976

    O/T
    Looking at reports of the demos in Dover today.
    Generally described as Anti-Immigration rally and Anti-Racism rally.
    Why the difference?
    Should it not be Anti and Pro immigration etc.

    BBC?
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929

    Pulpstar said:

    What is the problem with Google's tax bill. They're headquartered in Ireland and I don't even think it is about "clever lawyers and accountants" at all.

    My company's biggest project last year was in Turkey. We paid zero to the Turkish exchequer.

    Does your company have a great big office and employ hundreds/thousands of people in Turkey ?

    I don't think its regarded as a problem if a company is seen to pay its 'fair share' of tax 'somewhere'.

    But when tax havens and accounting tricks are believed to be involved its not well thought of.

    Now I don't know the details of Google's tax arrangements but after Starbucks with its Luxemburg transfer pricing and Kraft with its Channel Islands 'loans' all such globalised businesses have become tarred with the same brush.

    "All that despite the fact it had revenues in the UK of £4.9bn in that tax year.
    Why Ireland?

    The corporate tax rate there is just 12.5%, a lot lower than most EU countries. Although rates vary depending on turnover, UK corporate tax is 20%, in France it is 33.33% and Italy 27.5%. Germany's rate is 30-33%.

    So all the revenues that pour in from sales across Europe, including the UK, end up being taxed at just 12.5% in Dublin."

    This seems to be the heart of the issue.

    The only way to "solve" this is to harmonise tax rates across the EU (Corporation tax) so that MNCs don't choose Ireland for their headquarters. Even then why should Google move out of it's Dublin headquarters.

    The real issue with this is that when we gave Ireland all that money way back when we didn't insist on them raising their Corp tax rate. This is just a logical consequence of that. I see Zero issue with what Google has done and think we're lucky to get $130 Million to be frank.

    This is very different from the transfer pricing shenanigans of Starbucks where there are alot of stores here.
  • Options

    O/T
    Looking at reports of the demos in Dover today.
    Generally described as Anti-Immigration rally and Anti-Racism rally.
    Why the difference?
    Should it not be Anti and Pro immigration etc.

    Well it was organised by the National Front, and they do have form for racism.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,003
    Alistair said:

    The heart O the issue is that they negotiate the sales of advertising in their London office yet their contention that their London office is not a permanent residence in the UK has never been challenged.

    The problem with all of this is that it's very difficult. If you have a factory in Switzerland, and a sales office in London, where does the profit accrue? London or Switzerland?

    The problem with "clamping down" too much is that Google will decide: we don't need to have people selling the advertising in the UK, they can do it from Dublin. Companies are rational, and this is a globalised world: you can sell Internet advertising from anywhere in the world, the servers can exist anywhere in the world.

    It's a hard problem to solve.
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    Pulpstar said:

    What is the problem with Google's tax bill. They're headquartered in Ireland and I don't even think it is about "clever lawyers and accountants" at all.

    My company's biggest project last year was in Turkey. We paid zero to the Turkish exchequer.

    Does your company have a great big office and employ hundreds/thousands of people in Turkey ?
    ...
    If there are thousands of people working in Turkey on the project, but it doesn't constitute a permanent establishment, then it wouldn't matter.

    That wouldn't even change if the company had a separate business unit in Turkey, which would be taxed as an independent business. So long as the project was an export from the UK business unit, the profit from it gets taxed in the UK.

    That's just the way this stuff works right now. It would be possible to completely change the way things work - what Lord Lawson is suggesting (or Max on here a few days back) would be a radical overhaul - but it would require widespread international agreement (including from countries which would stand to lose out on the deal). It's not going to happen any time soon, even if momentum starts building in that direction.

    As far as I can see, campaigners' best chance with Google is to "persuade" (pressure/shame) them into booking some of their sales to the UK to the London office.
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,003
    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    What is the problem with Google's tax bill. They're headquartered in Ireland and I don't even think it is about "clever lawyers and accountants" at all.

    My company's biggest project last year was in Turkey. We paid zero to the Turkish exchequer.

    Does your company have a great big office and employ hundreds/thousands of people in Turkey ?

    I don't think its regarded as a problem if a company is seen to pay its 'fair share' of tax 'somewhere'.

    But when tax havens and accounting tricks are believed to be involved its not well thought of.

    Now I don't know the details of Google's tax arrangements but after Starbucks with its Luxemburg transfer pricing and Kraft with its Channel Islands 'loans' all such globalised businesses have become tarred with the same brush.

    "All that despite the fact it had revenues in the UK of £4.9bn in that tax year.
    Why Ireland?

    The corporate tax rate there is just 12.5%, a lot lower than most EU countries. Although rates vary depending on turnover, UK corporate tax is 20%, in France it is 33.33% and Italy 27.5%. Germany's rate is 30-33%.

    So all the revenues that pour in from sales across Europe, including the UK, end up being taxed at just 12.5% in Dublin."

    This seems to be the heart of the issue.

    The only way to "solve" this is to harmonise tax rates across the EU (Corporation tax) so that MNCs don't choose Ireland for their headquarters. Even then why should Google move out of it's Dublin headquarters.

    The real issue with this is that when we gave Ireland all that money way back when we didn't insist on them raising their Corp tax rate. This is just a logical consequence of that. I see Zero issue with what Google has done and think we're lucky to get $130 Million to be frank.

    This is very different from the transfer pricing shenanigans of Starbucks where there are alot of stores here.
    Heck: maybe we're doing this wrong. Maybe be should be cutting corporation tax to 10%; we might end up with a lot more tax and a lot more jobs.
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,003

    Pulpstar said:

    What is the problem with Google's tax bill. They're headquartered in Ireland and I don't even think it is about "clever lawyers and accountants" at all.

    My company's biggest project last year was in Turkey. We paid zero to the Turkish exchequer.

    Does your company have a great big office and employ hundreds/thousands of people in Turkey ?
    ...
    If there are thousands of people working in Turkey on the project, but it doesn't constitute a permanent establishment, then it wouldn't matter.

    That wouldn't even change if the company had a separate business unit in Turkey, which would be taxed as an independent business. So long as the project was an export from the UK business unit, the profit from it gets taxed in the UK.

    That's just the way this stuff works right now. It would be possible to completely change the way things work - what Lord Lawson is suggesting (or Max on here a few days back) would be a radical overhaul - but it would require widespread international agreement (including from countries which would stand to lose out on the deal). It's not going to happen any time soon, even if momentum starts building in that direction.

    As far as I can see, campaigners' best chance with Google is to "persuade" (pressure/shame) them into booking some of their sales to the UK to the London office.
    This reminds me of #vatmess. In an attempt to clampdown on multinational tax avoidance, you end up f*cking small businesses. If you have a small US company selling an on-line service, and you have a UK customer, are you obliged to collect tax and remit back to the UK government? It's just an incredibly hard problem to solve.
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    O/T
    Looking at reports of the demos in Dover today.
    Generally described as Anti-Immigration rally and Anti-Racism rally.
    Why the difference?
    Should it not be Anti and Pro immigration etc.

    BBC?
    I won't single out the BBC, it's the media generally.
    If one group turn out to oppose what the other are protesting about, have the intellectual honesty to describe them as such.
    IIRC You generally see demonstrations about hunting described as such.
  • Options

    O/T
    Looking at reports of the demos in Dover today.
    Generally described as Anti-Immigration rally and Anti-Racism rally.
    Why the difference?
    Should it not be Anti and Pro immigration etc.

    Well it was organised by the National Front, and they do have form for racism.
    As does Diane Abbott.
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929
    @rcs1000 We could match Ireland if we remain in the EU. If we vote to leave the EU then obviously it's a whole another ball game. But we have more flexibility with our laws then anyway.
  • Options

    O/T
    Looking at reports of the demos in Dover today.
    Generally described as Anti-Immigration rally and Anti-Racism rally.
    Why the difference?
    Should it not be Anti and Pro immigration etc.

    Well it was organised by the National Front, and they do have form for racism.
    Then describe it as a pro racism-and anti-racism event.
  • Options
    flightpath01flightpath01 Posts: 4,903

    Agree with Stodge that the first vaguely familiar Cabinet name to join Leave will have a big chance of being PM. As we've seen in Scotland, even losing a referendum doesn't necessarily stop the losers from piling in at the next opportunity.

    The point about Scotland is that once the referendum was out of the way, together with more devolution, then the public was free to throw out Labour MPs. The purpose of the SNP - no matter what anyone else might say - was served, after the vote there was no more independence on offer. The electorate was free to vote against the crass incompetent and corrupt Scottish Labour Party.
    If the referendum is lost for the mixed bunch that is Leave - do you seriously see the public falling over themselves to punish (what for?) Cameron and rush over to Farage and UKIP.
    Farage is already plotting his future, on an opposite track to Trump, as a media talking head and reality TV star.
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    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    kle4 said:



    Clinton seems to be pulling away in Iowa - 7 to 11 points ahead in the latest polls. The final Des Moines poll for the GOP is out at 5.45pm local time, which is 11.45pm our time.

    That's from before the latest e-mail revelations.
    Meh. If you were a voter who preferred Hillary to Sanders, would the news that she was once careless with some emails make you vote Sanders? If she was actually prosecuted it'd be awkward, but that won't happen before Monday.
    If the accusations are right, then she was more than 'careless'. That's quite a staggeringly dismissive thing to say.

    And even if she was 'careless', someone who is so careless should be allowed nowhere near any sensitive information.
    Perhaps they shouldn't. And yet that dismissive response seems quite probable from many people nevertheless. That they shouldn't be won't stop them being so.
    I think that the only thing that would really hurt Hillary with the emails would be if security of agents had been compromised rather than been at risk.

    Otherwise she is home, and any of the Hair Bear Bunch that the Republicans are choosing from would not be able to beat her.
    If proved, I look forward to others who do similar acts being treated so laxly. After all, it would be hard for her to know at the time she broke the law whether agents would be compromised or just put at risk.

    Agree with your second paragraph.
    It needs not just a smoking gun, but also an agent or similar who was arrested or killed, or pulled. Without that the scandal has no focus and will only convince the Clinton haters to hate a bit more.
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,003
    Pulpstar said:

    @rcs1000 We could match Ireland if we remain in the EU. If we vote to leave the EU then obviously it's a whole another ball game. But we have more flexibility with our laws then anyway.

    If we have a high rate of corporation tax an a free trade agreement with Ireland/the EU, then this kind of thing will continue even if we leave.

    Maybe it's time to say goodbye to corporation tax. It hardly raises any money anyway.
  • Options
    MyBurningEarsMyBurningEars Posts: 3,651
    edited January 2016
    Alistair said:



    The heart O the issue is that they negotiate the sales of advertising in their London office yet their contention that their London office is not a permanent residence in the UK has never been challenged.

    I made a similar point elsewhere but was (as far as I can see) quite correctly rebutted.

    Lots of companies employ international sales agents in an overseas territory to negotiate contracts for the export of their goods or services, but the sale ultimately gets booked back in the exporter's country.

    If you push Google really, really hard on the matter, isn't the end-game likely to be everything done from telesales in Ireland, as rcs points out? (They might still leave their developers in the UK. But it's difficult to argue that the UK coders are somehow directly responsible for ad sales in the UK.)

    I think one can reasonably query, in Google's case where their product is so ethereal, why they need to export from Ireland... with "persuasion" of some kind (an appropriate carrot or stick) perhaps they could just as well sell their product from London.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929
    That "tax on sales" proposed by Lord Lawson is just bonkers so far as I can initially tell. Top line is a crazy way to tax companies. Haven't even heard Corbyn propose anything that daft.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,898
    @TSE why am I thinking you're at Anfield again..?
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,003
    Pulpstar said:

    That "tax on sales" proposed by Lord Lawson is just bonkers so far as I can initially tell. Top line is a crazy way to tax companies. Haven't even heard Corbyn propose anything that daft.

    It would also just lead companies to not bother having a UK legal entity.
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    O/T
    Looking at reports of the demos in Dover today.
    Generally described as Anti-Immigration rally and Anti-Racism rally.
    Why the difference?
    Should it not be Anti and Pro immigration etc.

    Well it was organised by the National Front, and they do have form for racism.
    Then describe it as a pro racism-and anti-racism event.
    Not many pros with racism.

    But I'm writing a thread about that. Entitled 'Leave must not embody the spirit of Enoch Powell if they want to win'
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929
    rcs1000 said:

    Pulpstar said:

    That "tax on sales" proposed by Lord Lawson is just bonkers so far as I can initially tell. Top line is a crazy way to tax companies. Haven't even heard Corbyn propose anything that daft.

    It would also just lead companies to not bother having a UK legal entity.
    Well, yours truly would probably be on the dole right now if such a tax was in place :P.
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Sandpit said:

    @TSE why am I thinking you're at Anfield again..?

    TSE is very welcome at the King Power on Tuesday!
  • Options
    SimonStClareSimonStClare Posts: 7,976

    O/T
    Looking at reports of the demos in Dover today.
    Generally described as Anti-Immigration rally and Anti-Racism rally.
    Why the difference?
    Should it not be Anti and Pro immigration etc.

    BBC?
    I won't single out the BBC, it's the media generally.
    If one group turn out to oppose what the other are protesting about, have the intellectual honesty to describe them as such.
    IIRC You generally see demonstrations about hunting described as such.
    Heartily agree Mr Pubgoer and such media coverage reveals a lot about the organisation.

    BBC - Three people were arrested amid violent scenes as groups demonstrating against immigration clashed with anti-racism protesters in Dover.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-kent-35450115
  • Options
    isamisam Posts: 40,930
    edited January 2016
    As Enoch Powell is being proved correct all over Europe, and immigration/terrorism tops the polls of issues that matter to the public...
  • Options
    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,481
    edited January 2016
    Sandpit said:

    @TSE why am I thinking you're at Anfield again..?

    Nope, I'm in Sheffield. My next Liverpool match at Anfield will be against Augsburg at the end of February. In fact that's my next Liverpool match.

    Then the Rumbelows Cup Final againt Citeh a few days later.
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    Sandpit said:

    @TSE why am I thinking you're at Anfield again..?

    TSE is very welcome at the King Power on Tuesday!
    I'm in New York that day.
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    Chortle
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    O/T
    Looking at reports of the demos in Dover today.
    Generally described as Anti-Immigration rally and Anti-Racism rally.
    Why the difference?
    Should it not be Anti and Pro immigration etc.

    Well it was organised by the National Front, and they do have form for racism.
    I've had a better idea.
    The NF and BNP etc generally have fairly left wing ideas re state ownership and what have you.
    How about describing it as:
    'one group of left wing nutters throwing bricks at another group of left wing nutters'?
  • Options
    SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095
    So who cares what William Hill have to say.. As OGH says, we don't know what to compare it to.
    As for the GO decriers on here, he's done a much better job than most would have done in the circumstances, interesting that those putting the boot in would know how to start to deal with the deficit, all the suggestions ignore the politics of dealing with it
  • Options
    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,481
    edited January 2016

    O/T
    Looking at reports of the demos in Dover today.
    Generally described as Anti-Immigration rally and Anti-Racism rally.
    Why the difference?
    Should it not be Anti and Pro immigration etc.

    Well it was organised by the National Front, and they do have form for racism.
    I've had a better idea.
    The NF and BNP etc generally have fairly left wing ideas re state ownership and what have you.
    How about describing it as:
    'one group of left wing nutters throwing bricks at another group of left wing nutters'?
    Having had the EDL and Unite Against Fascism protest outside my front door in Manchester a few years ago, I view them both in stronger terms than nutters.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,898
    edited January 2016
    rcs1000 said:

    Pulpstar said:

    @rcs1000 We could match Ireland if we remain in the EU. If we vote to leave the EU then obviously it's a whole another ball game. But we have more flexibility with our laws then anyway.

    If we have a high rate of corporation tax an a free trade agreement with Ireland/the EU, then this kind of thing will continue even if we leave.

    Maybe it's time to say goodbye to corporation tax. It hardly raises any money anyway.
    Yes, there's now only a few large businesses that contribute a disproportionate amount of corporation tax, and it's very easy for them to jurisdiction shop within the EU.

    The current govt have cut CT from 28% to 21% over the last five years yet the amount paid has gone up to almost 2007 levels this year - due to international businesses choosing to base in the UK and a load more choosing not to relocate to Ireland or Luxembourg. George is trying to work out how much above Irish levels it need to be in order to maximise revenue.
  • Options
    surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549
    edited January 2016
    Pulpstar said:

    That "tax on sales" proposed by Lord Lawson is just bonkers so far as I can initially tell. Top line is a crazy way to tax companies. Haven't even heard Corbyn propose anything that daft.

    Actually, it has a lot going for it. It could only apply to those companies which have direct sales in the UK but do not pay Corporation Tax. I do not include companies here who might be using capital allowances or prior year losses to bring CT to zero.

    rcs1000 says they will go away ! Really ? Leave sales of £ 4.6bn ?
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,003

    O/T
    Looking at reports of the demos in Dover today.
    Generally described as Anti-Immigration rally and Anti-Racism rally.
    Why the difference?
    Should it not be Anti and Pro immigration etc.

    Well it was organised by the National Front, and they do have form for racism.
    I've had a better idea.
    The NF and BNP etc generally have fairly left wing ideas re state ownership and what have you.
    How about describing it as:
    'one group of left wing nutters throwing bricks at another group of left wing nutters'?
    Can we not skip the whole "wing" thing and just go with "nutters"?
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    stodgestodge Posts: 12,864
    Pulpstar said:

    That "tax on sales" proposed by Lord Lawson is just bonkers so far as I can initially tell. Top line is a crazy way to tax companies. Haven't even heard Corbyn propose anything that daft.

    It's not actually Lawson's proposal. I first saw it mooted by the 2020 Tax Commission set up by the TPA and the IOD and widely reported in the financial press. The commission basically argued for a huge simplification of the tax system including flat taxes.



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    AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    rcs1000 said:

    Pulpstar said:

    @rcs1000 We could match Ireland if we remain in the EU. If we vote to leave the EU then obviously it's a whole another ball game. But we have more flexibility with our laws then anyway.

    If we have a high rate of corporation tax an a free trade agreement with Ireland/the EU, then this kind of thing will continue even if we leave.

    Maybe it's time to say goodbye to corporation tax. It hardly raises any money anyway.
    I'd hardly call 9% of all tax receipts hardly any money.
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,898
    edited January 2016

    Sandpit said:

    @TSE why am I thinking you're at Anfield again..?

    TSE is very welcome at the King Power on Tuesday!
    LOL :) May the best team win!!

    I might bet on Leicester so I'm happy either way!
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    MyBurningEarsMyBurningEars Posts: 3,651
    edited January 2016
    Pulpstar said:


    ...The only way to "solve" this is to harmonise tax rates across the EU (Corporation tax) so that MNCs don't choose Ireland for their headquarters.

    That's not the only way to "solve" the issue, but harmonisation is one option. Getting involved in a corporation tax bidding war with the Irish is another (though we may well stand to lose out overall from doing so). Bribing/cajoling the Irish to raise their rates is another (though actually you obviously thought of this, see below). Scrapping the whole system of corporation tax and raising the taxes on capital gains and dividends instead is another "solution", as are the various attempts people have suggested to rectify or replace corporation tax (radical options that will probably never be implemented, but for instance some sort of change to country-by-country revenue reporting that means Irish sales to the UK are attributed as sales in the UK with resultant profits to be taxed in the UK, or switching from taxing profits to taxing sales, or various other things).
    Pulpstar said:


    The real issue with this is that when we gave Ireland all that money way back when we didn't insist on them raising their Corp tax rate. This is just a logical consequence of that.

    Quite. Missed a trick there, though the Irish were understandably resistant to having the rate tampered with. The fact so many US companies have their EU HQ in Dublin is something they don't want to lose out on anytime soon, and to be fair it would have been odd to bail them out while also demanding they throttle their own recovery.
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    ThreeQuidderThreeQuidder Posts: 6,133

    O/T
    Looking at reports of the demos in Dover today.
    Generally described as Anti-Immigration rally and Anti-Racism rally.
    Why the difference?
    Should it not be Anti and Pro immigration etc.

    In fairness, most demonstrations are against something.
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    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,481
    edited January 2016
    Sandpit said:

    Sandpit said:

    @TSE why am I thinking you're at Anfield again..?

    TSE is very welcome at the King Power on Tuesday!
    LOL :) May the best team win!!
    Leicester are crap, Benteke scored against them earlier in the season and he's rubbish.

    £32.5m for Benteke, what was Ian Ayre smoking when he made that deal with Villa?
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,898

    Sandpit said:

    @TSE why am I thinking you're at Anfield again..?

    Nope, I'm in Sheffield. My next Liverpool match at Anfield will be against Augsburg at the end of February. In fact that's my next Liverpool match.

    Then the Rumbelows Cup Final againt Citeh a few days later.
    Love the European nights, not managed to actually go for about five years now due to moving around too much. Will be at the local supporters' club bar with 100 other red shirts at midnight for the kickoff, might keep the next morning's diary clear!
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,003
    surbiton said:

    Pulpstar said:

    That "tax on sales" proposed by Lord Lawson is just bonkers so far as I can initially tell. Top line is a crazy way to tax companies. Haven't even heard Corbyn propose anything that daft.

    Actually, it has a lot going for it. It could only apply to those companies which have direct sales in the UK but do not pay Corporation Tax. I do not include companies here who might be using capital allowances or prior year losses to bring CT to zero.

    rcs1000 says they will go away ! Really ? Leave sales of £ 4.6bn ?
    They wouldn't leave sales of £4.6bn. They would just serve the UK market without having a legal entity in the UK.
  • Options

    O/T
    Looking at reports of the demos in Dover today.
    Generally described as Anti-Immigration rally and Anti-Racism rally.
    Why the difference?
    Should it not be Anti and Pro immigration etc.

    Well it was organised by the National Front, and they do have form for racism.
    I've had a better idea.
    The NF and BNP etc generally have fairly left wing ideas re state ownership and what have you.
    How about describing it as:
    'one group of left wing nutters throwing bricks at another group of left wing nutters'?
    Having had the EDL and Unite Against Fascism protest outside my front door in Manchester a few years ago, I view them both in stronger terms than nutters.
    What did you do to attract such opprobrium?
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,003

    O/T
    Looking at reports of the demos in Dover today.
    Generally described as Anti-Immigration rally and Anti-Racism rally.
    Why the difference?
    Should it not be Anti and Pro immigration etc.

    Well it was organised by the National Front, and they do have form for racism.
    I've had a better idea.
    The NF and BNP etc generally have fairly left wing ideas re state ownership and what have you.
    How about describing it as:
    'one group of left wing nutters throwing bricks at another group of left wing nutters'?
    Having had the EDL and Unite Against Fascism protest outside my front door in Manchester a few years ago, I view them both in stronger terms than nutters.
    What did you do to attract such opprobrium?
    TSE's music taste disgusts both groups in equal measure
This discussion has been closed.