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    GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,926
    Roger said:

    The outrageousness of these people holding their money in Switzerland and then having influence over the British government as advisors is beyond shocking. There is really nothing to say. Lord Fink and his apologists are just making fools of themselves. There is going to be real anger about this. It'll make MP's duck houses pale into insignificance.

    Meanwhile back on Planet Earth...

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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    Roger said:

    The outrageousness of these people holding their money in Switzerland and then having influence over the British government as advisors is beyond shocking.

    Like this guy?

    @Channel4News: Lord Paul tells #c4news has house in Switzerland and needs bank account there so can spend money http://t.co/awthmvjcDG

    I am shocked. Shocked I tell you...
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    Surely the way for Ed to lance this boil about all his own tax avoidance is to pay today the IHT he'd pay today if he inherited his mansion today?

    By his own lights, if you live in a house worth more than £2 million, 1/ that's a mansion and 2/ you are rich.

    Ed is a rich, rich man and so he should pay IHT now and in the same press release make it clear that as a rich man he will pay his own mansion tax out of his own pocket and will not expense it*.

    Job done, story killed, social justice served.

    * Batty Hattie can do the same.
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    BBC - Costa Concordia captain Schettino guilty of manslaughter

    no surprise there then?
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    JonnyJimmyJonnyJimmy Posts: 2,548
    RodCrosby said:

    Alistair said:

    Alistair said:


    Because Ralph hadn't used his tax free allowance. The the deed of variance meant that the tax free allowance was used.


    And the Miliband boys thought "Dad would definitely have wanted us to avoid this tax"?

    I'd be surprised if they or he thought that...
    It's on the same level as "using" your tax free allowance on your yearly income tax bill.
    No it's not. If you over pay tax by not using your tax free allowance you get given it back (this has happened to me when not working for part of the year, my automatically deducted tax meant I didn't use all of the allowance so I got a rebate).

    How many people got IHT rebates because they didn't know they could do this?
    It's why the law was changed in 2008, and why IHT is such a pernicious tax in practice, falling only on the secretive, the irrational, the unworldly, the ill or the just plain unlucky who don't have the wit or the time to seek proper advice...
    And before it was changed the Miliband lads, like any good socialists would, thought that they should make full use of their inheriting potential.

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    RodCrosbyRodCrosby Posts: 7,737

    RodCrosby said:

    Alistair said:


    Because Ralph hadn't used his tax free allowance. The the deed of variance meant that the tax free allowance was used.

    And the Miliband boys thought "Dad would definitely have wanted us to avoid this tax"?

    I'd be surprised if they or he thought that...
    As a life-long and committed Marxist, Ralph would have been horrified be the transfer of inherited wealth to his children. Their actions were a gross betrayal of everything he believed in and stood for.
    Well he could have set up a trust, purely for the maintenance of his wife in her lifetime, if he felt so strongly about it.

    Btw, the person who effectively made the deed of variation was Mrs Miliband (as the sole beneficiary), and she is a free agent.
    The Miliboys had to sign it too.
    In law, I don't think they did, since they were not "adversely affected beneficiaries" [or beneficiaries at all].
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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @OliverCooper: Labour's plan is now to defame Lord Fink: a man that gives a third of his income to charity. http://t.co/qXSPMbyLji http://t.co/9eaMLgSzrh
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    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Scott_P said:

    Roger said:

    The outrageousness of these people holding their money in Switzerland and then having influence over the British government as advisors is beyond shocking.

    Like this guy?

    @Channel4News: Lord Paul tells #c4news has house in Switzerland and needs bank account there so can spend money http://t.co/awthmvjcDG

    I am shocked. Shocked I tell you...
    How did he get the right to buy a house there?

    I thought you needed Swiss residency or a Swiss based company...
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    dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,291

    dr_spyn said:

    good job there were some Pink Spitfires around.

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=ko9gSpny4-c

    Great colour for hiding a photo-reconnaissance aircraft.

    Pink landies as well. Not sure if there's much traction (ho, ho) in Labour trying for the SAS vote.

    http://tinyurl.com/ng2kqn8

    Just found images of a Buccaneer, a Victor, a Tri-Star, a Jaguar, VC-10 & Tornado in desert pink.

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    PurseybearPurseybear Posts: 766
    edited February 2015

    this affair so toxic for the Tories

    You aren't jumping the gun there? It's wise sometimes to wait and watch which way things pan out like the tv debates which some said was a slam dunk cock up by Cameron.

    You might be right but not so sure. I've a sneaky feeling this could all go horribly wrong for Miliband http://order-order.com/2015/02/11/stanley-fink-to-ed-miliband-bring-it-on/

    What he seems to be attempting is to try to get 'the people' on his side at the expense of almost everyone with influence outside the grauniad and bbc. Cripes that's a high-risk strategy 3 months out. He could see an onslaught like never.
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    FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,062

    Matthew D'Ancona sums up why this affair so toxic for the Tories

    http://www.standard.co.uk/comment/comment/matthew-dancona-the-tories-and-hsbcs-toxic-message--were-not-all-in-it-together-10038830.html

    "What the public will see is not so much a shocking conspiracy as a reversion to type. It will observe an allegedly crooked bank helping its clients to evade fair taxation, and the boss of that bank not held to account but rewarded with a peerage and a senior post as a minister of the Crown.

    Don’t forget: the period during which Green was appointed was presented by the Coalition parties as a time of national emergency, in which the deficit bequeathed by Labour was the principal threat to economic stability and national fortune. The recruitment of the HSBC boss was announced on September 7, 2010, little more than a month before George Osborne’s first, sweeping spending review."

    And for their abettors too - the Lib Dems.
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    RogerRoger Posts: 18,907
    Scott

    "@OliverCooper: Labour's plan is now to defame Lord Fink: a man that gives a third of his income to charity. http://t.co/qXSPMbyLji http://t.co/9eaMLgSzrh"

    Poor guy. That only leaves him £30,000,000 a year
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    FlightpathFlightpath Posts: 4,012

    RodCrosby said:

    RobD said:

    RodCrosby said:

    Alistair said:

    Alistair said:

    Miliband is a first class shit. Rich of him to criticise others for tax avoidance when he himself avoided it on the death of his father


    https://cyberboris.wordpress.com/2013/08/15/how-ed-and-david-miliband-exploited-a-tax-loophole-described-by-gordon-brown-as-tax-abuse/

    How much tax has been avoided?
    ....
    ....
    ...
    It was legal tax avoidance. No different to what Miliband is attacking others for right now.
    Wrong. No tax was avoided. None was payable!
    Was none payable because it was avoided?? Chicken and egg stuff here.
    Nope. Spousal transfers on death [the original terms of the will] are entirely free from IHT.
    You are wasting your time , pb tories do not need to to know anything about tax , they simply feel they can throw out smears left right and centre at political opponents especially Ed M .
    What a trossock you are. Fine words from the party of Campbell and McBride. The party with nothing to offer but the politics of envy.
    Ed Miliband is no stranger to making smears.
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2426678/Ed-Miliband-KNEW-smear-campaigns-Gordon-Browns-spin-doctor-Labour-MPs-admits-party-fighting-begins.html
    ''Ed Miliband KNEW about smear campaigns by Gordon Brown's spin doctor, Labour MPs admits as party in-fighting begins''
    ''Mr McBride confesses to helping Mr Brown drive his leading rivals out of the Cabinet by using the dark arts of media manipulation.
    In the disturbingly candid book, serialised in the Daily Mail, the spin doctor says he routinely discredited opponents by tipping off newspapers about ‘drug use, spousal abuse, alcoholism and extra-marital affairs’.''
    ''Dame Tessa today admitted that Mr Miliband knew about the tactics used by Mr Brown's spin doctor to undermine rivals.''

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2426678/Ed-Miliband-KNEW-smear-campaigns-Gordon-Browns-spin-doctor-Labour-MPs-admits-party-fighting-begins.html#ixzz3RSxXOAxo
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    richardDoddrichardDodd Posts: 5,472
    That fool EdM actually derailed his own train today..now Labour and all of its apologists are running around like headless chickens..Do not stand up at the Despatch box and tell unsubstantiated porkies..lesson one...Good diversion away from the pink tampon tho.
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    weejonnieweejonnie Posts: 3,820
    Scott_P said:

    @OliverCooper: Labour's plan is now to defame Lord Fink: a man that gives a third of his income to charity. http://t.co/qXSPMbyLji http://t.co/9eaMLgSzrh

    Foot - Shoot
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    SmarmeronSmarmeron Posts: 5,099
    @dr_spyn
    You can also find pictures of the Blessed Margaret in sexist pink.
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    Alistair said:

    Alistair said:


    Because Ralph hadn't used his tax free allowance. The the deed of variance meant that the tax free allowance was used.

    And the Miliband boys thought "Dad would definitely have wanted us to avoid this tax"?

    I'd be surprised if they or he thought that...
    It's on the same level as "using" your tax free allowance on your yearly income tax bill.
    That's right in substance, Alistair, although there may be a technical flaw.

    I'm not altogether sure that you can waive your personal allowance. Maybe it's never been tested because nobody in their right mind would want to do so, any more than they would want to pay more inheritance tax than they had to.
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    Roger (the non tax dodger)

    Yes this would all be going swimmingly for Labour if Lord Paul wasn't such an unconvincing witness!

    If both Labour and Tory doners are involved then it becomes more negative for Labour. Just like cash for honours people expect it of the Tories and therefore it does Labour more damage when they are involved.

    They should stick to Lord Green in their attack since he is the only man in the frame appointed by Cameron as a Government Minister.
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    saddenedsaddened Posts: 2,245
    Roger said:

    Scott

    "@OliverCooper: Labour's plan is now to defame Lord Fink: a man that gives a third of his income to charity. http://t.co/qXSPMbyLji http://t.co/9eaMLgSzrh"

    Poor guy. That only leaves him £30,000,000 a year

    Seriously you need your head recalibrating. The man gives over a third of his income to charity, has built a company from the ground up and yet you, whose sole contribution to the happiness of the world is to flog bog roll, feels free to sneer.
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    JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,913

    Matthew D'Ancona sums up why this affair so toxic for the Tories

    http://www.standard.co.uk/comment/comment/matthew-dancona-the-tories-and-hsbcs-toxic-message--were-not-all-in-it-together-10038830.html

    "What the public will see is not so much a shocking conspiracy as a reversion to type. It will observe an allegedly crooked bank helping its clients to evade fair taxation, and the boss of that bank not held to account but rewarded with a peerage and a senior post as a minister of the Crown.

    Don’t forget: the period during which Green was appointed was presented by the Coalition parties as a time of national emergency, in which the deficit bequeathed by Labour was the principal threat to economic stability and national fortune. The recruitment of the HSBC boss was announced on September 7, 2010, little more than a month before George Osborne’s first, sweeping spending review."

    Very nasty.
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    JonnyJimmyJonnyJimmy Posts: 2,548
    RodCrosby said:

    RodCrosby said:

    Alistair said:


    Because Ralph hadn't used his tax free allowance. The the deed of variance meant that the tax free allowance was used.

    And the Miliband boys thought "Dad would definitely have wanted us to avoid this tax"?

    I'd be surprised if they or he thought that...
    As a life-long and committed Marxist, Ralph would have been horrified be the transfer of inherited wealth to his children. Their actions were a gross betrayal of everything he believed in and stood for.
    Well he could have set up a trust, purely for the maintenance of his wife in her lifetime, if he felt so strongly about it.

    Btw, the person who effectively made the deed of variation was Mrs Miliband (as the sole beneficiary), and she is a free agent.
    The Miliboys had to sign it too.
    In law, I don't think they did, since they were not "adversely affected beneficiaries" [or beneficiaries at all].
    Oops.. think you're right there having looked into it more closely. I was sure I'd heard that they would have had to sign it..

    Sorry for that Miliboys!

    (See ed, it's not that hard to admit you got it wrong and apologise)
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    RodCrosby said:

    RobD said:

    RodCrosby said:

    Alistair said:

    Alistair said:

    Miliband is a first class shit. Rich of him to criticise others for tax avoidance when he himself avoided it on the death of his father


    https://cyberboris.wordpress.com/2013/08/15/how-ed-and-david-miliband-exploited-a-tax-loophole-described-by-gordon-brown-as-tax-abuse/

    How much tax has been avoided?
    I have no idea , but it must have been quite a bit for him to do it. You can imagine the little shit rubbing his hands with glee at all that extra lolly.
    He has avoided £0 pounds of tax.

    In fact, due to legislation changes his position is exactly the same now as if they hadn't done anything at all.
    weasel words.. How much tax did he avoid at the time it would have been due by using the deed of variation? 50K 100k 200k ? do tell us..
    The fact of what would be due now is irrelevant..He would have had to have paid it at the time of his fathers death had it not been for the deed cof variation. So he avoided it DIDNT HE !!

    THE FACT THAT THE LAW HAS CHANGED IS FURTHER IRRELEVANT , IF HE HAD PAID IT AT THE TIME, HE WOULDNT HAVE BEEN ABLE TO CLAIN IT BACK NOW !
    It was legal tax avoidance. No different to what Miliband is attacking others for right now.
    Wrong. No tax was avoided. None was payable!
    Was none payable because it was avoided?? Chicken and egg stuff here.
    Nope. Spousal transfers on death [the original terms of the will] are entirely free from IHT.
    You are wasting your time , pb tories do not need to to know anything about tax , they simply feel they can throw out smears left right and centre at political opponents especially Ed M .
    Guessing you're a Labour supporter? If so you don't think the super rich did exceptionally well under Mr Blair?
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    JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,913
    saddened said:

    Roger said:

    Scott

    "@OliverCooper: Labour's plan is now to defame Lord Fink: a man that gives a third of his income to charity. http://t.co/qXSPMbyLji http://t.co/9eaMLgSzrh"

    Poor guy. That only leaves him £30,000,000 a year

    Seriously you need your head recalibrating. The man gives over a third of his income to charity, has built a company from the ground up and yet you, whose sole contribution to the happiness of the world is to flog bog roll, feels free to sneer.
    Be careful. Charitable giving is no guarantee of probity.
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    dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,291
    Smarmeron said:

    @dr_spyn
    You can also find pictures of the Blessed Margaret in sexist pink.

    When she rode on that Challenger tank?

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    RodCrosbyRodCrosby Posts: 7,737

    Alistair said:

    Alistair said:


    Because Ralph hadn't used his tax free allowance. The the deed of variance meant that the tax free allowance was used.

    And the Miliband boys thought "Dad would definitely have wanted us to avoid this tax"?

    I'd be surprised if they or he thought that...
    It's on the same level as "using" your tax free allowance on your yearly income tax bill.
    That's right in substance, Alistair, although there may be a technical flaw.

    I'm not altogether sure that you can waive your personal allowance. Maybe it's never been tested because nobody in their right mind would want to do so, any more than they would want to pay more inheritance tax than they had to.
    IHT by its nature is a "once in a lifetime" tax, and it's amazing how many people are potentially liable for it, do nothing to minimize or eliminate it, and hence hand a large chunk of the fruits their lifelong toil to the taxman, completely unnecessarily...
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    kjohnwkjohnw Posts: 1,456
    Roger said:

    Scott

    "@OliverCooper: Labour's plan is now to defame Lord Fink: a man that gives a third of his income to charity. http://t.co/qXSPMbyLji http://t.co/9eaMLgSzrh"

    Poor guy. That only leaves him £30,000,000 a year

    you really do sum up a typical socialist - envy of the rich, anyone who has wealth must be evil, and treated with suspicion, and contempt. but without wealth creation there would be no NHS, no public services,etc. meanwhile your probably supping a glass of champagne in your socialist ivory tower
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    PurseybearPurseybear Posts: 766
    edited February 2015
    saddened said:

    Roger said:

    Scott

    "@OliverCooper: Labour's plan is now to defame Lord Fink: a man that gives a third of his income to charity. http://t.co/qXSPMbyLji http://t.co/9eaMLgSzrh"

    Poor guy. That only leaves him £30,000,000 a year

    Seriously you need your head recalibrating. The man gives over a third of his income to charity, has built a company from the ground up and yet you, whose sole contribution to the happiness of the world is to flog bog roll, feels free to sneer.
    Glad you said that. Was going to have a go at Roger for not understanding anything about money, business, travel, companies, multinationals, charitable giving - in fact not understanding anything much at all.

    It's easy to take a snide swipe at business, and sometimes they definitely need calling to account but some of this smacks of pig ignorance mingled with envy and sheer stupidity.

    This wholesale attack on wealth-creation is like stepping back into the pages of the Communist Manifesto.
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    Roger said:

    Scott

    "@OliverCooper: Labour's plan is now to defame Lord Fink: a man that gives a third of his income to charity. http://t.co/qXSPMbyLji http://t.co/9eaMLgSzrh"

    Poor guy. That only leaves him £30,000,000 a year

    You are an odd chap - he gives a vast amount of his own money to charity and all you can do is sneer. - words fail me.
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    saddenedsaddened Posts: 2,245
    Jonathan said:

    saddened said:

    Roger said:

    Scott

    "@OliverCooper: Labour's plan is now to defame Lord Fink: a man that gives a third of his income to charity. http://t.co/qXSPMbyLji http://t.co/9eaMLgSzrh"

    Poor guy. That only leaves him £30,000,000 a year

    Seriously you need your head recalibrating. The man gives over a third of his income to charity, has built a company from the ground up and yet you, whose sole contribution to the happiness of the world is to flog bog roll, feels free to sneer.
    Be careful. Charitable giving is no guarantee of probity.
    Unless of course it's a saintly Labour donor.
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    SmarmeronSmarmeron Posts: 5,099
    @dr_spyn
    She had no aversion to pink if it suited her, tank or none.
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    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    IMO this affair will benefit the Greens, UKIP and SNP rather than Labour.
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    SmarmeronSmarmeron Posts: 5,099
    @SimonStClare
    Does he claim tax relief on these donations?
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    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,633
    Smarmeron said:

    @SimonStClare
    Does he claim tax relief on these donations?

    Yes, he said so in his letter.
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    RogerRoger Posts: 18,907
    "Like this guy?

    @Channel4News: Lord Paul tells #c4news has house in Switzerland and needs bank account there so can spend money http://t.co/awthmvjcDG"

    Exactly like that guy. I just saw him on Ch4 News and was reminded what an opportunist piece of work Blair was. Now though we're in a different era. Labour have changed. Cameron hasn't
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    With regards to the topic, this is all well and good but Labour have a pink van and as a result
    any and all analysis is useless and irrelevant. 98% swing Lab to Con because of the pink van, its shifting votes on a monumental scale as we speak. Why, someone called "Bob" even changed his vote this morning because of the pink van. I don't think this site and ScottP in particular has talked enough about the pink van and how it has completely and irreversibly changed the British political landscape.

    Meanwhile, always wrong and never ever learn....
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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    Roger said:

    Labour have changed.

    So labour have returned his donations, and paid tax on the John Mills donation?

    Umm....
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    kjohnwkjohnw Posts: 1,456
    saddened said:

    Jonathan said:

    saddened said:

    Roger said:

    Scott

    "@OliverCooper: Labour's plan is now to defame Lord Fink: a man that gives a third of his income to charity. http://t.co/qXSPMbyLji http://t.co/9eaMLgSzrh"

    Poor guy. That only leaves him £30,000,000 a year

    Seriously you need your head recalibrating. The man gives over a third of his income to charity, has built a company from the ground up and yet you, whose sole contribution to the happiness of the world is to flog bog roll, feels free to sneer.
    Be careful. Charitable giving is no guarantee of probity.
    Unless of course it's a saintly Labour donor.
    yeah like Bernie Ecclestone
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-27144637
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    saddenedsaddened Posts: 2,245
    Smarmeron said:

    @SimonStClare
    Does he claim tax relief on these donations?

    I don't know. Do you?

    I do, however, know that the recipients of the money benefit hugely.
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    Matthew D'Ancona sums up why this affair so toxic for the Tories

    http://www.standard.co.uk/comment/comment/matthew-dancona-the-tories-and-hsbcs-toxic-message--were-not-all-in-it-together-10038830.html

    "What the public will see is not so much a shocking conspiracy as a reversion to type. It will observe an allegedly crooked bank helping its clients to evade fair taxation, and the boss of that bank not held to account but rewarded with a peerage and a senior post as a minister of the Crown.

    Don’t forget: the period during which Green was appointed was presented by the Coalition parties as a time of national emergency, in which the deficit bequeathed by Labour was the principal threat to economic stability and national fortune. The recruitment of the HSBC boss was announced on September 7, 2010, little more than a month before George Osborne’s first, sweeping spending review."



    Yes, yes, but what about the pink van ?
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    JonnyJimmyJonnyJimmy Posts: 2,548
    I wonder whether CCHQ might want to remind people about Labour's second and third largest individual donors.

    I know nothing about their tax affairs, but have read plenty about the ease with which their property firm got planning permission for some huge projects in Croydon shortly after they donated rather large sums to their comrades.

    Ed wasn't leader then, but he's still taking a lot of money off the type who seem to donate for favours
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    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,633
    Roger said:

    "Like this guy?

    @Channel4News: Lord Paul tells #c4news has house in Switzerland and needs bank account there so can spend money http://t.co/awthmvjcDG"

    Exactly like that guy. I just saw him on Ch4 News and was reminded what an opportunist piece of work Blair was. Now though we're in a different era. Labour have changed. Cameron hasn't

    Now I know for sure you are trolling.
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    Roger said:

    Labour have changed.

    LOL!

    Ed has proved today that they haven't.

    The only thing which has changed is that their anti-prosperity agenda means that their non-union donations have collapsed.
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    @MaxPB - Snap!
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,300
    edited February 2015
    I hope Ed has instructed for that £2 million loan from Richard Caring is to be paid back immediately. I mean he wouldn't want to be seen as a hypocrite would he?
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    FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,062
    I have to say I do find it hard to understand why someone who wants to give a third of their income to charity would also want to be a Treasurer for the Tory party. Perhaps he feels it's the natural move for someone who who wants to belong to the upper echelons of society to support the Tories? Don't deny that there are plenty of snobby philanthropists out there.
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    saddenedsaddened Posts: 2,245


    Meanwhile, always wrong and never ever learn....

    Originality isn't your strong point is it? Sheep like in fact.
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    kjohnwkjohnw Posts: 1,456
    Roger said:

    "Like this guy?

    @Channel4News: Lord Paul tells #c4news has house in Switzerland and needs bank account there so can spend money http://t.co/awthmvjcDG"

    Exactly like that guy. I just saw him on Ch4 News and was reminded what an opportunist piece of work Blair was. Now though we're in a different era. Labour have changed. Cameron hasn't

    Labour have changed? what - like Falkirk, Rotherham?
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    Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 13,367
    edited February 2015
    RodCrosby said:

    Alistair said:

    Alistair said:


    Because Ralph hadn't used his tax free allowance. The the deed of variance meant that the tax free allowance was used.

    And the Miliband boys thought "Dad would definitely have wanted us to avoid this tax"?

    I'd be surprised if they or he thought that...
    It's on the same level as "using" your tax free allowance on your yearly income tax bill.
    That's right in substance, Alistair, although there may be a technical flaw.

    I'm not altogether sure that you can waive your personal allowance. Maybe it's never been tested because nobody in their right mind would want to do so, any more than they would want to pay more inheritance tax than they had to.
    IHT by its nature is a "once in a lifetime" tax, and it's amazing how many people are potentially liable for it, do nothing to minimize or eliminate it, and hence hand a large chunk of the fruits their lifelong toil to the taxman, completely unnecessarily...
    It's a while since I was in the biz, Rod, and even when I was IHT was never really my subject but I recall it always had the reputation of being the most avoidable of tax.

    There may not be such a thing as a good tax, but some are worse than others and IHT has to be one of the worse, since it falls largely on the ignorant, the ill-advised and the unlucky. It doesn't bring in much money, either.

    Do away with it, I say!
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    kjohnwkjohnw Posts: 1,456

    I hope Ed has instructed for that £2 million loan from Richard Caring is to be paid back immediately. I mean he would want to be seen as a hypocrite would he?

    yes but according to Roger Labour has changed LOL!
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    RodCrosby said:

    Alistair said:

    Alistair said:


    Because Ralph hadn't used his tax free allowance. The the deed of variance meant that the tax free allowance was used.

    And the Miliband boys thought "Dad would definitely have wanted us to avoid this tax"?

    I'd be surprised if they or he thought that...
    It's on the same level as "using" your tax free allowance on your yearly income tax bill.
    That's right in substance, Alistair, although there may be a technical flaw.

    I'm not altogether sure that you can waive your personal allowance. Maybe it's never been tested because nobody in their right mind would want to do so, any more than they would want to pay more inheritance tax than they had to.
    IHT by its nature is a "once in a lifetime" tax, and it's amazing how many people are potentially liable for it, do nothing to minimize or eliminate it, and hence hand a large chunk of the fruits their lifelong toil to the taxman, completely unnecessarily...
    What do you do if you have one single large family house worth, say, £800k by itself?

    Short of trading down to a smaller house below the IHT threshold, and dumping the balance of funds into some sort of trust, I'm not sure what the "average" Middle-class family can do to avoid IHT on their main property.

    Of course, through doing that, you lose the main family home and can't pass it on to your kids.
  • Options
    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    edited February 2015

    I have to say I do find it hard to understand why someone who wants to give a third of their income to charity would also want to be a Treasurer for the Tory party.

    Because he wants to do the best for Britain, of course. The same reason I donate (rather more modestly than Lord Fink!) to the Conservative Party. The same reason, no doubt, that J K Rowling donates to Labour, and the same reason that activists pound the streets for Labour, the Tories, UKIP, the Greens, and the LibDems.

    This isn't hard to understand, surely?
  • Options
    YorkcityYorkcity Posts: 4,382

    I wonder whether CCHQ might want to remind people about Labour's second and third largest individual donors.

    I know nothing about their tax affairs, but have read plenty about the ease with which their property firm got planning permission for some huge projects in Croydon shortly after they donated rather large sums to their comrades.

    Ed wasn't leader then, but he's still taking a lot of money off the type who seem to donate for favours

    Why don`t you do some research yourself then Jimmy ?

    You seem to do plenty regarding the Milliband family.
  • Options
    RodCrosbyRodCrosby Posts: 7,737
    edited February 2015

    Did the Wedgewood Benn's pay any inheritance tax when the old man died and left a 5 million pound estate.

    They did sometime similar to the Milibands, it seems
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/tax/11189430/Tony-Benns-inheritance-tax-dodge-how-it-works-and-how-you-can-use-it-too.html
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,633

    I have to say I do find it hard to understand why someone who wants to give a third of their income to charity would also want to be a Treasurer for the Tory party. Perhaps he feels it's the natural move for someone who who wants to belong to the upper echelons of society to support the Tories? Don't deny that there are plenty of snobby philanthropists out there.

    One can be pro-wealth and pro-charity at the same time. They are not mutually exclusive platforms.
  • Options
    SmarmeronSmarmeron Posts: 5,099
    edited February 2015
    @MaxPB
    Not that I am suggesting impropriety, but charities are much the same as Swiss bank accounts.
    They can be altruistic, but also a means of tax avoidance.
    Again, I am not suggesting that in this case there is anything dodgy, just that "charitable giving" is not always what it seems
  • Options
    MarkSeniorMarkSenior Posts: 4,699

    RodCrosby said:

    RobD said:

    RodCrosby said:

    Alistair said:

    Alistair said:

    Miliband is a first class shit. Rich of him to criticise others for tax avoidance when he himself avoided it on the death of his father


    https://cyberboris.wordpress.com/2013/08/15/how-ed-and-david-miliband-exploited-a-tax-loophole-described-by-gordon-brown-as-tax-abuse/

    How much tax has been avoided?
    I have no idea , but it must have been quite a bit for him to do it. You can imagine the little shit rubbing his hands with glee at all that extra lolly.
    He has avoided £0 pounds of tax.

    In fact, due to legislation changes his position is exactly the same now as if they hadn't done anything at all.
    weasel words.. How much tax did he avoid at the time it would have been due by using the deed of variation? 50K 100k 200k ? do tell us..
    The fact of what would be due now is irrelevant..He would have had to have paid it at the time of his fathers death had it not been for the deed cof variation. So he avoided it DIDNT HE !!

    THE FACT THAT THE LAW HAS CHANGED IS FURTHER IRRELEVANT , IF HE HAD PAID IT AT THE TIME, HE WOULDNT HAVE BEEN ABLE TO CLAIN IT BACK NOW !
    It was legal tax avoidance. No different to what Miliband is attacking others for right now.
    Wrong. No tax was avoided. None was payable!
    Was none payable because it was avoided?? Chicken and egg stuff here.
    Nope. Spousal transfers on death [the original terms of the will] are entirely free from IHT.
    You are wasting your time , pb tories do not need to to know anything about tax , they simply feel they can throw out smears left right and centre at political opponents especially Ed M .
    Guessing you're a Labour supporter? If so you don't think the super rich did exceptionally well under Mr Blair?
    Me a Labour supporter , you are new here aren't you ?
  • Options

    Roger said:

    Labour have changed.

    LOL!

    Ed has proved today that they haven't.

    The only thing which has changed is that their anti-prosperity agenda means that their non-union donations have collapsed.
    Not completely collapsed.

    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/7c4681fc-b11d-11e4-831b-00144feab7de.html#axzz3RT4rMKtS
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,633
    Smarmeron said:

    @MaxPB
    Not that I am suggesting impropriety, but charities are much the same as Swiss bank accounts.
    They can be altruistic, but also a means of tax avoidance.
    Again, I am not suggesting that in this case there is anything dodgy, just that "charitable giving" is not always what it seems

    No doubt that many charity donations are used to offset tax, but so what? It is legal and encourages charitable giving. The latter is important to our societal well-being, if rich people need to be bribed into giving vast sums to charity then that is a price I can live with if it means worth causes receive funding they would not otherwise have.
  • Options
    when government does so much that is immoral, surely not legally avoiding tax becomes immoral.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 92,079

    Matthew D'Ancona sums up why this affair so toxic for the Tories

    http://www.standard.co.uk/comment/comment/matthew-dancona-the-tories-and-hsbcs-toxic-message--were-not-all-in-it-together-10038830.html

    "What the public will see is not so much a shocking conspiracy as a reversion to type. It will observe an allegedly crooked bank helping its clients to evade fair taxation, and the boss of that bank not held to account but rewarded with a peerage and a senior post as a minister of the Crown.

    Don’t forget: the period during which Green was appointed was presented by the Coalition parties as a time of national emergency, in which the deficit bequeathed by Labour was the principal threat to economic stability and national fortune. The recruitment of the HSBC boss was announced on September 7, 2010, little more than a month before George Osborne’s first, sweeping spending review."



    Yes, yes, but what about the pink van ?
    I must say I am surprised effort has been made to keep that story going, at least as far as Guido and a few other places. It seemed your typical evening diversion sort of thing but no more than that, but some real attempt has been made to keep it going. An odd choice.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,300
    edited February 2015

    Roger said:

    Labour have changed.

    LOL!

    Ed has proved today that they haven't.

    The only thing which has changed is that their anti-prosperity agenda means that their non-union donations have collapsed.
    Not completely collapsed.

    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/7c4681fc-b11d-11e4-831b-00144feab7de.html#axzz3RT4rMKtS
    Now I wonder why is interested in supporting Miliband? Nothing to do with the fact that Miliband wants to break up the big energy companies and his guy happens to run a smaller operation in that sector?

    Or that he gets all his power from renewables, which rely on massive state handouts, and that Ed is much more likely to keep bunging the money their way?
  • Options
    YorkcityYorkcity Posts: 4,382

    RodCrosby said:

    RobD said:

    RodCrosby said:

    Alistair said:

    Alistair said:

    Miliband is a first class shit. Rich of him to criticise others for tax avoidance when he himself avoided it on the death of his father


    https://cyberboris.wordpress.com/2013/08/15/how-ed-and-david-miliband-exploited-a-tax-loophole-described-by-gordon-brown-as-tax-abuse/

    How much tax has been avoided?
    I have no idea , but it must have been quite a bit for him to do it. You can imagine the little shit rubbing his hands with glee at all that extra lolly.
    He has avoided £0 pounds of tax.

    In fact, due to legislation changes his position is exactly the same now as if they hadn't done anything at all.
    weasel words.. How much tax did he avoid at the time it would have been due by using the deed of variation? 50K 100k 200k ? do tell us..
    The fact of what would be due now is irrelevant..He would have had to have paid it at the time of his fathers death had it not been for the deed cof variation. So he avoided it DIDNT HE !!

    THE FACT THAT THE LAW HAS CHANGED IS FURTHER IRRELEVANT , IF HE HAD PAID IT AT THE TIME, HE WOULDNT HAVE BEEN ABLE TO CLAIN IT BACK NOW !
    It was legal tax avoidance. No different to what Miliband is attacking others for right now.
    Wrong. No tax was avoided. None was payable!
    Was none payable because it was avoided?? Chicken and egg stuff here.
    Nope. Spousal transfers on death [the original terms of the will] are entirely free from IHT.
    You are wasting your time , pb tories do not need to to know anything about tax , they simply feel they can throw out smears left right and centre at political opponents especially Ed M .
    Guessing you're a Labour supporter? If so you don't think the super rich did exceptionally well under Mr Blair?
    Me a Labour supporter , you are new here aren't you ?
    To be fair Mark he/she must be.

    You might get a public apology.
  • Options
    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @Coral: BREAKING: Paul Lambert sacked by Aston Villa.
  • Options
    saddenedsaddened Posts: 2,245
    Smarmeron said:

    @MaxPB
    Again, I am not suggesting that in this case there is anything dodgy, just that "charitable giving" is not always what it seems

    It is to the people who benefit. You need to dial your cynicism down from 11, just because he's a Tory.
  • Options
    Smarmeron said:

    @MaxPB
    Not that I am suggesting impropriety, but charities are much the same as Swiss bank accounts.
    They can be altruistic, but also a means of tax avoidance.
    Again, I am not suggesting that in this case there is anything dodgy, just that "charitable giving" is not always what it seems

    There is absolutely no justification whatever for tax relief on charitable donations.

    If you want to give to charity, that's fine. But why should other taxpayers be obliged to donate too, which is what happens when tax relief is claimed?

    It would be interesting to see what would happen to the level of charitable giving if this absurd concession were removed.
  • Options
    RodCrosbyRodCrosby Posts: 7,737

    RodCrosby said:

    Alistair said:

    Alistair said:


    Because Ralph hadn't used his tax free allowance. The the deed of variance meant that the tax free allowance was used.

    And the Miliband boys thought "Dad would definitely have wanted us to avoid this tax"?

    I'd be surprised if they or he thought that...
    It's on the same level as "using" your tax free allowance on your yearly income tax bill.
    That's right in substance, Alistair, although there may be a technical flaw.

    I'm not altogether sure that you can waive your personal allowance. Maybe it's never been tested because nobody in their right mind would want to do so, any more than they would want to pay more inheritance tax than they had to.
    IHT by its nature is a "once in a lifetime" tax, and it's amazing how many people are potentially liable for it, do nothing to minimize or eliminate it, and hence hand a large chunk of the fruits their lifelong toil to the taxman, completely unnecessarily...
    What do you do if you have one single large family house worth, say, £800k by itself?

    Short of trading down to a smaller house below the IHT threshold, and dumping the balance of funds into some sort of trust, I'm not sure what the "average" Middle-class family can do to avoid IHT on their main property.

    Of course, through doing that, you lose the main family home and can't pass it on to your kids.
    Hint: Perhaps you need to take advice on what is known as "the undivided share"?
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/property/advice/propertyclinic/7207543/Property-advice-reducing-inheritance-tax-liability.html
  • Options
    Scott_P said:

    @Coral: BREAKING: Paul Lambert sacked by Aston Villa.

    And in other shocking news...a bear has just taken a c##p in a forest.
  • Options
    CD13CD13 Posts: 6,352
    edited February 2015
    Mr Booth,

    I've been out, but you asked on a previous thread why I thought that political correctness was a big factor in the Rotherham scandal.

    You may not have had the time to read from the Casey or Jay reports but they are the sources I'm using.

    "The Council’s culture is unhealthy: bullying, sexism, suppression and misplaced ‘political correctness’ have cemented its failures ... a culture of covering up uncomfortable truths, silencing whistle-blowers and paying off staff rather than dealing with difficult issues ... The issue of race is contentious, with staff and Members lacking the confidence to tackle difficult issues for fear of being seen as racist or upsetting community cohesion." are just a few of the comments.

    I suggest you read both reports and form your own opinion.
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,633

    Smarmeron said:

    @MaxPB
    Not that I am suggesting impropriety, but charities are much the same as Swiss bank accounts.
    They can be altruistic, but also a means of tax avoidance.
    Again, I am not suggesting that in this case there is anything dodgy, just that "charitable giving" is not always what it seems

    There is absolutely no justification whatever for tax relief on charitable donations.

    If you want to give to charity, that's fine. But why should other taxpayers be obliged to donate too, which is what happens when tax relief is claimed?

    It would be interesting to see what would happen to the level of charitable giving if this absurd concession were removed.
    I understand both points of view, but the sums involved are pretty vast and giving tax relief encourages high net worth individuals to give to charity rather than keep their wealth locked up in wealth management account. Most charitable giving recycles the money back into the UK and global economy better than money sitting in a bank account. The net loss to the government from charity tax relief isn't really that high but charities and good causes gain significantly from it.
  • Options
    SmarmeronSmarmeron Posts: 5,099
    @saddened
    I don't care if he is a Martian Nationalist, there are lots of clever ways of managing your finances.
    Or are you the same as @TheWatcher, in believing that wealth confers morality?
  • Options

    Smarmeron said:

    @MaxPB
    Not that I am suggesting impropriety, but charities are much the same as Swiss bank accounts.
    They can be altruistic, but also a means of tax avoidance.
    Again, I am not suggesting that in this case there is anything dodgy, just that "charitable giving" is not always what it seems

    There is absolutely no justification whatever for tax relief on charitable donations.

    If you want to give to charity, that's fine. But why should other taxpayers be obliged to donate too, which is what happens when tax relief is claimed?

    It would be interesting to see what would happen to the level of charitable giving if this absurd concession were removed.
    I don't actually agree with you, but it's interesting to recall what happened when the coalition proposed to limit the maximum deduction to £50K a year or 25% of an individual's income, whichever is higher. All hell broke loose, and the Guardian-reading classes who'd previously been up in arms at the rich not paying enough tax suddenly became incredibly indignant that their pet causes were going to be badly hit. In the end it was dropped:

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-17680069
  • Options
    RodCrosby said:

    RodCrosby said:

    Alistair said:

    Alistair said:


    Because Ralph hadn't used his tax free allowance. The the deed of variance meant that the tax free allowance was used.

    And the Miliband boys thought "Dad would definitely have wanted us to avoid this tax"?

    I'd be surprised if they or he thought that...
    It's on the same level as "using" your tax free allowance on your yearly income tax bill.
    That's right in substance, Alistair, although there may be a technical flaw.

    I'm not altogether sure that you can waive your personal allowance. Maybe it's never been tested because nobody in their right mind would want to do so, any more than they would want to pay more inheritance tax than they had to.
    IHT by its nature is a "once in a lifetime" tax, and it's amazing how many people are potentially liable for it, do nothing to minimize or eliminate it, and hence hand a large chunk of the fruits their lifelong toil to the taxman, completely unnecessarily...
    What do you do if you have one single large family house worth, say, £800k by itself?

    Short of trading down to a smaller house below the IHT threshold, and dumping the balance of funds into some sort of trust, I'm not sure what the "average" Middle-class family can do to avoid IHT on their main property.

    Of course, through doing that, you lose the main family home and can't pass it on to your kids.
    Hint: Perhaps you need to take advice on what is known as "the undivided share"?
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/property/advice/propertyclinic/7207543/Property-advice-reducing-inheritance-tax-liability.html
    Interesting. Thanks.
  • Options
    dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,291
    Paul Lambert sacked
    Posted at 19:58
    Here is the statement in full from Aston Villa:
    "Aston Villa Football Club has parted company this evening with manager Paul Lambert.
    "First-team coach Scott Marshall and goalkeeping coach Andy Marshall will continue to prepare the squad for Sunday's FA Cup tie with Leicester City at Villa Park.
    "The club would also like to place on record its thanks to Paul and take this opportunity to wish him every success in the future.
    "The club will announce a new manager in due course.
    "There will be no further comment from the club at this stage."
  • Options
    JonnyJimmyJonnyJimmy Posts: 2,548
    Yorkcity said:

    I wonder whether CCHQ might want to remind people about Labour's second and third largest individual donors.

    I know nothing about their tax affairs, but have read plenty about the ease with which their property firm got planning permission for some huge projects in Croydon shortly after they donated rather large sums to their comrades.

    Ed wasn't leader then, but he's still taking a lot of money off the type who seem to donate for favours

    Why don`t you do some research yourself then Jimmy ?

    You seem to do plenty regarding the Milliband family.
    If CCHQ will pay me for it I'd be delighted to.

    My research time so far on the Milibands' tax affairs is about five minutes. I've spent a bit more time looking at what he said before he became Loto but there's not much to see and it's all pretty dull.

  • Options
    saddenedsaddened Posts: 2,245
    Smarmeron said:

    @saddened
    I don't care if he is a Martian Nationalist, there are lots of clever ways of managing your finances.
    Or are you the same as @TheWatcher, in believing that wealth confers morality?

    It's pointless discussing anything with you, it's obvious from your user name you're not the most opened minded. So I'm happy to leave it here and let you declare victory.
  • Options
    Chap from Ipsos-Mori tweets

    nothing directly relevant (though shameless plug: our Political Monitor is out tomorrow and it's a corker)
  • Options
    SmarmeronSmarmeron Posts: 5,099
    Watch the real expert give advice on tax.
    You have to love the eyebrows.
    www.youtube.com/watch?v=8qjBec3fpBI
    (The https:// is removed from the link for site rules)
  • Options

    Smarmeron said:

    @MaxPB
    Not that I am suggesting impropriety, but charities are much the same as Swiss bank accounts.
    They can be altruistic, but also a means of tax avoidance.
    Again, I am not suggesting that in this case there is anything dodgy, just that "charitable giving" is not always what it seems

    There is absolutely no justification whatever for tax relief on charitable donations.

    If you want to give to charity, that's fine. But why should other taxpayers be obliged to donate too, which is what happens when tax relief is claimed?

    It would be interesting to see what would happen to the level of charitable giving if this absurd concession were removed.
    I don't actually agree with you, but it's interesting to recall what happened when the coalition proposed to limit the maximum deduction to £50K a year or 25% of an individual's income, whichever is higher. All hell broke loose, and the Guardian-reading classes who'd previously been up in arms at the rich not paying enough tax suddenly became incredibly indignant that their pet causes were going to be badly hit. In the end it was dropped:

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-17680069
    As you would appreciate, Richard, the beneficiaries of tax relief are those that are around when it is introduced. After that the market adjusts, and the global effect is neutral. When it is removed, the losers are those around at the time. In short, nobody benefits overall, but there are winners and losers - at the beginning and the end.

    The squeals you heard were from the losers. 'Twas ever thus.
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,633

    Chap from Ipsos-Mori tweets

    nothing directly relevant (though shameless plug: our Political Monitor is out tomorrow and it's a corker)

    What was the previous Ipsos? Lab lead of 1? A corker must either show a massive Tory lead or a massive Labour lead. Not sure what else could be classified as a corker. Given the direction of travel the former seems much more likely.
  • Options
    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,629
    edited February 2015
    MaxPB said:

    Chap from Ipsos-Mori tweets

    nothing directly relevant (though shameless plug: our Political Monitor is out tomorrow and it's a corker)

    What was the previous Ipsos? Lab lead of 1? A corker must either show a massive Tory lead or a massive Labour lead. Not sure what else could be classified as a corker. Given the direction of travel the former seems much more likely.
    Yeah, last Ipsos-Mori had a Lab lead of 1, and Lab up 5%,

    The chap that tweeted is, isn't one to suffer from hyperbole, so it must be a real corker.
  • Options
    The Times:
    "Labour must axe austerity if it wants deal, says Sturgeon"
    That has to be worth 1% - 2% for the Tories, particularly in England.
    Btw Casino - have you noticed how a Lab/SNP deal is becoming increasingly talked about .... perhaps not as "foolhardy" a bet as you suggested .... now a 6/1 shot, compared with my 25/1 bet.
  • Options
    SmarmeronSmarmeron Posts: 5,099
    @saddened
    Suit yourself, I just can't be as balanced in my opinions as the PBTories are.
  • Options
    isamisam Posts: 41,014
    The story in the news is Ed Miliband taking on possible tax avoiding billionaire with Cameron positioned as sticking up for the Billionaire

    I couldnt care less about Cameron, the Conservatives, Labour or Miliband.. but this is why Miliband asked the questions he did today.. he wanted this row to be public and for Cameron to be seen to be in this position
  • Options
    kjohnwkjohnw Posts: 1,456

    The Times:
    "Labour must axe austerity if it wants deal, says Sturgeon"
    That has to be worth 1% - 2% for the Tories, particularly in England.
    Btw Casino - have you noticed how a Lab/SNP deal is becoming increasingly talked about .... perhaps not as "foolhardy" a bet as you suggested .... now a 6/1 shot, compared with my 25/1 bet.

    a Lab/SNP coalition will go down like a cup of cold sick in England, and will destroy Labour possibly forever
  • Options
    It just dawned on me.

    Corker might mean the Greens are in third place with Ipsos-Mori.
  • Options

    MaxPB said:

    Chap from Ipsos-Mori tweets

    nothing directly relevant (though shameless plug: our Political Monitor is out tomorrow and it's a corker)

    What was the previous Ipsos? Lab lead of 1? A corker must either show a massive Tory lead or a massive Labour lead. Not sure what else could be classified as a corker. Given the direction of travel the former seems much more likely.
    Yeah, last Ipsos-Mori had a Lab lead of 1, and Lab up 5%,

    The chap that tweeted is, isn't one to suffer from hyperbole, so it must be a real corker.
    Any clue as to what time it is due to be released?

  • Options
    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    isam said:

    The story in the news is Ed Miliband taking on possible tax avoiding billionaire with Cameron positioned as sticking up for the Billionaire

    I couldnt care less about Cameron, the Conservatives, Labour or Miliband.. but this is why Miliband asked the questions he did today.. he wanted this row to be public and for Cameron to be seen to be in this position

    Kippers for Miliband continues to gain momentum..
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 36,005
    MaxPB said:

    Chap from Ipsos-Mori tweets

    nothing directly relevant (though shameless plug: our Political Monitor is out tomorrow and it's a corker)

    What was the previous Ipsos? Lab lead of 1? A corker must either show a massive Tory lead or a massive Labour lead. Not sure what else could be classified as a corker. Given the direction of travel the former seems much more likely.
    Maybe it's a UKIP lead.
  • Options
    SmarmeronSmarmeron Posts: 5,099
    @kjohnw
    Same way as they were destroyed after the last election?
    Unfortunately despite some mighty blasts on the arse trumpet, that didn't happen.
  • Options

    MaxPB said:

    Chap from Ipsos-Mori tweets

    nothing directly relevant (though shameless plug: our Political Monitor is out tomorrow and it's a corker)

    What was the previous Ipsos? Lab lead of 1? A corker must either show a massive Tory lead or a massive Labour lead. Not sure what else could be classified as a corker. Given the direction of travel the former seems much more likely.
    Yeah, last Ipsos-Mori had a Lab lead of 1, and Lab up 5%,

    The chap that tweeted is, isn't one to suffer from hyperbole, so it must be a real corker.
    Any clue as to what time it is due to be released?

    Normally it is published in the evening standard, so any time between 11am and 2 pm
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,633
    isam said:

    The story in the news is Ed Miliband taking on possible tax avoiding billionaire with Cameron positioned as sticking up for the Billionaire

    I couldnt care less about Cameron, the Conservatives, Labour or Miliband.. but this is why Miliband asked the questions he did today.. he wanted this row to be public and for Cameron to be seen to be in this position

    Cameron, as far as I can see, hasn't stuck up for anyone. Lord Fink has piped up himself, but Cameron hasn't said anything.
  • Options

    It just dawned on me.

    Corker might mean the Greens are in third place with Ipsos-Mori.

    That would be a stinker.
  • Options
    New Thread
  • Options
    isamisam Posts: 41,014
    edited February 2015
    TGOHF said:

    isam said:

    The story in the news is Ed Miliband taking on possible tax avoiding billionaire with Cameron positioned as sticking up for the Billionaire

    I couldnt care less about Cameron, the Conservatives, Labour or Miliband.. but this is why Miliband asked the questions he did today.. he wanted this row to be public and for Cameron to be seen to be in this position

    Kippers for Miliband continues to gain momentum..
    I know you're trolling, but I am not for either, they're just the same.. but I like to watch the pretend differences being exaggerated

    Made a record of my PB Bets last night, saw Ive taken UKIP over the Lib Dems votes at 10/11 w you.. forgot about that one, nice!!
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 36,005

    I have to say I do find it hard to understand why someone who wants to give a third of their income to charity would also want to be a Treasurer for the Tory party. Perhaps he feels it's the natural move for someone who who wants to belong to the upper echelons of society to support the Tories? Don't deny that there are plenty of snobby philanthropists out there.

    Some super-rich people are philanthropists. As Andrew Carnegie put it "He who dies rich dies disgraced.". In fact, he did die rich, but he founded libraries and schools all over the English speaking world. Bill Gates is in the same mould. They're happy to give away vast sums, but want to spend it on the causes they select.

  • Options
    YorkcityYorkcity Posts: 4,382

    Yorkcity said:

    I wonder whether CCHQ might want to remind people about Labour's second and third largest individual donors.

    I know nothing about their tax affairs, but have read plenty about the ease with which their property firm got planning permission for some huge projects in Croydon shortly after they donated rather large sums to their comrades.

    Ed wasn't leader then, but he's still taking a lot of money off the type who seem to donate for favours

    Why don`t you do some research yourself then Jimmy ?

    You seem to do plenty regarding the Milliband family.
    If CCHQ will pay me for it I'd be delighted to.

    My research time so far on the Milibands' tax affairs is about five minutes. I've spent a bit more time looking at what he said before he became Loto but there's not much to see and it's all pretty dull.

    I totally agree.

    I would have thought someone is already been paid.
    I honestly can not remember him before he became leader.
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    GeoffMGeoffM Posts: 6,071

    Guessing you're a Labour supporter? If so you don't think the super rich did exceptionally well under Mr Blair?

    Although you are technically wrong about Mark Senior's politics, you have correctly spotted that he is as thick as elephant shit so it's an understandable mistake.
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    MarkSeniorMarkSenior Posts: 4,699
    GeoffM said:

    Guessing you're a Labour supporter? If so you don't think the super rich did exceptionally well under Mr Blair?

    Although you are technically wrong about Mark Senior's politics, you have correctly spotted that he is as thick as elephant shit so it's an understandable mistake.
    Ah words of unwisdom from the biggest crock of shite amongst pb tory lapdogs on here.
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    Yorkcity said:

    Yorkcity said:

    I wonder whether CCHQ might want to remind people about Labour's second and third largest individual donors.

    I know nothing about their tax affairs, but have read plenty about the ease with which their property firm got planning permission for some huge projects in Croydon shortly after they donated rather large sums to their comrades.

    Ed wasn't leader then, but he's still taking a lot of money off the type who seem to donate for favours

    Why don`t you do some research yourself then Jimmy ?

    You seem to do plenty regarding the Milliband family.
    If CCHQ will pay me for it I'd be delighted to.

    My research time so far on the Milibands' tax affairs is about five minutes. I've spent a bit more time looking at what he said before he became Loto but there's not much to see and it's all pretty dull.

    I totally agree.

    I would have thought someone is already been paid.
    I honestly can not remember him before he became leader.
    Test
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    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    BBC hatchet on Kipper's wanting to ditch the NHS..

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-31431460

    "Senior figures in UKIP think radical reform of the NHS is needed and internal disagreements about the idea are likely to resurface after the general election.

    I understand that one senior official very closely involved in writing the party's general election manifesto believes the current system "can't go on"."
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