politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Anybody got any by-election news from Rochester and Strood?
politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Anybody got any by-election news from Rochester and Strood?
… voting earlier with my wonderful wife. Today is day for people of Rochester and Strood who are my boss pic.twitter.com/OThUwF0po7
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Creditors have until next Tuesday to dispute Bates's plans to buy the League One club out of administration by paying one penny in the pound to businesses and individuals owed £35 million.
Lots available at 1.02 still.
Money, Money, Money, it's a rich mans world.
Aye, Aye, Open your legs!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Has anyone ever seen Peter Bone and Sven-Goran Eriksson in the same room??
At this rate I do think the seventh TV season of Game of Thrones will arrive before the final book. Which is a slight shame, but the TV series is really very good.
Both taxes are awfully designed.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/byelection/11241798/Rochester-and-Strood-by-election-live.html
As does the Grauniad:
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/live/2014/nov/20/polls-rochester-strood-byelection-mark-reckless-ukip-live
'Do you think that tax should be related to ability to pay'
Well yes of course. But I would argue that property taxes on high value homes do reflect ability to pay. I am not against taxes being rolled into a charge on the properties if owners do not have the readies immediately . If that reduces heirs' windfalls on death then that it is not a massive deal is it? Better to tax unearned income than earned
The only issue with London as a place for starting businesses, is how staggeringly expensive is to live. But that doesn't seem to have harmed it yet.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/
Mr. Away, people often live in houses for many years. That doesn't mean it's legitimate to hurl an extra tax their way. Just because someone has money doesn't mean it's valid for the state to try desperately to think of a way to seize it. Fair taxation doesn't mean ever more taxation.
Hopefully, next up is university fees.
IMO it takes a particular sort of pessimist to start moaning about having to pay some extra tax because their house has shot up in value to over £2 million however many years they have lived in it!!
What the ?
Fellow scrap metal dealer William Henry Gray, from Kirkcaldy in Fife, was ordered to pay back £76,000 for evading £127,741 in tax. The man, now in his sixties, failed to pay tax due in 2012.
Couple Richard and Geraldine Chan, estate agents from Hampsthwaite in Harrogate, evaded £30,000 in tax and must pay back half.
No wonder people try and dodge taxes, it pays off.
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/nov/20/boris-johnson-us-tax-bill
It's crazily bureaucratic now.
The next government, whoever it is, should merge Child Tax Credit and Child Benefit into one means-tested child allowance with the need to self-assess for HMRC abolished.
They should at the same time introduce some form of limit on the maximum number of eligible children, along with some fail-safe that means it is only paid to people who have contributed in Britain and for children that are resident in Britain.
Incidentally, I saw from one of my rare excursions on the tube that lovestruck.com are giving a free upgrade to their premium account for Londoners if you put in the codeword "Boris". This is not a service that I will be availing myself of, but I was fascinated to see that some advertising agency thought that Boris transcended politics sufficiently to be used as a codeword to denote London.
http://www.kentonline.co.uk/thanet/news/mum-jailed-for-55k-benefit-27124/
Dodge tax and... you are named and shamed. Hmm.
Simples.
Having children is one of the most popular activities there is, and we have an ever growing population. I see no reason why the state should continue to subsidise it, particularly when we having a pressing deficit challenge.
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/nov/20/cuba-american-paternalism-government-innovation
The headline is a classic.
What I don't like (and I appreciate others may disagree, strongly) is the idea that someone has to pay a tax bill to the state for the privilege of living in their own house, or on their own land. I think that creates a dangerous precedent that the state owns more rights over assets than the individual and, done incorrectly, could lead to a change in the 'master-servant' relationship between the state and the individual that isn't for the better.
I also don't like the idea of someone being forced off their land or out of their house due to a tax bill.
I'm gay, I'm not likely to be procreating any time soon, but I'm encouraging all my straight friends to go forth and breed. I need the population pyramid to keep growing if i'm going to have a comfortable retirement in ~40 years...
I am not affected by the mansion tax. However my income has gone up about two and a half times since I bought my house 25 years ago. My house has gone up in value - allegedly - by much more than that. I do not have hundreds of thousands more as a result of this alleged increase in value. I have precisely zero. I have a larger income which would not, assuming that a tax was levied on houses like mine, be sufficient to pay thousands of pounds more in tax.
At the point at which I sell I will have actual money. That is the point at which it makes sense to levy a tax on the seller, as we already do, on the buyer. It also has the advantage that you have an actual valuation - a real price - not something dreamt up by an estate agent.
The reason my house has gone up in value is because of a failure of government policy i.e. their failure to ensure that there is sufficient housing in the country. So what Labour are proposing is to tax people for the government's failures - as exemplified by ridiculously high house inflation.
Rather than being a beneficiary of this failure, my own children will suffer because they will find it impossible - unless I help them - to purchase any sort of property or, indeed, rent anywhere. It would be better - and I have said this in the past - if my house were worth the same as it was when I bought it.
The only increases in value in houses should come from actual improvements not inflation caused by failures in government policy.
Is Mark Reckless expected at Dirty Dicks tomorrow?
As for the master servant relationship you could argue that it makes it thus but surely merely having income tax means that you are 'bonded' for a certain amount of time to the state for your labour (when is tax freedom day again?) which surely is even more of a master servant relationship than a similar arrangement over your property
The Tories haven't helped themselves here by campaigning on negative Ukip territory. They have fallen into the trap where voters think they might as well vote for the real thing (Ukip) than the lite version a la Tolhurst.
What policies do Japan and Italy have in place (and, for that matter, Germany) with respect to child benefit? Are they affordable?
I can think of far better things to spend the money on.
What I would say about Reckless is that he isn't extreme enough to stop Lib Dems and Labour voters from tactically voting for him, if someone like Peter Bone defected, I think UKIP would struggle to win.
How about a condom tax?
Income tax is different. You 'pay as you earn', not pay as you live or pay as you earn. The state just takes a slice of what you earn each month. You stop earning, you stop paying. You earn less, you pay more. You earn more, you pay more. There's no ongoing or future liability just for existing.
China seems to struggle to keep its population under wraps. Japan can't get its population to breed with each other. From my perspective, neither policy seems particularly effective.
I don't see why we should waste money paying to subsidise kids. I think most people who want them will have them. Those who don't would need to be very heavily bribed to incentivise them, and would we want kids born to such parents?
If you can't afford to have kids, don't have kids. This welfare is a luxury we cannot afford.
http://www.theguardian.com/money/2006/mar/02/business.consumernews
That should do the trick.
I doubt anyone is bribed by the child benefit to have kids . They may be bribed by other benefits but the child benefit is at a level where it does not encourage kid making but merely helps pay for the kids development or comfort in some way. That surely is a good way for a state to spend money
I don't like it when the government tries to socially engineer society. We need to cut our social security/welfare spend. Child benefit is a good place to start.
Although I backed a low turnout I wouldn't be sorry to see a high one, and am pleased to note the elements will not be diminishing it.
The trouble with a low turnout is that vote shares become somewhat distorted. We really need to see how UKIP fare in 'normal' conditions: decent weather and a middling to good kind of candidate, like Reckless, against sound but not distinguished opposition should give us as good a benchmark as we are likely to get.
No doubt the spinners for all sides will go into overdrive after the event, but the betting markets suggest a 10% win for the Kippers will be about a par score. Seems about right to me.
(only kidding, antifrank!)
There's a much better argument for funding vouchers for this instead, but we are used to our nice juicy handout from the State for a kid from 0-16 and we don't want our sweeties taken away.
We all relied on the older generation as well.
I'm in favour of spreading taxes as widely as possible with as few exemptions as possible and, in consequence, lower taxes. Let people decide for themselves what they do with their lives without being distorted by tax impositions, exemptions or the state trying to 'nudge' us.
We're adults. Let's try behaving as such.
Jamie Ross @JamieRoss7 3 hrs3 hours ago
Just spoke to the Monster Raving Loony Party. They are genuinely confident of beating the Lib Dems today.
Jamie Ross @JamieRoss7 3 hrs3 hours ago
The Loonies said they are campaigning on gluing unruly teenagers together because "if you can't beat them, join them." #RochesterandStrood