Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 90 total)
  • Child of Thatcher or Son of Brown…
  • SurroundedByZulus
    Free Member

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-11888603

    I think that he’s misjudged how that comment will go down. I know Brown had his faults, but come on he’s not even close to Thatcher’s levels. It’s like blue square second division vs champions league.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    I know Brown had his faults, but come on he’s not even close to Thatcher’s levels.

    Name me one fundamental thing which Thatcher did, that Brown reversed ?

    Tory/New Labour……….I can’t tell the difference. Although apparently you can.

    SurroundedByZulus
    Free Member

    That’s a really simple one that ernie – the decline of the tories.

    PJM1974
    Free Member

    There’s a difference?

    We haven’t had a left wing government in power since 1979 IMHO.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    That’s a really simple one that ernie – the decline of the tories.

    So basically, Brown ‘didn’t even come close to Thatcher’s levels’ because he wasn’t a Tory……..other than that, there is no difference ?

    Thanks……. that makes perfect sense.

    kimbers
    Full Member

    brown was a child of thatcher

    he copied lawson/ lamonts ideas on pension holidays
    privatised, via pps
    kept us out of the euro
    10p tax rate, ok not as unfair as poll tax but he tried
    deregulation of the city
    giving bankers handjobs

    where he did differ was financially resuscitating the nhs the torries had tried to kill
    helping to open up further education to the less well off etc etc

    Stoner
    Free Member

    BTW, little bit of info about pension holidays.
    In order for a pension fund and its trustees to be able to apply the bulk a lot of revenue breaks they wre OBLIGED by HMRC to take fund payment holidays to keep surpluses below 5%. It wasnt a corporate governenance decision it was a legal requirement.

    After various stock market booms, companie’s usually finf their pension funds in surplus and so have stop paying into them or lose tax deduction benefits.

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    A tad harsh Ernie – tax credit were redistributive and made a real difference to some – not that that invalidates your basic point.

    SaxonRider
    Full Member

    TandemJeremy – Member
    A tad harsh Ernie – tax credit were redistributive and made a real difference to some – not that that invalidates your basic point.

    Ditto. But what’s wrong with you all? This resembles a reasonable discussion!

    Lifer
    Free Member

    Worst thing about that clip is that you can see that “miserable pipsqueak” Gove.

    Urgh

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    A tad harsh Ernie

    Really ? I thought I was being quite kind. This is my harsh mode…..

    The alleged lefties are always so quick to condemn Thatcher as evil personified. OK fair enough, if that’s what you believe. So it therefore follows that New Labour must have reversed many of the terrible things which she did.

    And yet despite asking 24 hours ago, no one has yet provided a single example of one fundamental thing which Thatcher did, that Brown reversed. Which would suggest that Brown was on the same level of “evilness” as Thatcher I reckon.

    Indeed one of the first things Brown did when he became PM was to invite Thatcher to number 10 for tea, and to pose smiling with her in front of the cameras …….just to emphasise to the whole world how much he admired her.

    How many lefties on here would like to invite Thatcher round to their gaff for tea ? It is clearly not what you would expect someone who fundamentally disagrees with her to do. BTW, Thatcher never invited Wilson or Callahan to number 10 after she became PM. Not even Heath for that matter.

    As I’ve said before, the only reason Brown invited Thatcher to number 10 was to send out a crystal clear unambiguous signal to the whole world that, under his premiership, the government would carry on pursuing Thatcherite policies……despite Blair leaving office. Can’t see how that puts him on a different level to Thatcher.

    Furthermore, many people argue today that the present government’s economic policies are even more right-wing than Thatcher’s. Due to the fact that they are prepared to go much further than Thatcher ever went. Well if this is true, and I think that it is, then exactly the same can be said of New Labour, ie, they were more right-wing than Thatcher.

    Because once in power New Labour took Thatcher’s economic policies much further than Thatcher and the Tories ever did. As an example, despite whilst in opposition Labour opposing every single privatisation carried out by the Tories without one single exception[/u] having won the election, New Labour immediately decided that one of the problems facing Britain was that the Tories hadn’t privatised enough. And they started their own programme of privatisation and introducing “market forces” into sectors which Thatcher could only have imagined of in her wildest dreams. I could go on to mention tuition fees, prescription charges, etc, but the list is simply too long.

    In essence, New Labour’s argument/justification for being in government was that they were far better Thatcherites than the Tories. And there is indeed an element of truth in that. Certainly when it came to privatisation and introducing market forces New Labour was able to do it very effectively with no opposition and very little bad publicity. Unlike the Tories who were dogged throughout their 18 years in power by Labour’s total opposition to privatisation – in and out of parliament, and the resulting bad publicity. In certain areas the Tories simply didn’t bother because they knew that they would have too bigger battle in their hands. New Labour had no such worries.

    Finally, some people need to remember that Thatcher was actually a member of the Conservative Party, so it should come as no surprise to them that she behaved like a Conservative. She was always going to serve the best interests of the super-rich class which she had married into. At least there was an element of honesty about Thatcher – she never pretended to be anything other than a Tory.

    And I for one, am grateful that she had the decency not to join the Labour Party. The Blair-Brown-Mandelson axis however, chose to masquerade as socialists, although each for their separate reasons I suspect…….but that’s another story.

    Stoner
    Free Member

    There’s no such thing as an un-hypocritical socialist though Ernie.

    At least there was an element of honesty about Thatcher – she never pretended to be anything other than a Tory.

    Only those who genuinely recognise and support the market economy approach to social economics are being truly honest about their intentions 🙂

    And before that Hoon elfin comes wading in with his size 70IQ, I havent said that there’s no such thing as a dishonest capitalist. Capitalism on the other hand is transparently, honest. Just not necessarily always moral.

    ononeorange
    Full Member

    Ernie – maybe one thing.

    Brown (as Chancellor) reversed/ended the Tory habit of manipulating interest rates to create a nice little inflationary boom about 12 months before each election, by handing control of those rates to an independent body (although Merv seems to be at present just an extension of the Tory party publicity dept). Not exactly a reverse, but an end to a rather sleazy little habit.

    BigButSlimmerBloke
    Free Member

    Tory/NewBlue Labour……….I can’t tell the difference

    Fixed it for you

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    Good point.
    The Tories preach being selfish and helping yourself and that is exactly what they do whatever the cost to ither people.

    Stoner
    Free Member

    The Tories preach being selfish

    I swear that’s not in the manifesto….

    I think what you mean is the Tories preach self reliance and not to always expect the state to be there.

    slowjo
    Free Member

    I think Labour also restored the link to proper inflation proofing on state pensions (linked to earnings, 2.5% or the RPI which ever is the highest) after Thatcher devalued it by linking it to CPI.

    I’m a bit hazy on the detail but it is far better now than it was when Thatcher was booted out.

    ononeorange
    Full Member

    oooh oooh – thought of another. Blair reversed the policy (in connection with the troubles in Northern Ireland) of “Let’s just send even more troops in and refuse to listen to what the Republicans say – that’ll solve it!”.

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    Increawsing funding on the NHS was fairly fundamentlal change. Increasing budget significantly after decades of decreasing

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    Fair point turns lefty rhetoric down to 4 😳
    Granted they have better PR than to say that ; they are not stupid.
    Is it easier to preach self reliance when you have inherited millions?

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    Goodness me, I sat back thinking to myself : “right, having upped the stakes, now be prepared to get floored with an example of a fundamental thing which Thatcher did, that Brown reversed[/b]“.

    Nope………..so far so good.

    Some people must be thinking, “maybe the old witch wasn’t that bad after all”.

    .

    Capitalism on the other hand is transparently, honest.

    😀 …….yeah, right………..the market always knows best, the invisible hand of the market, when supply goes up and costs come down, prices ALWAYS go DOWN, the market will solve all housing issues, work hard and you will be rewarded, “value” is what people are prepared to pay, and so it goes on ……ad infinitum

    SurroundedByZulus
    Free Member

    I gave you one right at the start. Thatcher took the tories and buried them for a good long time, Gordon Brown reversed that.

    Stoner
    Free Member

    now, now. Dont be sarcastic just because you dont like being reminded of a universal truth 🙂

    ononeorange
    Full Member

    Well I’ve had 2, TJ’s had one and slowjo’s had 1.

    PimpmasterJazz
    Free Member

    Maybe a lot of the damage Thatcher did is actually irreversible.

    Brown would have found it hard to reopen the pits or buy back Sealink…

    trailmonkey
    Full Member

    The Blair-Brown-Mandelson axis however, chose to masquerade as socialists

    Did they ? Can’t ever remember thinking that about them.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    Well I’ve had 2, TJ’s had one and slowjo’s had 1.

    😕 I didn’t say scrape the bottom of the barrel looking for things which Brown did different to Thatcher.
    I said, name me one fundamental thing which Thatcher did, that Brown reversed.

    You know, something which epitomises “Thatcherism”. And just to remind you, Thatcherism is the promotion of low inflation, tax cuts, the small state, and deregulated free markets, through tight control of the money supply, privatisation, and constraints on the labour movement.

    So hit me with the killer…….the renationalisation of the utilities maybe, or the scrapping of anti-trade union laws, or the strict regulation of the banks and finance ? There must a list as long as your arm, considering just how unacceptable Thatcherism was.

    And yes, just about everything Thatcher did could have been reversed. Except maybe the reopening of the flooded coal mines……and we couldn’t get back North Sea oil of course.

    Zulu-Eleven
    Free Member

    Name me one fundamental thing which Thatcher did, that Brown reversed ?

    Sorry for the delay Ernie – should have dropped in a little earlier to help you out:

    Now, I’m going to be technical here and talk about something Thatcher did…

    By the time of the 1979 election, public debt was approx 44% of GDP. L

    In 1979, the Thatcher revolution started. By 1983 public debt had dropped slightly to 41.3% of GDP.

    By the 1987 election, Thatcher’s second term had made further moves to cut debt down to 38.6%. Finally approaching levels seen before World War 1.

    The 1992 election, which saw John Major having replaced Thatcher, saw public debt down to 24.6% of GDP. Lower than the level seen entering World War 1 and indeed lower than at any other time in the 20th century.

    Sadly, John Major frittered it away. By 1997 when he was defeated by Labour led by Tony Blair, public debt had ballooned out to 43.8% of GDP. That single term led by John Major had wasted all that had been achieved before it under the Thatcher years. Public debt was back to nearly 1979 levels.

    Obviously, as we know, Blair and Labour entered power during boom years, the economy had been coming out of recession, with positive growth, for all of the 3 years before the 1997 general election.

    By 2001, public debt had shrunk back to 32.1% of GDP, as Labour sought to demonstrate it was fiscally prudent during the first term, and as economic growth boosted tax revenue.

    However, by 2005 Gordon Brown had let things slip. Public debt as a proportion of GDP had creeped back up to 37.4%, which during a time of economic growth and prosperity (and few tax increases) meant a significant spending increase.

    By 2009 it had shot up further to 55.2%, by the time of the 2010 Election, UK public debt had increased again, to the point where The measure of public sector net debt, expressed as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP), was 64.5 per cent at the end of October 2010 compared with 58.8 per cent at end of October 2009.

    Net debt was £955.0 billion at the end of October compared with £828.8 billion a year earlier.

    So, in Conclusion, the answer to your question: The fundamental thing achieved by Brown that reversed the accomplishments of Thatcher was managing to increase public debt, whereas Thatcher reduced it!

    Aye thank ewe 😆

    Stoner
    Free Member

    the small state

    ah, well that’s easy Gordon went in for the small state in a big way. I think not 😉

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    Now, I’m going to be technical here and talk about something Thatcher did…

    What you really mean is, I am going to use this opportunity to express my undying admiration for Maggie.

    How “technical” of you 😀

    btw, government spending actually increased slightly throughout Thatcher’s premiership.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    well that’s easy Gordon went in for the small state in a big way. I think not

    Nor did Thatcher. See above, “government spending actually increased slightly throughout Thatcher’s premiership”.

    The “reduction in government spending” claim, turned out to be a load of bollox.

    PimpmasterJazz
    Free Member

    One fundamental thing?

    I have no figures without doing research so there is an element of conjecture to this, but I would say the National Health Service and education funding.

    (Please note – funding and not introducing unnecessary amounts of mind-numbing cr@p)

    (and yes – that’s two things)

    Zulu-Eleven
    Free Member

    btw, government spending actually increased slightly throughout Thatcher’s premiership

    Between 1979 and 1984, public spending grew due to a combination of the implementation of the Clegg pay awards, keeping to the commitment made to NATO by the previous Labour administration to increase defence spending by at least 3% a year until 1985 and also weak economic performance which increased spending on social security benefits. The following four years to 1989 saw negative or low growth in total spending, in part due to strong economic performance reducing spending on social security…During Margaret Thatcher’s premiership public spending grew in real terms by an average of 1.1% a year –

    So, under the Evil Thatch monster, public spending grew, NHS spending grew, and public sector debt Fell!

    😉

    Edit – For the pimpmeister:

    The total cost of the UK NHS has increased from approximately £9.2 billion in 1978/79 to £37.4 billion in 1991/92. Adjusting this figure to account for general inflation shows a real terms increase of 50.4% over this period…

    So, NHS Spending grew 50% in real term under Thatcher…

    Eye thank ewe again… 😆

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    Zulu-Eleven, O child of Thatcher……..why do you respond to my claim, “government spending actually increased slightly throughout Thatcher’s premiership” with, “during Margaret Thatcher’s premiership public spending grew in real terms by an average of 1.1% a year” ? 😕

    Yes I know that public spending rose under Thatcher……..that’s why I said it.

    Perhaps you’d like to remind us how the tax burden also rose under Thatcher ? 💡

    Thatcher might well have “promoted” low tax and public spending, but she in fact did the reverse.
    A bit like Gordon Brown, you could say.

    mefty
    Free Member

    They renationalised Railtrack, but they did it off balance sheet so it did not ruin their numbers.

    John Major did start the Northern Ireland peace process, Thatcher did not but then again the IRA did bomb the Tory conference while she was PM and the man responsible for getting her elected Tory leader was murdered by the IRA. In this context, her intransigence whilst not perhaps laudable was understandable.

    Zulu-Eleven
    Free Member

    And I gave you reasons too, didn’t I Ernie – that much of that increase was down to commitments made under a Labour government and to increases in NHS spending…

    Thatcher pulled off the economic miracle, she reduced public debt whilst at the same time increasing public spending – yet according to you, she wrecked Britain… So which is it, did she increase NHS spending by 50%, or did she pare the NHS to the bone? as you cannot have it both ways!

    The greatest criticism that you appear to be able to come up with is that the tax burden increased, but given the fact that that only supports the claim she moved balance of public spending shifted from borrowed money to tax receipts, I’d put it to you that its a fantastic example of fiscal housekeeping and cutting your cloth to match your income.

    Would you prefer she had stolen your children’s trust fund to pay for short term political gain, like Gordon did?

    uponthedowns
    Free Member

    Name me one fundamental thing which Thatcher did, that Brown reversed ?

    Tory/New Labour……….I can’t tell the difference. Although apparently you can.

    ‘strewth I’m in the strange position of agreeing with Ernie.

    When asked once what her finest achievement had been Thatcher replied “New Labour”

    She succeeded in moving the centre ground of British politics to the right and Labour had to move to occupy that ground if they were ever to become electable.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    They renationalised Railtrack

    😀 next you’ll be telling me that they nationalised the banks. Yes, after much protesting, screaming, and shouting, Blair did eventually agree to, in effect, nationalise Railtrack.

    But firstly Thatcher never privatised the railways, so I’m not sure that it counts as a fundamental thing which Thatcher did, that Brown reversed.

    It’s quite a hard thing, this trying to think of a fundamental thing which Thatcher did, that Brown reversed………is it not ?

    And secondly, despite a pre-election commitment to renationalise the railways, Blair only very reluctantly agreed to the nationalisation of Railtrack as a means of keeping Britain’s railways privatised……..
    no Network Rail, no private rail companies operating. It’s called State Monopoly Capitalism.

    But you are very naughty mefty, New Labour would rather people weren’t reminded how they were forced to, in effect, renationalise the railways infrastructure……it doesn’t comfortably fit in with their commitment to free-market neo-liberalism.

    As far as Northern Ireland is concerned, I am at a complete loss why it should represent a fundamental thing which Thatcher did, that Brown reversed. British troops were originally sent to Northern Ireland by a Labour government. Thatcher merely inherited the situation from Labour.

    Stoner
    Free Member

    ernie – turn it round the other way, what did thatcher do fundamentally different to Wilson or Callaghan?
    National expenditure rates followed the cycles as much as they have done for the last 30yrs.

    The UK politic doesnt do “fundamental” shifts much. We live in the centre ground, a little bit to the right one day, a little bit to the left the other day.

    How big a fundament are you thinking? 😉

    dekadanse
    Free Member

    Yes Ernie, and I find myself agreeing with you too……..surely being a consensus-merchant was not what you had in mind?

    And as for Stoner’s ‘honesty of the market’ bollocks, I have rarely heard such gibberish. It’s all done with smoke n mirrors, mate – the market is more like the distorting mirror of real life – as in, the ‘free’ market leads to wage slavery, etc etc. Are you paid to come up with this tosh, or is it your natural inclination?

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