Starmer v Truss – the first PMQs – politicalbetting.com
Kick off is as usual at noon. This is a very big moment for both leaders but unfortunately, I have a longstanding family engagement in London and will not be able to watch live.
Not having big hitters like Gove and Rishi in the Cabinet is detrimental to the running of the nation, giving a big job like BIES to JRM is plain idiotic. I'm trying to be fair to Liz and give her a chance but that appointment is terrible and shows a lack of courage to face down the ERG now that she's in place.
Not having big hitters like Gove and Rishi in the Cabinet is detrimental to the running of the nation, giving a big job like BIES to JRM is plain idiotic. I'm trying to be fair to Liz and give her a chance but that appointment is terrible and shows a lack of courage to face down the ERG now that she's in place.
The rest are inexperienced not terrible, so its just that one which baffles - she could have picked anyone and leaving him would not dent her standing with the right given the rest. Bizarre.
Liz Truss will be Britain’s next prime minister — the nation’s fourth in seven years. And she’s inheriting a nation falling apart at the seams. https://nyti.ms/3ASl6ru"
Liz Truss will be Britain’s next prime minister — the nation’s fourth in seven years. And she’s inheriting a nation falling apart at the seams. https://nyti.ms/3ASl6ru"
Liz Truss will be Britain’s next prime minister — the nation’s fourth in seven years. And she’s inheriting a nation falling apart at the seams. https://nyti.ms/3ASl6ru"
I think Starmer is playing this well. He’s giving her enough respect to ask a detailed policy question. I thought Truss started well but she’s waffling in response to the Windfall Tax questions.
Not having big hitters like Gove and Rishi in the Cabinet is detrimental to the running of the nation, giving a big job like BIES to JRM is plain idiotic. I'm trying to be fair to Liz and give her a chance but that appointment is terrible and shows a lack of courage to face down the ERG now that she's in place.
Without the ERG support Truss would not be PM. She knows they can break her as they made her
Truss freezing the cap was going to cause Labour problems . So the refusal to extend a windfall tax helps them and allows Labour to accuse her of siding with the energy companies .
I agree I don't think she'll last more than two years and I think her plans are awful, but it is at least slightly refreshing that she seems to actually believe at least some of what she's actually saying, unlike the relentlessly grim, clowning cynicism of Johnson.
Truss freezing the cap was going to cause Labour problems . So the refusal to extend a windfall tax helps them and allows Labour to accuse her of siding with the energy companies .
Labour should frame the whole thing is “bailing out the energy companies”. They should say we’re all still paying, just via the debt levied on our children.
Liz Truss will be Britain’s next prime minister — the nation’s fourth in seven years. And she’s inheriting a nation falling apart at the seams. https://nyti.ms/3ASl6ru"
I don't know. But I'm starting to get shades of Thatcher here. Shes very clear in her principles and what she wants to do.
I'm not sure I agree with her at all, but she could prove people wrong.
I think the energy price stuff will get her a hearing, and then she gets one conference speech to win over the public. Similarly this is the conference speech where Starmer can convince people he ought to be PM.
Yes, this is not my idea of a good PM but it's a sad measure of how much Johnson has lowered the bar that so long as she takes the job seriously and doesn't lie all the time, I reckon I'll be ok with her.
PM says she doesn't understand what @Ianblackford_MP position is because he wants a windfall tax on oil companies and also no more extraction of oil from the North Sea.
UK gas producers and electricity generators may make excess profits totaling as much as £170 billion ($199 billion) over the next two years, according to Treasury estimates that lay bare the revenue-raising potential of a windfall tax.
Treasury officials will deliver the assessment to the next prime minister when they take office on Sept. 6, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing internal calculations.
Yes, but why? They can afford to dump that if they do the silly thing of withdrawing altogether. And the latter presumably doesn’t require a Commons vote.
UK gas producers and electricity generators may make excess profits totaling as much as £170 billion ($199 billion) over the next two years, according to Treasury estimates that lay bare the revenue-raising potential of a windfall tax.
Treasury officials will deliver the assessment to the next prime minister when they take office on Sept. 6, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing internal calculations.
What is an “excess profit”? Who is to say it is “excess”? How much profit is one allowed to make? Might one not reframe this as “investment in energy sector to soar, and pension funds to benefit, as energy sector firms make record profit”?
The NYT's anti-British stance is getting a bit embarrassing. New York City had more homicides in July than London did in the whole of the first 6 months of the year.
UK gas producers and electricity generators may make excess profits totaling as much as £170 billion ($199 billion) over the next two years, according to Treasury estimates that lay bare the revenue-raising potential of a windfall tax.
Treasury officials will deliver the assessment to the next prime minister when they take office on Sept. 6, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing internal calculations.
What is an “excess profit”? Who is to say it is “excess”? How much profit is one allowed to make? Might one not reframe this as “investment in energy sector to soar, and pension funds to benefit, as energy sector firms make record profit”?
I was expecting a car crash and it isn't, but who the hell is going to pay for the energy cap?
The answer is 'growth' by having a larger economy its swallowed by a higher tax take.
I'm not sure it'll work, but the principle is sound 'in principle'.
It's full throated capitalism.
Well I agree that is what she thinks will happen, but it won't. The cost is now and large. There will just be a huge debt funded by the same people she is trying to help.
Watching on a delay. Three questions in, and I’m liking this Prime Minister already.
She's good. I've said she is being underestimated and written-off too early. LP questions are appearing a tad negative and uncharitable. Whether we agree with her policies or not, let's rejoice that she is no shopping-trolley.
Not having big hitters like Gove and Rishi in the Cabinet is detrimental to the running of the nation, giving a big job like BIES to JRM is plain idiotic. I'm trying to be fair to Liz and give her a chance but that appointment is terrible and shows a lack of courage to face down the ERG now that she's in place.
Without the ERG support Truss would not be PM. She knows they can break her as they made her
That ridiculous idiot is technically in my management chain now. I don’t think he can do too much harm but it’s certainly pushing me in the direction of a new job…
The dividing lines are very sharp. This is good. The UK (actually, England) needs to decide whether it wants to be America or Europe.
That's what I was thinking after her short introductory speech. Whatever you think about her plans, and my views aren't good, after Johnson she at least brings some sort of clarity to things, which, in the short term at least, almost feels like some kind of a relief from the wandering Johnsonian opportunism and void.
Seems like a false dichotomy to say we have to be either continental Europe or the USA.
Like when people defend the NHS by comparing it to the USA's mad approach, and neglect to consider numerous other countries that have sensible healthcare without fetishising it into a religion.
UK gas producers and electricity generators may make excess profits totaling as much as £170 billion ($199 billion) over the next two years, according to Treasury estimates that lay bare the revenue-raising potential of a windfall tax.
Treasury officials will deliver the assessment to the next prime minister when they take office on Sept. 6, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing internal calculations.
What is an “excess profit”? Who is to say it is “excess”? How much profit is one allowed to make? Might one not reframe this as “investment in energy sector to soar, and pension funds to benefit, as energy sector firms make record profit”?
They’re unearned war profits. Easily measured.
See Sunak’s speech, earlier in the year.
Is the reverse then true? Should the Gvt underwrite “excess losses”?
Watching on a delay. Three questions in, and I’m liking this Prime Minister already.
She's good. I've said she is being underestimated and written-off too early. LP questions are appearing a tad negative and uncharitable. Whether we agree with her policies or not, let's rejoice that she is no shopping-trolley.
I’m not going to cheerfully accept wrong headed over incompetent but I’ll certainly agree its a marginal improvement.
The dividing lines are very sharp. This is good. The UK (actually, England) needs to decide whether it wants to be America or Europe.
Neither. Closer to Europe than America in most ways but not a typical European country either. And there are places outside of Europe and America that are making massive investments in education, technology and infrastructure that we should be looking at too.
Positively Brownite PMQs. Economic battle lines drawn for next 6 months. A substantive and strategic divide, not a personality-driven tactical slanging match. Both landed their message. Starmer: tax energy companies not ordinary people. Truss: we can't tax our way to growth.
UK gas producers and electricity generators may make excess profits totaling as much as £170 billion ($199 billion) over the next two years, according to Treasury estimates that lay bare the revenue-raising potential of a windfall tax.
Treasury officials will deliver the assessment to the next prime minister when they take office on Sept. 6, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing internal calculations.
What is an “excess profit”? Who is to say it is “excess”? How much profit is one allowed to make? Might one not reframe this as “investment in energy sector to soar, and pension funds to benefit, as energy sector firms make record profit”?
They’re unearned war profits. Easily measured.
See Sunak’s speech, earlier in the year.
Is the reverse then true? Should the Gvt underwrite “excess losses”?
When the many energy firms went bust last year who do you think took on the excess losses? Customers and govt (yes, some via other energy firms, but de facto customers and govt).
UK gas producers and electricity generators may make excess profits totaling as much as £170 billion ($199 billion) over the next two years, according to Treasury estimates that lay bare the revenue-raising potential of a windfall tax.
Treasury officials will deliver the assessment to the next prime minister when they take office on Sept. 6, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing internal calculations.
While levying a windfall tax is neither simple, nor a panacea, ruling it out entirely is dogmatic and stupid.
UK gas producers and electricity generators may make excess profits totaling as much as £170 billion ($199 billion) over the next two years, according to Treasury estimates that lay bare the revenue-raising potential of a windfall tax.
Treasury officials will deliver the assessment to the next prime minister when they take office on Sept. 6, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing internal calculations.
What is an “excess profit”? Who is to say it is “excess”? How much profit is one allowed to make? Might one not reframe this as “investment in energy sector to soar, and pension funds to benefit, as energy sector firms make record profit”?
They’re unearned war profits. Easily measured.
See Sunak’s speech, earlier in the year.
Is the reverse then true? Should the Gvt underwrite “excess losses”?
When the many energy firms went bust last year who do you think took on the excess losses? Customers and govt (yes, some via other energy firms, but de facto customers and govt).
UK gas producers and electricity generators may make excess profits totaling as much as £170 billion ($199 billion) over the next two years, according to Treasury estimates that lay bare the revenue-raising potential of a windfall tax.
Treasury officials will deliver the assessment to the next prime minister when they take office on Sept. 6, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing internal calculations.
What is an “excess profit”? Who is to say it is “excess”? How much profit is one allowed to make? Might one not reframe this as “investment in energy sector to soar, and pension funds to benefit, as energy sector firms make record profit”?
They’re unearned war profits. Easily measured.
See Sunak’s speech, earlier in the year.
Is the reverse then true? Should the Gvt underwrite “excess losses”?
Well we own Octopus energy for that reason. And a bank.
I don't mind Coffey being a fat drunk. I do mind her being a Roman Catholic anti abortion bigot. a lot.
Where does she stand on homoeopathy?
She seems to think chiropractors are mainstream.
*blinks*
A UCL chemist should certainly not be sympathetic to the notion of succussation, so good for her if that is so - but chiropractice? (Chiropraxis? Chiropracty?)
UK gas producers and electricity generators may make excess profits totaling as much as £170 billion ($199 billion) over the next two years, according to Treasury estimates that lay bare the revenue-raising potential of a windfall tax.
Treasury officials will deliver the assessment to the next prime minister when they take office on Sept. 6, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing internal calculations.
What is an “excess profit”? Who is to say it is “excess”? How much profit is one allowed to make? Might one not reframe this as “investment in energy sector to soar, and pension funds to benefit, as energy sector firms make record profit”?
They’re unearned war profits. Easily measured.
See Sunak’s speech, earlier in the year.
Is the reverse then true? Should the Gvt underwrite “excess losses”?
Well we own Octopus energy for that reason. And a bank.
Comments
2 scenarios - liz plays it dull and terse, I'm here to deliver not quip.
Or she over compensates as the backbenches roar incessantly and tries to come out swinging.
Whether that confidence is misguided or not, time will tell.
It ain’t gonna go away, Liz.
She has a plan and she has ideas.
Which is a refreshing change from Boris.
@nytopinion
Liz Truss will be Britain’s next prime minister — the nation’s fourth in seven years. And she’s inheriting a nation falling apart at the seams. https://nyti.ms/3ASl6ru"
https://twitter.com/nytopinion/status/1566773151819653120
Finally a politician whose ideas I can interrogate because at least she has some.
Fair play Liz.
I'm not sure I agree with her at all, but she could prove people wrong.
I don't like her ideas at all - but she has some.
Bit of an unknown quantity I have to say.
I agree, the tories chose a dud. But they’re stuck with her.
It was due back in Commons next week.
https://twitter.com/MrHarryCole/status/1567471503884648448
Well I am pleased about that
But yes she might do better than we expect.
https://twitter.com/PaulGoodmanCH/status/1567471003550244867
It'll be a friendly nod back to the days of the ever-popular window tax.
Not unlikely that the angle and contributors he would have brought in to cover UK during his tenure might have a particular slant.
It’s a shootout.
I'm not sure it'll work, but the principle is sound 'in principle'.
It's full throated capitalism.
https://twitter.com/holyroodmandy/status/1567472259127730176
UK gas producers and electricity generators may make excess profits totaling as much as £170 billion ($199 billion) over the next two years, according to Treasury estimates that lay bare the revenue-raising potential of a windfall tax.
Treasury officials will deliver the assessment to the next prime minister when they take office on Sept. 6, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing internal calculations.
It's America or EU social democracy.
See Sunak’s speech, earlier in the year.
Like when people defend the NHS by comparing it to the USA's mad approach, and neglect to consider numerous other countries that have sensible healthcare without fetishising it into a religion.
https://twitter.com/theobertram/status/1567474542922145792
A UCL chemist should certainly not be sympathetic to the notion of succussation, so good for her if that is so - but chiropractice? (Chiropraxis? Chiropracty?)
German Economy Minister Habeck can imagine parts of the economy will "simply stop producing for the time being."
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