MegaSack DRAW - This year's winner is user - rgwb
We will be in touch
that we rank close to average among OECD countries in terms of tax levels ie a middle taxing country.
Well I would say below average.(Almost bottom 3rd). And then look at the 'powerhouse' of countries that sit in that percentile. Apart from Japan (and possibly Switzerland) we're aligned in the bottom third or so with some pretty weak economies.
And as for corporation tax we are way way below average.
My prediction is that freed from the Westminster Labour doom-quagmire, he'll be a considerably more effective opposition leader in his self-imposed Northern Exile, than the useless beardy bloke floundering hopelessly in his Islington 6th form echo chamber
Burnham will be any but "effective", has he flip flopped on any policies yet? oh no, he hasn't got any and is having a big twitter lead consultation
damning report on maternity services in North Manchester? That will be JC style response from our local professional scouser
Well excuse me rone, I did the calculation of 17/34 in my head and could have got it wrong
I got 13/34. Maybe you have newer data? I wasn't being facetious.
😉 Doesnt matter! The only thing that is falsifiable is the notion that we are a low tax, low wage economy. But you are correct re corporation tax as corporates have faced a lower tax burden (something that our centre-left friends up north wanted to extend even further!)
But then again, corporates dont pay tax - their customers, employees or shareholders do!
and he jumps head first in to post truth politics after his facts were wrongThe only thing that is falsifiable is the notion that we are a low tax, low wage economy.
so below average and below average but not Low Ah THM the spinning is amusing why do what you rail against? Hypocrisy is rarely endearing.
Adds wink as that make it all OK 😉
Phew he's surfaced
Abuse @TulipSiddiq received yesterday is completely unacceptable. Political disagreement should never lead to such vile threats and language
perhaps he was being quiet about this week in case Jambas found out where he was on wednesday!! 😉
that we rank close to average among OECD countries in terms of tax levels ie a middle taxing country.
From rones post above. Note I pointed out we receive healthcare for our taxes. Most other countries do not.
[b]IIRC[/b] the average cost of healthcare is about 10% of average wages - so all those countries with insurance based healthcare systems you need to add around 10% to the tax figure to have a comparison with the UK
@rone do those studies include VAT, as many EU countries have VAT on food of 5-10% and full VAT (20%) on utility bills so we'll be more towards the low end of that basis. Sure I read somewhere German utility bills are 50% higher than ours due to various taxes
TJ French, Germans, Spanish, Dutch, Spanish ... all get "free" healthcare paid for via their taxes.
@TMH top Twitter joke 🙂 Corbyn always goes to ground / into a paralysis when things get remotely difficult. You can see on QT they've lost interest in even having the Labour "front bench" team on. This was exactly as predicted, Labour are becoming irrelevant
Jamba - no they do not.
~Dutch and German are mixed - ie if you earn below a certain amount the state picks up the bill but earn over a certain amount you have to. dutch also have 2 levels of insurance. My Dutch family pay £300 a month compulsory healthcare insurance for the lower level. Each of my nephews cost £3000 on top to be born.
Yes they do Jambas.
TBC the rankings vary form year to year and OECD has just published new numbers last week, which actually puts us lower than 17 and at 22 just below the average. So neither Rone nor my original numbers was up-to-date!! Still we are in the big band around the average level. And as before, the level of tax take in the UK is remarkably stable given the noise and misunderstanding (see ^) of the issue.
But VAT in UK is broadly the same at OECD average too.
we tax rel, high on income and property and rel, low on corporates, social security and non VAT taxes and services
Any word from Jezza yet? Or is he still at his socialist fell-walking convention in Uzbekistan?
after the "book club", who knows?
The Guardian has an interesting summary
The same cannot be said of Jeremy Corbyn. There is no positive gloss to apply to Labour’s fourth place in Sleaford. Its vote share shrank seven points to 10% from 17% in 2015 (and 34% in 1997). This, too, is consistent with polls that tell a story of stagnation tipping towards decline. The simplest explanation for Labour’s dismal showing is that it has no coherent position on Brexit, which is the question of the moment and so bound to hover over the polling booth. But that reflects a deeper malaise. Mr Corbyn’s party struggles to express itself on Brexit because it is unsure of its instincts on matters that will define the UK’s post-EU status: border control, openness to global markets, willingness to project power through western alliances. As a result, Labour offers a complaint about Conservative management but no alternative prospectus. There is nothing to instil confidence or hold together the coalition of the party’s traditional supporters that straddles divergent – arguably incompatible – attitudes on immigration and, by extension, Europe. These are deep structural problems – and they have built up over years. No leader could be expected to solve them overnight. But an essential measure of leadership, in the absence of ready solutions, is the ability to signal some interim strategy for recovery; some capability for reassurance that the quest for answers is under way; that the job, however difficult, is being done. It is the apparent lack of this remedial activity that is so profoundly damaging to Labour’s standing.
Poor bloke. Must feel a bit lonely at the top with no love coming up from below!
Talking of the disappeared where is our very own Croydonista? Its a tame place without his solid defence of the old boy. God knows he needs some allies.
TJ my point is healthcare is free, it doesn't stop when you are unemployed or retired. When you are working there are higher costs if you earn more. Like in France they have a mixed system of state and private / top up options. Key difference in France vs UK imo is that if you go "private" the state still pays its basic starter amount so you get a vakue back for the taxes you've paid.
Seems to me that the strategy of Corbyn's opponents is now to just ignore him and carry on whilst not directly challenging his authority. And it's working. Why they couldn't have worked this out sooner instead of launching that idiotic leadership challenge is a mystery. Give him enough rope, he'll do the rest it would seem.
Definitely dazh, the longer he is situ the better
I thought Jezza had quite a few fans on here, have they changed their minds/opinion ?
Jamababalay - memberTJ French, Germans, Spanish, Dutch, Spanish ... all get "free" healthcare paid for via their taxes.
Germans definitely don't. My cousin decided not to bother paying for insurance, which was fine until he got very sick when, after a some quite expensive (but ultimately fruitless) treatment, the insurance companies involved got quite unhappy.
Seems to me that the strategy of Corbyn's opponents is now to just ignore him and carry on whilst not directly challenging his authority. And it's working.
It's not really. The central issue is that Corbyn isn't perhaps as concerned as he should be about electoral success. He's happy to just bod along, ineffectively, preaching to the converted. The question is, will he go even after Labour get whipped in 2020? He may still have the support of the majority of Labour members, activists, and perhaps even Unite.
Jamba - you are still talking nonsense. If you are earning you have to pay. The vast majority of healthcare costs do not come from taxation - you pay it on top of your taxation. so this must be allowed for when comparing tax rates.
I wish I understood that - cant work out if there is a genuinely interesting idea here or just jumbled thinking. Its a new idea though...
I thought Jezza had quite a few fans on here, have they changed their minds/opinion ?
That's too simplistic a question really. I had an open mind on Corbyn and supported the change away from the empty career politics that labour exercised under blair/brown, especially as the centrist new labour approach was no longer working. Corbyn however was an accidental leader, and clearly not committed to it. The labour right then went and made things worse by entrenching his leadership with that ridiculous challenge.
The problems with labour go way beyond Corbyn, he's just the poor sod at the focus of it. And brexit has amplified the problems massively. Where Corbyn has failed however is that he's compromised his beliefs to the point where he's allowed himself to become portrayed as a flip-flopping metropolitan elitist liberal who can't make his mind up about brexit. Had he gone for the populist left vote it might have been different, but instead he's retreated into his comfort zone with predictable results.
In the end it's not case of changing opinion, but of recognising reality. And the fact that the PLP couldn't put up a candidate to beat him is just as much a failure as Corbyn himself.
Corbyn was a stunt that went wrong from the start fuelled by media's desire for a story/something to ridicule. There is little surprising about the outcome. Labour repeating much of their history. What do people say about not learning the lessons....?
I genuinely feel for the guy - many get promoted well beyond their level of competence but few have it unfurl under 24/7 scrutiny. Its all rather sad.
Still stand by my voting for J.C in both leadership elections.
Sorry I cant bs bothered to google it but aren't the membership figures something like momentum 10000 and Labour 200000?
Edit 20k and 550k
"The question is, will he go even after Labour get whipped in 2020? He may still have the support of the majority of Labour members, activists, and perhaps even Unite."
Why would he go after a big loss in 2020? His mandate is to reform the party into a Socialist Workers Party. The membership measure his success by that, not by winning parliamentary seats.
I suspect he wants out, but like Mugabe, if he quits his own henchmen will tear him apart.
I actually feel for the guy. He wanted to be a campaigning back bench MP waving the flag for the left, he'd have retired in 2020 with an unremarkable but fairly commendable career behind him. Buy pure chance he's ended up the man who killed 100 year old party and won't be able to retire until he's well on the way to 80.
Wonder what his fairly recent wife thinks? She didn't sign up for this.
Where is ernie_lynch ?
I genuinely feel for the guy
He could have said no.
He didnt want the job and didnt expect to win - then he got caught up in the whirlwind and the rest is a tragedy
So, he didn't want it, but let other people badger him in to running? All the hallmarks of a true leader! 😀
His mandate is to reform the party into a Socialist Workers Party.
Don't be ridiculous. The SWP have a membership in the low thousands, labour hundreds of thousands. He has a mandate to take the party back to democratic control of the members where future leaders can no longer railroad policy to achieve their own personal ambitions. If he achieves one thing that will be it. Had they let him get on with that I'm convinced he'd have stepped aside with good grace and allowed someone else to go to the next election. I still actually think that could happen, but it's more likely that the centrist PLP members will break away and form an anti-brexit alliance with the libdems and SNP.
dazh, we are getting to see how that works out for them. Policy should not be set by recently joined activists that much is clear.
"He didnt want the job and didnt expect to win - then he got caught up in the whirlwind and the rest is a tragedy"
Yeah, really hard to find a winner in all this. Not the liberals. Maybe UKIP which is ironic since Labour's leadership trio are Brexiteers.
So, he didn't want it, but let other people badger him in to running? All the hallmarks of a true leader!
There has never been any doubt about his leadership qualities
"He could have said no."
He couldn't really. They all sat in a room to discuss who the token hard left candidate should be. JMcD didn't fancy it had tried before and had had a heart attack, Abbot had tried before. Attention gravitated to JC.
It really was JCs turn, he couldn't really get out of it.
Where is ernie_lynch ?
Castro's funeral
He can't quit. John takes his dinner money every day, slaps him about a bit, and tells him he's not going anywhere until he ****ing well says so!
hold on is he a terrorist sympathiser trot billy or a weedy weakling bullied by the big boys
FFS Binners you have gone proper Littlejohn on this issue binbins
Where is Ernie? Not seen him about for ages
unless Blair comes back .
Blair's not coming back. If Corbyn has achieved one thing that is it. Corbyn is in an impossible position. Most of the party's supporters voted to remain, most of the voters they need to win over voted to leave. No one could navigate a path through that. For all those criticising Corbyn, I would simply ask, who else? I wonder whether the silence from the PLP is a recognition that there is no one else who could do any better.
I've had this discussion with a few folk. Owen Smith or Andy Burnham are the two most mentioned. I would not vote for a labour party led by either. the first is a right winger who thinks bombing brown people into the dark ages is acceptable and the second a gray man has never had an original thought in his life and will say anything to anyone if he thinks it what they want to hear.
Been impressed with Keir Starmer recently
Been impressed with Keir Starmer recently
Zero personality. He's a barrister to the core, competent, forensic, but completely lacking in emotion. People are not going to vote for that.
Heidi Alexander.
Where are the political giants in all parties? all we have is nonentities / lightweights.
People of the stature of Hesletine, Ashdown, John Smith etc? OK so we up north get Sturgeon and Salmond but in the main uk parties where are the people of principle and ideas we can get behind? Leaders who invigorate their parties?
In industry. Earning higher salaries, with less stress, where they don't get hounded by the media 24/7 or get death threats on social media.
The longer Corbyn is in charge the less likely a new leader is to emerge. MPs need to earn a living and their emloyment (ie election) prospects are looking increasingly bleak. Labour really need to elect a woman leader, the continual revolving stream of men has to end. Cameron broke the mould for the Tories and defeated David Davies who had been expected to win amd as such ushered in a new era for the party lead by a young man with a fresh face. Labour need something similar.
Labour had an NHS day a few weeks ago (pr last Saturday ?) with virtually no press coverage. Today Corbyn will make a speech on human rights. Supposedly Labour are considering a plan to ban the sale of all petrol and diesel cars over a 10 year period. Whilst this is interesting to a few it's all too easy to classify it as Islington Dinner Party politics.
Human Rights Campaigner Peter Tatchell lead a protest against Corbyn's speach today interrupting it. There is Corbyn's dilema, he is now the establishment figure people are protesting against. Corbyn also showed how irrational his stance is refusing to focus on condeming Russia and insisting on condeming all bombing, ie the US. Old habits die hard.
This just opens him up again for refusing to directly critise the old friend of Communist Russia.
All the stories are about the protest. It's not rocket science to manage the speech to exclude obvious protestors or keep them away from the stage
Has he resigned yet?
Ashdown
Anyone who describes Ashdown as a political giant needs to really think about it, he won't even honour a simple bet
"In industry. Earning higher salaries, with less stress, where they don't get hounded by the media 24/7 or get death threats on social media."
So true. We treat our politicians pretty badly (largely for sport IMHO) and it does mean that better candidates won't ever make their way into politics.
Not just at the national level, even in local politics, volunteers who have almost zero power beyond where the dog poo bins are placed get accused of corruption, based on zero evidence.
Wasn't it Mussolini who got power by taking on unpopular public service jobs? If *all* public service jobs are unpopular who takes over?
Tatchell interview in the link below. Points out Corbyn's double standards re Russia and the US.
Jeremy Corbyn had intended to embarrass Theresa May's government on Saturday.He was poised to accuse the Prime Minister of "sacrificing human rights on the altar of the arms trade" by cosying up to "dictatorial" Saudi Arabia while it represses its citizens at home and carries out atrocities in neighbouring Yemen with British weaponry.
But while hoping to put pressure on the Government to practice what it preaches, instead it was his own record which came under a barrage of fire - and from a respected left-wing campaigner.
[b]Peter Tatchell interrupted his speech to accuse Mr Corbyn of double standards - happily calling out any intervention by the West and its Allies; but failing to issue firm condemnation of Russian barrel-bombing of Syrians.[/b]
http://news.sky.com/story/human-rights-campaigner-embarrasses-jeremy-corbyn-10690772
It's OK, though, he's going to ban petrol cars.
Big and daft - compared to the minnow we have now?
It's OK, though, he's going to ban petrol cars.
It's OK he came up with that idea to draw attention away from all his other disasters.
BTW when you watch coverage of the "big" human rights speech today there are about 30 people in the audience.
Don't worry Diane says it all going to be ok, Jeremy will close the poll gap in 12 months as he's the right leader with the right policies. Not seen Marr yet myself but sounds like it's an interview not to miss.
jambalaya - Member
Cameron broke the mould for the Tories and defeated David Davies who had been expected to win amd as such ushered in a new era for the party lead by a young man with a fresh face. Labour need something similar
This is ultimately the point of corbyn, ie who he eventually hands over to. Some young face from the ranks or someone from the PLP. Guess the answer to that battle will decide the direction of labour for a generation.
here's a question, can corbyn call a leadership election then put someone forward, not himself? If so, I think that'd be labours best bet before the next election, or could he just transition power?
.Labour really need to elect a woman leader, the continual revolving stream of men has to end
Gloria De Piero?
Or more realistically Caroline Flint.
Once he's banned cars I presume we're all going to have to get around on crap bikes which will be delivered by horse and cart?
Horse and cart was good at one point.
I think if we're ever going to improve things something radical as got to happen. Not saying it will go down well ...
seosamh
He can just step down if he wants - and usually all political parties stitch up leadership elections so he could step down having reached agreement with the party as to who the successor would be.
Possible for sure. Likely? Doubt it
Old Jezza's in his way to Derby, leaving the B team to face the music, JMcD was funny on Pinear this morning - managed to say Unite 30x in one minute, Not sure if he was talking about the union or what the party needs to do. Funny to hear him criticise the Tories for having no plan and then admitting that the issue of FoM could only be determined by negotiation. At least on radio, you couldn't see the lack of a straight face!
rone - flints voting record disqualifies her for me.
Gloria De Piero the same - both voted for trident, for overseas wars, against investigations into these wars.
MY real issue I touched on earlier. I don't know of a single Labour party politician I think is worthy of being leader. Its a great loss to our body politic on all sides that we have such second rate folk representing us. Coupled with the fact so many of them in all parties are out to enrich themselves.
I don't know what the answer is to this but our elected representatives are so often completely the wrong folk to do so.
. I don't know of a single Labour party politician I think is worthy of being leader.
There's only one solution TJ. You know what to do. 🙂
Martin - not me -too intolerant. I am not sure the british reserve would stop them protesting when the death squads start operating. I'd soon get the population down to a sustainable amount.
You sound like the perfect politician for the troubled times we find ourselves in. 🙂
Has anyone noticed that Ernie stopped posting shortly before the Fidel's death was announced?
#makesyouthink
Christmas Jumper Day is on Labour's main media diary. <giggles>
'Concert for Corbyn' 😀
'Concert for Corbyn'
Do you think they'll bust out the Christmas single?
😯 What the actual....?
@ Flashheart - I think that is hands down the best video I've ever seen posted on here.
Oooooooooo need one of those artisanal JC tree ornamentals.
Concert for Corbyn, wonder if they will all be wearing the same jumper, maybe he could have a platform to sit on and wave from 😉
The press department need firing and not for leaking the schedule, given his massivly symbolic Christmas cards when all the others went for kids drawings there is just something not working in there.
Anyway which UB40 are playing?
Corbyn appoints ex Sinn-Fein staffer and member to be his "stakeholder engagement manager". The man never stops digging does he, that appointment will help distance him from accusations of supporting terrorists - not.
Fisher played a role in the cross-party “Friends of the Good Friday Agreement” which included figures such as Kevin McNamara, the former Shadow Northern Ireland Secretary.She then worked for Sinn Fein Parliamentary Group when the party wanted a presence in Westminster during the peace process.
pretty damning evidence of why we should dislike her from your link 😕
Your self pwns are my favourite
Can we have an appeal to your own authority....i miss them the most.
Jambas, mon amis, avez-vous remarqué l'efficacité du logiciel de blocage* allégué par le petit homme qui vit sous le pont?
😀
Interesting that Clive Lewis just tweeted this.
I noticed someone above was saying that Momentum meetings were getting bogged down in old structures.
https://www.change.org/p/we-believe-in-momentum
Corbyn appoints ex Sinn-Fein staffer and member
So the Govt ban National Action, and Labour encourage bigots who are *far* more violent. I wonder which policy voters empathize with?
It's not even incompetence, it's like he's deliberately doing things to alienate [s]voters[/s] sane people.
[url= https://medium.com/@lauracatrionamurray/momentum-vs-inertia-e525c8f9e217#.16krviswb ]More on the momentum travails. [/url]. Seems to me that the momentum-ites and the blairites have more in common. If they can find a way to combine and fight off the trots then the future could look a whole lot brighter.
Re-launch coming in the New Year, we are going to see more Corbyn on telly, I can't wait
[url= https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/dec/15/labour-plans-jeremy-corbyn-relaunch-as-a-leftwing-populist ]Labour plans Jeremy Corbyn relaunch[/url]
Comments are exactly glowing, seems even his supporters of a year ago have gone quiet or given up. But this one comment sums it all up:
[i]This does have the feel, a little, of Iain Duncan Smith's "quiet man is turning up the volume" re-launch from back in the day.[/i]
Dragon - details here, unless cougs kills it!! 😉
http://singletrackworld.com/forum/topic/jezza-mkii-the-2017-relaunch?replies=7#post-815567
Sad, tired, irrelevant, pointless.


