Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 112 total)
  • Tories threaten to suspend the Lords over Tax Credits
  • Lifer
    Free Member
    wanmankylung
    Free Member

    It’s ma maw an am no playin anymare.

    Lifer
    Free Member

    Yep, seems to me they’re backing themselves into a corner at the same time as throwing the toys out of the pram.

    kimbers
    Full Member

    they are just throwing their weight around, coz they think theynow own the world

    which they kinda do since they got their majority

    I just hope that the countries* not too shafted by the next election

    *I say country, I mean the poor, unemployed, disabled, sick, doctors, teachers, police service etc

    Northwind
    Full Member

    It’s pretty interesting… Because usually they could play the undemocratic card, except that these are the secret cuts that they refused to admit to before the election. I’m not normally a fan of the unelected house overruling the elected government but the way they’ve gone about this, I think turnabout’s fair play basically.

    If they’d admitted before the election that they planned to drive 700000 households into poverty via welfare cuts, then they’d have the right to steamroller things past the Lords. But they kept that under wraps til after the election FOR SOME MYSTERIOUS REASON. So now they can suck on it.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    Ah, “unnamed government sources” and “One option is to”

    😆

    rickmeister
    Full Member

    The Treasury said the savings are equivalent to around 200,000 nurses and 70,000 doctors, or around 325,000 teachers, or more than the entire budget of the Home Office.

    But if it goes ahead, those numbers won’t be appointed, will they?

    A lazy, offhand and pointless comparison?

    Cash will just go into the deficit hole working towards the budget surplus as stated , to secure providence for the next election .

    Rorschach
    Free Member

    The Treasury said the savings are equivalent to around 20,000 holiday homes and 70,000 private school places, or around 325,000 personal health plans, or more than the entire income from consultancies of the front bench.

    Fixed it………

    julianwilson
    Free Member

    and “One option is to”

    I rather like the paragraphs before which are much clearer in raising one of the the advantages of an unelected upper chamber -that is in challenging a government with a very slim majority, (decided by a turnout and percentage that would not see them elected in at all if they applied their propsed rules about industrial action ballots to elections as well) -doing something that the prime minister categorically stated (live on the telly and everything) that he wouldn’t do six months ago before the election, and featured nowhere in their manifesto.

    Now that is a bad enough story already. Looks like they will look rather undemocratic whatever they do from here. 😆

    curto80
    Free Member

    Kimbers you were right the first time, the whole country is forked with these mentalists in charge

    binners
    Full Member

    Dave’s problem isn’t in the Lords, it’s on his own backbenches. There are a lot of Tory MP’s who know that the amount of the ‘working poor’ (who they somewhat laughably claim to represent) who are about to get seriously financially shafted, are considerably higher than their majorities. And they’re getting very twitchy!

    Dave seems to have got a bit too cocky – unusual for him – and forgotten that he only has a majority of 12.

    They truly are a shower of utter and complete ****s!!!!

    MoreCashThanDash
    Full Member

    This why the idea of an independent unelected chamber of wise heads seems a good idea. Shame it doesn’t normally work like that and is full of toadies and has beens or never was’.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Despite its design faults the second chamber works remarkably well!

    Why is there shock here? The Tories were elected with (despite?) a mandate to deliver greater and faster cuts*. More and more areas have been ring-fenced (now security, defence and immigration???) so that leaves welfare to bear even more of the brunt. No surprises there.

    The interesting bit is the extent to which May and Hammond are playing silly buggers in order to put Osborne in a tricky place. George has come out of the traps early and the other leadership contenders would love to slow him down…..

    * non-ring fenced departments being asked to make 25-40% reductions

    binners
    Full Member

    The interesting bit is the extent to which May and Hammond are playing silly buggers in order to put Osborne in a tricky place.

    Not to mention his other competition….

    Theres certainly a lot of jockying for position going on. You’d think Dave was about to go next week. Bozzer has been openly critical of Osbourne’s tax credits policy, and said it needs to be reviewed.

    But he does have a point. Remember Gordon Browns 10p tax rate fiasco? This has potential to be far worse than that. But very similar in lots of ways. In the respect that there seems to be no real concern at the top as to the very real impact that this is about to have.

    There are an awful lot of people who are the very poorest workers in the country, already struggling, who are about to get absolutely clobbered. I’d say that a lot of them, at the moment, have no idea the extent of how much. So at the moment this is all largely academic. Come January when people can no longer pay their bills or feed their kids – because this is genuinely what will happen – and too a large number of people too – we’ll see how self-satisfied George is looking then. Because this is not going to look good. And these aren’t the ‘scroungers’ that everything is blamed on. This will be working families being forced into genuine poverty. By a gang of multimillionaires with their inherited fortunes. The Tory/Nasty party doing what it does best? That’s certainly how its going to come across. Because that’s what it is.

    epicyclo
    Full Member

    Here’s Dave’s chance to make a genuine saving.

    Scrap the House of Lords, don’t refurbish the parliament building, and move the government to a new facility on low cost land in an industrial estate somewhere central to the whole UK such as Carlisle. It will save squi££ions.

    I’m sure he’s probably got that idea at the back of his mind. 🙂

    P-Jay
    Free Member

    This has all the hallmarks of another U-turn, or at least a serious amendment to keep Boris happy.

    Perhaps the lesson in this is, if your job is subject to the whims of the general public, don’t do this whilst you’re telling them you’re taking all their money for their own good.

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    Total non story @Lifer. The accepted mode of operation is that the Lords will NEVER vote down a government manifesto commitment. What is being speculatively floated here by the huffington isn’t even voting it down it’s a sabotage tactic. If they where to do so the Lords would be significantly overstepping the mark. As such they should expect a robust government responce.

    The government was elected on a cost cutting manifesto and as thm says the ring fencing of education, nhs etc means the cuts will be deeper elsewhere.

    btw my ex wife gets tax credits, she worked “part time” (4 days a week, short hours) earning about half of what she could do if she worked full time. Then she claims credits as that’s a better quality of life than the extra hours which would in total pay more. What started out as a sensible idea has like many welfare payments mushroomed into a benefits monster, many times greater than envisaged.

    Another anecdote, tax credits and the self employed. There are people (I know) who run their own small business which doesn’t make much money and they claim tax credits. The fact is they could get a normal job, even just working in a supermarket, and earn more than being self employed and therefore be entitled to less tax credits. It is it clear at all that the lady on QT would be suffering a reduction in credits, she just doesn’t know. She too was self employed and making “no profit”. I am a big supporter of small business but if you work at it and make no money should tax credits support your “failing” business ?

    There is no doubt tax credits have subsidised low wages by employers. It’s time to break that cycle.

    mefty
    Free Member

    Perhaps the lesson in this is, if your job is subject to the whims of the general public, don’t do this whilst you’re telling them you’re taking all their money for their own good.

    Good advice, hence that picture is of IDS’s reaction to the announcement of the National Living Wage.

    binners
    Full Member

    The government was elected on a cost cutting manifesto and as thm says the ring fencing of education, nhs etc means the cuts will be deeper elsewhere.

    Thats not the point. Dave was promising all kinds of savings in public spending before May, but refusing to say where he was going to make them. So people speculated that it was tax credits. He was specifically asked, immediately prior to the election, if he intended to cut tax credits. His answer to that was a categoric statement that they had no intention of doing so.

    Now he’s about to do it.

    That’s just being a lying bastard!

    Jammers – would you say that your ex wife is broadly representative of the people receiving tax credits?

    El-bent
    Free Member

    I am a big supporter of small business but if you work at it and make no money should tax credits support your “failing” business ?

    There is no doubt tax credits have subsidised low wages by employers. It’s time to break that cycle.

    The weak will die.

    binners
    Full Member

    There is no doubt tax credits have subsidised low wages by employers. It’s time to break that cycle.

    By immediately making the poor poorer? But placing no onus on the employers to pay their staff a living wage?

    Compassionate conservatism at work once again eh? 🙄

    And before you start: Georges ‘Living Wage’ is nothing of the sort. Its spin. And it isn’t even being delievered for another 4 years. What happens in the meantime. Workhouses? I’m sure IDS would love that

    doris5000
    Full Member

    Another anecdote, tax credits and the self employed. There are people (I know) who run their own small business which doesn’t make much money and they claim tax credits.

    True. but this was Tory policy to massage the JSA figures

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-21260331

    My wife was pushed in this direction when she was unemployed about 3 years ago. Managed to hold out and get a proper job in the end but they leaned on her pretty hard.

    binners
    Full Member

    Another anecdote, tax credits and the self employed. There are people (I know) who run their own small business which doesn’t make much money and they claim tax credits.

    I find that anecdotes, particularly ones you heard down the pub, maybe involving a friend of a friend, are most definitely the best basis for government policy 😀

    just5minutes
    Free Member

    there were two facts on Radio4 this morning that surprised me:

    1.the proposed cuts don’t actually “hit the poorest hardest” as they will impact on working families not families where the parents are unemployed.

    2. Even after the cuts, the total spending on tax credits will still be significantly above the level of 2003 in real terms – so according to Labour, the Tories will be “hitting the poor” but will still be spending more than Labour did.

    According to IFS and BBC figures when Labour left office more than 90% of families were receiving tax credits and 60% of households were net recipients from the state i.e. received more than they put in. Which is pretty good evidence of the need for reform.

    doris5000
    Full Member

    2. Even after the cuts, the total spending on tax credits will still be significantly above the level of 2003 in real terms – so according to Labour, the Tories will be “hitting the poor” but will still be spending more than Labour did.

    but real wages (adjusted for inflation) are still below 2003 levels. So tax credit spending probably should be above where it was in 2003.

    binners
    Full Member

    1.the proposed cuts don’t actually “hit the poorest hardest” as they will impact on working families not families where the parents are unemployed.

    Those self-indulgent bastards eh? Working full time and expecting to have a better lifestyle than unemployed people. Pfft! That’s what happens when you lavish people with £6.70 an hour, zero hours contracts luxury. They develop a culture of entitlement

    grum
    Free Member

    If the Tories were a business and the ‘National Living Wage’ was a product they were selling they’d be in hot water under the Trades Description Act. It’s an outright sham.

    ac282
    Full Member

    I don’t think the main thrust of the argument against the changes has ever been about them hitting the poorest hardest.

    I don’t think there is anything wrong in principal with ending the subsidy of low wage employers but the current changes are going to give a kick in the chops to anyone who does to get out and work for a low wage.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    I thought the left were opposed to the state subsidising employers to pay low wages?

    There are, of course, very valid questions about how you do that without hurting the worst off, the benefit taper/withdrawal rate needs to be looked at very carefully (indeed, it could be argued that the changes undermined one of the most progressive elements of the universal credit system, which was a lowering of that taper rate) but the concept of the policy is robust.

    grum
    Free Member

    I am, but I don’t support taking away the subsidy while doing nothing about low wages (as above, the ‘national living wage’ is a joke).

    But then according to Jeremy Hunt we all need to start working hard like people in a communist dictatorship. Well, not everyone obviously just the plebs.

    binners
    Full Member

    Tax Credits were indeed bonkers. But that’s not the fault of the low paid. Its the fault of employers who have effectively had their wage bills taxpayer subsidised for years. And the politicians who did it through being too cowardly to confront the greedy, self-serving, short term attitudes in the countries boardrooms*

    But its the very lowest paid who are now being asked to shoulder the burden of changing this perverse system, while the companies who have benefited so enormously by having their staff costs partly paid by us, and thus their profits government funded, for years, aren’t being asked to take a hit at all.

    The final bitter irony to this is, somewhat predictably, that a lot of these very same companies are apparently based in Luxemburg, or the British Virgin Islands, so don’t pay any tax

    Isn’t modern consumer capitalism BRILLIIIIIIAAAAAAANNNTTTTT!!!!!

    * If the minimum wage had kept pace with boardroom pay rises since its inception, it would now stand at over £21 an hour.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    What should the national living/minimum wage be then?

    Say as a proportion of the median wage (and, of course, recognising that an increase in the minimum affects the median)

    And, by comparison, what proportion of the median wage should someone receive on benefits so as not to be trapped in poverty? (Say, 60% of median wage? which is a commonly used poverty threshold? So in order to make sure that people in were better off in work than benefits, you would have to peg minimum wage somewhere significantly above this?)

    There’s a lot of ‘X isn’t enough’ without a lot of thought as to what ‘X should be’

    binners
    Full Member
    epicyclo
    Full Member

    binners – Member
    …If the minimum wage had kept pace with boardroom pay rises since its inception, it would now stand at over £21 an hour.

    I have always believed there should be a connection between the minimum wage and MPs salary, eg a multiple of 3. Then if MPs are feeling the pinch… 🙂

    Also, it always puzzles me how you can improve an economy by impoverishing the bulk of the consumers, but I’m sure a juju doctor economist will be along shortly to explain this.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    But its the very lowest paid who are now being asked to shoulder the burden of changing this perverse system, while the companies who have benefited so enormously by having their staff costs partly paid by us, and thus their profits government funded, for years, aren’t being asked to take a hit at all.

    well, not strictly true, but….

    one of the reasons why politicians get away with subterfuge is that sorting out the winners and losers is far from straightforward and GO for one has not been clear enough. But that doesn’t mean that blanket statements are any better…

    by impoverishing the bulk of the consumers

    Where does that come from?

    binners
    Full Member

    So if its not strictly true, how much are employers having to raise their wages rates by? What percentage? As their employees tax credits are stopped then?

    Not in 2019… right now. Because that’s when their employees wages are effectively about to be slashed

    We’re always told how absolutely bloody marvelous capitalism is. That the laws of supply and demand are god. Yet the likes of Tesco, at the same time, expect us to believe that they can’t afford to pay their staff a living wage, and this needs to be subsidised by the taxpayer. While still paying dividends to shareholders on their massive profits, of course

    Its not actually peoples wages that are being subsidised at all! Its corporate profits. That’s the real ‘benefits culture’ on display here.

    Yet once again its the poor that are being made to pay

    We’re all in it together apparently. Though I’ve not heard that phrase for a while now.

    Have you?

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    Jammers – would you say that your ex wife is broadly representative of the people receiving tax credits?

    No of course not but I would guess she’s not alone and as I said the other person I know who gets them is self-employed as a lifestyle choice and making very little money.

    Minimum wage vs boardroom pay, not really a relevant comparison is it ? The completion for minimum wage jobs comes from abroad in terms of international manufacturing and migrants willing to work for low pay. I’d imagine minimum wage hasn’t kept up with IT consulting either for example.

    @binners also if you’ve been following Tescos aren’t making massive profits, in fact they’ve been fudging their accounts as their business is struggling. We pay too little for our food, its been a race to the bottom in terms of quality and price.

    epicyclo
    Full Member

    teamhurtmore – Member
    “by impoverishing the bulk of the consumers”
    Where does that come from?

    You must be a Tory. 🙂

    Simple. You have millions living just above the breadline propped up by supplementary money from the govt.

    Once you have millions of people working full time and earning less than subsistence wages the traders whose income depends on those people will also suffer. The suppliers to those traders will suffer too, etc etc Fleas on fleas on the fleas on a dog principle.

    Seeing as one of our big problems is collecting tax from the multinationals, perhaps we should be looking at other ways to tax them. I suggest they pay a tax on turnover instead of income, and if they don’t like it tell them to eff off. A local competitor will soon pop up take up the slack.

    binners
    Full Member

    @binners also if you’ve been following Tescos aren’t making massive profits, in fact they’ve been fudging their accounts as their business is struggling.

    Irrelevant. Tesco’s present position is entirely of their own making.

    The fact of the matter is that over the timescale that Tax Credits have been in place, massively profitable companies (of which Tesco is just a random example) have had their wage bills effectively subsidised by the taxpayer, thus greatly increasing their profits.

    But they’re still not being asked to pay for this.

    The poor are…. AGAIN!

    The whole thing stinks!

    Its corporate welfare! And we’re all paying for it!!!

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Binners – again, the blanket inaccuracies are not helpful to the debate. As noted above, it is simply incorrect to state that

    Yet the likes of Tesco, at the same time, expect us to believe that they can’t afford to pay their staff a living wage, and this needs to be subsidised by the taxpayer. While still paying dividends to shareholders on their massive profits, of course

    …as the 75% reduction in the 2014 dividend and the collapse in the share price in 2014 and basically flat share price this year illustrate

    The point about taxpayers subsidies is more valid. Who introduced the idea and who seeks to eliminate it?

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 112 total)

The topic ‘Tories threaten to suspend the Lords over Tax Credits’ is closed to new replies.