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Farage remains the favourite to become our next Prime Minister – politicalbetting.com

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  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,439
    theakes said:

    Latest Canadian Parliament seat projection:
    "123
    -37 seats
    Conservative
    163
    +44 seats
    New Democrat
    17
    -8 seats
    Bloc Québécois
    32
    +0 seats
    Green
    3
    +1 seat
    People's Party
    0
    +0 seats

    Remarkable transformation over the past 30 days, how much due to Trump. Now indicates a hung Parliament, may be a Con/Bloc coalition or amazingly a Liberal led one again. Surely the Cons cannot slide further.

    Suggests Polievre's Conservatives will fall short of a majority, shades of Cameron 2010 for Poilievre, he was heading for a landslide then international events conspired to deny him a majority with the governing party also changing its leader (and remember Gordon Brown did get an initial bounce when he replaced Blair)
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,740
    Eabhal said:

    It's pretty easy. Council tax accounts for about £50 billion, roughly the same as defence spending. Increase it from 0.5% of total house values to 0.75%.

    Alternatively, revenge on Amazon for Bond. The UK gets about 5 billion packages a year delivered to homes. £2 flat tax on that, save the high street etc etc
    Ha!

    So you are going to raise a highly visible tax on housing. And that will be easy?

    And as an encore, massively increase the price of tat?

    The Evul Chav Scum Racist hordes will be revolting over that last one.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,439

    We are borrowing too much, taxing too much, and spending too much

    Seriously this cannot go on
    Labour will just increase tax some more then
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,740

    The Constitutional Reform Act of 2005
    The Human Rights Act of 1998

    Both are wholly pernicious and need to, and I think will go.

    Bank of England independence also has a constitutional bearing, and has been equally harmful, whilst patently failing in its stated aim to avoid economic shocks. The lack of political accountability has actually led to worse and more reckless monetary policy.
    I do wonder when the Reformy types work out that all they need is different judges. Even MAGA got there in the end.

    “Judge rules that drowning boat immigrants is protecting their human rights.”
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,439
    edited February 21

    Just the same as Rishi's Tories. Tax has been going up for years.

    I would like to see a party that proposes cutting the state expenditure and thus enabling cutting taxes, but any cut is vociferously opposed.

    Including by you, bitching and crying about cutting welfare like the winter fuel allowance.
    The Tories cut the additional rate income tax, took the lowest earners out of income tax with the LDs and cut inheritance tax.

    Osborne also cut spending except for the NHS and overseas aid, vociferously opposed by Labour when doing so and cut corporation tax. Labour has already axed WFA for most pensioners as you say even if all the opposition parties, not just the Tories, opposed it
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,357

    We are borrowing too much, taxing too much, and spending too much

    Seriously this cannot go on
    I think it's more that we're taxing the wrong people, and things. Can I start with property taxes; why are they calculated on the same basis, and the top valuation is the same, in Oldham and Westminster.
  • Ha!

    So you are going to raise a highly visible tax on housing. And that will be easy?

    And as an encore, massively increase the price of tat?

    The Evul Chav Scum Racist hordes will be revolting over that last one.
    There is a simpler way

    Increase standard rate to 25% reduce or abolish ni for workers and reduce the subsidises for evs which in the main goes to wealthy car buyers
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,725
    Dura_Ace said:

    I don't fucking miss mine. The firing pin broke on it and we had no spares so I threw it in the Shatt Al Arab. I then bought an M4 off a heavily indebted USN combat medic with the heavy duty "SOCOM" barrel. That was an unparalleled implement of wilful murder and I wish I still had it.
    Anything not using telescoped rounds is obsolescent now, though.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,357
    edited February 21

    I do wonder when the Reformy types work out that all they need is different judges. Even MAGA got there in the end.

    “Judge rules that drowning boat immigrants is protecting their human rights.”
    Aren't judges, or at least some of them, elected in the USA?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,725
    edited February 21

    {narrator - The police failed to equity why someone would bring a Folio edition of Lies Of Vladimir Putin into a court room. The fact that it had an SA80 hidden in it was almost inevitable.}
    Should have been an obvious clue to its unreliable contents.
  • nico67nico67 Posts: 4,913
    18 to 30 year olds are less likely to need to use the NHS so a youth mobility scheme won’t be a negative there .

    And these are temporary visas , this is not FOM . And opposed to the big increase in immigration from outside the EU where too many family members came and older relatives which put more strain on services .

    This isn’t reverse racism, if people like facts those are the facts .

    Because the visa is time limited most of those coming will likely work in hospitality and construction where there’s a desperate need for workers .

    Where are all the unemployed Brit’s willing to work in that sector .



  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,901
    edited February 21

    Need to be a big book to hide a semi!

    I miss my SA80
    Semi-automatic pistol, not semi-automatic rifle. Examples of small semi-automatic pistols are the Ruger LCP, the Smith and Wesson Shield, and - Bond again - the Walther PPK

    https://ruger.com/products/lcp/models.html
    https://www.smith-wesson.com/products/shield
    https://waltherarms.com/firearms/ppk

    Smaller still would be the Beretta Bobcat and Tomcat

    https://www.beretta.com/en-us/firearms/by-gun-family/bobcat-family
    https://www.beretta.com/en-us/firearms/by-gun-family/tomcat-family

    Smaller than that would require the type of ladies' gun used in legend by riverboat gamblers in the 19th century, or maybe during cotillions to repel unwanted advances

  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited February 21
    Nigelb said:

    I love the immediate postwar Aerofilms stuff.
    Aerial photography had matured to create fantastic quality, and the excess of pilots and aircraft enabled a large number of great photographs.

    A real window into our industrial past.
    Did I mention NCAP? I should have.

    https://www.ncap.org/

    Complementary to the Aerofilms on
    https://www.britainfromabove.org.uk/

    - but both are priceless. Been looking at some fascinating wartime photos on NCAP of my town with air raid shelters, allotments on the public park, and an army convoy driving down the street. And the old mills down the way.


    IIRC the postwar stuff was in part a systematic RAF project to map the whole of the UK.
  • BattlebusBattlebus Posts: 622
    edited February 21
    ...
  • HYUFD said:

    The Tories cut the additional rate income tax, took the lowest earners out of income tax with the LDs and cut inheritance tax.

    Osborne also cut spending except for the NHS and overseas aid, vociferously opposed by Labour when doing so and cut corporation tax. Labour has already axed WFA for most pensioners as you say even if all the opposition parties, not just the Tories, opposed it
    Osborne cut spending in some areas, yes, which is why he was able to reduce the deficit.

    Sadly in recent years the Tories have turned their back on Osborne and have been increasing spending rapidly, and opposing any cuts even that Labour makes.

    You can't have your cake and eat it too, if you want to cut spending then you need to cut expenditure which means things like abolishing the triple lock, freezing pensions, cutting the WFA etc

    Until you're ready to be serious about cutting expenditure, don't moan about taxes.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,311

    I do wonder when the Reformy types work out that all they need is different judges. Even MAGA got there in the end.

    “Judge rules that drowning boat immigrants is protecting their human rights.”
    The problem arises through making judges legislators.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,740
    nico67 said:

    18 to 30 year olds are less likely to need to use the NHS so a youth mobility scheme won’t be a negative there .

    And these are temporary visas , this is not FOM . And opposed to the big increase in immigration from outside the EU where too many family members came and older relatives which put more strain on services .

    This isn’t reverse racism, if people like facts those are the facts .

    Because the visa is time limited most of those coming will likely work in hospitality and construction where there’s a desperate need for workers .

    Where are all the unemployed Brit’s willing to work in that sector .



    We pay them not to work. Their benefits get withdrawn nearly as fast as any money they make.

    Would you work a shitty job for about £1 an hour increased income?

    It’s called a rational economic decision.

    I’ve sat across from people who are terrified of doing more than 16 hours a week because of this shit.

    And some who bravely decided to plough through to get a better job on the other side. The company I am associated with has helped a few swim that river.
  • nico67 said:

    18 to 30 year olds are less likely to need to use the NHS so a youth mobility scheme won’t be a negative there .

    And these are temporary visas , this is not FOM . And opposed to the big increase in immigration from outside the EU where too many family members came and older relatives which put more strain on services .

    This isn’t reverse racism, if people like facts those are the facts .

    Because the visa is time limited most of those coming will likely work in hospitality and construction where there’s a desperate need for workers .

    Where are all the unemployed Brit’s willing to work in that sector .


    I have no problem with a youth mobility scheme but Labour have not put a number on them but it is suggested 70,000

    The excessive immigration has been stopped and immigration numbers should fall, but as far as I am concerned if we need workers in hospitiaity and building then we need them permanently not just for 2 or 3 years and then to return home
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,926
    edited February 21

    Ha!

    So you are going to raise a highly visible tax on housing. And that will be easy?

    And as an encore, massively increase the price of tat?

    The Evul Chav Scum Racist hordes will be revolting over that last one.
    We are at war Malmesbury! Time for the manor lords to pay their share. Rename it the Geld.

    (But you're right.)
  • HYUFD said:

    Labour will just increase tax some more then
    Which will reduce the take further whilst destroying the lives of millions of people. How is this not evil ?
  • The UK has nearly £50b worth of Russian assets frozen, including the Abramovich money.

    Chris Bryant put forward a bill giving the UK government 60 days to seize those assets. David Lammy demanded a plan to seize the assets and gave the government 90 days to do so.

    It's odd that now that they are in government, 230+ days have passed and yet they still haven't moved on this.

    Fuckwits.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,740
    Sean_F said:

    The problem arises through making judges legislators.
    That’s the primary problem.

    The secondary problem is that judges are generally easy to appoint and hard to remove.

    So you end up with a legislature appointed for life, with no recourse. And also is the primary and most powerful legislature. No one can overrule them.

    The old fashioned House Of Lords (pre 1910) wasn’t that powerful.
  • nico67 said:

    18 to 30 year olds are less likely to need to use the NHS so a youth mobility scheme won’t be a negative there .

    And these are temporary visas , this is not FOM . And opposed to the big increase in immigration from outside the EU where too many family members came and older relatives which put more strain on services .

    This isn’t reverse racism, if people like facts those are the facts .

    Because the visa is time limited most of those coming will likely work in hospitality and construction where there’s a desperate need for workers .

    Where are all the unemployed Brit’s willing to work in that sector .



    Most people working in those sectors are Brits.

    If firms are struggling to fill vacancies then have you considered the wages they are offering may be too low, or that the terms and conditions they are offering are not good enough?
  • eekeek Posts: 29,444

    We are borrowing too much, taxing too much, and spending too much

    Seriously this cannot go on
    Problem is - there is nothing that can easily be taxed.

    It’s almost like Rishi and Hunt shouldn’t have cut employee NI
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,725

    Agreed. But in general we try to pigeonhole people into reliable supporters of X, and real people are often harder to categorise. PB is valuable because it offers a space where people can explore their opinions without being abused (much). Disagreeing with the ideas is fine, but one shouldn't slag off individuals because they've reached different conclusions. It sometimes just makes them interesting.

    Partly because I used to be a professional politician, I'm used to interacting with people who disagree without either pretending to agree with them or slagging them off personally. Otherwise you end up with a set of echo chambers where everyone agrees and is bewildered when the world moves differently.
    Interesting substitution of 'because' for 'despite'.
    I suspect it's more to do with your being a nice guy.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,740

    Most people working in those sectors are Brits.

    If firms are struggling to fill vacancies then have you considered the wages they are offering may be too low, or that the terms and conditions they are offering are not good enough?
    Or that we are paying people not to work.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,357

    I have no problem with a youth mobility scheme but Labour have not put a number on them but it is suggested 70,000

    The excessive immigration has been stopped and immigration numbers should fall, but as far as I am concerned if we need workers in hospitiaity and building then we need them permanently not just for 2 or 3 years and then to return home
    They are though, often, jobs which don't require much training. Hans can come for a year or so, then be replaced by Pierre and so on.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,444

    Ha!

    So you are going to raise a highly visible tax on housing. And that will be easy?

    And as an encore, massively increase the price of tat?

    The Evul Chav Scum Racist hordes will be revolting over that last one.
    And it’s a tax that is seriously due reform but no Government is willing to touch it
  • StereodogStereodog Posts: 786

    I thought that that particular 'urban myth' referred to a pre-WWI dispute, when Churchill was a "Liberal' minister.
    As a Liberal Home Secretary he was criticised for authorising the use of troops to break a strike at Tonypandy and also for turning up in person at the Siege of Sydney Street. I don't think those actions resulted in any additional deaths but not entirely sure.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,365

    I do wonder when the Reformy types work out that all they need is different judges. Even MAGA got there in the end.

    “Judge rules that drowning boat immigrants is protecting their human rights.”
    I find this rather silly response somewhat at odds with your NU10K hobby horse, given that the judiciary are a key example of the type.

    Judges that were not working to undermine the aims of democratically elected Governments (including this one) would be great, but we must first:
    1. Remove the basis in law for the dangerous and grotesque verdicts and encroachments into policy that we're seeing
    2. Ensure that the top judge is once again a member of the Government and therefore accountable to the public
  • Or that we are paying people not to work.
    Yes, don't get me started on the real marginal tax rate that people on 16 hours face. A common issue in hospitality.

    Which is why some of the more dodgy firms in the sector have people working full time but 16 hours through the books with the rest cash in hand (often below minimum wage). The firm avoids NICs, the employee avoids tax, NIC and gets to claim benefits and if anyone comes to inspect the premises that just happens to be one of the employees 16 hours this week.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,189
    edited February 21

    Osborne cut spending in some areas, yes, which is why he was able to reduce the deficit.

    Sadly in recent years the Tories have turned their back on Osborne and have been increasing spending rapidly, and opposing any cuts even that Labour makes.

    You can't have your cake and eat it too, if you want to cut spending then you need to cut expenditure which means things like abolishing the triple lock, freezing pensions, cutting the WFA etc

    Until you're ready to be serious about cutting expenditure, don't moan about taxes.
    "in recent years" the Government (in the shape of the Conservative Party) had to address Covid and its associated monumental once-in-a-century expense; and a European war that bent energy prices massively out of shape. Whatever flavour of government we had "in recent years" would have had to protect the private sector and protect against energy price shocks. That it flew in the face of what a Conservative government might be expected to do was neither here nor there. It's the awkwardness of events.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,439
    UK to negotiate on realigning to EU food safety and carbon 'cap and trade' allowances under ECJ jurisdiction

    https://x.com/DavidGHFrost/status/1892710168602775865
  • eek said:

    Problem is - there is nothing that can easily be taxed.

    It’s almost like Rishi and Hunt shouldn’t have cut employee NI
    You're right, they should have abolished it, not just cut it.

    They put up income tax and NI combined by more than they cut Employee NI. But you know that already.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,725

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/cn489e05k09t?post=asset:7fe04e94-ca4d-4e39-924d-2ef3564757a8#post

    Ed Davey, Liberal Democrat leader, says there should be a new tax on digital services to increase defence immediately, with cross-party talks on going further to reaching 3% of GDP on defence

    It would likely require much harder choices than a "digital services" tax, but otherwise, sensible.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,973
    edited February 21

    I find this rather silly response somewhat at odds with your NU10K hobby horse, given that the judiciary are a key example of the type.

    Judges that were not working to undermine the aims of democratically elected Governments (including this one) would be great, but we must first:
    1. Remove the basis in law for the dangerous and grotesque verdicts and encroachments into policy that we're seeing
    2. Ensure that the top judge is once again a member of the Government and therefore accountable to the public
    With all due respect you don’t understand the legal system at all if you think re-forming the appellate committee of the House of Lords will change ANYTHING. The judges are the same, regardless of whether they sit in the Lords or in the Supreme Court. At the end of the day Parliament is still sovereign and judges can only interpret inconsistencies in the law. If you want less “judicial activism” then Parliament should write better and clearer laws. The commons literally leaves gaping gaps in legislation because they are lazy for judges to fix. All you are spouting is populist nonsense about all the solutions being easy when they are not. As usual the actual answer is hard work and actual accountability of our elected representatives.
  • "in recent years" the Government (in the shape of the Conservative Party) had to address Covid and its asscoaited monumental once-in-a-century expense; and a European war that bent energy prices massively out of shape. Whatever flavour of government we had "in recent years" would have had to protect the private sector and protect against energy price shocks. That it flew in the face of what a Conservative government might be expected to do was neither here nor there. It's the awkwardness of events.
    That's the same level of excuse-making as Brown's defenders make.

    The problem is the Tories made political choices of things they would not cut, like welfare for pensioners or the NHS beloved by pensioners, and cut everything else. But they ran out of other things to cut, but continued to increase expenditure on the triple lock welfare etc.

    That, not Covid, is why the Tories left office bequeathing an even higher level of expenditure on welfare than Gordon Brown did, despite the fact unemployment was lower.

    Welfare today is going on the grey vote, and until it gets touched it is only going to keep ballooning and needing ever higher taxes.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,189
    viewcode said:

    Semi-automatic pistol, not semi-automatic rifle. Examples of small semi-automatic pistols are the Ruger LCP, the Smith and Wesson Shield, and - Bond again - the Walther PPK

    https://ruger.com/products/lcp/models.html
    https://www.smith-wesson.com/products/shield
    https://waltherarms.com/firearms/ppk

    Smaller still would be the Beretta Bobcat and Tomcat

    https://www.beretta.com/en-us/firearms/by-gun-family/bobcat-family
    https://www.beretta.com/en-us/firearms/by-gun-family/tomcat-family

    Smaller than that would require the type of ladies' gun used in legend by riverboat gamblers in the 19th century, or maybe during cotillions to repel unwanted advances
    Or (as per "The Guard") for "killing little Protestants"

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lOF1GJimMJI
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,973
    Remember in our system Parliament can overrule any judicial judgment with primary legislation, regardless of whether it came from the Supreme Court or the House of Lords. Blair did not change that. Our elected representatives should stop blaming others bodies for their incompetence and actually do their jobs. Likewise, people like @Luckyguy1983 should stop importing American issues which do not exist in this country. If you don’t like the law, Parliament can change the law. It just doesn’t.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,725
    Eabhal said:

    It's pretty easy. Council tax accounts for about £50 billion, roughly the same as defence spending. Increase it from 0.5% of total house values to 0.75%.

    Alternatively, revenge on Amazon for Bond. The UK gets about 5 billion packages a year delivered to homes. £2 flat tax on that, save the high street etc etc
    £1 would be enough to raise spending to 2.5% of GDP, without stinging/disrupting too much.
    Not a bad idea at all.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,926
    edited February 21

    There is a simpler way

    Increase standard rate to 25% reduce or abolish ni for workers and reduce the subsidises for evs which in the main goes to wealthy car buyers
    You are in Facebook la la land. Abolishing NI would cost £170 billion. You'd need to increase income tax by 64%, or from 20% to 33% on the basic rate and to 66% on the higher rate just to breakeven. Or quadruple council tax.

    I can't find any comprehensive stats on the total value of EV subsidies, but the OBR reckon the Conservatives spent £3 billion over 14 years on it. That's less than 1% of the annualised cost of an increase in defence spending to 3% of GDP.
  • BattlebusBattlebus Posts: 622
    Trump going to Fort Knox..
    “We’re getting a little bit shaky. We’re getting the yips on this stuff. Like I want to find out,” Trump said. “We’re going to open up the doors. I’m going to see if we have gold there. Did anybody steal the gold in Fort Knox?”

    https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5156669-trump-fort-knox-gold/
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,274
    Elon Musk says Zelenskyy is sending soldiers to die just so he can make money: https://bsky.app/profile/newseye.bsky.social/post/3linicydro22v
  • Eabhal said:

    You are in Facebook la la land. Abolishing NI would cost £170 billion. You'd need to increase income tax by 64%, or from 20% to 33% on the basic rate and 66% on the higher rate just to breakeven.

    I can't find any comprehensive stats on the total value of EV subsidies, but the OBR reckon the Conservatives spent £3 billion over 14 years on it. That's less than 1% of the annualised cost of an increase in defence spending to 3% of GDP.
    So do it, increase Income Tax by enough to replace NI and level the playing field.

    That would still be (net) a tax cut for those working for a living while being a tax rise on those who are not doing so.

    NI is an Income Tax not paid by everyone, it is worse than Income Tax. Taxes should be low but consistently paid by everyone, equalising tax rates so everyone who earns the same amount pays the same tax rate is to be welcomed not warned against.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,926
    Nigelb said:

    £1 would be enough to raise spending to 2.5% of GDP, without stinging/disrupting too much.
    Not a bad idea at all.
    It wouldn't work because of the behavioural response. That might be mitigated somewhat by increased business rate/NDR revenue from High Streets, but not enough to cover it.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,189

    Elon Musk says Zelenskyy is sending soldiers to die just so he can make money: https://bsky.app/profile/newseye.bsky.social/post/3linicydro22v

    Does anybody really give a shit what Musk says any more? Sure, he can make things, but he won't be remembered for his utterances.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,081
    RefUK came second in a London local by-election yesterday in Hammersmith&Fulham. Their share of the vote wasn't very high but still you wouldn't have expected it in that sort of area.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,439

    So do it, increase Income Tax by enough to replace NI and level the playing field.

    That would still be (net) a tax cut for those working for a living while being a tax rise on those who are not doing so.

    NI is an Income Tax not paid by everyone, it is worse than Income Tax. Taxes should be low but consistently paid by everyone, equalising tax rates so everyone who earns the same amount pays the same tax rate is to be welcomed not warned against.
    No, NI is not an income tax. It is used to determine eligibility for the state pension and JSA now too and should be extended to increasingly fund the NHS and social care not income tax.

    If anything we need more National Insurance and less Income Tax
  • Elon Musk says Zelenskyy is sending soldiers to die just so he can make money: https://bsky.app/profile/newseye.bsky.social/post/3linicydro22v

    Putin is the one sending people into the meat grinder.

    The displacement being exhibited right now is unbelievable.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,189

    That's the same level of excuse-making as Brown's defenders make.

    The problem is the Tories made political choices of things they would not cut, like welfare for pensioners or the NHS beloved by pensioners, and cut everything else. But they ran out of other things to cut, but continued to increase expenditure on the triple lock welfare etc.

    That, not Covid, is why the Tories left office bequeathing an even higher level of expenditure on welfare than Gordon Brown did, despite the fact unemployment was lower.

    Welfare today is going on the grey vote, and until it gets touched it is only going to keep ballooning and needing ever higher taxes.
    The amount spent on Covid and fuel subsidies dwarfs any amount on choices made.
  • Battlebus said:

    Trump going to Fort Knox..


    https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5156669-trump-fort-knox-gold/
    Totally not the setup of a heist caper.

    (Mostly because the protagonsists of heist capers are strangely loveable. See last night's love for Thomas Crown.)

    Oh Sinner Man, where you gonna run to?
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,274

    Osborne cut spending in some areas, yes, which is why he was able to reduce the deficit.

    Sadly in recent years the Tories have turned their back on Osborne and have been increasing spending rapidly, and opposing any cuts even that Labour makes.

    You can't have your cake and eat it too, if you want to cut spending then you need to cut expenditure which means things like abolishing the triple lock, freezing pensions, cutting the WFA etc

    Until you're ready to be serious about cutting expenditure, don't moan about taxes.
    Abolishing the triple lock and freezing pensions are not cuts. They are avoiding future increases.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,973
    HYUFD said:

    No, NI is not an income tax. It is used to determine eligibility for the state pension and JSA now too and should be extended to increasingly fund the NHS and social care not income tax.

    If anything we need more National Insurance and less Income Tax
    It’s a tax levied on income. It’s an income tax.
  • The amount spent on Covid and fuel subsidies dwarfs any amount on choices made.
    Yes and those amounts being excluded from the data still leaves expenditure going up and taxes going up.

    One-off expenditure isn't the problem, the problem is the structural deficit just as it was when Brown left office and just as it is today. We have a structural deficit not because of fuel subsidies which don't exist anymore, or furlough which doesn't exist anymore, but because of choices like the triple lock that have ballooned annual expenditure out of control.
  • nico67 said:

    18 to 30 year olds are less likely to need to use the NHS so a youth mobility scheme won’t be a negative there .

    And these are temporary visas , this is not FOM . And opposed to the big increase in immigration from outside the EU where too many family members came and older relatives which put more strain on services .

    This isn’t reverse racism, if people like facts those are the facts .

    Because the visa is time limited most of those coming will likely work in hospitality and construction where there’s a desperate need for workers .

    Where are all the unemployed Brit’s willing to work in that sector .



    The London Labour mentality:

    Twenty years ago - lets get some immigrants to do the construction jobs so we don't need to train anyone.

    Now - where are the local construction workers ? Lets get some more immigrants to do the work.

    Altogether now to the the tune of the Red Flag:

    We'll keep the wages down and the house prices up. We'll keep the rentier flag flying here.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,725
    Eabhal said:

    It wouldn't work because of the behavioural response. That might be mitigated somewhat by increased business rate/NDR revenue from High Streets, but not enough to cover it.
    How many fewer parcels would a £1 charge imply ?

    A 10% fall would still get you enough revenue for 2.5% of GDP.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,242
    Leon said:

    It’s not that it’s woke, it’s more that it’s fucking terrible

    Good acting, great cinematography, but only an imbecile would call it a fine, Oscar-worthy movie

    It has possibly the most comically absurd ending in the history of Hollywood
    Ive heard nothing about that and it makes me interested.

    Does it basically recreate the ending of Dan Brown's Angels and Demons, but in highbrow fashion?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    HYUFD said:

    No, NI is not an income tax. It is used to determine eligibility for the state pension and JSA now too and should be extended to increasingly fund the NHS and social care not income tax.

    If anything we need more National Insurance and less Income Tax
    Pampering the Tory-voting pensioners, much?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,242
    HYUFD said:

    Suggests Polievre's Conservatives will fall short of a majority, shades of Cameron 2010 for Poilievre, he was heading for a landslide then international events conspired to deny him a majority with the governing party also changing its leader (and remember Gordon Brown did get an initial bounce when he replaced Blair)
    Its quite a fun shape up really. Liberals probably cannot believe their luck.
  • HYUFD said:

    No, NI is not an income tax. It is used to determine eligibility for the state pension and JSA now too and should be extended to increasingly fund the NHS and social care not income tax.

    If anything we need more National Insurance and less Income Tax
    How about we put national insurance on non-work income ?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,740
    Stereodog said:

    As a Liberal Home Secretary he was criticised for authorising the use of troops to break a strike at Tonypandy and also for turning up in person at the Siege of Sydney Street. I don't think those actions resulted in any additional deaths but not entirely sure.
    Tonypandy involved zero deaths from the troops sent to restore order - rioting basically.

    At Sydney Street, a bunch of armed robbers murdered an unarmed policeman. They holed up in a house and continued firing at the police. Churchill sent Army units as armed backup to the police - which was the standard policy at the time.

    He then went to Sydney Street to see what was actually happening. As opposed to third hand reports.

    The house caught fire - almost certainly due to the use of powder firearms from inside building. The same thing was a regular occurrence in such gun battles.

    Churchill gave the order for the fire brigade to stay back, since the robbers were still shooting. No one emerged from the building, In the end.

    The robbers were immigrants and Churchill was latter booed (by locals) for his perceived Liberal attitude towards immigrants.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,439

    Osborne cut spending in some areas, yes, which is why he was able to reduce the deficit.

    Sadly in recent years the Tories have turned their back on Osborne and have been increasing spending rapidly, and opposing any cuts even that Labour makes.

    You can't have your cake and eat it too, if you want to cut spending then you need to cut expenditure which means things like abolishing the triple lock, freezing pensions, cutting the WFA etc

    Until you're ready to be serious about cutting expenditure, don't moan about taxes.
    Badenoch has said she will means test the triple lock now, it is the LDs and Reform most committed to keeping the triple lock as now
  • Abolishing the triple lock and freezing pensions are not cuts. They are avoiding future increases.
    Avoiding future increases is cutting in real terms. Indeed increasing in cash terms can still be a real terms cut.

    If we said for the next few years that pensions would go up by a fixed 1% per annum (as many worked for salaries did under Osborne) then that would cut expenditure in real terms.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,242

    Putin is the one sending people into the meat grinder.

    The displacement being exhibited right now is unbelievable.
    They are just rehashing russian talking points from 2022 which, for a few years, the West did not pander to.

    But now the order is in to accept the ludicrous reasoning.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,439

    How about we put national insurance on non-work income ?
    Whatever it is put on it should increasingly be funding welfare, pensions and healthcare as it was created in the early 20th century to fund the emerging welfare state
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,357
    Stereodog said:

    As a Liberal Home Secretary he was criticised for authorising the use of troops to break a strike at Tonypandy and also for turning up in person at the Siege of Sydney Street. I don't think those actions resulted in any additional deaths but not entirely sure.
    Wikipedie, which I've just checked to confirm my memory, says that only one person died in the miners strike and there's absolutely no evidence to suggest that soldiers were involved.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,311
    Stereodog said:

    As a Liberal Home Secretary he was criticised for authorising the use of troops to break a strike at Tonypandy and also for turning up in person at the Siege of Sydney Street. I don't think those actions resulted in any additional deaths but not entirely sure.
    Churchill had major flaws, but there’s a whole cottage industry of quasi-historians, eager to build up a black legend about him.

    He never used soldiers to open fire on strikers.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,439
    Andy_JS said:

    RefUK came second in a London local by-election yesterday in Hammersmith&Fulham. Their share of the vote wasn't very high but still you wouldn't have expected it in that sort of area.

    Albeit only by 0.4% ahead of the Tories and 1.2% ahead of the LDs, the Labour voteshare down 18% though they held it.

    In the other by election in Hammersmith and Fulham though Reform were 4th

    https://x.com/ElectionMapsUK/status/1892728677927923821

    https://x.com/ElectionMapsUK/status/1892724153679053048
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,725

    Totally not the setup of a heist caper.

    (Mostly because the protagonsists of heist capers are strangely loveable. See last night's love for Thomas Crown.)

    Oh Sinner Man, where you gonna run to?
    But see, for example, the heist movies with Warren Oates.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,081

    The UK has nearly £50b worth of Russian assets frozen, including the Abramovich money.

    Chris Bryant put forward a bill giving the UK government 60 days to seize those assets. David Lammy demanded a plan to seize the assets and gave the government 90 days to do so.

    It's odd that now that they are in government, 230+ days have passed and yet they still haven't moved on this.

    Fuckwits.

    Nothing annoys voters more than when politicians promise to do something in opposition and then they don't do it when they get into office.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,725
    A challenge to one of Europe's remaining areas of tech dominance,

    Nikon Aims to Close the Gap on ASML with New ArF Lithography System in FY28
    https://www.trendforce.com/news/2025/02/21/news-nikon-aims-to-close-the-gap-on-asml-with-new-arf-lithography-system-in-fy28/
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,000
    edited February 21
    English clubs stuffed in UEFA draw.

    Liverpool to play PSG, then Villa, then Arsenal or a Madrid Team to reach final.
  • Avoiding future increases is cutting in real terms. Indeed increasing in cash terms can still be a real terms cut.

    If we said for the next few years that pensions would go up by a fixed 1% per annum (as many worked for salaries did under Osborne) then that would cut expenditure in real terms.
    That might, just about, keep pace with the increasing number of pensioners. Even with a planned increase in the state pension age, that is set to go up by about 15 percent in the next decade.

    https://www.icaew.com/insights/viewpoints-on-the-news/2025/jan-2025/chart-of-the-week-pensioners-on-the-rise

    A lot of the 80s political nostalgia is about wishing the UK still had a mega-favourable dependency ratio, and that's probably never coming back.
  • English clubs stuffed in UEFA draw.

    No surprise at all that Liverpool gets PSG, that was inevitable.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,942
    kle4 said:

    They are just rehashing russian talking points from 2022 which, for a few years, the West did not pander to.

    But now the order is in to accept the ludicrous reasoning.
    You have to wonder if Putin and Musk/Trump have hatched up some secret plot to divvy up great lumps of the world between them. Nothing else makes much sense other than Trump has gone senile and Musk's brain is fried with ketamine.
  • FossFoss Posts: 1,332
    If we’re going for low cost cash then we should also look at vat on overseas personal remittance and ending gift aid on overseas spend.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,216
    HYUFD said:

    Badenoch has said she will means test the triple lock now, it is the LDs and Reform most committed to keeping the triple lock as now
    Why is means testing the WFA the work of Satan but means testing the triple lock a brilliant idea?
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,078
    viewcode said:

    Shouldn't that be you miss with your SA80?

    (ducks)
    You wouldn't need to if your comment was right !!!!
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,000
    edited February 21

    No surprise at all that Liverpool gets PSG, that was inevitable.
    Then two legs against Villa in QF Final, then a trip to Madrid in semi.

    Every magician in the world will be proud how these draws are made 😆
  • glwglw Posts: 10,280
    Nigelb said:

    A challenge to one of Europe's remaining areas of tech dominance,

    Nikon Aims to Close the Gap on ASML with New ArF Lithography System in FY28
    https://www.trendforce.com/news/2025/02/21/news-nikon-aims-to-close-the-gap-on-asml-with-new-arf-lithography-system-in-fy28/

    That's good news. Nikon and Canon being serious players again, and maybe Japan's Rapidus fabs being competitive, will be good for us all. We want more competitors and secure suppliers. We should be talking to the Japanese government about working with them.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,462

    No surprise at all that Liverpool gets PSG, that was inevitable.
    We beat them easily at the Emirates. I'd be inclined to say that was the better draw for Liverpool.

    Arsenal on the other hand...
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,274

    Does anybody really give a shit what Musk says any more? Sure, he can make things, but he won't be remembered for his utterances.
    Some here, and some at the top of the Conservative Party, still think he is some inspirational genius whose lead we should follow.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,078

    Yes but we need to have a sensible grown up conversation about what we can sensibly cut (and the positives and negatives of doing so). If we have that conversation and the end result is still expenditure vastly greater than income then we need have an equally grown up conversation about taxation. There is literally no alternative.
    I agree but this govt, of which I had high hopes and voted for, has blown that by doing a couple of things. Kicking into the long grass reform of care funding until, effectively, after the next election, and ruling out reform of the triple lock with their stupid Ming Vase strategy. There will be other things too but these, to me, are totemic.

    They could have got this out of the way now and by 2029 most people would have forgotten and if things were getting better they would easily have got back in.
  • Then two legs against Villa in QF Final, then a trip to Madrid in semi.

    Every magician in the world will be proud how these draws are made 😆
    All English clubs are in the same half of the draw, so not possible to get an all-English final.

    Barcelona (the other draw Liverpool could have got) have got Benfica, then Dortmund or Lille, then probably Bayern Munich or Inter Milan.

    Definitely seems the tougher of the two draws, for coming first.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Dura_Ace said:

    Why is means testing the WFA the work of Satan but means testing the triple lock a brilliant idea?
    Because MT the TFL doesn't actually hit any Tory-voting pensioner this year. Whereas MT the WFA kicks them in the goolies, metaphorically, right away.

    Also cos MT the WFA is a stupid idea anyway. Given how HMRC and DWP can't even communicate properly anyway. DWP can't even do proper PAYE as it is - no P60, no deduction at source.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,078
    Dura_Ace said:

    Why is means testing the WFA the work of Satan but means testing the triple lock a brilliant idea?
    Easier to scrap the triple lock and link to average earnings.

    Problem with means testing is the cost of doing so.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,274
    Sean_F said:

    Churchill had major flaws, but there’s a whole cottage industry of quasi-historians, eager to build up a black legend about him.

    He never used soldiers to open fire on strikers.
    But he did propose the slogan "Keep Britain White" for the 1955 general election.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,000
    edited February 21

    All English clubs are in the same half of the draw, so not possible to get an all-English final.

    Barcelona (the other draw Liverpool could have got) have got Benfica, then Dortmund or Lille, then probably Bayern Munich or Inter Milan.

    Definitely seems the tougher of the two draws, for coming first.
    Absolutely.

    Also means Liverpool get an interesting week of Chelsea away, a Madrid team (home I think) in semi final, then Arsenal home. Huge 8 days in the two big competitions.

    The Slot Machine were superb in second half at Villa, like they were superb in second half at Forest. Worthy Champions this season. Only question is, can Slot keep it going next season despite having to change things in market with aging legs in key players.
    Yes, on basis Macalister with best years ahead of him, just as important to this side as Salah arguably enjoying his best Liverpool season.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,274
    HYUFD said:

    Albeit only by 0.4% ahead of the Tories and 1.2% ahead of the LDs, the Labour voteshare down 18% though they held it.

    In the other by election in Hammersmith and Fulham though Reform were 4th

    https://x.com/ElectionMapsUK/status/1892728677927923821

    https://x.com/ElectionMapsUK/status/1892724153679053048
    Indeed. RefUK have had plenty of strong local by-election results lately. This isn't one of them.

    Good result for Labour in Kilmarnock.
  • BattlebusBattlebus Posts: 622
    edited February 21


    Badenoch has said she will means test the triple lock now, it is the LDs and Reform most committed to keeping the triple lock as now
    Why is means testing the WFA the work of Satan but means testing the triple lock a brilliant idea?

    It's a sound bite. Triple Lock is already means tested as anything over Personal Allowance is taxed. If she is referring to the WFA method where only those on Pension Credit get indexed, then those that have never contributed to NI (usually recent arrivals) will get the a basic pension at the same level as those that have contributed.

    The benefit system (if you call pensions a benefit) is highly complex, interrelated and backed by years of legislation. Change one bit and the number of Judicial Reviews that will flow will make it even more of a mess.

    Although if you exit the ECHR you can penalise any particular group you want without the worry of Judicial Reviews.
  • Alphabet_SoupAlphabet_Soup Posts: 3,549
    HYUFD said:

    Badenoch has said she will means test the triple lock now, it is the LDs and Reform most committed to keeping the triple lock as now
    Presumably that means freezing the state pension but triple-locking pension credits (which are, of course, means tested). It's not a bad idea but it would hurt millions of marginal cases. I don't understand why cliff-edges are necessary in the computer age. Can't there be a smoother transition from one to the other?
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,215
    edited February 21

    Absolutely.

    Also means Liverpool get an interesting week of Chelsea away, a Madrid team (home I think) in semi final, then Arsenal home. Huge 8 days in the two big competitions.
    It also means if its a Liverpool v Arsenal Semi Final that will be happening at the same week as Liverpool v Arsenal in the Premier League, which as it stands could be the match that determines the League (by my reckoning if both teams drop same amount of points between now and then and then Liverpool beat Arsenal at Anfield, that makes them Champions there and then).
  • Alphabet_SoupAlphabet_Soup Posts: 3,549

    But he did propose the slogan "Keep Britain White" for the 1955 general election.
    An election in which Evelyn Waugh pointedly refused to vote Conservative because 'they had not put the clock back by a single minute'.
  • BattlebusBattlebus Posts: 622
    Have I mentioned before that Badenoch is a dud?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,515
    I see Steve Bannon is doing the cheeky little Nazi salute now. Everything comes back into fashion eventually, doesn't it.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,216
    Battlebus said:

    Have I mentioned before that Badenoch is a dud?

    Why the tories went for her over Jenners is a fucking mystery. At least he looks and acts like he wants to be PM.
  • Taz said:

    Easier to scrap the triple lock and link to average earnings.

    Problem with means testing is the cost of doing so.
    That's one problem, but the bigger one is the effect it has on people's behaviour.

    If saving for your retirement just means you are going to get less from the state in decades to come, why bother saving?

    (Which was the logic behind gradually making the core state pension drift upwards over a few decades, which the triple lock does in an era of reasonably stable inflation. It doesn't tell us when to step off that escalator, and it doesn't handle spikes like the one we have just had well. But hey ho.)
This discussion has been closed.