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Let’s talk about cats and one cat in particular – politicalbetting.com

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  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,255

    Why after 14 years of Tory government is CR not blaming the current government for having failed to deliver schools of sufficient quality that he feels the need to send his kids to a private school in the first place and is so unhappy about such a prospect of a state education for his kids, as 93% of the population receive ?
    Because no Government since the 1960s has delivered schools of sufficient quality. As a rule state education in the UK is shit and has been for decades. I don't know if private education is any better but there is almost an element of victim blaming to attack people for trying to avoid the worst of the state sector.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    O/T

    Just learnt something totally new thanks to a Jago Hazzard video. Heathrow Airport airlines used to employ air terminals outside the airport to check people in and use coaches to transport them to the airport. The West London air terminal in Kensington was in use from 1957 to 1974.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_London_Air_Terminal
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JuUovamSJgg
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    kyf_100 said:

    Are we really sure we want to create a group comprising of the privileged offspring of the elite, separate them from the rest of society for a(nother) decade, and also give them advanced weapons training?

    I mean, I'm up for it, just for shits and giggles, it's not materially worse than Rishi's plan to fix the country...
    Bit too reminiscent of the Manchester & Salford Yeomanry, or for Scots the Cinque Port Light Dragoons.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,314

    Most of the private schools are expecting a shakeout due to Starmer. Single sex schools are increasingly going co-ed so they can pick up families of those faced with school closures. The smaller schools are most vulnerable as they live closer to the breadline.

    I suspect the net effect will be fewer schools but the really well off will go on as usual. The fall out will be less well off families who want to invest in their kids education.
    Yep. My wife and I have had this chat today.

    We might just give up. We'd be £35k a year better off, the state about £14k worse off. We could pay for nannies, after-school care, much nicer holidays and cars, and a home extension; we could also pay off our mortgage and retire earlier. The taxpayer would pick up the bill.

    But, that's the effect of a really stupid policy.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,317

    True, but that was sort of a meme/piss-take but the stuff aimed at Laura Kuenssberg is just aggressive and downright nasty.
    No it is not.

    She is supposed to be impartial and above the fray. She is hoist by her own petard. See the podcast with another idiot Paddy O'Connell. The one about Starmer attending non-league football grounds. I can't be arsed to post it again. I've already posted it twice.

    For reference I have no idea who Chris Mason votes for.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    Just learnt something totally new thanks to a Jago Hazzard video. Heathrow Airport airlines used to employ air terminals outside the airport to check people in and use coaches to transport them to the airport. The West London air terminal in Kensington was in use from 1957 to 1974.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_London_Air_Terminal
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JuUovamSJgg

    Used it a couple of times when my family had to get home in a hurry.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810

    This is a good post. Elections are won from the centre until they aren’t. I personally remain convinced that a populist right wing movement is entirely likely to arise in the next 5-10 years in this country, and it could do really well. Look at France.
    It could be the Tory Party. They could choose that route. It depends on how they react to July 4th.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    It is odd how London's population has never been higher and yet schools are having to close because they don't have enough children enrolling.
  • No it is not.

    She is supposed to be impartial and above the fray. She is hoist by her own petard. See the podcast with another idiot Paddy O'Connell. The one about Starmer attending non-league football grounds. I can't be arsed to post it again. I've already posted it twice.

    For reference I have no idea who Chris Mason votes for.
    Laura K who I have often defended, on the night of the LEs, literally said that the race was closer than expected and that Khan would quite possibly lose. Now this was before a single vote had even been counted.

    It doesn't say much for the credibility of her sources - but also what on Earth was she doing?
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,955

    I doubt VAT on private schools is going to raise much money for the government as it will move some pupils back to the state sector.

    But in the upcoming decades we're going to have to see more taxes raised and lower spending on pretty much all of the country.

    And it will be easier for many of the disadvantaged groups to lose out if some of those at the top are visibly doing so as well.

    Even if its unfortunate and unpleasant for your family.
    The credit crunch killed off about thirty schools in the UK, and that was a one or two year blip. Assume Labour in power for ten years and the policy won't be reversed until at least 2034, and you're potentially looking at a prolonged depression that kills off (ballpark figure here) 300 private schools.

    All those kids have to go somewhere. Some of them will be absorbed into other private schools, but even then, imagine if an additional 100-ish state schools need to be built to accommodate kids from private schools that have closed down, on top of an extra 10-20% demand created by parents who would have sent their kids to private schools, but are no longer able to. More schools will have to be built, meaning the cost will probably be greater than the extra £6k per child.

    The truth is we don't know exactly how this policy is going to play out, but I did some calculations a few weeks ago and worked out that it's likely to have a creeping, cumulative effect, as parents will pay for kids with three or four years left to go, but be less likely to pay for 5 year olds with 13 years to go, creating a progressive hollowing out of the system that will lead to more and more private schools closing over time.

    In short, I reckon Labour's tax wheeze may generate a windfall at first, but will slowly become net negative in terms of tax take over time.

    But it won't be the top public schools closing down. It will be the minor schools favoured by the middle classes. So we'll end up with an even more divided system than we have now.

    For those reasons, I think it's a bad policy. It will cost the taxpayer more than it brings in revenue, and actually increase division in society by limiting educational choices to an even smaller, more privileged elite.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,062

    Because no Government since the 1960s has delivered schools of sufficient quality. As a rule state education in the UK is shit and has been for decades. I don't know if private education is any better but there is almost an element of victim blaming to attack people for trying to avoid the worst of the state sector.
    Not really true, 89% of schools in the UK are now rated good or outstanding. There is also more choice than there was before with free schools and academies as well as the remaining grammars and private schools still, not just one size fits all comprehensives
    https://epi.org.uk/publications-and-research/ofsted-ratings-have-standards-been-improving/#:~:text=So it is true; 68,year this figure was 89%.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited May 2024
    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    Just learnt something totally new thanks to a Jago Hazzard video. Heathrow Airport airlines used to employ air terminals outside the airport to check people in and use coaches to transport them to the airport. The West London air terminal in Kensington was in use from 1957 to 1974.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_London_Air_Terminal
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JuUovamSJgg

    Interesting how a concept can go out of fashion so quickly: they built a £5 million building for the terminal which opened in 1963, but just 10 and a half years later the whole idea of having air terminals outside the airport was obsolete.
  • Every 18-year-old will get the choice of how they do their National Service.

    Deciding to either serve their country in the Armed Forces or serve their community by volunteering.

    2/6

    https://x.com/RishiSunak/status/1794693714721522045

    But not a choice to not do it, Rishi.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,787

    Yep. My wife and I have had this chat today.

    We might just give up. We'd be £35k a year better off, the state about £14k worse off. We could pay for nannies, after-school care, much nicer holidays and cars, and a home extension; we could also pay off our mortgage and retire earlier. The taxpayer would pick up the bill.

    But, that's the effect of a really stupid policy.
    Aside from the ususal class war nonsense this isnt that well thought through.

    My daughter is an assistant head at a private school. The school offers boarding during the week as many of the parents are City types who work bizarre hours so want their kids in a routine. They'll continue on pretty much as normal. So you'll just get the very rich affording education and the schools become even more exclusive.
  • BatteryCorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorse Posts: 4,787
    edited May 2024

    There is a big difference between asking and telling.

    There is also a big difference between paid national service and forced, unpaid, labour.

    No-one posting on PB, no politician or pundit backing Sunak’s wheeze, has done forced, unpaid, labour in their adult lives - unless they’ve been convicted of a crime. So why should 18 year olds alone be compelled?

    How about this, we introduce votes for 16 and 17 year olds and then have a referendum on them doing it when they turn 18.

    As this is a policy for them, they should be able to vote for it, right?

    But of course as we know, it isn't for them.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,918

    You forget, Chris, it's not: my son is losing his school and his teachers their jobs. The town, a school that's been at the centre of the community for almost 90 years.

    This is deeply deeply real. It's not a game. It's not a ding-dong.

    Real people, real lives, real impact.

    Learn it.
    If you think Keir Starmer "is dirt" and you would "wade through blood" to stop him, because a school is closing, then quite frankly I think you need professional help.

    I suspect that saying those kinds of things would have the police knocking at your door if you belonged to some minority communities.
  • It is that school but, with respect, you know nothing about it other than keen to find an angle that absolves Labour of all blame. It'd otherwise compell you to engage with the complexities of a nasty and unpleasant policy that you'd prefer not to.

    The 20% price demand shock has been sufficient to kill it off, whereas otherwise it would have survived, and the disruption its going to cause to my son and his friends, and all the job losses it causes - including several pre-school teachers who are family friends - can be laid entirely at the door of SKS. Everyone knows he's going to win and that's having real world effects now.

    I'd walk through blood to stop the man. He has deeply angered me and ripped the heart out of one of the core pillars of our local community.

    He is dirt.
    Grow up, lad. This makes you sound unhinged. It's going to be a terrible six weeks for you, and the next four or five years will probably see you in a padded cell.
    Just let it go.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,774

    The neighbouring school hoping to recruit the pupils is £3,000 more expensive, which is more or less the same as VAT would have
    added.
    Sure. Not everyone will be able to afford it.

    Let’s say that the minimum viable number of pupils for each school is 100.

    At £10k for one school and £13k for the other all kids are educated (numbers made up).

    If the price of the cheaper option rises to £13k then there are3 options available to parents:

    - move to the more expensive school (if you are going to have to pay the same then you might as well give it to your school rather than pay it in tax)
    - move to the local state school if you can’t afford it
    - Grin and bear it

    If enough parents take the first two prions then the £10k school is no longer viable and closes.

    The result is:

    - some pupils move to the more expensive school resulting in larger classes and diminishing (slightly) the quality of education
    - some pupils move to the local state school (ditto)
    - money is taken out of the local economy either in tax or because it is being funnelled into the £13k school
    - diversity of education provision is reduced
    - Teachers lose their jobs as do general staff

    I’m struggling to see any good outcomes here?

  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017

    You forget, Chris, it's not: my son is losing his school and his teachers their jobs. The town, a school that's been at the centre of the community for almost 90 years.

    This is deeply deeply real. It's not a game. It's not a ding-dong.

    Real people, real lives, real impact.

    Learn it.

    Yes, it’s happened to lots of schools and many other community institutions thanks to government decisions. This one hits you, countless others have been affected by previous ones. That’s the nature of political choices, many of which you have supported and advocated.

  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,507
    Chris said:

    If you think Keir Starmer "is dirt" and you would "wade through blood" to stop him, because a school is closing, then quite frankly I think you need professional help.

    I suspect that saying those kinds of things would have the police knocking at your door if you belonged to some minority communities.
    I think CR is very upset, and is venting a little.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,787
    Andy_JS said:

    It is odd how London's population has never been higher and yet schools are having to close because they don't have enough children enrolling.

    This is the future. Its why Starmer's pledge of 6500 extra teachers is dross. Primary schools are running out of pupils because of the collapsing birth rates. That will hit hit secondary scools in about 7 years time and Unis in 14.

    All our politicians and civil servants will act shocked and then claim they are learning the lessons.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,829
    MJW said:

    The point with Sunak and why he's been useless is that while there are different routes to a winning coalition of voters, you have to pick one, and a theory of the case, and stick to it. The most obvious ones broadly being the Cameron 2010-15 one - which was founded on detoxifying the party with more liberal voters and gluing those on to more traditional Tories and those fearful or fed up of Labour. Then there's the Boris, unite Brexit voters one, which united socially conservative types sharing both left and right economic views, while daring its liberal wing to vote for Jeremy Corbyn.

    Neither are now an easy option for the Tories. Brexit has receded as a frontline issue but has made the Cameron route difficult to take without a mea culpa as the fracture with liberalism (not solely caused by Brexit, but a useful shorthand for the breach) is here to stay. It's not likely Boris' works either now as it was dependent on promises of spending to those left-wing on that were empty and now impossible. Brexit is largely seen to be a failure, even by enough leave voters who support the principle, to make standing on it as your big thing a vote loser. Plus there's no Jeremy Corbyn to shore up the Tories' liberal wing.

    But you do have to pick one and stick to it. Sunak has flailed between them - he's cast himself as a pragmatic ideologically unbound problem solver one minute, then sounded like a rabid right-wing Boomer Facebook group the next. Which just annoy everyone.

    Like their campaign is "stick with us, we've got a sensible plan" but the policies broadcast at the loudest volume are back of a fag packet populism that tells you they haven't beyond scraping the bottom of the barrel.

    To get an idea of how ludicrous it is think about what a similar approach from Labour would look. Running their "security and patriotism" stuff one minute, then, because they didn't want to upset Corbyn fans, pivoting to saying NATO is actually rubbish and why can't we all have a cup of tea with Putin and the Ayatollah the next.
    Churchill was quite happy to have a cup of tea with Stalin, and he wasn't considered weak on security or patriotism, so I'm not sure of the basis of your point.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,918

    I think CR is very upset, and is venting a little.
    No doubt. But I think he does need to calm down with the "wade through blood to stop him" stuff. It's not healthy for anyone to be thinking like that.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,507
    Chris said:

    No doubt. But I think he does need to calm down with the "wade through blood to stop him" stuff. It's not healthy for anyone to be thinking like that.
    Agreed.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    Chris said:

    No doubt. But I think he does need to calm down with the "wade through blood to stop him" stuff. It's not healthy for anyone to be thinking like that.
    He’s experiencing a policy that hurts him. He’s reacting as many others do. It’s understandable.

  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,787
    Chris said:

    If you think Keir Starmer "is dirt" and you would "wade through blood" to stop him, because a school is closing, then quite frankly I think you need professional help.

    I suspect that saying those kinds of things would have the police knocking at your door if you belonged to some minority communities.
    Have the plods called on you yet ? I seem to remember you expressed some spicy views on Bojo and Truss.

    Maybe the professional help got to you on time.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159

    Aside from the ususal class war nonsense this isnt that well thought through.

    My daughter is an assistant head at a private school. The school offers boarding during the week as many of the parents are City types who work bizarre hours so want their kids in a routine. They'll continue on pretty much as normal. So you'll just get the very rich affording education and the schools become even more exclusive.
    I don't get this argument at all. If you're concerned about exclusivity, why not abolish them altogether? Only 7% of children go to them - that's pretty damn exclusive already.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,320
    edited May 2024

    Every 18-year-old will get the choice of how they do their National Service.

    Deciding to either serve their country in the Armed Forces or serve their community by volunteering.

    2/6

    https://x.com/RishiSunak/status/1794693714721522045

    But not a choice to not do it, Rishi.

    As an interesting gedankenexperiment, imagine 18 year old Sunak turning up for day one of his CIC at Catterick.
  • twistedfirestopper3twistedfirestopper3 Posts: 2,526
    edited May 2024
    This is on sale in WH Smith's in Loughborough.
    The Echo has gone downhill since I were a lad.


  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,507

    Have the plods called on you yet ? I seem to remember you expressed some spicy views on Bojo and Truss.

    Maybe the professional help got to you on time.
    It might not be as bad as he thinks. When I taught in an independent school we were always taking in refugees from failing schools. Deals were done, scholarships and bursaries awarded, and the students settled down. Most independent schools work together in this regard. Where is the school?
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    O/T

    Jago Hazzard also mentions in his video that Heathrow Express tickets can be purchased for just £5.50 instead of £25 if you book 90 days in advance. I didn't know that.
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,955
    dixiedean said:

    Except.
    We are facing a baby bust. The birth rate fell off a cliff around 2013. Primary Schools are already facing closure because of falling rolls. This will feed into Secondary very soon.
    More kids in the system leads to the much cheaper option of State schools staying open rather than the costs of closing them down.
    I'm actually deeply unconvinced of this, based on my very unscientific study of who's at the school gates of the primary schools near me.

    We've yet to see how the birthrate changes, taking into account the preferences of recent immigrants. They may well, due to cultural values, place much higher emphasis on having children than we do.

    I wouldn't be surprised to see an uptick in the birthrate in the next decade.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,507

    This is on sale in WH Smith's in Loughborough.
    The Echo has gone downhill since I were a lad.


    How big is the plane?
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,255
    edited May 2024
    HYUFD said:

    Not really true, 89% of schools in the UK are now rated good or outstanding. There is also more choice than there was before with free schools and academies as well as the remaining grammars and private schools still, not just one size fits all comprehensives
    https://epi.org.uk/publications-and-research/ofsted-ratings-have-standards-been-improving/#:~:text=So it is true; 68,year this figure was 89%.
    An entirely artificial rating system based on assessments from a thoroughly discredited Government Quango. If you are having to use that as the basis for your argument then you are utterly lost.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,320
    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    Jago Hazzard also mentions in his video that Heathrow Express tickets can be purchased for just £5.50 instead of £25 if you book 90 days in advance. I didn't know that.

    Strong Roy Cropper energy.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,787
    Eabhal said:

    I don't get this argument at all. If you're concerned about exclusivity, why not abolish them altogether? Only 7% of children go to them - that's pretty damn exclusive already.
    On what basis do you abolish them ? And where do you draw the line ? Are you going abolish all the schools trusts which are in effect private schools outside immediate state control.

    And if you do abolish them how are you going to stop the flow of pupils to private schools in Ireland ?
  • Casino is reacting to the schools policy as many of us younger folks feel about the national service policy. It makes sense.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,507
    Dura_Ace said:

    As an interesting gedankenexperiment, imagine 18 year old Sunak turning up for day one of his CIC at Catterick.
    Will he be bringing back ricketts, whooping cough, measles parties and Double Your Money as well?
    Beer at 2 bob a pint?
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,787

    It might not be as bad as he thinks. When I taught in an independent school we were always taking in refugees from failing schools. Deals were done, scholarships and bursaries awarded, and the students settled down. Most independent schools work together in this regard. Where is the school?
    You's need to ask @Casino_Royale
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,062

    An entirely artificial rating system based on assessments from a thoroughly discredited Government Quango. If you are having to use that as the basis for your argument then you are utterly lost.
    It is though partly a reflection of more choice in the system driving up standards with free schools, academies etc and a focus on getting the basics of literacy and numeracy right first
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159
    kyf_100 said:

    I'm actually deeply unconvinced of this, based on my very unscientific study of who's at the school gates of the primary schools near me.

    We've yet to see how the birthrate changes, taking into account the preferences of recent immigrants. They may well, due to cultural values, place much higher emphasis on having children than we do.

    I wouldn't be surprised to see an uptick in the birthrate in the next decade.
    To counter this, the ONS are always having to adjust their TFR estimates downwards. You might be right about immigrants, but ultimately this is more than offset by other groups - just look at Scotland.

    It's another reason why we have these housing crises - population is rising in only a few spots in the country, and falling away elsewhere. You can plaster Herefordshire with houses but that doesn't make up for the fact the only people having kids are in Birmingham.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173

    This is the future. Its why Starmer's pledge of 6500 extra teachers is dross. Primary schools are running out of pupils because of the collapsing birth rates. That will hit hit secondary scools in about 7 years time and Unis in 14.

    All our politicians and civil servants will act shocked and then claim they are learning the lessons.
    All part of the ever accelerating population Ponzi scheme. Import young people to shore up the tax base. Bleed them white to keep pensioners minted (firstly through the triple lock, secondly through pumping up house prices by not building enough for all the extra people.) Make it too expensive for the young to breed, so that they grow older with insufficient replacements in the next generation to support them. Import yet more young people to shore up the tax base. Etc etc, repeat til the Sun swallows the Earth.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,829
    Stocky said:

    OK but don't you agree that Johnson was even more "illiberal, incompetent, profligate, weak"?
    No. Boris had a weak personality and would usually take the path of least resistance, but he could have a flash of rebellious fire about him occasionally, and he started from liberal instincts albeit that he was so often browbeaten away from them. Sunak’s Prime Ministerial vacuum has been of a whole different order of weakness. He has shown a craven desire to be liked by anyone powerful, caving to the EU, the civil service, the Bank of England, the USA, the Quangocracy - these haven't even been capitulations - to capitulate you need at least initially to have made the opposing argument.

    As for more profligate - Sunak was the Chancellor for much of that period, and value for money was becoming talked about internally as an issue for him. I suspect he'd have been moved on as COE and certainly he should have been.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,918

    Have the plods called on you yet ? I seem to remember you expressed some spicy views on Bojo and Truss.
    Maybe I'm having a "sense of humour failure", but if the Tory right think "I would wade through blood to stop him" is an acceptable way to talk about Starmer, I hope we're not going to hear a lot of whining from them about threats of violence towards MPs.
  • pm215pm215 Posts: 1,237
    pigeon said:

    All part of the ever accelerating population Ponzi scheme. Import young people to shore up the tax base. Bleed them white to keep pensioners minted (firstly through the triple lock, secondly through pumping up house prices by not building enough for all the extra people.) Make it too expensive for the young to breed, so that they grow older with insufficient replacements in the next generation to support them. Import yet more young people to shore up the tax base. Etc etc, repeat til the Sun swallows the Earth.
    If it's sustainable without collapsing until the sun swallows the earth then I'm not sure you can really classify it as a ponzi scheme...
  • BatteryCorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorse Posts: 4,787
    edited May 2024

    You's need to ask @Casino_Royale
    It's in Hampshire. I don't know Casino personally at all but I wonder if we have any mutual friends, as I grew up very close to where I think he comes from/lives.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,062
    edited May 2024

    Casino is reacting to the schools policy as many of us younger folks feel about the national service policy. It makes sense.

    Given Reeves this morning said Labour would not raise income tax or national insurance and would keep a tight control on public spending. Given Starmer will keep the UK out of the EU and EEA for the foreseeable future and not restore free movement and given on most other issues you now can't get a fag paper's difference between Starmer and Sunak it is seems the VAT on private schools policy could be the only significant change an incoming Labour government makes from the current Tory one (the only other one is Labour would replace the Rwanda scheme with new investigators to cut small boats crossing the channel, so still the same end goal)
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159
    edited May 2024

    On what basis do you abolish them ? And where do you draw the line ? Are you going abolish all the schools trusts which are in effect private schools outside immediate state control.

    And if you do abolish them how are you going to stop the flow of pupils to private schools in Ireland ?
    Hey, I didn't say it was practical - it would be a disaster in Edinburgh. But there is a bit of a Telegraph meme where going to private school is a sort of middle class norm. It's not. It's elite.

    I come from a middle class background, parents are graduates in professional/management roles, but I was nowhere near going to a private school.

    It's the same twisted reference points that sees people claim people with cars are the downtrodden poor - but people in the lowest income decile have a much lower rate of ownership than those is middling ones.
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,964

    Churchill was quite happy to have a cup of tea with Stalin, and he wasn't considered weak on security or patriotism, so I'm not sure of the basis of your point.
    Those were desperate time for us as a nation, and everybody understood that. And then once the threat from Nazi Germany was over, or even just a bit before, Churchill stopped having cups of tea with Stalin. Cups of tea with Stalin were just a tactical move.

    Today we are in the middle of a crisis and these are desperate times but just for the Conservative Party, which is shattering ever more on a daily basis. Nobody knows what the Conservative Party really stands for, so everybody applies his own worst interpretation. They have no hope in this election.

    Except for the shedloads of money they are going to throw at it.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,362
    kyf_100 said:

    I'm actually deeply unconvinced of this, based on my very unscientific study of who's at the school gates of the primary schools near me.

    We've yet to see how the birthrate changes, taking into account the preferences of recent immigrants. They may well, due to cultural values, place much higher emphasis on having children than we do.

    I wouldn't be surprised to see an uptick in the birthrate in the next decade.
    Not enough immigrants to change the figures that much. The underlying issue is that people of normal child-raising age can't afford to have children, because their finances are so stretched by mortgage payments.

    Which is probably at least as big an issue for parents in the private school market.

    It means that the state primary I went to is closing, because the area doesn't have enough children in it any more. Which is a bit sad, but not worth wading through blood for.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    Hamas says it has launched a rocket attack towards the Tel Aviv area in central Israel for the first time in nearly four months.

    At least eight rockets were launched from the Rafah area in southern Gaza and several were intercepted, the Israeli military says. No injuries have been reported.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    edited May 2024
    The thing about this national service policy (that would never happen even if the Tories won) is like here it has generated a lot of heat.

    If you are the Tories, and your strategy is supposed to be scaring people about possibility of Labour government, its another day where all the focus is on this nonsense idea.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,508

    It is that school but, with respect, you know nothing about it other than keen to find an angle that absolves Labour of all blame. It'd otherwise compell you to engage with the complexities of a nasty and unpleasant policy that you'd prefer not to.

    The 20% price demand shock has been sufficient to kill it off, whereas otherwise it would have survived, and the disruption its going to cause to my son and his friends, and all the job losses it causes - including several pre-school teachers who are family friends - can be laid entirely at the door of SKS. Everyone knows he's going to win and that's having real world effects now.

    I'd walk through blood to stop the man. He has deeply angered me and ripped the heart out of one of the core pillars of our local community.

    He is dirt.
    He's a lawyer, a former socialist who immediately and shamelessly betrayed everybody who voted for him as leader of his party, now a centrist vote-chaser and a kneeler who doesn't know what a woman is. Until he suddenly found out. Of course he's dirt.

    In the meantime I hope your kid's education somehow continues without too much disruption.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,718
    Foxy said:

    My FiL did his National Service in the RAF in 1950. 3 months square bashing in Cannock, then a troopship. Half got off in Malta, where they spent a year eating pumpkins and being sexually harassed by predatory NCOs, the other half to Korea.

    Being in Malta was the first time he travelled aboard. He came back by rail, 3rd class via Italy on a bit of leave. It took him 3 days.
    My father didn't do national service because he failed the physical (terrible eyesight). This annoyed him as he'd wanted to be a conscientious objector!
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295

    How about this, we introduce votes for 16 and 17 year olds and then have a referendum on them doing it when they turn 18.

    As this is a policy for them, they should be able to vote for it, right?

    But of course as we know, it isn't for them.
    Children should not be voting in elections.
  • I really do think the Tories have utterly shafted young people. We are just a punching bag at this point.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    Andy_JS said:

    Children should not be voting in elections.
    The Scottish Tories disagree with you - or at least they did a decade ago. Now, who knows, tbf?
  • Andy_JS said:

    Children should not be voting in elections.

    You're planning to stop the Tories voting?
  • AlsoLeiAlsoLei Posts: 1,522
    edited May 2024
    kle4 said:

    It will be amusing (and astounding) if in fact Sunak has pitched this just right and there is a marked swing to the Tories from this plan. That would be against the face of some brutal media and punditry takes, but is not impossible, though I do not expect it.

    Can we set some reasonable benchmarks for success?

    A good result might perhaps be a swing of 3 points from Refuk > Con by the end of this week, with no increase in LLG share. A Refuk > Con shift of 5 points and/or an LLG decrease by 3 points would be excellent.

    Certainly, as Casino points out, they've grabbed lots of attention with this, and it's been the most effective attempt at shifting the narrative since (at least) the budget. It'll be fascinating to see how the polling changes as a result!
  • eekeek Posts: 29,738

    Yep. My wife and I have had this chat today.

    We might just give up. We'd be £35k a year better off, the state about £14k worse off. We could pay for nannies, after-school care, much nicer holidays and cars, and a home extension; we could also pay off our mortgage and retire earlier. The taxpayer would pick up the bill.

    But, that's the effect of a really stupid policy.
    Nope that’s what you are giving up to give you child the education you wanted to give them.

    Personally I think it was insane, you would be way better off going to state schools and spending the money getting tuition when required
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,526
    Sean_F said:

    That. And, the imbecility of trying to protect Owen Paterson, and Chris Pincher. Then Liz Truss' economic chaos. Then, so many MPs putting their fingers in the wrong places.

    All, entirely self-inflicted problems.

    Covid and Ukraine would probably have done for any government, but not to this extent.
    The amount of totally needless self-inflicted damage the Conservatives have done is astonishing.

    It leads me to question the calibre of people who are attracted to government and politics.

    It isn't that they lack abilities its rather that so many of them are fundamentally flawed.

    Yet it is these fundamentally flawed people who end up in high office whereas 'normal' people who would never make such mistakes end up talking about it on PB.

    So does the whole political process deserve some of the blame.
  • Just again, why should people not be paid for this? If they are being forced to do it, surely they should be paid? Does anyone actually think people shouldn't be paid?
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,250
    AlsoLei said:

    Can we set some reasonable benchmarks for success?

    A good result might perhaps be a swing of 3 points from Refuk > Con by the end of this week, with no increase in LLG share. A Refuk > Con shift of 5 points and/or an LLG decrease by 3 points would be excellent.

    Certainly, as Casino points out, they've grabbed lots of attention with this, and it's been the most effect attempt at shifting the narrative since (at least) the budget. It'll be fascinating to see how the polling changes as a result!
    The problem is that tomorrow there will be other things happening, there's the usual bobbling around the margin of error, associating small polling moves from individual events/policies is a fool's errand. Won't stop people doing it though.

  • MJWMJW Posts: 2,012

    Churchill was quite happy to have a cup of tea with Stalin, and he wasn't considered weak on security or patriotism, so I'm not sure of the basis of your point.
    He was when we were allies - less so when Churchill was warning Stalin was a menace to European peace.

    But that's by the by, whichever you agree with - Corbyn and Starmer have quite different political approaches and appeals to target voters. In relation to defence, which I used as an example Starmer makes sure to reassure he supports our existing international security arrangements and to appear strong on this. Repudiate that and take the far left's position that those security arrangements are bad and certain anti-West dictatorships have a point, and you annoy everyone and appear a fool.

    You can pick one or the other of those positions or other ones associated with a particular type of politics, but if you pick both at the same time you look ridiculous.

    As Sunak does by trying to promote himself as both a pragmatic problem solver aiming to "get the job done" and then by flailing about on the right trying to appease his party's headbangers.

  • pm215pm215 Posts: 1,237
    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    Jago Hazzard also mentions in his video that Heathrow Express tickets can be purchased for just £5.50 instead of £25 if you book 90 days in advance. I didn't know that.

    The comments section says those advance purchase cheap tickets were dropped last year, though.

    (Last time I needed to get to Heathrow I took the Piccadilly -- from KGX it's not that much slower, and you can get elsewhere-to-Heathrow via tube tickets at a sane price whereas you can't for via-liz-line; getting an all in one ticket was reduced faff on the work expenses claim front.)
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,718

    It is that school but, with respect, you know nothing about it other than keen to find an angle that absolves Labour of all blame. It'd otherwise compell you to engage with the complexities of a nasty and unpleasant policy that you'd prefer not to.

    The 20% price demand shock has been sufficient to kill it off, whereas otherwise it would have survived, and the disruption its going to cause to my son and his friends, and all the job losses it causes - including several pre-school teachers who are family friends - can be laid entirely at the door of SKS. Everyone knows he's going to win and that's having real world effects now.

    I'd walk through blood to stop the man. He has deeply angered me and ripped the heart out of one of the core pillars of our local community.

    He is dirt.
    Yet you're entirely happy for this government to take actions that will cause universities to go bust.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,607

    I think CR is very upset, and is venting a little.
    Better venting on here than taking it out on some innocent Labour canvasser that just happens to knock his door.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159
    AlsoLei said:

    Can we set some reasonable benchmarks for success?

    A good result might perhaps be a swing of 3 points from Refuk > Con by the end of this week, with no increase in LLG share. A Refuk > Con shift of 5 points and/or an LLG decrease by 3 points would be excellent.

    Certainly, as Casino points out, they've grabbed lots of attention with this, and it's been the most effective attempt at shifting the narrative since (at least) the budget. It'll be fascinating to see how the polling changes as a result!
    The problem is so much of the effect will be caught by changes in turnout rather than swings to other parties.
  • Just again, why should people not be paid for this? If they are being forced to do it, surely they should be paid? Does anyone actually think people shouldn't be paid?

    It's never going to happen. There's not the numbers of voters insane enough people to vote the Tories back in.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,607

    Will he be bringing back ricketts, whooping cough, measles parties and Double Your Money as well?
    Beer at 2 bob a pint?
    He’s already brought back whooping cough.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,849
    I know why Casino is angry about the proposed closure of his kids' school - its personal. Of course its personal, you want whats best for your kids.

    But - and its a very big but - if VAT is the difference between the school thriving and the school closing then I have to ask how they expect all other businesses to cope with similar increases in their costs which they can't pass on.

    We need to have principles and create rules which apply evenly and equally. We charge VAT on services - and a private school provides a service. We say "market forces" when businesses fail and don't support bailing them out or preferential tax treatments to protect them. Every other school gets stuck with the local demographic impacts and budget constraints.

    So when it's your kids, its personal. Get that. But does the same principle not apply to all kids? Or just your own? The argument seems to be "this will cost the state" because private school kids will transfer to the state sector. OK, thats fine. As happens all the time already when schools close.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,787

    I know why Casino is angry about the proposed closure of his kids' school - its personal. Of course its personal, you want whats best for your kids.

    But - and its a very big but - if VAT is the difference between the school thriving and the school closing then I have to ask how they expect all other businesses to cope with similar increases in their costs which they can't pass on.

    We need to have principles and create rules which apply evenly and equally. We charge VAT on services - and a private school provides a service. We say "market forces" when businesses fail and don't support bailing them out or preferential tax treatments to protect them. Every other school gets stuck with the local demographic impacts and budget constraints.

    So when it's your kids, its personal. Get that. But does the same principle not apply to all kids? Or just your own? The argument seems to be "this will cost the state" because private school kids will transfer to the state sector. OK, thats fine. As happens all the time already when schools close.

    So youre for VAT on university fees ?

  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,774

    This is on sale in WH Smith's in Loughborough.
    The Echo has gone downhill since I were a lad.


    Think of the efficiency savings that can be generating by eliminating the second “n”. They are, almost by definition, surplus.

    Time (both writing and reading), paper, ink, the savings just go on and on
  • BatteryCorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorse Posts: 4,787
    edited May 2024
    It's very personal for me that we have a government that wants to shaft me at every turn.

    Lock down to protect society, put your life on hold for two years

    Up your taxes to the highest in history

    Offer no help on housing - build no houses

    Force you to do unpaid work

    It feels like a deliberate attack on young people.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,526

    Yep. My wife and I have had this chat today.

    We might just give up. We'd be £35k a year better off, the state about £14k worse off. We could pay for nannies, after-school care, much nicer holidays and cars, and a home extension; we could also pay off our mortgage and retire earlier. The taxpayer would pick up the bill.

    But, that's the effect of a really stupid policy.
    Your kids might be better off if you saved £10k each for them per year so that they can afford a house in their twenties.

    The difference between a state and private education now is likely to have much less effect on them than whether they become home owners or renters in the future.
  • BatteryCorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorse Posts: 4,787
    edited May 2024

    So youre for VAT on university fees ?

    Yes. 100%.

    In fact, I'd have fees eliminated for doctors and nurses but up them for other degrees. In principle I oppose fees but accept - unlike the Tories - it is unaffordable. Of course with the £2.5bn they've just plucked out of thin air, perhaps that could eliminate the fees?
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,507

    He’s already brought back whooping cough.
    Sorry my bad
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729

    Yep. My wife and I have had this chat today.

    We might just give up. We'd be £35k a year better off, the state about £14k worse off. We could pay for nannies, after-school care, much nicer holidays and cars, and a home extension; we could also pay off our mortgage and retire earlier. The taxpayer would pick up the bill.

    But, that's the effect of a really stupid policy.
    Good news, you'll be paying 20% VAT on that home extension and the childcare, and those business in turn will be paying more income tax for the extra staff.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,359

    It's very personal for me that we have a government that wants to shaft me at every turn.

    Lock down to protect society, put your life on hold for two years

    Up your taxes to the highest in history

    Offer no help on housing - build no houses

    Force you to do unpaid work

    It feels like a deliberate attack on young people.

    You were one of the biggest proponents of lockdown on this site!
  • RobD said:

    You were one of the biggest proponents of lockdown on this site!
    You must be confusing me with somebody else. I haven't been a member here that long.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,062
    HYUFD said:

    Given Reeves this morning said Labour would not raise income tax or national insurance and would keep a tight control on public spending. Given Starmer will keep the UK out of the EU and EEA for the foreseeable future and not restore free movement and given on most other issues you now can't get a fag paper's difference between Starmer and Sunak it is seems the VAT on private schools policy could be the only significant change an incoming Labour government makes from the current Tory one (the only other one is Labour would replace the Rwanda scheme with new investigators to cut small boats crossing the channel, so still the same end goal)
    Plus Labour would remove the few remaining hereditaries but keep the rest of the Lords. I would not even be surprised if Starmer brought out his own version of national service
  • I didn't have Novara Media supporting this policy on my bingo card, it must be said.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,359

    Yes. 100%.

    In fact, I'd have fees eliminated for doctors and nurses but up them for other degrees. In principle I oppose fees but accept - unlike the Tories - it is unaffordable. Of course with the £2.5bn they've just plucked out of thin air, perhaps that could eliminate the fees?
    I think forgiveness is a better approach. Each year in the NHS knocks a couple of grand off the amount to be repaid. That way you don’t train people and then they promptly bugger off without paying for it.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,219

    I'm not sure if this is something that Sunak should be boasting about for electoral purposes:

    Conversely, the 60 overachieving areas with the highest housing delivery tend to be in the northwest (19) and Yorkshire and the Humber (10), where prices are lower. Richmondshire, in North Yorkshire, tops the chart: the council built 1,562 homes, which exceeded its low requirement of 29 by more than 5,000 per cent. These councils may see housing development “as a way to lever in investment and improve their housing stock quality, culminating in a pro-development stance”, Edward Clarke, an associate director at Lichfields, says.

    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/why-we-dont-build-enough-homes-in-the-right-places-tr5c9lsl2

    Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive
    But to be young and northern was very heaven!

    One reason that attempting to move jobs out of London has repeatedly failed was the insistence of employers of paying half - or even less!

    2/3rds would mean a return over a longer period.

    Housing is only one part of the puzzle.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    edited May 2024
    An organisation having nearly as bad a week as the Tories...

    Google's new AI search results are having quite the week. Here's a thread with some of my favorite answers:

    https://x.com/JeremiahDJohns/status/1794543007129387208
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Re any effect on the election from the likes of the NS announcement. Obviously time will tell but look at who is clutching their pearls the hardest and making the most noise in the media and on socials for a policy that polling suggests is anywhere from overall net negative to net positive without being unconscionable and wonder why. The hysteria from some of the commentariat suggests they are concerned it might shift the dial rather than any deep seated objection to the concept in and of itself.
    It's a classic firecracker tactic.
    As electoral entertainment it's gold
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,482
    Afternoon all :)

    A sunnier spell splitting some sharp showers (try saying that with your teeth out).

    I'm not quite sure what to make of this "national service" idea - it's an old Conservative meme which gets wheeled out every so often under various guises. I recall a scheme to make sure 16-18 year old "NEET"s (Not in Education, Employment or Training) had to attend some form of training scheme at Youth Centres or something like that.

    I remember various attempts to encourage apprenticeships sponsoring companies to employ and train young people but as it seems we have a "threat" again - seriously, Putin isn't the Warsaw Pact with 100 divisions two hours from the Rhine. We always have to have a "threat", don't we, and when we didn't for a brief period from 1989 people actually started asking whether all the money we were throwing at the military-industrial complex (including nuclear weapons) was money well spent?

    The "threat" is used as glue to hold society together and, if I were being a complete cynic, supportive of the Government.

    There's some interesting comments on birth rates - the last time birth rates fell, schools were closed or merged together and playing fields sold off for housing development. When the birth rate recovered, money had to be spent providing additional classrooms to deal with the new bulge in capacity. Currently, the big problem in school construction is the severe shortage of SEN units to deal with the post-lockdown increase in referrals.

    Deltapoll continues the 17.5% swing from Conservative to Labour. We have the Monday R&W poll tomorrow which will be interesting as R&W do their fieldwork on the Sunday and the last poll had a larger than usual sample base (3,700) which is more than double Deltapoll or Opinium.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,774

    Just again, why should people not be paid for this? If they are being forced to do it, surely they should be paid? Does anyone actually think people shouldn't be paid?

    They are not being forced to do something specific.

    They are being asked to make a contribution to society. A few hours a month.

    Think of it as non-cash tax if it makes you feel better.

  • RobD said:

    I think forgiveness is a better approach. Each year in the NHS knocks a couple of grand off the amount to be repaid. That way you don’t train people and then they promptly bugger off without paying for it.
    Yeah I can have a discussion about how it would be done. Stay in the NHS five years and it gets wiped.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,526

    It is deeply unpleasant and deeply personal.

    But the point is it won't raise any money for the government and will make the education smaller and worse. That's my argument as to why anyone who cares about state education should oppose it.

    I think Starmer would have more fruit pursuing a line of broader wealth taxes, even if I didn't necessarily agree with them.
    I agree in that I would prefer more taxes on property and wealth.

    More taxes on inheritance and rentierism and less on work and 'self-improvement'.

    I think we should be encouraging more spending on education.

    Personally I think we should all have a lifetime 'learning allowance'.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159
    edited May 2024
    RobD said:

    You were one of the biggest proponents of lockdown on this site!
    Hey - you can be pro-lockdown (as I was for the first one) and remain upset about how society treated young people during that period. Tuition fees, the lack of gardens, the bans on Parkrun, prioritising recreation over getting schools back open and so on

    I still have this memory of a radio call in where it was suggested that pubs and bars should only open to people aged 50 and over to prevent young people bringing COVID in. Arseholes. But I still understood what needed to be done.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,718

    Most of the private schools are expecting a shakeout due to Starmer. Single sex schools are increasingly going co-ed so they can pick up families of those faced with school closures. The smaller schools are most vulnerable as they live closer to the breadline.

    I suspect the net effect will be fewer schools but the really well off will go on as usual. The fall out will be less well off families who want to invest in their kids education.
    By less well off, I presume you mean in the top decile by wealth, but not the top percentile.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810

    He’s experiencing a policy that hurts him. He’s reacting as many others do. It’s understandable.
    I like the policy (ending tax breaks for inequality machines is the very least I expect from a Labour government) - but if you replace "school" with "mine" and "Starmer" with "Thatcher", CR's 'blood up' post reads exactly like a Scargill speech from the 1980s. I was therefore able to empathize a little bit.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,062

    Not enough immigrants to change the figures that much. The underlying issue is that people of normal child-raising age can't afford to have children, because their finances are so stretched by mortgage payments.

    Which is probably at least as big an issue for parents in the private school market.

    It means that the state primary I went to is closing, because the area doesn't have enough children in it any more. Which is a bit sad, but not worth wading through blood for.
    It is not just a UK problem though, across the developed world parents are having less children.

    The UK fertility rate of 1.6 is actually higher than that in Canada, Germany, Japan, Italy, Spain, South Korea and China and the same as in Australia and only just below the 1.7 fertility rate in the US in 2024. Only France and Ireland at an average of 1.8 children per mother and Argentina at 1.9 are close to replacement rate of 2.1
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_total_fertility_rate
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    edited May 2024
    RobD said:

    I think forgiveness is a better approach. Each year in the NHS knocks a couple of grand off the amount to be repaid. That way you don’t train people and then they promptly bugger off without paying for it.
    Its such a no-brainer policy. Politically, the Tories could have easily got ahead on this kind of thing. I don't think it gets students voting for you, but it probably brings some more parents back on side. Practically, it is good idea and I wouldn't be surprised if long term it isn't even money saver for government. A dentist costs what £100k+ to train, getting a few more years of them being NHS dentist versus knocking off £10-15k in debt.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,774

    I know why Casino is angry about the proposed closure of his kids' school - its personal. Of course its personal, you want whats best for your kids.

    But - and its a very big but - if VAT is the difference between the school thriving and the school closing then I have to ask how they expect all other businesses to cope with similar increases in their costs which they can't pass on.

    We need to have principles and create rules which apply evenly and equally. We charge VAT on services - and a private school provides a service. We say "market forces" when businesses fail and don't support bailing them out or preferential tax treatments to protect them. Every other school gets stuck with the local demographic impacts and budget constraints.

    So when it's your kids, its personal. Get that. But does the same principle not apply to all kids? Or just your own? The argument seems to be "this will cost the state" because private school kids will transfer to the state sector. OK, thats fine. As happens all the time already when schools close.

    The argument is that education is a social good.

    Restricting private education reduces the resources available for the less well off.

    The cost of waiving VAT is a fraction of the cost of providing it via the state
This discussion has been closed.