politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Maybe next time the Tories will have to emulate the GE2015 EdS

The Chancellor, Philip Hammond, has been in full defensive mode as he has sought to fight off the criticism that his National Insurance changes for the self-employed are in breach of a GE2015 Conservative manifesto pledge.
Comments
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A timely reminder that things could be worse.0
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Bring back Dave and George.0
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I think we're in danger of going OTT. This is nowhere in the league of the tuition fees debacle - Which pretty much overnight saw the Lib-Dems going to 20% to 10% in the polls.
It's probably not even as bad as the Pasty tax.0 -
I'm not yet sure how this will play out. I'm not thrilled by the changes, but there are still considerable tax advantages to self-employment.
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You've changed your tune. You was #TeamHammond yesterday!TheScreamingEagles said:Bring back Dave and George.
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The OmNICshambles does not augar well for the great repeal bill.
Do we really want to give Mrs May Henry VIII powers?
Sic semper tyrannis.0 -
"One thing’s for sure Cameron/Osborne would not have made this mistake"
That some airbrushing of omnishambles budgets...There were I, II, lost count... Osborne did more post budget u-turns than Eric pickles has had greggs for lunch.0 -
Lol - the order of magnitude difference between this and the tuition fee effect is absolubtely staggering.
This is £240 / yr at most is it not ?
Tuition fees from zero to effectively up to around £84k over a lifetime in the last 20 years.0 -
PAYE employees far outnumber the self employed, so I'm not even sure that this is a vote loser.GIN1138 said:I think we're in danger of going OTT. This is nowhere in the league of the tuition fees debacle - Which pretty much overnight saw the Lib-Dems going to 20% to 10% in the polls.
It's probably not even as bad as the Pasty tax.0 -
9 day wonder. Brown and Osborne set a very, very high bar for budgetary foul-ups. "OmNICshambles" just doesn't make it as a meme, and if that plus sacking Tarzan is as bad as it gets there is not a lot to worry about.0
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Who will be the Minister in charge of the Repeal Bill?TheScreamingEagles said:The OmNICshambles does not augar well for the great repeal bill.
Do we really want to give Mrs May Henry VIII powers?
Sic semper tyrannis.0 -
I fell for the jokes.GIN1138 said:
You've changed your tune. You was #TeamHammond yesterday!TheScreamingEagles said:Bring back Dave and George.
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I see that the whole Brexit causing a collapse in support for Scottish independence is gathering pace
https://twitter.com/ReutersJamie/status/8397810819644907570 -
Politics of envy plays far better than people are prepared to admit I expect.glw said:
PAYE employees far outnumber the self employed, so I'm not even sure that this is a vote loser.GIN1138 said:I think we're in danger of going OTT. This is nowhere in the league of the tuition fees debacle - Which pretty much overnight saw the Lib-Dems going to 20% to 10% in the polls.
It's probably not even as bad as the Pasty tax.0 -
Yes. George's focus group would have picked up the trouble about a week after the budget, as it usually did.TheScreamingEagles said:Bring back Dave and George.
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Good post from @Richard_Tyndall OPT. As is often the case with Richard, I don't agree with all of it but his views are always very cogently argued.
The key point I do agree with is this idea – that has been allowed to fester – that welfare should be a 'pay in, get out' regime. That's simply bonkers. My household income is very high compared to the average and, therefore, I pay a lot of tax, compared to the average. Do I think I should get all that back in services? No. Clearly I pay that as a mixture of a safety net and a general view that all civilised nations have a floor beneath which no citizen should be allowed to fall. Tax and welfare is a cost of running a country and an economy, not some sort of Christmas Savings Club run by HMRC.0 -
Theoretically David Davis, but it will involve every minister.GIN1138 said:
Who will be the Minister in charge of the Repeal Bill?TheScreamingEagles said:The OmNICshambles does not augar well for the great repeal bill.
Do we really want to give Mrs May Henry VIII powers?
Sic semper tyrannis.0 -
FWIW I think the NIC thing is a storm in a teacup. It's hardly a horrific measure, perhaps amateurishly handled, but there have been much worse.0
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I am struggling to see how any of this matters. There is no opposition, so the Tories can do what they like. They'll probably end up going back on this because May hates bad headlines in the Tory press.0
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It's a bit of a disaster, but a minor one in the overall scheme of things. I don't think a 2% tax increase for some well-paid people who pay much less tax than employed people (which is what this is) is really going to be remembered amidst all the Brexit fallout.0
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The Ed Stone, an undeclared expense & monument to Miliband's folly. Too heavy for the platform, a definite jaw dropping WTF moment in 2015 GE.
Otherwise it is a great idea to set manifesto commitments in stone.0 -
@JBeattieMirror: Hammond's cocksure joke about Norman Lamont getting sacked ten weeks after delivering a budget looking less amusing for him by the minute0
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Someone posted yesterday that Osborne put up NI for some last year. Is this true?Richard_Nabavi said:It's a bit of a disaster, but a minor one in the overall scheme of things. I don't think a 2% increase for some well-paid people (which is what this is) is really going to be remembered amidst all the Brexit fallout.
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Yes, public sector workersisam said:
Someknd posted yesterday that Osborne put up NI for some last year. Is this true?Richard_Nabavi said:It's a bit of a disaster, but a minor one in the overall scheme of things. I don't think a 2% increase for some well-paid people (which is what this is) is really going to be remembered amidst all the Brexit fallout.
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OmNICshambles, like the LDs tuition fees pledge, will be remembered
No it won't.0 -
David Davis has done quite well so far I think.TheScreamingEagles said:
Theoretically David Davis, but it will involve every minister.GIN1138 said:
Who will be the Minister in charge of the Repeal Bill?TheScreamingEagles said:The OmNICshambles does not augar well for the great repeal bill.
Do we really want to give Mrs May Henry VIII powers?
Sic semper tyrannis.0 -
That is pretty much spot on. Rephrased in realpolitik terms, the rich should aim to pay just enough tax to the proles, to dissuade the proles from killing and eating them.Bojabob said:Good post from @Richard_Tyndall OPT. As is often the case with Richard, I don't agree with all of it but his views are always very cogently argued.
The key point I do agree with is this idea – that has been allowed to fester – that welfare should be a 'pay in, get out' regime. That's simply bonkers. My household income is very high compared to the average and, therefore, I pay a lot of tax, compared to the average. Do I think I should get all that back in services? No. Clearly I pay that as a mixture of a safety net and a general view that all civilised nations have a floor beneath which no citizen should be allowed to fall. Tax and welfare is a cost of running a country and an economy, not some sort of Christmas Savings Club run by HMRC.0 -
But that is almost exactly what most people think NI is, as I've heard first hand many times. Lots of people seem to think there is a pot of gold with their name on it just waiting for retirement. They don't realise that NI goes towards general current spending.Bojabob said:Tax and welfare is a cost of running a country and an economy, not some sort of Christmas Savings Club run by HMRC.
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Yes, me.isam said:
Someknd posted yesterday that Osborne put up NI for some last year. Is this true?Richard_Nabavi said:It's a bit of a disaster, but a minor one in the overall scheme of things. I don't think a 2% increase for some well-paid people (which is what this is) is really going to be remembered amidst all the Brexit fallout.
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Envy or fairness, depending on whether you are the one being taxed or not.Pulpstar said:
Politics of envy plays far better than people are prepared to admit I expect.glw said:
PAYE employees far outnumber the self employed, so I'm not even sure that this is a vote loser.GIN1138 said:I think we're in danger of going OTT. This is nowhere in the league of the tuition fees debacle - Which pretty much overnight saw the Lib-Dems going to 20% to 10% in the polls.
It's probably not even as bad as the Pasty tax.0 -
Given the only polling on the subject has voters backing the NI increase, the Lords and Heseltine are yet again putting themselves against public opinion on Brexit and it was Cameron and Osborne's impossible manifesto commitment to hold income tax and NI rates and cut inheritance tax and increase funding for the NHS and social care which meant something had to give to say this is May's worst week in government is absurd0
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This in itself might not be a vote loser but Hammond's credibility is definitely harmed, we'll wait and see to what degreeglw said:
PAYE employees far outnumber the self employed, so I'm not even sure that this is a vote loser.GIN1138 said:I think we're in danger of going OTT. This is nowhere in the league of the tuition fees debacle - Which pretty much overnight saw the Lib-Dems going to 20% to 10% in the polls.
It's probably not even as bad as the Pasty tax.0 -
What was it before, and "after" forFreggles said:
Yes, public sector workersisam said:
Someknd posted yesterday that Osborne put up NI for some last year. Is this true?Richard_Nabavi said:It's a bit of a disaster, but a minor one in the overall scheme of things. I don't think a 2% increase for some well-paid people (which is what this is) is really going to be remembered amidst all the Brexit fallout.
1) A self employed person earning £30k.
2) An employed (Private sector) person earning £30k.
3) An employed (Public sector) person earning £30k.0 -
One reason why IC & NI should be merged...But given the outcry over journalists paying 60p more a week in tax, that is never going to happen.Bojabob said:Good post from @Richard_Tyndall OPT. As is often the case with Richard, I don't agree with all of it but his views are always very cogently argued.
The key point I do agree with is this idea – that has been allowed to fester – that welfare should be a 'pay in, get out' regime. That's simply bonkers. My household income is very high compared to the average and, therefore, I pay a lot of tax, compared to the average. Do I think I should get all that back in services? No. Clearly I pay that as a mixture of a safety net and a general view that all civilised nations have a floor beneath which no citizen should be allowed to fall. Tax and welfare is a cost of running a country and an economy, not some sort of Christmas Savings Club run by HMRC.0 -
I didn't even realise there had been such a pledge. And I pay attention to politics! It's certainly nowhere near the iconic status that the LD tuition fees pledge had.tlg86 said:OmNICshambles, like the LDs tuition fees pledge, will be remembered
No it won't.0 -
Everybody goes back on manifesto commitments. Sometimes even if they were a good idea at the time, they are just unworkable thorugh no fault of those proposing it due to outside events. And sometimes they were never good ideas in the first place. Going back on a single one here (not that they haven't missed others, I am sure, but people are going hysterical over this one) is hardly that unusual an occurrence historically, and the important question is is there another way.
If it is justified and necessary the breach should be maintained, and the price will be people pointing out that breach next time - but every party can also point to breaches of manifesto promises, because a certain amount is unavoidable, so its not a huge concern unless they get into the habit of breaching for no good reason - or their own incompetence is the reason - otherwise no party should produce a manifesto, if breaking a pledge means we can trust none of it.
The Edstone was stupid for many reasons of course - the vacuous phrasing, the gimmicky nature of the stunt - but also because the idea a commitment should be set in stone so firmly is stupid, it is inflexible. Parties need to stick to their promises or else justify why they cannot, and we should judge them on how well they justify any broken promises, not merely on whether they did break a promise, because it might be for a good reason. If it is, we can be more confident they won't break the next lot of promises without a good reason.0 -
No comparison really, the LDs U-turn on their tuition fees pledge meant every student would leave university owing many thousands of pounds, just as they embark on their chosen careers. The small changes to NICS is a matter of £100s for those self-employed.0
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Trump proved you don't need the media if your ideas and personality are strong enough.FrancisUrquhart said:
One reason why IC & NI should be merged...But given the outcry over journalists paying 60p more a week in tax, that is never going to happen.Bojabob said:Good post from @Richard_Tyndall OPT. As is often the case with Richard, I don't agree with all of it but his views are always very cogently argued.
The key point I do agree with is this idea – that has been allowed to fester – that welfare should be a 'pay in, get out' regime. That's simply bonkers. My household income is very high compared to the average and, therefore, I pay a lot of tax, compared to the average. Do I think I should get all that back in services? No. Clearly I pay that as a mixture of a safety net and a general view that all civilised nations have a floor beneath which no citizen should be allowed to fall. Tax and welfare is a cost of running a country and an economy, not some sort of Christmas Savings Club run by HMRC.0 -
Only 49% of all voters though but we know No voters turn out from 2014. Of course Yes had a clear lead in a poll a fortnight before the last indyrefAlistair said:I see that the whole Brexit causing a collapse in support for Scottish independence is gathering pace
https://twitter.com/ReutersJamie/status/8397810819644907570 -
Did they? I thought they only had the lead in very few polls.HYUFD said:
Only 49% of all voters though but we know No voters turn out from 2014. Of course Yes had a clear lead in a poll a fortnight before the last indyrefAlistair said:I see that the whole Brexit causing a collapse in support for Scottish independence is gathering pace
https://twitter.com/ReutersJamie/status/839781081964490757
Nevertheless, it seems the case that the base independent support is up a few points. And we don't know if the No voters will all turnout to the same degree they did last time (though hopefully so). The numbers are with Yes, I fear.0 -
If Scotland votes for independence, I expect support for independence will perhaps a year later be at 60-40... which should increase over time particularly if Scotland rejoins the Eu to say 70-30.
A Scotland within the UK remains at 49-51 forever pretty much.0 -
Ok, so the Tories had already reneged on a, or more to the point, this, manifesto commitment. Why the outrage this year and not last?Freggles said:
Yes, public sector workersisam said:
Someknd posted yesterday that Osborne put up NI for some last year. Is this true?Richard_Nabavi said:It's a bit of a disaster, but a minor one in the overall scheme of things. I don't think a 2% increase for some well-paid people (which is what this is) is really going to be remembered amidst all the Brexit fallout.
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Perhaps, although the polling general doesn't show much change from Referendum (apart from a blip straight after the Brexit vote).Alistair said:I see that the whole Brexit causing a collapse in support for Scottish independence is gathering pace
https://twitter.com/ReutersJamie/status/8397810819644907570 -
In the hands of Blair/Brown in their glory days this would have been manna from heaven. They would have put this manifesto pledge break in their back pockets and then hammered the Tories at next GE on every single one of their tax manifesto commitments. Effectively done this could neutralise the usual 'tax bombshell' tory attack.Bojabob said:FWIW I think the NIC thing is a storm in a teacup. It's hardly a horrific measure, perhaps amateurishly handled, but there have been much worse.
But, we have Corbyn and clowns in charge, so it wont happen...0 -
So yes, the breach if upheld will be thrown in the Tories' faces; are we to believe a government has never had to face that before? We all want promises to be kept, where possible (and unworkable promises not to be made in the first place) and they may and should face consequences for that, but how severe should surely depend on how many times they break promises, for what reason, and what is the alternative offering?0
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My pay slips for March 2016 and April 2016:Pulpstar said:
What was it before, and "after" forFreggles said:
Yes, public sector workersisam said:
Someknd posted yesterday that Osborne put up NI for some last year. Is this true?Richard_Nabavi said:It's a bit of a disaster, but a minor one in the overall scheme of things. I don't think a 2% increase for some well-paid people (which is what this is) is really going to be remembered amidst all the Brexit fallout.
1) A self employed person earning £30k.
2) An employed (Private sector) person earning £30k.
3) An employed (Public sector) person earning £30k.
March: £2,818.17 - NI: £227.49
April: £2,818.17 - NI: £257.540 -
Squeaky bum time at No 10. Carlotta will be wetting herself on how she can construe this as BAD SCOTLAND.HYUFD said:
Only 49% of all voters though but we know No voters turn out from 2014. Of course Yes had a clear lead in a poll a fortnight before the last indyrefAlistair said:I see that the whole Brexit causing a collapse in support for Scottish independence is gathering pace
https://twitter.com/ReutersJamie/status/8397810819644907570 -
Yes need a clear lead to be sure of victory, they still don't have it even with the prospect of hard Brexit and most likely it will be a job offer requirement and bilateral agreements etc which May be acceptable to Scots anyway. Of course the harder the Brexit the even harder the Scexit, Scottish independence now means border controls at Berwick and customs duties on Scottish exports to the rest of the UKkle4 said:
Did they? I thought they only had the lead in very few polls.HYUFD said:
Only 49% of all voters though but we know No voters turn out from 2014. Of course Yes had a clear lead in a poll a fortnight before the last indyrefAlistair said:I see that the whole Brexit causing a collapse in support for Scottish independence is gathering pace
https://twitter.com/ReutersJamie/status/839781081964490757
Nevertheless, it seems the case that the base independent support is up a few points. And we don't know if the No voters will all turnout to the same degree they did last time (though hopefully so). The numbers are with Yes, I fear.0 -
It's probably a bit of a storm in a teacup. However, it illustrates a few things:
1) The government is inept in checking what it had promised in the last manifesto. It's almost as if it doesn't feel that the manifesto has anything to do with it.
2) Brexit has transformed the political terrain. It feels quaint to be talking about tax and spend.
3) If the government can't get this policy through, it's a reminder that its small majority didn't become numerically much larger just because the opposition got more inept. Theresa May would still do well to find a way of engineering an early election, if she can.0 -
Remoaners wanting something to bash the government with?isam said:
Ok, so the Tories had already reneged on a, or more to the point, this, manifesto commitment. Why the outrage this year and not last?Freggles said:
Yes, public sector workersisam said:
Someknd posted yesterday that Osborne put up NI for some last year. Is this true?Richard_Nabavi said:It's a bit of a disaster, but a minor one in the overall scheme of things. I don't think a 2% increase for some well-paid people (which is what this is) is really going to be remembered amidst all the Brexit fallout.
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Exactly, and that is also CCHQ's spin that it is only a few journalists who are out of pocket.SimonStClare said:No comparison really, the LDs U-turn on their tuition fees pledge meant every student would leave university owing many thousands of pounds, just as they embark on their chosen careers. The small changes to NICS is a matter of £100s for those self-employed.
But the similarity is with the broken election pledge. A new factor is it may strain relationships between the executive and backbenches, and even the party in the country. May was supposed to be their friend, unlike the ponceyboots (am I saying it right?) Cameroons, who were seen as interlopers to be tolerated while they were winning, like Tony Blair and New Labour. This upsets that narrative.0 -
I'd love to know what proportion of each cumulative percentage point of turnout Yes/No captured.HYUFD said:
Only 49% of all voters though but we know No voters turn out from 2014. Of course Yes had a clear lead in a poll a fortnight before the last indyrefAlistair said:I see that the whole Brexit causing a collapse in support for Scottish independence is gathering pace
https://twitter.com/ReutersJamie/status/839781081964490757
My feeling going into the vote was that a high turnout was good for yes but a very high turnout would be good for No.
Given the SNP got 50% on 72% turnout on the general election and Yes got 45% on 85% and the Yes to SNP vote was highly correlated I suppose you could make some assumptions.0 -
I think Scindependance Day is a given at this point, it's just a matter of when. I presume the EU will be giving them come hither eyes in order to cock over May's Brexit negotiations.kle4 said:
Did they? I thought they only had the lead in very few polls.HYUFD said:
Only 49% of all voters though but we know No voters turn out from 2014. Of course Yes had a clear lead in a poll a fortnight before the last indyrefAlistair said:I see that the whole Brexit causing a collapse in support for Scottish independence is gathering pace
https://twitter.com/ReutersJamie/status/839781081964490757
Nevertheless, it seems the case that the base independent support is up a few points. And we don't know if the No voters will all turnout to the same degree they did last time (though hopefully so). The numbers are with Yes, I fear.0 -
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No but you do have McDonnell talking about talking £800 billion from the wealthy, and you don't have to be that well off to just creep into the top 10%.rottenborough said:
In the hands of Blair/Brown in their glory days this would have been manna from heaven. They would have put this manifesto pledge break in their back pockets and then hammered the Tories at next GE on every single one of their tax manifesto commitments. Effectively done this could neutralise the usual 'tax bombshell' tory attack.Bojabob said:FWIW I think the NIC thing is a storm in a teacup. It's hardly a horrific measure, perhaps amateurishly handled, but there have been much worse.
But, we have Corbyn and clowns in charge, so it wont happen...0 -
One suspects that they may not have checked the manifesto because in their heads this is a new government, a May government, and the manifesto was Cameron.AlastairMeeks said:It's probably a bit of a storm in a teacup. However, it illustrates a few things:
1) The government is inept in checking what it had promised in the last manifesto. It's almost as if it doesn't feel that the manifesto has anything to do with it.
2) Brexit has transformed the political terrain. It feels quaint to be talking about tax and spend.
3) If the government can't get this policy through, it's a reminder that its small majority didn't become numerically much larger just because the opposition got more inept. Theresa May would still do well to find a way of engineering an early election, if she can.0 -
What say you about the NI increase on public sector workers from Osborne last year? I didn't know about that, or that there was a manifesto pledge not to do it, but it seems bizarre to hear the fuss over this years manifesto breakage, when it was already broken.AlastairMeeks said:It's probably a bit of a storm in a teacup. However, it illustrates a few things:
1) The government is inept in checking what it had promised in the last manifesto. It's almost as if it doesn't feel that the manifesto has anything to do with it.
2) Brexit has transformed the political terrain. It feels quaint to be talking about tax and spend.
3) If the government can't get this policy through, it's a reminder that its small majority didn't become numerically much larger just because the opposition got more inept. Theresa May would still do well to find a way of engineering an early election, if she can.0 -
The Sun, The Telegraph, The Daily Mail, John Redwood, IDS, and The Moggster are Remoaners? Who knew.glw said:
Remoaners wanting something to bash the government with?isam said:
Ok, so the Tories had already reneged on a, or more to the point, this, manifesto commitment. Why the outrage this year and not last?Freggles said:
Yes, public sector workersisam said:
Someknd posted yesterday that Osborne put up NI for some last year. Is this true?Richard_Nabavi said:It's a bit of a disaster, but a minor one in the overall scheme of things. I don't think a 2% increase for some well-paid people (which is what this is) is really going to be remembered amidst all the Brexit fallout.
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Yep - totally agree. As Marx nearly said about welfare and services: "From each according to his ability to pay, to each according to his needs." Of course, the key debating point is what constitutes "needs".Bojabob said:Good post from @Richard_Tyndall OPT. As is often the case with Richard, I don't agree with all of it but his views are always very cogently argued.
The key point I do agree with is this idea – that has been allowed to fester – that welfare should be a 'pay in, get out' regime. That's simply bonkers. My household income is very high compared to the average and, therefore, I pay a lot of tax, compared to the average. Do I think I should get all that back in services? No. Clearly I pay that as a mixture of a safety net and a general view that all civilised nations have a floor beneath which no citizen should be allowed to fall. Tax and welfare is a cost of running a country and an economy, not some sort of Christmas Savings Club run by HMRC.
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In other words 'the party I support broke a pledge and I hope that is forgotten quickly'.ThreeQuidder said:
I didn't even realise there had been such a pledge. And I pay attention to politics! It's certainly nowhere near the iconic status that the LD tuition fees pledge had.tlg86 said:OmNICshambles, like the LDs tuition fees pledge, will be remembered
No it won't.0 -
OGH is very happy to have a stick to beat the Tories. He hopes that his LibDem friends will benefit.0
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The big surprise for me was Glasgow voting Yes. Had that city been the first to declare, I'd have been sure that Yes had won.Alistair said:
I'd love to know what proportion of each cumulative percentage point of turnout Yes/No captured.HYUFD said:
Only 49% of all voters though but we know No voters turn out from 2014. Of course Yes had a clear lead in a poll a fortnight before the last indyrefAlistair said:I see that the whole Brexit causing a collapse in support for Scottish independence is gathering pace
https://twitter.com/ReutersJamie/status/839781081964490757
My feeling going into the vote was that a high turnout was good for yes but a very high turnout would be good for No.
Given the SNP got 50% on 72% turnout on the general election and Yes got 45% on 85% and the Yes to SNP vote was highly correlated I suppose you could make some assumptions.0 -
Cheers, I'll take a look at mine when I get home - we're on a similiar wage (I think)tlg86 said:
My pay slips for March 2016 and April 2016:Pulpstar said:
What was it before, and "after" forFreggles said:
Yes, public sector workersisam said:
Someknd posted yesterday that Osborne put up NI for some last year. Is this true?Richard_Nabavi said:It's a bit of a disaster, but a minor one in the overall scheme of things. I don't think a 2% increase for some well-paid people (which is what this is) is really going to be remembered amidst all the Brexit fallout.
1) A self employed person earning £30k.
2) An employed (Private sector) person earning £30k.
3) An employed (Public sector) person earning £30k.
March: £2,818.17 - NI: £227.49
April: £2,818.17 - NI: £257.540 -
Tuition fees were politically viable because the burden fell on *other* people.Pulpstar said:Lol - the order of magnitude difference between this and the tuition fee effect is absolubtely staggering.
This is £240 / yr at most is it not ?
Tuition fees from zero to effectively up to around £84k over a lifetime in the last 20 years.
People who couldn't yet vote.0 -
One indeed suspects that. If correct, that tells us something about David Cameron's government and something about Theresa May's government.rottenborough said:
One suspects that they may not have checked the manifesto because in their heads this is a new government, a May government, and the manifesto was Cameron.AlastairMeeks said:It's probably a bit of a storm in a teacup. However, it illustrates a few things:
1) The government is inept in checking what it had promised in the last manifesto. It's almost as if it doesn't feel that the manifesto has anything to do with it.
2) Brexit has transformed the political terrain. It feels quaint to be talking about tax and spend.
3) If the government can't get this policy through, it's a reminder that its small majority didn't become numerically much larger just because the opposition got more inept. Theresa May would still do well to find a way of engineering an early election, if she can.0 -
True, but wasn't the McD thing from a video from 2012 or some such?glw said:
No but you do have McDonnell talking about talking £800 billion from the wealthy, and you don't have to be that well off to just creep into the top 10%.rottenborough said:
In the hands of Blair/Brown in their glory days this would have been manna from heaven. They would have put this manifesto pledge break in their back pockets and then hammered the Tories at next GE on every single one of their tax manifesto commitments. Effectively done this could neutralise the usual 'tax bombshell' tory attack.Bojabob said:FWIW I think the NIC thing is a storm in a teacup. It's hardly a horrific measure, perhaps amateurishly handled, but there have been much worse.
But, we have Corbyn and clowns in charge, so it wont happen...0 -
If this is as bad as it gets they don't have much to worry about.0
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Are Mr Smithson and his Lib Dem leader Tim Farron not being a trifle hypocritical in prattling on about the government breaking manifesto pledges....certainly two words do spring to mind here..."tuition fees".0
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Yes it is old, the Tories will just have to make do with "he wants to borrow £500 billion".rottenborough said:
True, but wasn't the McD thing from a video from 2012 or some such?glw said:
No but you do have McDonnell talking about talking £800 billion from the wealthy, and you don't have to be that well off to just creep into the top 10%.rottenborough said:
In the hands of Blair/Brown in their glory days this would have been manna from heaven. They would have put this manifesto pledge break in their back pockets and then hammered the Tories at next GE on every single one of their tax manifesto commitments. Effectively done this could neutralise the usual 'tax bombshell' tory attack.Bojabob said:FWIW I think the NIC thing is a storm in a teacup. It's hardly a horrific measure, perhaps amateurishly handled, but there have been much worse.
But, we have Corbyn and clowns in charge, so it wont happen...0 -
@smashmorePH: Tory MP Stephen McPartland tells @daily_politics NIC raise is "not acceptable, it cannot be allowed to proceed".0
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The government U-turning would be bad news for them. It was after Osborne u-turned on tax credits that back benchers knew they could push him around
Hammond needs to stand firm, or he WILL pay the price.0 -
Hold on, wasn't the NI thing last year about SERPS or one of the other pension thingies?isam said:
What say you about the NI increase on public sector workers from Osborne last year? I didn't know about that, or that there was a manifesto pledge not to do it, but it seems bizarre to hear the fuss over this years manifesto breakage, when it was already broken.AlastairMeeks said:It's probably a bit of a storm in a teacup. However, it illustrates a few things:
1) The government is inept in checking what it had promised in the last manifesto. It's almost as if it doesn't feel that the manifesto has anything to do with it.
2) Brexit has transformed the political terrain. It feels quaint to be talking about tax and spend.
3) If the government can't get this policy through, it's a reminder that its small majority didn't become numerically much larger just because the opposition got more inept. Theresa May would still do well to find a way of engineering an early election, if she can.0 -
It's not really true. What he did was end the (partial) contracting-out of NI for public sector workers, marginally reducing the massively unfair advantage which public-sector workers have over almost everyone else in their pension arrangements.isam said:Someone posted yesterday that Osborne put up NI for some last year. Is this true?
Unsurprisingly, although as you'd expect the unions were indignant about it, it was so obviously not an unfair change that the indignation didn't get much publicity, and it would be hard to argue that it was a breach of the manifesto pledge.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/george-osborne-national-insurance-wage-cuts-a6956731.html
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I'm not saying everybody who is complaining is a Remoaner. But there do seem to be a fair number of commentators who in other circumstances would normally applaud a modest and highly progressive tax rise.TheScreamingEagles said:
The Sun, The Telegraph, The Daily Mail, John Redwood, IDS, and The Moggster are Remoaners? Who knew.glw said:
Remoaners wanting something to bash the government with?isam said:
Ok, so the Tories had already reneged on a, or more to the point, this, manifesto commitment. Why the outrage this year and not last?Freggles said:
Yes, public sector workersisam said:
Someknd posted yesterday that Osborne put up NI for some last year. Is this true?Richard_Nabavi said:It's a bit of a disaster, but a minor one in the overall scheme of things. I don't think a 2% increase for some well-paid people (which is what this is) is really going to be remembered amidst all the Brexit fallout.
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Dominic Raab not happy. Warning a seperate bill will allow NI to be looked at "in the round".0
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If he doesn't have the numbers to back his proposal (and my reading is that he doesn't), he will need to bend - or crash.Pulpstar said:The government U-turning would be bad news for them. It was after Osborne u-turned on tax credits that back benchers knew they could push him around
Hammond needs to stand firm, or he WILL pay the price.0 -
You probably need to insert the word "self-employed" before "commentators".glw said:
I'm not saying everybody who is complaining is a Remoaner. But there do seem to be a fair number of commentators who in other circumstances would normally applaud a modest and highly progressive tax rise.TheScreamingEagles said:
The Sun, The Telegraph, The Daily Mail, John Redwood, IDS, and The Moggster are Remoaners? Who knew.glw said:
Remoaners wanting something to bash the government with?isam said:
Ok, so the Tories had already reneged on a, or more to the point, this, manifesto commitment. Why the outrage this year and not last?Freggles said:
Yes, public sector workersisam said:
Someknd posted yesterday that Osborne put up NI for some last year. Is this true?Richard_Nabavi said:It's a bit of a disaster, but a minor one in the overall scheme of things. I don't think a 2% increase for some well-paid people (which is what this is) is really going to be remembered amidst all the Brexit fallout.
Meanwhile Janet Dailey is on the warpath about the digital tax changes and quarterly inputs.0 -
https://twitter.com/jgforsyth/status/839815653238456322AlastairMeeks said:If he doesn't have the numbers to back his proposal (and my reading is that he doesn't), he will need to bend - or crash.
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If he bends on this then I can't see him lasting that long in post - or if he does doing anything meaningful to tax & spend. He will be hamstrung and seen as weak, weak, weak.AlastairMeeks said:
If he doesn't have the numbers to back his proposal (and my reading is that he doesn't), he will need to bend - or crash.Pulpstar said:The government U-turning would be bad news for them. It was after Osborne u-turned on tax credits that back benchers knew they could push him around
Hammond needs to stand firm, or he WILL pay the price.0 -
Given the clear correlation between deprivation and yes vote in the polling I wasn't surprised, but the low Glasgow turnout did surprise and (obviously) disappoint me.Sean_F said:
The big surprise for me was Glasgow voting Yes. Had that city been the first to declare, I'd have been sure that Yes had won.Alistair said:
I'd love to know what proportion of each cumulative percentage point of turnout Yes/No captured.HYUFD said:
Only 49% of all voters though but we know No voters turn out from 2014. Of course Yes had a clear lead in a poll a fortnight before the last indyrefAlistair said:I see that the whole Brexit causing a collapse in support for Scottish independence is gathering pace
https://twitter.com/ReutersJamie/status/839781081964490757
My feeling going into the vote was that a high turnout was good for yes but a very high turnout would be good for No.
Given the SNP got 50% on 72% turnout on the general election and Yes got 45% on 85% and the Yes to SNP vote was highly correlated I suppose you could make some assumptions.0 -
What on Earth makes him think that? Nobody is "unsackable" except maybe HMQ...Scott_P said:
https://twitter.com/jgforsyth/status/839815653238456322AlastairMeeks said:If he doesn't have the numbers to back his proposal (and my reading is that he doesn't), he will need to bend - or crash.
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Yes, it is looking that way.AlastairMeeks said:If he doesn't have the numbers to back his proposal (and my reading is that he doesn't), he will need to bend - or crash.
Some of the backbench fuss seems to be coming from hardline Brexiteers, who might be using it as a means of weakening the most senior softer-Brexit member of the government.0 -
I somewhat agree with Daley. There's also a bit of a divide between HRMC and the gov.uk people over systems. If we are going to file quarterly returns the systems had better be top notch.rottenborough said:You probably need to insert the word "self-employed" before "commentators".
Meanwhile Janet Dailey is on the warpath about the digital tax changes and quarterly inputs.
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Well quite. Lets look at the 25% charge put on the real "middle britain" of PAYE workers.rottenborough said:Dominic Raab not happy. Warning a seperate bill will allow NI to be looked at "in the round".
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"One thing’s for sure Cameron/Osborne would not have made this mistake."
OGH, you are TSE and I claim a reduced PB membership fee.
:-)0 -
Not only is the amount involved peanuts but surely it's the case that nobody is going to pay a penny more until January 2019?
ie The change comes in from April 2018 - tax and NI for 2018/19 will be payable in two instalments - in January 2019 and July 2019 - based on estimated income (ie prior year) - and it's then adjusted to correct figure in January 2020.0 -
The other wrinkle we need to contemplate is the different relationship between No 10 & 11. Cameron and Osborne were a double act; May and Hammond are nowhere near as close. Another fumble like this could easily see Disco Phil jettisoned in favour of another Amber-esque acolyte.AlastairMeeks said:
One indeed suspects that. If correct, that tells us something about David Cameron's government and something about Theresa May's government.rottenborough said:
One suspects that they may not have checked the manifesto because in their heads this is a new government, a May government, and the manifesto was Cameron.AlastairMeeks said:It's probably a bit of a storm in a teacup. However, it illustrates a few things:
1) The government is inept in checking what it had promised in the last manifesto. It's almost as if it doesn't feel that the manifesto has anything to do with it.
2) Brexit has transformed the political terrain. It feels quaint to be talking about tax and spend.
3) If the government can't get this policy through, it's a reminder that its small majority didn't become numerically much larger just because the opposition got more inept. Theresa May would still do well to find a way of engineering an early election, if she can.
Are there any markets up on next Chancellor right now?0 -
The press have totally misjudged this because of self enjoyed journos, 57% back the NI rise according to SkyTheScreamingEagles said:0 -
All seems a bit over the top reaction wise.
How many omnishambles budgets did boy George manage to engineer?
Likewise, regarding the polling for independence - good on them. The SNP would have to front up to some pretty harsh realities (which no doubt will also be blamed on Westminster.0 -
I suspect the idea was that this was a promise that could be ditched and blamed on having to go into another coalition government (not that the Lib Dems got away with that argument).
Winning an overall majority unexpectedly failed to disarm some of their own booby traps...0 -
If the 43 percent are all in Tory marginals...HYUFD said:
The press have totally misjudged this because of self enjoyed journos, 57% back the NI rise according to SkyTheScreamingEagles said:0 -
0
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To be honest I'd completely forgotten about this until someone mentioned it on here last night. Since I started work in 2009 quite a lot has changed - the pensions contributions have been going up while the tax free allowance has also been going up. The gains and losses have pretty much cancelled each other out.Pulpstar said:
Cheers, I'll take a look at mine when I get home - we're on a similiar wage (I think)tlg86 said:
My pay slips for March 2016 and April 2016:Pulpstar said:
What was it before, and "after" forFreggles said:
Yes, public sector workersisam said:
Someknd posted yesterday that Osborne put up NI for some last year. Is this true?Richard_Nabavi said:It's a bit of a disaster, but a minor one in the overall scheme of things. I don't think a 2% increase for some well-paid people (which is what this is) is really going to be remembered amidst all the Brexit fallout.
1) A self employed person earning £30k.
2) An employed (Private sector) person earning £30k.
3) An employed (Public sector) person earning £30k.
March: £2,818.17 - NI: £227.49
April: £2,818.17 - NI: £257.540 -
Olney might be able to hold Richmond because of this, and that will be about it.Alistair said:
If the 43 percent are all in Tory marginals...HYUFD said:
The press have totally misjudged this because of self enjoyed journos, 57% back the NI rise according to SkyTheScreamingEagles said:0 -
BF have a first cabinet member to leave market but it is totally moribund.Animal_pb said:
The other wrinkle we need to contemplate is the different relationship between No 10 & 11. Cameron and Osborne were a double act; May and Hammond are nowhere near as close. Another fumble like this could easily see Disco Phil jettisoned in favour of another Amber-esque acolyte.AlastairMeeks said:
One indeed suspects that. If correct, that tells us something about David Cameron's government and something about Theresa May's government.rottenborough said:
One suspects that they may not have checked the manifesto because in their heads this is a new government, a May government, and the manifesto was Cameron.AlastairMeeks said:It's probably a bit of a storm in a teacup. However, it illustrates a few things:
1) The government is inept in checking what it had promised in the last manifesto. It's almost as if it doesn't feel that the manifesto has anything to do with it.
2) Brexit has transformed the political terrain. It feels quaint to be talking about tax and spend.
3) If the government can't get this policy through, it's a reminder that its small majority didn't become numerically much larger just because the opposition got more inept. Theresa May would still do well to find a way of engineering an early election, if she can.
Are there any markets up on next Chancellor right now?0 -
Mr. Mannion, the biggest of those was the referendum promise.0
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Sky interviewing someone from Resolution Foundation- 96% of changes to NICs will be paid by wealthiest households.0