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The new normal? Reform ahead of the Tories – politicalbetting.com

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  • TazTaz Posts: 17,198
    edited January 15
    viewcode said:

    ...Speaking of overlooked classic episodes, I saw "Stones of Blood" the other day, and (if you can overlook the naff FX) it holds up well.

    (I'm trying to spread the rumour that the 2025 Xmas throwback classic will be "The Claws Of Axos in Black and White")
    :smiley:

    IIRC the original UK Gold screening was in black and white. Certainly some of the first copies to get out to fans were.

    I do like Stones of Blood and it was one of the last Dr Who stories to show a character Smoking. De Vries smokes a cigarette.

    It's quite a fun story like that whole season. Vivian Fay is quite an interesting character.

    I can forgive naff FX far more than I can forgive poor acting or scripting.

    Last one I watched was the coloured War Games which I think worked rather well and the colour work very good.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,171
    Pulpstar said:

    The biggest problem is that the triple lock isn't actually a triple lock, it's a triple ratchet.

    Take 3 years as follows for the purposes of the exercise.

    Year 1, prices drop by 50%, earnings drop by 50%.

    Year 2 prices rise by 100%, earnings stay flat.

    year 3 prices stay flat, earnings rise by 100%.

    Say the pension is £10,000.

    After yr 1 it is worth £10,250 with the 2.5% "lock".

    In yr 2 it is worth £20,500 with the prices "lock".

    In yr 3 it is worth £41,000 with the earnings "lock".

    £10,000 is worth the same as it was at the end of yr 3 as it was at the start - but

    The pension has gone by 310% in real terms over the course of 3 years !

    Obviously I've exaggerated what would happen in the real world but if you get a lot of hops between the higher of prices and earnings in individual years then the value goes up and up and up (In terms of real prices, real earnings and nominal). It mathematically MUST beat inflation in the long run !
    You don't even need that. The prices spike we've all just experienced pressed the pensions button twice:

    In 2022 due to inflation.
    In 2023 due to wages (which took a while to respond).

    Which is the real (but fiddly to explain) reason why clawing back the winter fuel payment was necessary and now was roughly the right technocratic time to do it.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,520
    Pulpstar said:

    The biggest problem is that the triple lock isn't actually a triple lock, it's a triple ratchet.

    Take 3 years as follows for the purposes of the exercise.

    Year 1, prices drop by 50%, earnings drop by 50%.

    Year 2 prices rise by 100%, earnings stay flat.

    year 3 prices stay flat, earnings rise by 100%.

    Say the pension is £10,000.

    After yr 1 it is worth £10,250 with the 2.5% "lock".

    In yr 2 it is worth £20,500 with the prices "lock".

    In yr 3 it is worth £41,000 with the earnings "lock".

    £10,000 is worth the same as it was at the end of yr 3 as it was at the start - but

    The pension has gone by 310% in real terms over the course of 3 years !

    Obviously I've exaggerated what would happen in the real world but if you get a lot of hops between the higher of prices and earnings in individual years then the value goes up and up and up (In terms of real prices, real earnings and nominal). It mathematically MUST beat inflation in the long run !
    It does, and I agree your point, but to make another one against it.

    If the pension goes up purely and simply by inflation every year (so no link to average earnings) then in the very long run pensioners who rely on it will fall into poverty.

    You can see that by taking say the average wage in 1960 and just uplifting it for inflation and see what that looks like now. It'll be under the poverty line, I bet.
  • Pulpstar said:

    The biggest problem is that the triple lock isn't actually a triple lock, it's a triple ratchet.

    Take 3 years as follows for the purposes of the exercise.

    Year 1, prices drop by 50%, earnings drop by 50%.

    Year 2 prices rise by 100%, earnings stay flat.

    year 3 prices stay flat, earnings rise by 100%.

    Say the pension is £10,000.

    After yr 1 it is worth £10,250 with the 2.5% "lock".

    In yr 2 it is worth £20,500 with the prices "lock".

    In yr 3 it is worth £41,000 with the earnings "lock".

    £10,000 is worth the same as it was at the end of yr 3 as it was at the start - but

    The pension has gone by 310% in real terms over the course of 3 years !

    Obviously I've exaggerated what would happen in the real world but if you get a lot of hops between the higher of prices and earnings in individual years then the value goes up and up and up (In terms of real prices, real earnings and nominal). It mathematically MUST beat inflation in the long run !
    I entirely get the point, which can arguably be made more simply than you have done. Given basic pension increases at least as much (and often more) than average earnings year to year, simple maths means in the very long term it'll outstrip average earnings.

    So the triple lock will have to be broken eventually. Although eventually doesn't necessarily mean over the next four years. The basic state pension is better than it was in the UK, but it's hardly lavish. There's a totally reasonable debate to be had about how far pensioners can or should be insulated from economic challenges facing the UK. But some of the tone of the debate tends towards the idea that slightly younger people are being shafted by millions of avaricious wrinklies, and that isn't very realistic.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,295

    10% cut to all Chagossians. Sorted!
    The Chagos "deal" gets weirder. Badenoch mentioned it today in PMQs - why are we giving away territory and paying to do it (yes yes, of course, Truss and Cleverley etc). So she neatly cued up Starmer to finally explain why we must do such a terrible deal, literally paying to be robbed blind, and his best reason was "it was a Tory policy"

    And yet we know that Labour will ditch perfectly nice policies (rewilding beavers in England) simply for being tainted by the Tory legacy

    So WTAF? Why? Why the terrible deal, why the terrible hurry?

    There are now quite lurid speculations on TwiX that certain parties will personally gain, financially, from this calamity, if it is enacted. I was tempted to dismiss them, but in the absence of any better explanation...
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,520
    Nigelb said:

    I note the FT maintains his anonymity.

    My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over
    https://x.com/buccocapital/status/1879225677234500059

    Exactly. That there is the famous "Vibe Shift".
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,198
    edited January 15
    Currys to offshore more jobs to India as a response to the additional costs of employment imposed by the govt in the budget, or so they claim.

    I thought businesses were just going to pay for this out of profits !!!!


    "The retailer has previously warned that it faces £30m in extra costs as a result of the Chancellor’s October Budget, at which she announced a £25bn National Insurance (NI) raid on employers, as well as a 6.7pc increase in the minimum wage.

    Mr Baldock said that while it was important to invest in staff pay, he warned that some of the new costs announced by Ms Reeves would be harmful to jobs.

    “The National Insurance tax is a tax on jobs that doesn’t benefit colleagues at all and actually depresses hiring and boosts offshoring and automation.

    “We don’t want to employ fewer people in the UK. We don’t want to depress hiring in the UK. We want to employ more people. We want to be in the box seat for powering growth in this country. We want to invest more, hire more, and help the economy grow faster. What we’re asking for is the environment to allow us to do that.”"

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/currys-to-outsource-staff-to-india-after-reeves-s-tax-raid/ar-AA1xeG9r?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=9e8260cf29bd453d92da18c065a6e586&ei=7
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,520

    Handing out passports has been a government priority for a while.
    Rightly so. People who want Stalag17 should go to North Korea. Oh wait, they can't.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,135
    Leon said:

    The Chagos "deal" gets weirder. Badenoch mentioned it today in PMQs - why are we giving away territory and paying to do it (yes yes, of course, Truss and Cleverley etc). So she neatly cued up Starmer to finally explain why we must do such a terrible deal, literally paying to be robbed blind, and his best reason was "it was a Tory policy"

    And yet we know that Labour will ditch perfectly nice policies (rewilding beavers in England) simply for being tainted by the Tory legacy

    So WTAF? Why? Why the terrible deal, why the terrible hurry?

    There are now quite lurid speculations on TwiX that certain parties will personally gain, financially, from this calamity, if it is enacted. I was tempted to dismiss them, but in the absence of any better explanation...
    I'm still hopeful the deal will somehow be stymied at the last moment.
  • PJHPJH Posts: 783

    When you refer to a no immigration policy, is that in absolute or net terms as those are two completely different things?

    Eg you could have a policy of net no migration, which I believe was Reform's policy last time, which would still entail over a hundred thousand people per year immigrating to net against those who emigrate.

    Or you could have a policy of no immigration which if you don't prevent emigration would mean net emigration over 100k per annum.
    I wasn't particularly specifying (not my policy, I was just thinking out loud). I can't speak for them but I imagine many of the 'No Immigration' types mean absolutely none at all. But I suspect no net immigration would be more than enough to have the effects I've suggested.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,369
    Nigelb said:

    I note the FT maintains his anonymity.

    My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over
    https://x.com/buccocapital/status/1879225677234500059

    Ironically, this guy could be characterized using both the words he cites.
  • PJHPJH Posts: 783

    Government department efficiency update:

    Completed online application for my son for his new passport on evening of 7th Jan. Received text back confirming receipt. Sent old passport back on 8th Jan. Received text back confirming receipt. Received new passport in the post yesterday (14th).

    It can be done - efficient, using technology. Impressed. Looking at their stats, average waiting time has been under 10 days for over a year now.

    That's impressive - even in the 'good old days' I remember being told to allow 3 months to be sure your new passport arrived in time!

  • Nigelb said:

    I note the FT maintains his anonymity.

    My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over
    https://x.com/buccocapital/status/1879225677234500059

    Hurrah, at work I won’t have self censor anymore, I can be my true unrestrained self.
  • kinabalu said:

    The passport office has always been great in my experience.
    In 2022, it could be up to a month on average. From 2020 onwards it never averaged less than 10 days until autumn 2023. It has been <10 days ever since. As Eek says, they have found ways of improving.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    PJH said:

    That's impressive - even in the 'good old days' I remember being told to allow 3 months to be sure your new passport arrived in time!

    It’s amazing how a load of sh!tty headlines, and insurance companies arguing with government about liability for cancellations, can suddenly spur government departments to do what they’re supposed to do.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,135
    edited January 15
    Sean_F said:

    The attitude of the Mauritius government is simply weird. They won't get a better deal from Trump. Sometimes, people just overplay their hand totally,
    Maybe they don't want the islands, but they want to have the grievance of not having the islands.

    I feel that a few people who campaigned for Brexit might have been happier with the vote going marginally the other way.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,342
    Leon said:

    The Chagos "deal" gets weirder. Badenoch mentioned it today in PMQs - why are we giving away territory and paying to do it (yes yes, of course, Truss and Cleverley etc). So she neatly cued up Starmer to finally explain why we must do such a terrible deal, literally paying to be robbed blind, and his best reason was "it was a Tory policy"

    And yet we know that Labour will ditch perfectly nice policies (rewilding beavers in England) simply for being tainted by the Tory legacy

    So WTAF? Why? Why the terrible deal, why the terrible hurry?

    There are now quite lurid speculations on TwiX that certain parties will personally gain, financially, from this calamity, if it is enacted. I was tempted to dismiss them, but in the absence of any better explanation...
    Starmer is clearly not being frank about it.
  • Ivor Caplin is still tweeting. Shouldn’t someone be performing an intervention?
    Nsfw in case anyone can be arsed looking at his tweets.

    I had unfortunately seen. I've also seen that he still appears to have a parliamentary pass. He shouldn't be allowed anywhere near there and shouldn't have been for some time.

    Maybe his good friend, the Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology, could stage the intervention?

  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,195
    Pulpstar said:

    The biggest problem is that the triple lock isn't actually a triple lock, it's a triple ratchet.

    Take 3 years as follows for the purposes of the exercise.

    Year 1, prices drop by 50%, earnings drop by 50%.

    Year 2 prices rise by 100%, earnings stay flat.

    year 3 prices stay flat, earnings rise by 100%.

    Say the pension is £10,000.

    After yr 1 it is worth £10,250 with the 2.5% "lock".

    In yr 2 it is worth £20,500 with the prices "lock".

    In yr 3 it is worth £41,000 with the earnings "lock".

    £10,000 is worth the same as it was at the end of yr 3 as it was at the start - but

    The pension has gone by 310% in real terms over the course of 3 years !

    Obviously I've exaggerated what would happen in the real world but if you get a lot of hops between the higher of prices and earnings in individual years then the value goes up and up and up (In terms of real prices, real earnings and nominal). It mathematically MUST beat inflation in the long run !
    If we look at the actual numbers, it has added perhaps 8-9% in real terms in nearly 15 years.

    (There are numbers out there somewhere.)
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,084
    edited January 15
    kinabalu said:

    It does, and I agree your point, but to make another one against it.

    If the pension goes up purely and simply by inflation every year (so no link to average earnings) then in the very long run pensioners who rely on it will fall into poverty.

    You can see that by taking say the average wage in 1960 and just uplifting it for inflation and see what that looks like now. It'll be under the poverty line, I bet.
    You can still adjust upward by the higher of earnings, prices, and 2.5% compounded. It would still be 'triple locked'. It is surely not beyond the wit of a gov't department to just plot the three on a graph and keep the pension at the highest of the three lines ?

    In my example that'd give a pension of £10,769 after three years. It'd still be up by 7.7% in real terms. It is the long term ratchet effect which is the issue imo.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,003

    You don't even need that. The prices spike we've all just experienced pressed the pensions button twice:

    In 2022 due to inflation.
    In 2023 due to wages (which took a while to respond).

    Which is the real (but fiddly to explain) reason why clawing back the winter fuel payment was necessary and now was roughly the right technocratic time to do it.
    Exaggeration hardly cuts it , next he will be explaining how if he stiches 3 pairs of bollox to his granny he will have 3 granddad's. I have seen some mince in my time but that one takes the biscuit.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,520

    Hurrah, at work I won’t have self censor anymore, I can be my true unrestrained self.
    Total and utter freedom of speech!

    I reckon out of all that previously self-censored thought and opinion that will now fizz around the internet, the workplace and the home will come the secret of intergalactic travel and a cure for cancer.

    #vibeshift
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,083

    Ironically, this guy could be characterized using both the words he cites.
    Bit harsh on retards.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,003
    Taz said:

    Currys to offshore more jobs to India as a response to the additional costs of employment imposed by the govt in the budget, or so they claim.

    I thought businesses were just going to pay for this out of profits !!!!


    "The retailer has previously warned that it faces £30m in extra costs as a result of the Chancellor’s October Budget, at which she announced a £25bn National Insurance (NI) raid on employers, as well as a 6.7pc increase in the minimum wage.

    Mr Baldock said that while it was important to invest in staff pay, he warned that some of the new costs announced by Ms Reeves would be harmful to jobs.

    “The National Insurance tax is a tax on jobs that doesn’t benefit colleagues at all and actually depresses hiring and boosts offshoring and automation.

    “We don’t want to employ fewer people in the UK. We don’t want to depress hiring in the UK. We want to employ more people. We want to be in the box seat for powering growth in this country. We want to invest more, hire more, and help the economy grow faster. What we’re asking for is the environment to allow us to do that.”"

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/currys-to-outsource-staff-to-india-after-reeves-s-tax-raid/ar-AA1xeG9r?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=9e8260cf29bd453d92da18c065a6e586&ei=7

    These clowns could not run a bath.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,195
    edited January 15
    Sandpit said:

    The mad rush, especially in the US, to sign inviolable contracts and treaties before Monday lunchtime in Washington is scary to watch.

    Has there ever before been so many US regulations and Executive Orders issued in the last week or two of a Presidency before? It’s doubly concerning when we know that the big man isn’t entirely all with it at the moment, so who’s actually writing all this stuff, and hoping to ram it all through before the change of administration?

    Meanwhile, Defence Secretary nominee Pate Hesgeth was running rings around the Senate Defence Committee yesterday, a bunch of old people who had very little military experience between them.
    What was that, Captain Mainwaring?

    A quick check reveals that nearly half of the Armed Services Committee are veterans, including several women, many at senior level.

    (Admittedly dramatic) Example: Lieutenant Colonel Tammy Duckworth, who lost both legs in Iraq when she was a Blackhawk helicopter pilot, and it was hit by an RPG, in 2004. Military career from 1990-2014.

    Plus those who are eg ex-CIA and ex-DOD.

    I think the USA has Veterans in its establishment in a way beyond our (including my) ken in the UK. Thee are nearly 20 million veterans.

    I listened to part of it, and Pete Hegseth was sloping shoulders and generating word salads like a Post Office Executive. I think restraints on questions were more likely generated by a Republican obeissance-to-Trump factor.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,973

    Maybe they don't want the islands, but they want to have the grievance of not having the islands.

    I feel that a few people who campaigned for Brexit might have been happier with the vote going marginally the other way.
    It's pretty obvious Starmer is trying to engineer a Falklands crisis. He's feigned vulnerability, Mauritius have taken the bait, 5D chess, THE IRON KNIGHT fights for the RED-FOOTED BOOBY.

    Given the absence of any other explanation, this has to be it.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,275

    Watching PMQs for the first time in ages (since I'm not swimming this lunchtime...)

    The other day I criticised SKS over the way he speaks. He's a bit better at this PMQs (though that's a very low hurdle to cross), but Badenoch is awful in a different way. Her voice is more appealing, but she makes too many wordslips, and the content of what she says is absolutely meh. Worse, she cannot think on her feet.

    It really is two drunken amateurs slugging it out at the bar.

    It’s a bit like two people talking to each other but having separate conversations. High performance art.

    Badenoch has surprised me because one of the things I thought she would be good at, if nothing else, was PMQs. Instead she stumbles around a set of scripted topics/statements as if she’s just teeing things up for Starmer to knock down. She is better when she focuses on one topic, like last week, but it’s far from good even then.

    The only reason people aren’t even harder on her is Starmer isn’t that great either. If she was facing someone like Blair she’d be mortifyingly embarrassing.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,295
    By way of boasting - not my normal style, I know - I just want to point out that I said one of the upsides of a Trump presidency might be a deal in Gaza, as well as Ukraine. Because Trump is an ice-breaker and a gamechanger, by definition. For good or ill (often ill) he wants to do things very differently, and sees everything from a perspective not available to Washington insiders. eg he's much less likely to genuflect to the pro-Israel lobbyists in DC

    Lo and behold, as Trump arrives, a ceasefire looms in Gaza. If Biden/Harris had won. this would likely not be happening

    You can thank me later
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,003

    I entirely get the point, which can arguably be made more simply than you have done. Given basic pension increases at least as much (and often more) than average earnings year to year, simple maths means in the very long term it'll outstrip average earnings.

    So the triple lock will have to be broken eventually. Although eventually doesn't necessarily mean over the next four years. The basic state pension is better than it was in the UK, but it's hardly lavish. There's a totally reasonable debate to be had about how far pensioners can or should be insulated from economic challenges facing the UK. But some of the tone of the debate tends towards the idea that slightly younger people are being shafted by millions of avaricious wrinklies, and that isn't very realistic.
    Greed by people , on here who are loaded . Pity help their grandparents ,these bloodsuckers will be robbing them blind first opportunity they get.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,083
    Sandpit said:

    The mad rush, especially in the US, to sign inviolable contracts and treaties before Monday lunchtime in Washington is scary to watch.

    Has there ever before been so many US regulations and Executive Orders issued in the last week or two of a Presidency before? It’s doubly concerning when we know that the big man isn’t entirely all with it at the moment, so who’s actually writing all this stuff, and hoping to ram it all through before the change of administration?
    Their system is different from ours. The 'big man who isn't entirely all with it' comes in next week.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,902
    Sean_F said:

    Starmer is clearly not being frank about it.
    Reasons of National Security, no doubt...
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,003
    MattW said:

    If we look at the actual numbers, it has added perhaps 8-9% in real terms in nearly 15 years.

    (There are numbers out there somewhere.)
    Yes and to a totally inadequate pension to start with , still the worst pension in the developed world by a long way.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,902
    malcolmg said:

    These clowns could not run a bath.
    I don't think Curry's do plumbing.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,003
    Eabhal said:

    It's pretty obvious Starmer is trying to engineer a Falklands crisis. He's feigned vulnerability, Mauritius have taken the bait, 5D chess, THE IRON KNIGHT fights for the RED-FOOTED BOOBY.

    Given the absence of any other explanation, this has to be it.
    Long way of saying he is f***ing useless.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,275
    I actually think Uncle Jeremy’s letters from worried-of-Spalding was a better PMQ tactic than Badenoch’s.
  • NEW THREAD

  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited January 15
    kinabalu said:

    It does, and I agree your point, but to make another one against it.

    If the pension goes up purely and simply by inflation every year (so no link to average earnings) then in the very long run pensioners who rely on it will fall into poverty.

    You can see that by taking say the average wage in 1960 and just uplifting it for inflation and see what that looks like now. It'll be under the poverty line, I bet.
    Ooh ... too tempting ...
    https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1964/jan/27/working-hours-and-earnings
    Apr 1960 average wage was 14.10 weekly = 733.20 pa for 52 weeks

    Bank of England inflation calculator gives 14413 smackers.

    But that's using CPI ...

    https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/monetary-policy/inflation/inflation-calculator

    Hmmm....
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,003
    Pulpstar said:

    You can still adjust upward by the higher of earnings, prices, and 2.5% compounded. It would still be 'triple locked'. It is surely not beyond the wit of a gov't department to just plot the three on a graph and keep the pension at the highest of the three lines ?

    In my example that'd give a pension of £10,769 after three years. It'd still be up by 7.7% in real terms. It is the long term ratchet effect which is the issue imo.
    Richy rich boys scared pensioners are going to get within a thousand miles of them.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,902
    MattW said:

    What was that, Captain Mainwaring?

    A quick check reveals that nearly half of the Armed Services Committee are veterans, including several women, many at senior level.

    (Admittedly dramatic) Example: Lieutenant Colonel Tammy Duckworth, who lost both legs in Iraq when she was a Blackhawk helicopter pilot, and it was hit by an RPG, in 2004. Military career from 1990-2014.

    Plus those who are eg ex-CIA and ex-DOD.

    I think the USA has Veterans in its establishment in a way beyond our (including my) ken in the UK. Thee are nearly 20 million veterans.

    I listened to part of it, and Pete Hegseth was sloping shoulders and generating word salads like a Post Office Executive. I think restraints on questions were more likely generated by a Republican obeissance-to-Trump factor.
    Tactical error by the Democrats, though, attacking his (admittedly reprehensible) character.

    The possibly persuadable votes against him on the GOP side don't care that he's a dick who has been accused of sexual assault etc.
    They should have attacked his obvious lack of qualifications - and the fact that he bankrupted the only two (small) organisations that he ever ran.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 29,846
    Leon said:

    The Chagos "deal" gets weirder. Badenoch mentioned it today in PMQs - why are we giving away territory and paying to do it (yes yes, of course, Truss and Cleverley etc). So she neatly cued up Starmer to finally explain why we must do such a terrible deal, literally paying to be robbed blind, and his best reason was "it was a Tory policy"

    And yet we know that Labour will ditch perfectly nice policies (rewilding beavers in England) simply for being tainted by the Tory legacy

    So WTAF? Why? Why the terrible deal, why the terrible hurry?

    There are now quite lurid speculations on TwiX that certain parties will personally gain, financially, from this calamity, if it is enacted. I was tempted to dismiss them, but in the absence of any better explanation...
    As Starmer said at PMQs, the deal started under the last government (as did almost everything Kemi raises) so it sounds unlikely. Inertia, perhaps?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,520
    edited January 15

    In 2022, it could be up to a month on average. From 2020 onwards it never averaged less than 10 days until autumn 2023. It has been less than 10 days ever since. As Eek says, they have found ways of improving.
    Nice to hear about something going well. I guess many things are ticking along quite nicely thank you. There's a big innate (and totally understandable) bias for the opposite, dog bites man, man bites dog etc.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,840
    edited January 15

    Ironically, this guy could be characterized using both the words he cites.
    Are you saying that calling Trump a retarded pussy is somehow reprehensible?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,840

    As Starmer said at PMQs, the deal started under the last government (as did almost everything Kemi raises) so it sounds unlikely. Inertia, perhaps?
    Starting a negotiation doesn't mean agreement with every possible outcome of the negotiations.
  • DopermeanDopermean Posts: 889
    Taz said:

    Currys to offshore more jobs to India as a response to the additional costs of employment imposed by the govt in the budget, or so they claim.

    I thought businesses were just going to pay for this out of profits !!!!


    "The retailer has previously warned that it faces £30m in extra costs as a result of the Chancellor’s October Budget, at which she announced a £25bn National Insurance (NI) raid on employers, as well as a 6.7pc increase in the minimum wage.

    Mr Baldock said that while it was important to invest in staff pay, he warned that some of the new costs announced by Ms Reeves would be harmful to jobs.

    “The National Insurance tax is a tax on jobs that doesn’t benefit colleagues at all and actually depresses hiring and boosts offshoring and automation.

    “We don’t want to employ fewer people in the UK. We don’t want to depress hiring in the UK. We want to employ more people. We want to be in the box seat for powering growth in this country. We want to invest more, hire more, and help the economy grow faster. What we’re asking for is the environment to allow us to do that.”"

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/currys-to-outsource-staff-to-india-after-reeves-s-tax-raid/ar-AA1xeG9r?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=9e8260cf29bd453d92da18c065a6e586&ei=7

    Perhaps he should concentrate on their core processes, my 2 local Currys stores are utter basket cases where the simple function of accepting customer payment for an item they've picked up from a shelf seems to have been rendered nigh on impossible by their till system.
    As they are almost the only highstreet/retail park consumer electrical retailer left they should be taking all the immediate purchase business.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,083

    Are you saying that calling Trump a retarded pussy is somehow reprehensible?
    I once had a very stupid cat, but he never tried to overthrow the government. Or sexually assault a journalist. Or fiddle his taxes. Or falsify election returns. Or threaten judges.

    It’s really not on to compare him to Trump.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,520
    ydoethur said:

    I once had a very stupid cat, but he never tried to overthrow the government. Or sexually assault a journalist. Or fiddle his taxes. Or falsify election returns. Or threaten judges.

    It’s really not on to compare him to Trump.
    No, cats should never be insulted like that. Beautiful creatures they are.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,902

    Are you saying that calling Trump a retarded pussy is somehow reprehensible?
    The story was about a banker.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Dopermean said:

    Perhaps he should concentrate on their core processes, my 2 local Currys stores are utter basket cases where the simple function of accepting customer payment for an item they've picked up from a shelf seems to have been rendered nigh on impossible by their till system.
    As they are almost the only highstreet/retail park consumer electrical retailer left they should be taking all the immediate purchase business.
    Let me guess, you give them a USB cable you pulled off the shelf, and they immediately ask you for your mobile phone number?
This discussion has been closed.