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In The Bleak Midwinter – politicalbetting.com

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  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336
    Roger said:

    You think that was a reply to a real letter?

    You were in marketing!


    Did you say the same about Fauci's musings on Santa? Or is this driven by something else.
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    edited November 2020
    Sandpit said:

    It is indeed a great opportunity for soft displays of power at the same time as knocking this bloody thing on the head. It looks like the three most likely candidates to end up in the third world are the Oxford, Russian and Chinese efforts, so it would be great if the U.K. effort can be distributed free to poorer countries.
    Not a bad idea. At £3 a dose, our £10 billion could cover half* the planet!

    *Ok, maybe a quarter to a third, depending on the protocol.
  • Meanwhile, recent lockdown in London seems to have made no difference.

    https://twitter.com/timspector/status/1331556653716697089
    That data surely implies the lockdown was just hard enough to stop the increase but not hard enough to cut the rates.

    So presumably if you want to stop the increase you need to maintain the lockdown, whereas if you want to cut the rates you'd need to lockdown harder.

    Not sure that data says what you want it to say.
  • MattW said:

    Agree - good post.

    On foreign aid I am not sure that a reduction to say 0.5% would do that much harm.

    There was an interesting session on "Wealth Taxin the light of COVID" in Parliament the other day. One aspect was an attempt to brand IHT and CGT as 'wealth taxes'.

    Another was a suggestion that the amount to be raised could be £250-500bn over several years, which is a little loopy - ask Mgr Hollande.

    But enough unanimity that reform of things like Stamp Duty to a more continuous setup may be imaginable.
    Finance guy in Spectator this week has interesting take on CGT: sort out the way private equity types can class 'carried interest' earnings as CG rather than income.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,523
    kle4 said:

    It'll lead to some bad press, no doubt, but it's an easy target even with the manifesto committment (and subsequent - why proceed with these other manifesto commitments you say still need to happen? - comments) and if that's the worst that comes from the announcements they'd take that, I bet.
    Boris needs to find a politically acceptable way to square the circle.

    The COVID Vaccine way does seem a good idea. As was the original (but I think, frustrated) idea to develop a production facility in an African country was (going back to I think April).

    He needs a Machiavelli with a black heart to point out these cynical but useful balances to him.

    Is Lord Mandelbrot available?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,651
    MattW said:

    Agree - good post.

    On foreign aid I am not sure that a reduction to say 0.5% would do that much harm.

    There was an interesting session on "Wealth Taxin the light of COVID" in Parliament the other day. One aspect was an attempt to brand IHT and CGT as 'wealth taxes'.

    Another was a suggestion that the amount to be raised could be £250-500bn over several years, which is a little loopy - ask Mgr Hollande.

    But enough unanimity that reform of things like Stamp Duty to a more continuous setup may be imaginable.
    I'd say that IHT and CGT are wealth taxes. Any tax levied on assets rather than revenue fits that bill imo.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,126
    stodge said:

    What got John Major over the line were the polls the weekend after Thatcher's departure showing he would do as well against Kinnock's Labour as Heseltine if not better.

    There's a key point for the future - the Conservative Party (and it's not alone in this) will only remove a leader when it's clear the leader itself is the problem and the problem would be solved by another leader.

    With Thatcher, Labour led by ten points, with Heseltine, the parties were level. Conservative backbenchers with small majorities faced electoral oblivion with Thatcher but a chance for salvation with Heseltine. That encouraged Heseltine to stand.

    Last year, once it became clear only Johnson, of all the leadership challengers, could deliver a majority for the Conservatives, the leadership election, as a contest, was over and once Prime Minister, the General Election was also over as a contest. The only way a non-Conservative Government could have been elected would have been for the Conservative-Leave vote to have been split with a sizeable chunk going to Farage. A divided Leave vote and a divided Remain vote would have produced a Commons with no overall majority (again).
    Yes, ultimately the reason that the Conservatives defenestrated Thatcher is that in her third term she had rapidly become an electoral liability. It wasn't just lefties that had gone off her, but her own party and voters.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045

    Meanwhile, recent lockdown in London seems to have made no difference.

    https://twitter.com/timspector/status/1331556653716697089
    Not to be funny, but if you were to show the graph up until end of October and then extrapolate the November figures from it before they had happened, I think you’d have been challenged if you’d said that the former impled the latter.

    To end of October, you’ve got a steady rise, mitigated by a dip at half term.
    Through November, you’ve got a flat line.

    I would have assumed that something changed at the start of November to flatten it, without any other information input. Wouldn’t you?
  • MaxPB said:

    Sterling is currently held in reserve and having the largest financial services industry in the world basically allows the Bank to get away with it. They're betting that neither of those changes. One of the reasons I liked Carney was that he had an outsider's view of the UK economy and that gave him an objectivity that I think Bailey lacks.

    Bailey is all upside all the time, when realistically there are huge downside risks coming in the near future.

    Even in a deal brexit and vaccine environment the UK economy has got lots of structural weaknesses related to decades of underinvestment in infrastructure by the state and businesses by corporates, a management class more interested in their individual bonus than long term company performance, unions more interested in squeezing as much from companies for their members rather than ensuring the overall health of the company and the world's most selfish pensioner class living on defined benefit schemes they pulled the ladder up for which our generation is going to end up funding through higher taxes for public sector pensions and significantly reduced dividends and capital growth in the private sector as dividends and investment will be sacrificed to keep those defined benefit schemes funded.

    Anyway, all of these things will have a severe depressive effect on trend growth in the UK and we will become a second rate economy and lose our ability to monetise debt.
    Not sure I am that pessimistic, if only because global savings have to be parked somewhere and the problems you describe with respect to our economy are not unique to us.
    There is a limit to QE's effectiveness when the curve is already so low and flat, but I think we are still some way off the point where it becomes positively damaging to the outlook.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,101
    Sandpit said:

    Exactly. If you’re going to have an aid budget, vaccinating a substantial proportion of the global population against this damn virus is the best possible use of it!
    I don't think anyone would disagree with this.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801

    Not to be funny, but if you were to show the graph up until end of October and then extrapolate the November figures from it before they had happened, I think you’d have been challenged if you’d said that the former impled the latter.

    To end of October, you’ve got a steady rise, mitigated by a dip at half term.
    Through November, you’ve got a flat line.

    I would have assumed that something changed at the start of November to flatten it, without any other information input. Wouldn’t you?
    Tbh, the flat line starts before the end of October.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,212
    edited November 2020
    kinabalu said:

    I'd say that IHT and CGT are wealth taxes. Any tax levied on assets rather than revenue fits that bill imo.
    Warren started to call her new tax the ultra-millionaire tax instead of a wealth tax. Multi-millionaire would fit better here, but I think differentiating between normal taxes on wealth like IHT and CGT, and taxing the super elite is important to get enough of the middles classes supporting it.

    The super elite avoid IHT in particular through trusts, so it is a middle class wealth tax rather than an elite wealth tax.
  • JACK_WJACK_W Posts: 682
    Scott_xP said:
    " .... unannounced movement."

    Translation - Personal Trump crap.
  • SirNorfolkPassmoreSirNorfolkPassmore Posts: 7,286
    edited November 2020

    Higher taxes are always popular with individuals if they are to the disbenefit of others (people that are richer than they). I have always thought there should be a voluntary tax, to enable those that believe in higher taxes to show a genuine commitment. If a majority participate it can then be rolled out to others.
    Some Councils do write to top band Council Tax payers asking for contributions to a voluntary fund (generally for purposes going above and beyond the local authority's legal obligations but which have a level of local support). They don't get a huge payment rate in relation to the turnover of a local authority, but the sums raised aren't insignificant either.

    I do agree with your general point. An interesting idea and I think it would raise a fair amount if for a specific purpose.
  • I don't think anyone would disagree with this.
    Yet the govt probably wont think of it!
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    I missed the ONS/NRS/NISRA figures were updated for week ending 13th November

    Deaths still up but they've stopped their strict adherence to the fortnightly doubling, 2,838 dead compared to 1,598 two week previously. A mere 77% increase compared to the doublings we saw over the last two months.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336

    I don't think anyone would disagree with this.
    HMG, in their infinite wisdom, might. :D
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,126

    Not a bad idea. At £3 a dose, our £10 billion could cover half* the planet!

    *Ok, maybe a quarter to a third, depending on the protocol.
    Certainly investment in a vaccination programme in developing countries is a highly appropriate use of our aid budget. I think though that your sums neglect the cost of the medical and administrative infrastructure needed for such a programme. That is likely to be more expensive than the vaccine, but also useful in the long term for other similar vaccines and public health programmes.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336
    MaxPB said:

    Tbh, the flat line starts before the end of October.
    Is this a case of policy catching up with behaviour?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,413
    Christ, and this guy is actually worried about supposedly fraudulent votes?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,086

    Not to be funny, but if you were to show the graph up until end of October and then extrapolate the November figures from it before they had happened, I think you’d have been challenged if you’d said that the former impled the latter.

    To end of October, you’ve got a steady rise, mitigated by a dip at half term.
    Through November, you’ve got a flat line.

    I would have assumed that something changed at the start of November to flatten it, without any other information input. Wouldn’t you?
    Fake graph of fake data of a fake disease, showing fake results of fake actions.

    Do catch up.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,126
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,101
    Lib Dum surge
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,336

    Lib Dum surge

    They were bound to get an outlier eventually.
  • kle4 said:

    Christ, and this guy is actually worried about supposedly fraudulent votes?
    Donald Trump is not concerned in the slightest about fraud. He's concerned about his own self-image as a Winner. Indeed, the Trump story over the next few years is fairly likely to end with the courts concluding that he's something of a fan of fraud.
  • RobD said:

    HMG, in their infinite wisdom, might. :D
    I think it will get hit from both sides within govt. Traditionalists wont like the aid budget being diverted and the populists wont want to pay for other countries. So unlikely to happen even though it should do and is clearly the best use of the 2021 aid budget.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,086

    I do understand, I just think the constant culture war trolling is a bit pathetic and not very funny.
    I know. But there are people out there in, some in positions to change things, who think like that.

    Personally, I *want* upset the Death To The West types. Doing it by vaccinating people against disease would make me giggle.
  • MysticroseMysticrose Posts: 4,688
    An article in Nature explaining why the Oxford Astra-Zeneca reporting may be incorrect, why the actual efficacy may be 66%: not 62% nor 90% nor 70%. It may all be down to the way the data was handled across the two different dosing regimes.

    Until further data is analysed we just don't know but at the moment there is no doubt in my mind that Moderna and Pfizer are frontrunners with Oxford in third.

    https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-03326-w

  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,485
    Finding it odd that Trump authorized the transition yet is still fighting and also that he is retweeting Sidney Powell stuff after she was fired. Looking like he is not in control of some of these events.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045
    edited November 2020
    MaxPB said:

    Tbh, the flat line starts before the end of October.
    If I’d been shown that at the end of October and before lockdown, I would have assumed a temporary dip caused by half term that was expiring at the end of October.

    We have the rise starting at the beginning of September. Separately, we have estimates that schools being open add 0.25 to R, and, since that date, ONS surveys showing a big rise in infections in school-aged children since schools reopened (especially secondary school children). We also have seen migration of infection from infectees of that age to older demographics.

    The rise between then and the end of October is linear. Given that viruses spread exponentially, and with no further input data, I would speculate from the graph alone that levels of restrictions were being progressively increased, but not by enough to flatten it.

    The dip in late October correlates with a dip in secondary school aged children in the ONS survey, which ended and resumed an upwards slope after about a week. This coincided with half term, and correlates well with the earlier estimates that schools being open adds to the infection rate.

    I would therefore expect, in a counterfactual, that the linear rise would have resumed through November without other measures being taken.

    Essentially, I would say it points to:

    - Half term/schools being closed + Tiered restrictions pull R below 1.
    - Tier 4/soft lockdown + schools being open hold R at 1.

    A corollary would be that a long Christmas break would obviate need for the current lockdown (unless there was otherwise increased mixing - which we fully expect to happen, anyway).
  • Hear comes Dishy Rishi with a load more logs from the magic money forest.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,447
    Andy_JS said:
    Starmer so underwhelming, people are prepared to consider the LibDems again in desperation?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,651
    edited November 2020

    Warren started to call her new tax the ultra-millionaire tax instead of a wealth tax. Multi-millionaire would fit better here, but I think differentiating between normal taxes on wealth like IHT and CGT, and taxing the super elite is important to get enough of the middles classes supporting it.

    The super elite avoid IHT in particular through trusts, so it is a middle class wealth tax rather than an elite wealth tax.
    Yes there's a difference between a tax on wealth and a tax on the wealthY. For example, I'd say an income tax of say 75% on earnings over £1m p/a is not a wealth tax in the first sense but it is in the second. In practice I think you have to be catching people who are relatively affluent but are not rich. The top decile perhaps. Not sure. One would have to look at the numbers. The trouble with just targeting the truly rich is that it doesn't raise enough.
  • RobD said:

    Is this a case of policy catching up with behaviour?
    School half term.

    Like the boffins said in the summer, you can have pubs or schools but not both.

    Good news: collectively, we might get away with Christmas socialisation, since schools will be closed.
  • He is already spending money like Mrs U on a trip to Costco ...
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801

    If I’d been shown that at the end of October and before lockdown, I would have assumed a temporary dip caused by half term that was expiring at the end of October.

    We have the rise starting at the beginning of September. Separately, we have estimates that schools being open add 0.25 to R, and, since that date, ONS surveys showing a big rise in infections in school-aged children since schools reopened (especially secondary school children). We also have seen migration of infection from infectees of that age to older demographics.

    The rise between then and the end of October is linear. Given that viruses spread exponentially, and with no further input data, I would speculate from the graph alone that levels of restrictions were being progressively increased, but not by enough to flatten it.

    The dip in late October correlates with a dip in secondary school aged children in the ONS survey, which ended and resumed an upwards slope after about a week. This coincided with half term, and correlates well with the earlier estimates that schools being open adds to the infection rate.

    I would therefore expect, in a counterfactual, that the linear rise would have resumed through November without other measures being taken.

    Essentially, I would say it points to:

    - Half term/schools being closed + Tiered restrictions pull R below 1.
    - Tier 4/soft lockdown + schools being open hold R at 1.

    A corollary would be that a long Christmas break would obviate need for the current lockdown (unless there was otherwise increased mixing - which we fully expect to happen, anyway).
    These is case data which has a 10 day lag from infection to registering the case. The levelling off in London started before half term.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,872
    edited November 2020

    Starmer so underwhelming, people are prepared to consider the LibDems again in desperation?
    He could still be PM on those numbers.

    Electoral Calculus projects a hung parliament based on that new Comres with Cons on 312, Lab 250, SNP 58 and LDs 7.

    So even Cons + the 8 DUP would only get to 320, still 6 short of an overall majority but Labour + SNP + LDs + 4 PC +2 SDLP + 1 Green = 222.

    https://www.electoralcalculus.co.uk/fcgi-bin/usercode.py?scotcontrol=Y&CON=39&LAB=37&LIB=7&Brexit=3&Green=4&UKIP=&TVCON=&TVLAB=&TVLIB=&TVBrexit=&TVGreen=&TVUKIP=&SCOTCON=20&SCOTLAB=18.4&SCOTLIB=5.5&SCOTBrexit=1.1&SCOTGreen=1.1&SCOTUKIP=&SCOTNAT=52.6&display=AllChanged&regorseat=(none)&boundary=2019
  • No sugarcoating from Rishi today in these borrowing figures.
  • F##k me thats huge numbers of borrowing.
  • kjh said:

    Finding it odd that Trump authorized the transition yet is still fighting and also that he is retweeting Sidney Powell stuff after she was fired. Looking like he is not in control of some of these events.

    I think the reality is he's been told by Senate leaders and others that they will play along for now, but only if he fires Powell (who had decided the Governor of Georgia was part of her crazy conspiracy theories, and who was seriously undermining their continuing Senate campaigns there) and authorises transition work (as they want Biden to own any early errors rather than blaming a farcical transition process). As you say, he's a lame duck and events are running ever faster away from him.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,447
    Sandpit said:

    Exactly. If you’re going to have an aid budget, vaccinating a substantial proportion of the global population against this damn virus is the best possible use of it!
    Although the same could be said of fabulously wealthy individuals, looking for a legacy.

    A bunch of them could get together a divide vaccinating the world's 50 poorest countries between them.
  • kinabalu said:

    Yes there's a difference between a tax on wealth and a tax on the wealthY. For example, I'd say an income tax of say 75% on earnings over £1m p/a is not a wealth tax in the first sense but it is in the second. In practice I think you have to be catching people who are relatively affluent but are not rich. The top decile perhaps. Not sure. One would have to look at the numbers. The trouble with just targeting the truly rich is that it doesn't raise enough.
    It would if you shook up the treatment of trusts. Credit Suisse have the top 1% owning 24% of the UK.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818

    F##k me thats huge numbers of borrowing.

    The only astonishing thing is that you are surprised.

    What did you expect?
  • The borrowing forecast figures are far worse than the unemployment forecast figures.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,872
    edited November 2020

    I wouldn't be at all surprised if Boris didn't U-turn over this - it would fit perfectly with the new One Nation, internationalist, Bidenesque image he's cultivating. Moreover the cut was mainly driven by Rees-Mogg and the Daily Express - both discredited instruments of the Trump era.
    Why would he? Cutting overseas aid is about the only spending cut the public suppport

    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/1330571816272793610?s=20
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,126

    Although the same could be said of fabulously wealthy individuals, looking for a legacy.

    A bunch of them could get together a divide vaccinating the world's 50 poorest countries between them.
    Bill Gates has done so, I believe.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,872
    Rishi promises a pay rise for nurses and doctors but rest of public sector pay to be frozen except for those earning less than £24,000
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,222
    edited November 2020

    Predecessors of both parties have had a long tradition of replying to picked children letters. And publicising the letters and the replies.
    The story of how Thatcher's aides wisely refused to put a stamp on her reply to a miner's kid has never been widely publicised.

    'I'm really very sorry that Santa will not be visiting your nest of enemies within this year, however your letter has touched my heart and I've asked a very good friend to see if he can Fix It for you.'

  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,101

    It would if you shook up the treatment of trusts. Credit Suisse have the top 1% owning 24% of the UK.
    What would you change?
  • theakestheakes Posts: 958
    Why can't our politicians follow Trudeau's example, "if you are thinking of going to visit family, especially eldrely relatives, DON'T. So much simpler.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,101

    Sensible compromise for public sector wages. Prioritise the lowest earners and the NHS.

    There's much more to the NHS than just "doctors" and "nurses".
  • theakes said:

    Why can't our politicians follow Trudeau's example, "if you are thinking of going to visit family, especially eldrely relatives, DON'T. So much simpler.

    Indeed.

    The vaccine is just weeks away. Why take the risk?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,651

    It would if you shook up the treatment of trusts. Credit Suisse have the top 1% owning 24% of the UK.
    Really? Remarkable. So what sort of measures could unlock that iyo?
  • theakes said:

    Why can't our politicians follow Trudeau's example, "if you are thinking of going to visit family, especially eldrely relatives, DON'T. So much simpler.

    Uh oh. Trudeau = far-right trigger
  • There's much more to the NHS than just "doctors" and "nurses".
    What's your point?
  • HYUFD said:

    Rishi promises a pay rise for nurses and doctors but rest of public sector pay to be frozen except for those earning less than £24,000

    2.1m workers says Ed Conway.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,101

    What's your point?
    Why are they less deserving than "doctors" and "nurses"?
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818

    The borrowing forecast figures are far worse than the unemployment forecast figures.

    Sorry why are you surprised? You have supported all of this to the hilt. I imagine you ran the numbers in your head.

  • theakes said:

    Why can't our politicians follow Trudeau's example, "if you are thinking of going to visit family, especially eldrely relatives, DON'T. So much simpler.

    Beyond me...i would have gone rule of 6 (plus kids) for Christmas Day, but don't invite your oldies.

    Instead we have gone for a week hall pass. Bonkers.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,651

    No sugarcoating from Rishi today in these borrowing figures.

    Not just a pretty face on instagram, Rishi. Has courage too. Facing this head on.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,447
    Foxy said:

    Bill Gates has done so, I believe.
    I think he backed a bunch of different trials, to ensure we would get a vaccine sooner. I'm talking about the next step once you have that vaccine.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801
    Where is the money coming from for all of these spending commitments. This is ridiculous.
  • Why are they less deserving than "doctors" and "nurses"?
    Because there's a limit to the money available. Doctors and nurses have been on the frontline kitted out in PPE bearing the brunt of this pandemic. As have care workers and others too outside the NHS.

    Have the others you're thinking of who are earning more than £24k per annum been the same?
  • MaxPB said:

    Where is the money coming from for all of these spending commitments. This is ridiculous.

    Even Mrs U thinks he might be going a bit mad with the public credit card....
  • Sorry why are you surprised? You have supported all of this to the hilt. I imagine you ran the numbers in your head.

    As Thatcher said: TINA.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801
    Overseas Aid should be cut to almost £0 for the foreseeable future, we just can't afford it. Spending on disaster relief only.
  • MaxPB said:

    Overseas Aid should be cut to almost £0 for the foreseeable future, we just can't afford it. Spending on disaster relief only.

    And vaccine distribution?
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    HYUFD said:
    based on the government's plan to have everybody in tier III lockdown until March 2021, those numbers look rather optimistic, I would suggest.

  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,101

    Because there's a limit to the money available. Doctors and nurses have been on the frontline kitted out in PPE bearing the brunt of this pandemic. As have care workers and others too outside the NHS.

    Have the others you're thinking of who are earning more than £24k per annum been the same?
    No, only doctors and nurses on COVID wards have been on the frontline kitted out in PPE. Other doctors and nurses have simply worn masks like everybody else.

    I'm talking about speech therapists, radiographers, they people who work in the labs analysing blood work, paramedics, etc.

    "Doctors" and "nurses" is just populist bollocks.
  • MaxPB said:

    Overseas Aid should be cut to almost £0 for the foreseeable future, we just can't afford it. Spending on disaster relief only.

    Direct it all at vaccine programs...that is genuine good for the world...not paying for Chinese musicals.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801

    And vaccine distribution?
    Give away what we don't use, but beyond that no. I don't think you understand the scale of the debt we're being asked to take on. Saving £11bn per year on Aid is a minimum necessity to justify this huge increase.
  • Beyond me...i would have gone rule of 6 (plus kids) for Christmas Day, but don't invite your oldies.

    Instead we have gone for a week hall pass. Bonkers.
    Its not a hall pass, it is a limitation of just 3 non-exchangeable families.

    And Christmas Day alone does not work. Some people for good reason can't or don't want to travel on Christmas Day.

    We're thinking of inviting my sister-in-law as our only visitor for this period, or going to see her ourselves. That would be it for us. But we won't see her on Christmas Day - we have a rule in our household that Christmas Day is for our children so we won't leave the house on Christmas Day and due to the lack of public transport she's unable to travel to see us on Christmas Day. So if we do the Christmas visit on the 23rd or Boxing Day then how is that worse than someone else doing that on Christmas Day?
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818

    As Thatcher said: TINA.
    That's the absurdity that Johnson is trying to sell to the public, at any rate, even after the numbers of his tame scientists have been shattered by their rivals.

    Its clear now that Britain is being bankrupted to keep certain reputations intact and persons in power.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801
    Rishi has transformed into Ed Miliband. This is a disaster.
  • £4b pork barrel fund for Jenrick.
  • No, only doctors and nurses on COVID wards have been on the frontline kitted out in PPE. Other doctors and nurses have simply worn masks like everybody else.

    I'm talking about speech therapists, radiographers, they people who work in the labs analysing blood work, paramedics, etc.

    "Doctors" and "nurses" is just populist bollocks.
    I would imagine radiographers and paramedics are being covered in the phrase "doctors and nurses" I'd be surprised if their pay is frozen.

    Accountants on the other hand may be different.
  • MaxPB said:

    Rishi has transformed into Ed Miliband. This is a disaster.

    Ed Miliband would have frozen public sector pay?

    I doubt it!
  • How's this being paid for?
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801

    Sensible compromise for public sector wages. Prioritise the lowest earners and the NHS.

    I'm sorry it isn't. Teachers have had an enormously difficult task this year and they are being shat on from a great height with this pay freeze. Cut the aid budget to zero and give teachers a payrise.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,212
    edited November 2020
    kinabalu said:

    Really? Remarkable. So what sort of measures could unlock that iyo?
    Ask a tax trust specialist! From a maths point of view, annual wealth tax of 1% on the top 1% of asset owners in the UK, would raise about £30-35bn extra per year. You wont get full compliance but dont see why half of that isnt achievable.
  • Even Jezza is sitting there thinking crickey he is spending a lot of money....
  • Even Jezza is sitting there thinking crickey he is spending a lot of money....

    Labour will whinge it is not enough.
  • How's this being paid for?

    And watch Labour say it is not enough
  • Labour will whinge it is not enough.
    Obvs ....
  • based on the government's plan to have everybody in tier III lockdown until March 2021, those numbers look rather optimistic, I would suggest.

    it is ludicrous if there is no deal as seems now likely.

    makes whitty's graphs look sound.
  • Immediately Annelise Dodds starts whinging that the government isn't spending enough.

    Who could have foreseen that?
  • Dodds doesn’t thank Rishi for early sight of his statement? Didn’t get it or bad manners?
  • londonpubmanlondonpubman Posts: 3,641
    edited November 2020

    Dodds doesn’t thank Rishi for early sight of his statement? Didn’t get it or bad manners?

    Not the first time she has failed to do so. Good news that she will never get the chance to be preparing the statement.

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