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Jimbuna
01-31-25, 08:53 AM
COMEDY GOLD :)

This is what we currently have as our Chancellor of the Exchequer. Well worth a viewing imho especially if comedy is your topic of choice and at 6:30 the real fun begins on the embarrassing (for her) topic of her CV :haha:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k9seuVEc3ME

Jimbuna
02-01-25, 12:50 PM
Keir Starmer will 'take the knee' to the EU he wishes we were in

They say you should never meet your heroes.

But on Monday, in Brussels, that's exactly what Sir Keir Starmer is doing. Taking the knee to the European Union he wishes we were still in.

Five years after Britain has left the EU, like a crazy ex who won't stop messaging, he still hasn't moved on.

Starmer didn't just oppose Brexit. After he lost in 2016, Starmer made it his life's mission to reverse the people's will.

After this generational vote of confidence in Britain, he voted to block it 48 times in Parliament. Energetically campaigning for second referendum and free movement of people. And he has consistently called for closer alignment with EU against the interest of Britain.

Whichever way you cut it, this is man who can't even imagine a Britain that is confident of our place in the world, where the sun never sets on our horizons and our potential as Britannia is unchained.

But, like Express readers, I can.

Starmer has his head in the sand, determined to deny the many successes Brexit has brought Britain.

We have cut VAT on a range of products - like axing the motorhome tax I pushed through Parliament. We have signed trade deals with the fastest growing economies in the world, including round the pacific rim, uniting against Chinese expansionism. And we delivered the fastest vaccine at pace, allowing us to bounce back from the pandemic far quicker than the continent.

All of these things, Sir Keir Starmer personally tried to delay, block and frustrate however he could. Now he is in Number 10, he will try and kill Brexit with a death by a thousand cuts. He is already talking about taking hundreds of thousands more EU migrants, sacrificing our sovereignty and shackling ourselves to EU regulations wherever possible.

Brexit was a vote of confidence in Britain. I felt the wave of optimism for a Britain out, and back into when we left the European Union. But this is something Starmer just doesn't get.

Perhaps it's because he doesn't believe in Britain.

If Starmer really meant it when he said repeatedly that he would put country before party, he would stop making longing noises towards the EU and instead look beyond to the world of opportunity - including our closest ally - America.

While European economies like France and Germany are flatlining, America is taking off.

A US trade deal would be the ultimate prize of Brexit. For anyone who doesn't have a thinly veiled desire to rejoin Europe, this deal would unleash opportunities for British businesses to benefit from international trade like never before.

We laid the foundations for it, negotiating with President Trump in his first term. Now he's back in the White House, the appetite for it in Washington is there. Despite this, it clearly isn't in Downing Street. It beggars belief given the possibility of tariffs.

Increased trade with the US could add billions to the economy, raise wages and undo some of the damage caused by Labour's economic mismanagement. It could also be the silver bullet to growth Starmer is allegedly looking for. Instead, he is dithering and delaying while we all get poorer.

Despite the Prime Minister's efforts, our country's best days are ahead of us. Britain is a land of opportunity, not a country to apologise for. It's why I will always champion a Brexit Britain. And I look forward to making the post of our new opportunities, not mourn a declining EU like they clearly still are in Downing Street.

Starmer's Britainis holding Britain back in a world that is changing. Our economy is flatlining, inflation is ticking up and we are giving away strategic assets, like our fisheries and the Chagos Islands, left, right and centre.

Making the most of our post-Brexit freedoms is one of Britain's major competitive advantages. After five long years outside his beloved EU, it's about time Starmer puts aside his sour grapes and embraces Brexit Britain. It's in all of our best interests.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/travel/news/keir-starmer-will-take-the-knee-to-the-eu-he-wishes-we-were-in/ar-AA1yeKvD?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=4e105fa10e8749ff88f13ed48043a41c&ei=36

Gorpet
02-02-25, 01:12 AM
random find but common sense. true for other countries, too.

https://youtu.be/NVAj52nFvGY?si=4Jh1qqR9o38JJC5p

Oh, but no the World Elites who after finding out, we can't leave this Planet. And these rats are using up our resources. We have to kill them all, Look make them believe in science. And will we will kill them all.
And if there are any low brow leaders of any countries will kill them to. We will kill as many as we have to. And when our global world under our new AI ,because our planet has now evolved and AI has stopped climate change.,over population . And after a hundred years we still as humans left this planet. But will we will have a politician.

Gorpet
02-02-25, 01:28 AM
I used to fear for the future of my children when I pass but it is now my granddaughter who is at greatest risk.

Whilst the wife and I are financially comfortable because of prudent saving and multiple pensions that still does not ease our sense of worry for our granddaughter.

Well,Look get ready. Keir Starmer has a future planned for his family but not yours.

Jimbuna
02-02-25, 10:06 AM
More skullduggery from Liebour perhaps?

Fears council shake-up could spell end of independent-run areas

A major shake-up of local councils in England could spell the end of areas where independents – with no allegiance to major political parties – are in charge, councillors fear.

There has been a steady increase in the number of independent councillors over the past decade, with more than 2,200 across England and Wales.

At the moment, groups of independents are involved in running 63 councils, either on their own or in partnership with other parties.

The vast majority - 47 - are smaller district or borough councils, many of which are set to be scrapped or merged under government plans.

Big city councils and regional mayors are dominated by Labour, the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats.

Ministers argue combining smaller councils would make local government simpler and save money by making the delivery of services more efficient.

But Marianne Overton, leader of the Local Government Association's Independent Group, said if councillors represented bigger areas it would weaken the link with communities and make it harder for independents to be elected.

Independents argue they can better reflect local views as they do not have to follow the positions of a national party.

However, proposals to reorganise local government - which amount to the biggest shake-up since the 1970s - could threaten the representation of independents, opponents say.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c05l60786mlo

Jimbuna
02-03-25, 09:40 AM
Rachel from Accounts, one of the biggest predators toward the UK elderly population in politics.

Ten million pensioners to be hit with income tax bills

Ten million pensioners will be paying income tax by 2032, new figures reveal.

Three quarters of retirees are set to be “dragged into the tax net” under current government policy, a rise of 15 percentage points in a decade, analysis by Sir Steve Webb, the former pensions minister, shows.

The trend is being driven by a perfect storm of frozen income tax thresholds, an ageing population and the increasing value of the state pension thanks to the triple lock.

Around 61pc of the UK’s 12 million pensioners paid tax in 2022-23, figures from HMRC show.

However, the Office for National Statistics confirmed the number of people over state pension age is expected to hit 13.7 million by 2032.

At the same time, the state pension is on course to become taxable by 2027 after Labour refused to increase tax-free thresholds for retirees.

According to analysis from Sir Steve, now a partner at LCP, it means 76pc of pensioners will have to pay tax by 2032.

He said: “The proportion of pensioners dragged into the tax net has risen sharply in recent years as large cash increases in the pension have been set against a backdrop of frozen tax thresholds.

“Although future pension rises are likely to be smaller, if thresholds continue to be frozen, more and more pensioners will end up paying tax.

“We are also likely to see nearly 2 million more pensioners by the early 2030s compared with today.”

The calculation takes into account the new state pension age, which will be 67 from 2028. It also assumes that the state pension will increase by 2.5pc a year, which is the minimum allowed under the triple lock.

However, pensioners received a 4.1pc boost this year, which followed record-breaking rises in the two previous years. A higher than expected increase via the triple lock would push even more pensioners past the frozen tax threshold.

John O’Connell, of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said the “disastrous policy” needed to change.

He said: “Frozen thresholds are causing misery for taxpayers of all stripes. Pensioners too are increasingly feeling the strain as they see their nest eggs chipped away at by this disastrous policy.

“Rachel Reeves has a significant opportunity to ease the burden on households while giving the economy a boost by unfreezing thresholds.”

Pensioners are already bracing themselves for a tax bill on their state pension.

Tax thresholds were frozen by Rishi Sunak, the then-chancellor, in 2021 before Jeremy Hunt extended it to 2028.

However, during the election campaign, the Conservatives also announced a triple lock plus policy that would have protected the state pension from ever becoming taxable.

This was not adopted by Labour, meaning that the state pension will generate a tax bill by 2027 unless the Government intervenes.

Around 10 million pensioners have also been stripped of the winter fuel payment as Labour sought to balance its books.

Morgan Vine, of Independent Age, said: “Around 2 million older people in the UK currently live in poverty, and another 1m hover just above the line.

“Day to day, this looks like washing in cold water, skipping meals and living in just one room to save on energy costs. It is no way to live.

“For both today and tomorrow’s older people, it’s essential that politicians come together to establish what is an adequate income to avoid financial hardship in later life and ensure that everyone receives it.”
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/ten-million-pensioners-to-be-hit-with-income-tax-bills/ar-AA1yjSh5?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=075c49f89f554f33a6a739b4fa935fed&ei=10

Jimbuna
02-03-25, 10:33 AM
So, Rachel from Accounts has been found out on yet another point of note.

Rachel Reeves’ Heathrow runway report was commissioned by the airport

Rachel Reeves’ Heathrow third runway report was commissioned by the London airport.

On Saturday night it was confirmed that a report cited by the Chancellor as providing evidence that a third runway at Heathrow would boost the UK economy by a significant amount was commissioned by the airport itself.

Experts and green groups have also challenged Reeves' view - also outline in the report - that advances in the production of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) had been a "gamechanger" that would dramatically limit damage to the environment caused by flying, saying the claims were overblown and did not stand up to scrutiny, reports The Guardian.

During her speech in Oxford, Reeves committed to "leave no stone unturned" in the search for economic growth. She also said that a new runway would create 100,000 new jobs and connect the UK "to emerging markets all over the world, opening up new opportunities for growth."

She added: “According to the most recent study from Frontier Economics, a third runway could increase potential GDP by 0.43 per cent by 2050" and that “60 per cent of that boost would go to areas outside London and the south-east".

Following her speech, Frontier Economics consultancy confirmed to the Observer that it had been commissioned by Heathrow to write the report, which it insisted had been an entirely independent exercise. Heathrow also confirmed it had asked Frontier Economics to do the work.

The New Economics Foundation (NEF) thinktank criticised the Chancellor on Saturday night for the ­justifications she gave for backing a third ­runway, saying it believed the methodology used had ­previously been judged unreliable by the Department for Transport.

Alex Chapman, senior economist at the NEF, said: “It is very concerning that the chancellor appears to be basing her support for Heathrow expansion on a figure from a report commissioned by Heathrow airport. Even more worrying is the fact that the methodology they have applied is one that the Department for Transport has previously decided is not fit for purpose, and that the report uses forecast data supplied by the airport itself."

Mr Chapman continued that the Heathrow expansion represents a major threat to the UK’s climate goals and "flies in the face of scientific advice". He added, that to ensure that the claimed economic benefits are concrete, assessments should be carried out by independent government economists.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/rachel-reeves-heathrow-runway-report-was-commissioned-by-the-airport/ar-AA1ykjOt?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=ENTPSP&cvid=c00549550d744791a896c497598194e4&ei=74

Jimbuna
02-04-25, 09:01 AM
Top Labour backer turns on party over Reeves’ ‘crippling’ Budget

One of Labour’s top business backers has turned on Rachel Reeves, warning her Budget will cripple businesses and lead to swathes of job losses.

In a damning letter, Labour donor Sacha Lord threatened to quit the party over the chancellor’s tax-hiking autumn statement unless there were urgent changes.

Mr Lord, who was Greater Manchester’s night time economy adviser under mayor Andy Burnham for seven years, said he is “deeply concerned about the precarious situation” facing the hospitality sector.

“I urge you to act before irreversible damage is done,” he warned the chancellor.

Mr Lord is the latest high-profile business leader to oppose measures pushed through by the chancellor in October, with growing signs the Budget has stymied economic growth and caused thousands of job losses.

In his emotional letter sent on Tuesday, Mr Lord wrote: “I myself have been a Labour Party member for four years. I am now reconsidering this position.

“I attended your manifesto launch, I supported you in your bid to become the government and I believed you had a deep understanding of the problems on the ground. Not anymore. I heard Labour declare itself the party for business and growth. I no longer believe that to be the case.”

Mr Lord, who also serves as chairman of industry body the Night Time Industries Association, said the hospitality sector employs 3.5 million people and the government is “threatening its very survival”.

He cited warnings of up to 9,000 pub closures this year, including one pub chain that has halted plans to open five new sites. “These businesses are not just numbers, they prop up our high streets, our communities and our culture that we are famed for the world over,” Mr Lord said.

He warned: “If nothing changes, thousands more businesses will collapse, and Labour will be responsible.”

And in a desperate plea for support or a U-turn on Ms Reeves’ Budget, Mr Lord said: “The hospitality sector is an essential driver of growth, a major employer and an irreplaceable part of our social fabric. It can drive the economy out of the stagnancy it has found itself in. It deserves recognition and support to prevent thousands of closures.

“Chancellor, you must do better.”

In her Budget, Ms Reeves hiked employer national insurance contributions and ended inheritance tax exemptions for farms worth more than £1m.

Economists have branded the national insurance hike a “tax on working people” that will lead to lower wages and job losses, while family farm owners have warned her inheritance tax raid will force a generation of farmers out of business.

Ms Reeves also unveiled a 6.7 per cent hike in the minimum wage, which employers have said will pile further pressure on already stretched businesses.

Sainsbury’s last month said it would cut 3,000 jobs in the UK due to a looming surge in costs including the higher tax and wage bills caused by Ms Reeves’ Budget.

And the Confederation of British Industry, which represents businesses, has said the economy was headed for “the worst of all worlds” after the chancellor’s Budget.

In a bid to get back on the front foot after months of economic stagnation, Ms Reeves last month set out a swathe of measures aimed at “turbocharging” the economy, including backing a third runway at Heathrow and overhauling Britain’s planning rules.

That move prompted another Labour backer, millionaire donor and energy tycoon Dale Vince, to warn the Heathrow expansion would be a mistake and provide only “an illusion of growth”.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/top-labour-backer-turns-on-party-over-reeves-crippling-budget/ar-AA1ynRtl?ocid=mailsignout&pc=U591&cvid=a06fa688c003403ca375c615130c73ac&ei=22

Jimbuna
02-04-25, 10:02 AM
Keir Starmer accused of 'false promises' as huge council tax increases planned

Keir Starmer was condemned for making "false promises" after his Government announced massive increases in council tax - despite promising to freeze it.

Most councils will be allowed to increase the tax on residents by 5%, double the rate of inflation, while some have been given permission for increases of up to 10%.

But while leader of the opposition, Sir Keir pledged to freeze council tax for a year, using a windfall tax on profits from energy companies to pay for it.

The Labour leader said in March 2023: "We're announcing today that Labour would freeze next year's council tax, using those windfall profits. It's a choice the government can make now that money is on the table. We would obviously vote for it. Ten billion pounds and they're not using it to help working people."

Kevin Hollinrake, Conservative Shadow Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, said today: "It is clear from this settlement that Labour are once again pushing the burden on to taxpayers after they promised to freeze council tax.

"Their Local Government Finance Settlement will mean that councils will have to raise council tax to accommodate Labour's jobs tax. This means that local people will pay more for less when it comes to local services, especially in rural areas which are losing the Rural Services Delivery Grant that Labour have abolished.

"The Labour Party have made false promises to local people, promising to freeze council tax while many councils will now have to raise it due to Labour's political choice to raise council tax. From Whitehall to your town hall, under Labour, you pay more and get less."

Most councils will be allowed to increase the tax paid by households by 5%, double the current 2.5% rate of inflation, but a number will be allowed additional rises.

Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner, the Cabinet minister in charge of local councils, has decided Windsor and Maidenhead Borough Council will be allowed a rise of 9%, Birmingham City Council will be allowed a rise of 7.5%, Bradford Council will be allowed a rise of 10%, Newham Council will be allowed a rise of 9%, Somerset Council will be allowed a rise of 7.5% and Trafford Council will be allowed to increase council tax by 7.5%.

It means people in a band D property in Bradford could see the charge from the council increase by £170 - in addition to an increase in the amount charge by the local police and fire authorities, which are added to council tax bills.

The limit set by Ms Rayner is the biggest increase councils are allowed to charge before they are forced to hold a referendum of local voters asking if they agree with the increase. However, in practice councils are almost certain to impose the maximum rise possible.

According to the Local Government Association, Chancellor Rachel Reeves's decision to increase National Insurance, which is paid by employers including local authorities, has helped push up bills. The Government has provided them with some extra money to meet the extra cost but that leaves councils with a £1.2billion shortfall.

Some authorities had asked for permission to impose even bigger tax hikes, with Windsor and Maidenhead telling Ministers it wanted a 25% rise.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/keir-starmer-accused-of-false-promises-as-huge-council-tax-increases-planned/ar-AA1ynsfD?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=5ad71343384841118fa679d9dabba51f&ei=19

Jimbuna
02-05-25, 01:04 PM
Starmer leads laziest government in modern times, figures show

Sir Keir Starmer leads the laziest new government in modern times, data have revealed.

Following the election in July 2024, Labour has been the most inactive of any newly elected government in the modern period, according to analysis shared by the Conservatives.

By the end of its first 200 days in power, the Government had brought six pieces of primary legislation into force.

This compares to nine bills in the first 200 days of Margaret Thatcher’s first government, 11 in the first 200 days of Tony Blair’s first government, and eight bills in the first 200 days of David Cameron’s first government.

Of the six bills introduced by the Labour government, three began life under the previous Conservative government and one is a standard budgetary bill.

The Government has therefore only passed two new substantive bills since July: the Budget Responsibility Act 2024, and the Passenger Railway Services (Public Ownership) Act 2024.

The Budget Responsibility Act 2024 received royal assent on Sept 10 and requires the Treasury and the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) to follow certain procedures when announcing economically significant measures.

Meanwhile, the Passenger Railway Services (Public Ownership) Act 2024 received royal assent on Nov 28 and gives public sector companies responsibility for providing passenger railway services.

The three bills introduced by the former Conservative government, but which were passed by Labour, are the Financial Assistance to Ukraine Act 2025, the Lord Spiritual (Women) Act 2015 (Extension) Act, and the Supply and Appropriation (Main Estimates) Act 2024.

Sir Keir has been facing mounting criticism for the party’s inactivity in Parliament in recent weeks, with many pointing out that very few Labour MPs contribute during the working day.

On Saturday, the Telegraph revealed that a large number of Labour MPs have barely spoken in the House of Commons at all since they were elected in July.

The majority of backbenchers who have spoken fewer than 10 times in the House of Commons since the general election last summer are Labour MPs.

Of 47 backbench MPs who fit into this category, 40 are Labour MPs, with the newest Labour MPs making up 28 members or two-thirds of the group. Some have officially spoken on just three occasions since they were called to serve and others even less.

Broader analysis of spoken contributions to the Commons, Westminster Hall debates and the submission of written questions showed 220 Labour backbench MPs elected for the first time last year have made only 43 contributions to Parliament on average.

Conservative MPs have also criticised the Government for being “quiet” in its first months in government.

On Tuesday, Esther McVey, a former Tory minister, wrote on X, formerly Twitter: “Why is Parliament so quiet? Where have all the Labour MPs gone? Seems Starmer is sending his unhappy, restless MPs back to their constituencies to prevent them plotting against him.”

Ben Obese-Jecty, the Conservative MP for Huntingdon, said: “An MP’s job is to represent their constituents in Parliament. With 400 MPs, you would expect to see the government benches always full, but they only ever are for PMQs.”
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/starmer-leads-laziest-government-in-modern-times-figures-show/ar-AA1ytvKH?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=987c5f3103864f698e4c892fb0d008a4&ei=13

Jimbuna
02-05-25, 01:13 PM
Nigel Farage vents fury over decision to postpone local elections

Nigel Farage lashed out at the 'cowardice of the political class' today as Labour agreed to postpone local elections for a year.

The Reform leader said he was 'blummin' angry' after votes due to be held in May in nine areas were pushed back a year amid efforts to reform local government.

He claimed his party was on course to make huge gains especially in East Anglia, including Essex, where he is an MP, before they acted.

At a press conference today he vowed the party would still stand around 1,500 candidates, adding: 'I thought only dictators cancelled elections?'

Speaking at a press conference in Westminster, he claimed the decision was a result of 'the connivance of a now terrified Labour Party… and Conservative-led councils who of course want to keep the money rolling for at least another couple of years'.

He added: 'The reorganisation of local government is going to take up to three years to complete, and given that the term for a county councillor is four years, there is absolutely no justification for cancelling the elections for 5.5 million people other than the cowardice of the existing political class.'

Angela Rayner gave nine local authorities permission to tear up plans for May due to imminent reforms that will see scores of them axed.

The English Devolution White Paper, published in December, said 164 district and 21 county councils responsible for a combined population of 20 million and an annual budget of £32 billion will be merged to create authorities serving at least 500,000 people.

Permission has now been given for some of those affected to delay elections until the new council is up and running, to avoid having councillors serving terms of a year or less.

Communities secretary Ms Rayner told MPs that she was only agreeing to half of the requests for postponements, allowing them in areas where 'significant amounts of work' were required to alter the council structure.

They are: Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex, Thurrock, Surrey, East Sussex, West Sussex, Hampshire and the Isle of Wight.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/nigel-farage-vents-fury-over-decision-to-postpone-local-elections/ar-AA1ytcm5?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=987c5f3103864f698e4c892fb0d008a4&ei=51

Jimbuna
02-06-25, 08:37 AM
Bank of England halves growth forecast in blow to Rachel Reeves

The Bank of England has cut its 2025 growth forecast in half and warned that Rachel Reeves’s record tax raid risks driving unemployment far higher than expected.

Officials believe the economy will barely avoid recession as the Bank cut interest rates by 0.25 percentage points to 4.5pc, with two officials calling for even steeper reductions.

The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) that sets interest rates said the economy probably shrank by 0.1pc in the wake of the Chancellor’s maiden Budget, and would barely grow in the first three months of this year.

Bank staff now believe the economy will expand by just 0.75pc this year, down from a projection of 1.5pc just three months ago.

The prediction is likely to be regarded as an embarrassment for the Chancellor, who vowed to put growth at the heart of the Government’s agenda in a major speech just last week.

The Bank’s latest economic forecasts warned of a stagnating economy, higher inflation and rising unemployment against the backdrop of a £40bn tax raid that will hit low-paid workers hardest.

It said businesses were raising prices faster and shedding jobs more quickly than initially anticipated.

Andrew Bailey, the Governor, said policymakers would take a “gradual and careful approach to reducing rates further” as he signalled that the impact of higher taxes and Donald Trump’s trade war would affect how quickly the Bank could cut rates going forward.

Inflation is expected to rise to 3.7pc by the end of this year, almost double the Bank’s target. However, officials signalled that they were prepared to continue cutting rates despite this increase because it will be driven by higher energy bills, as wage growth continues to cool.

However, price rises, as measured by the consumer prices index (CPI), are not expected to return to 2pc until the end of 2027.

Consumer-facing sectors such as retail and hospitality are expected to be hit hardest by Ms Reeves’s decision to increase employers’ National Insurance by £25bn.

Bank staff highlighted that a large share of these businesses employed staff at or just above the minimum wage, preventing them from absorbing the tax rise through lower wages.

Instead, these businesses which employ millions of workers, were expected to hire less or shed more jobs.

The Bank warned: “Employment may have a more prominent role as a margin of adjustment than otherwise, as the sectors that are most affected by the NICs [National Insurance contributions] increase also tend to be more labour intensive.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/bank-of-england-halves-uk-growth-forecast-in-blow-to-rachel-reeves/ar-AA1ywAoO?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=48f3d994413845479d3506f73346642e&ei=8

Jimbuna
02-06-25, 08:48 AM
Rachel Reeves doesn't want you to realise one thing about interest rates drop

I reckon Rachel Reeves spent this morning with her eyes closed, hands clasped together as she knelt, praying for an interest rate reduction from the Bank of England.

Scratch that, she's more likely to have been sticking pins into a voodoo doll resembling her Labour predecessor Gordon Brown, the man who told the bank it can do what it wants as long as it aims for 2% inflation.

After all, how much more tolerable life would be for Reeves if she could just tell Governor Andrew Bailey to cut interest rates. How much more convincing her clarion calls of economic exuberance would sound if she could follow them up with some actual good news.

It'd appear in far better taste to have the Chancellor claiming the Britain is on the up if she was telling it to home-owners to whom she was granting relief.

Perhaps those in rented accommodation could not be offended by her smiles if their buy-to-let landlords lost their excuse for rental price increases.

People with credit card debt might be a little lighter on their feet, feeling like there might be an end to the abusive barrage to which they've been subjected in recent years.

In the Reeves, she got what she wanted. So some might think it's a good day for a clearly struggling Chancellor.

But to say this is a sticking plaster holding together her political reputation would be to vastly overestimate this decision while underestimating the British people.

We're not stupid, we know the Labour Government has no say over what the Bank of England does to its base rate. Any economic improvement will be credited to the people who really have power in this decision - those who sit on the Monetary Policy Committee.

Reeves on the other hand still has to bet that an ever-elusive third runway at Heathrow Airport will materialise. She also has to hope we'll forget that it was her Government that told the population its economy was in the toilet.

Ah, but that was the fault of the Tories. We have Labour now. And they're fixing it. How, exactly? By hiking Employer National Insurance? How are workers supposed to benefit from their employers penny-pinching to pay the new rate? What about raiding the pockets of dead soldiers? Will that fix the economy? No.

The primary problem for Rachel Reeves is that voters remember her pronouncements of doom when Labour entered office. And many know why she did it. It wasn't because she was genuinely shocked by Tory governance and the state in which they left the economy (in the first half of 2024 we had the fastest-growing economy in the G7). She did it to hit us with tax rises.

So although a cut in interest rates is welcome, Rachel Reeves should not benefit from a boost to the country's morale. Her smiles should not scorch from our memory her previous grim-faced pronouncements. Remember why she did it - she did it to take your money. And she doesn't want you to realise that today she's given you nothing back.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/travel/news/rachel-reeves-doesn-t-want-you-to-realise-one-thing-about-interest-rates-drop/ar-AA1ywIjZ?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=48f3d994413845479d3506f73346642e&ei=73

Jimbuna
02-07-25, 07:25 AM
Some on benefits are 'taking the mickey', says minister

Some people on benefits are "taking the mickey", Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall has said, as the government seeks ways to curb welfare spending.

Kendall was speaking to ITV about a Department of Work and Pensions survey that suggested 200,000 people on benefits were ready to work if they had support.

The DWP report, external found 49% of health and disability benefits claimants felt they would never be able to work again.

But it also showed nearly half (44%) of people with a mental health condition expected to be able to work in future if their health improved.

Kendall told ITV, external: "I think what the survey shows today is that despite all the myths, a lot of people who are currently on sickness or disability benefits want to work."

When asked if people on benefits were "pretending they can't work", she added: "Many of them have either just lost jobs that they desperately miss, or really want to get back into to work once they've got their health condition under control.

"So I think that there are many more people who want to work. I have no doubt, as there always have been, there are people who shouldn't be on those benefits who are taking the mickey and that is not good enough - we have to end that."

The government says the number of young people aged 16 to 34 who do not work because of long-term sickness and have a mental health condition has reached 270,000.

This number increased by 60,000 (26%) in the last year, according to the DWP.

As of January, 9.3 million people aged 16 to 64 in the UK were economically inactive - a rise of 713,000 since the Covid pandemic.

Last year, the government spent £65bn on sickness benefits, external - a 25% increase from the year before the pandemic. That figure is forecast to increase to around £100bn before the next general election.

Kendall said the DWP survey, which spoke to 3,401 benefit recipients, showed the need to reform the current welfare system and encourage young people to work if they can.

The DWP secretary said: "There is genuinely a problem with many young people, particularly the Covid generation, but we can't have a situation where doing a day's work is in itself seen as stressful."

Kendall said supermarket managers had told her some young people did not understand work was "just the nature of life and that isn't stress or pressure".

The DWP secretary is expected to present a policy paper on welfare reform next month.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cq5gpyv4dnwo

Jimbuna
02-07-25, 12:29 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gPuntlpIUgk

Jimbuna
02-09-25, 02:03 PM
M&S chief accuses government of raiding retail sector ‘like a piggy bank’

The chief executive of Marks & Spencer has accused the government of raiding the retail sector “like a piggy bank” with its latest tax policies as businesses face mounting financial pressures.

Stuart Machin highlighted rising National Insurance Contributions (NICs) for businesses and new packaging levies as major burdens on the industry. He called on the government to stagger NIC changes over time and delay the introduction of the controversial packaging levy, warning that these measures risk stifling growth.

“The long-term growth ambitions [of the government] are laudable, but they are at risk of remaining only that unless action is taken to encourage growth today,” he wrote.

In October’s Budget, the government announced an increase in NIC rates for employers from April and lowered the threshold at which firms begin paying them, from £9,100 to £5,000. The National Living Wage will also rise. While unions welcomed the wage increase, businesses have expressed concern over higher costs.

Machin also condemned the government’s extended producer responsibility (EPR) levy, which aims to make producers cover the costs of recycling packaging waste. He warned that the £2bn measure would lead to significantly higher tax bills for retailers, with “no improvement to recycling.”

“Retail is being raided like a piggy bank, and it’s unacceptable,” Machin said, writing in The Sunday Times.

Despite M&S reporting a £672m profit last year, he cautioned that many retailers were struggling and warned of job losses, store closures, and slower wage growth across the sector.

Machin echoed calls from Next boss Lord Wolfson to phase in NIC increases and urged the government to rethink its approach to business rates and packaging levies to give retailers “breathing space.”

A Treasury spokesperson defended the policies, saying: “We delivered a once-in-a-Parliament budget to wipe the slate clean and deliver the stability businesses need, laying the foundations for economic growth.

“In addition to capping corporation tax for the duration of parliament, we’re permanently cutting business rates for retail, hospitality, and leisure on the high street from 2026.”
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/m-s-chief-accuses-government-of-raiding-retail-sector-like-a-piggy-bank/ar-AA1yHEfs?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=27af182dbf2043a1bf73aebcb99e69ee&ei=17

Jimbuna
02-09-25, 02:10 PM
Taxpayers ‘face £200bn cost of Labour failure on migration’

Kemi Badenoch has warned that taxpayers could face an “astronomic” bill of more than £200 billion because of Labour’s failure to tackle mass migration.

The Tory leader said that Labour’s “lax approach” would see Britain carry on subsidising low-paid foreign workers and their dependents.

Mrs Badenoch was responding to a think tank report which found households face a long-term bill of £8,200 each to fund extra services for 800,000 recent arrivals.

The Centre for Policy Studies has calculated that more than 800,000 migrants who came to Britain between 2021 and 2024 could permanently settle in the UK.

It said the cumulative bill for the extra services and benefits they required, compared with the taxes they would pay, would come to £243 billion over their lifetimes.

Mrs Badenoch said the findings showed that Labour needed to take action to “end the conveyor belt to a precious British passport”.

Mrs Badenoch added: “This new research shows that, if the Government stubbornly refuses to adopt our plan, British taxpayers could be lumbered with an astronomic cost.

“The country simply can’t afford the Labour Party’s lax approach to immigration.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/taxpayers-face-200bn-cost-of-labour-failure-on-migration/ar-AA1yGlnl?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=5d0f6f8df82a4b788983b89f7d323e99&ei=88

Gorpet
02-09-25, 11:53 PM
Taxpayers ‘face £200bn cost of Labour failure on migration’

Is,It true that your Labour Party politicians have held their positions for years ? and did nothing and just set in the shadows, All the while still taking the taxpayer pound.And showing up at every party, and fox hunt, deer, boar, chicken,and women, Any hunt they were invited to mingling with the Tories.

And now they are in power. And none of these politicians have no idea what was happening as they themselves were in the Government. And now they are in power.....The Americans have taught them to Blame the other guy and dubble down create havoc, and in the end while they drink wine, Rome Burns.

Jimbuna
02-10-25, 06:42 AM
IMHO this current Liebour government is the most inept and deceitful bunch of miscreants I have ever come across during my lifetime.

Jimbuna
02-10-25, 06:52 AM
Nigel Farage warns ‘vulnerable’ Rachel Reeves her days are numbered as Chancellor braces for revolt

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage has claimed Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves is in a "more precarious position" than Labour leader Keir Starmer ahead of today's farmers' protest in London.

Speaking to GB News, Nigel criticised Reeves' Budget for "denting confidence in the UK economy" and targeting farmers with "sums that don't add up."

He called for the complete abolition of inheritance tax, describing it as "death taxes."

"Whatever level you're at, I think inheritance tax, or more accurately, death taxes, should be abolished outright," Nigel told Eamonn Holmes and Ellie Costello.

Farmers are staging another tractor protest outside Parliament today against Labour's proposed inheritance tax changes.

The rally comes as MPs debate an e-petition with over 148,000 signatures calling to maintain current inheritance tax exemptions for working farms.

Labour has confirmed it will not reverse its plans to introduce a 20 per cent inheritance tax rate on farms worth more than £1 million.

The changes, announced in the Budget, are set to come into force in April 2026.

The new rules will end an existing exemption that allowed family farms to be passed down without paying inheritance tax.

The Reform UK leader argued that current inheritance tax rules have distorted land values, citing examples of wealthy investors exploiting loopholes.

"Some big billionaires have bought up vast tracts of Lincolnshire, pushing land prices up to £25,000 an acre, because there has been an inheritance tax loophole," he told GB News.

He warned the proposed changes would have wider implications beyond agriculture.

"The new proposals don't just affect farmers, they affect family businesses as well, and it's just yet another reason why people are selling up and leaving the country," he said.

Joining protesters in London, Nigel rallied support for the farmers' cause.

"The family farm should not be driven out of existence. Politically, I think we can win this," the Reform UK leader told demonstrators.

He insisted that "MPs need to listen" to the farmers.

Nigel expressed optimism about the protest's potential impact, suggesting there "are some wins" that could be achieved through continued demonstrations.

"The whole thing is monstrous!" he declared, referring to the inheritance tax changes affecting both farms and family businesses.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/other/nigel-farage-warns-vulnerable-rachel-reeves-her-days-are-numbered-as-chancellor-braces-for-revolt/ar-AA1yK5wC?ocid=msedgntp&pc=ENTPSP&cvid=d678a91366234da69be0bb313b9f6338&ei=53

Jimbuna
02-10-25, 12:54 PM
Nothing beats lining one's own pockets.

Money well spent, I thiunk not.

Watchdog recommends £2,500 pay rise for UK MPs

MPs should receive a £2,500 pay rise for the next financial year, an increase of 2.8%, the body that recommends their salaries has said.

If the pay rise proposed by the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (Ipsa) goes through, it would raise a backbench MP’s salary from £91,346 to just under £94,000.

The year-on-year figure for consumer price index inflation in December was 2.5%, but it is expected to increase as the year goes on.

At the end of last year, ministers recommended a 2.8% pay increase for public sector staff including NHS workers, teachers and senior civil servants, prompting the threat of strikes.

MPs used to decide on their own annual pay rises but since 2011 the decision has been left to Ipsa, which consults on the proposed increase before confirming it.

The question of whether MPs and ministers should accept pay rises is still debated among parliamentarians. Asked about whether Keir Starmer would accept the latest increase, his official spokesperson said pay rises for MPs were a matter for Ipsa.

Richard Lloyd, the chair of Ipsa, said: “Our pay proposal for 2025-26 reflects the experience of the wider working public-sector population, and recognises both the vital role of MPs and the current economic climate.”

The increase is the pay for a backbench MP. Ministers receive additional pay, as does the opposition leader and shadow chief whip and their deputy.

Separately, MPs can claim back expenses accrued as part of their work, which mainly comprises staffing and office costs.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/watchdog-recommends-2-500-pay-rise-for-uk-mps/ar-AA1yKLme?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=cefad7670d374cc5ddd011514a21e279&ei=28

Jimbuna
02-11-25, 01:16 PM
Humiliation for Keir Starmer as dozens of his own MPs fail to back Channel migrant plan

Keir Starmer's plan to end the Channel migrant crisis was thrown into chaos last night as dozens of his own MPs refused to back it.

The Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill passed its first hurdle by 333 votes to 109 - a majority of 224.

But voting records showed 74 Labour MPs refused to support the flagship legislation designed to smash the smuggling gangs.

Hours earlier, the plan was attacked by politicians from all sides.

Veteran Labour politician Diane Abbott asked Home Secretary Yvette Cooper if "she is trying to stigmatise desperate migrants".

And Tory Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp branded the Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill a "border surrender Bill", which "creates a pathway to citizenship for people who have entered the country illegally".

Former Home Secretary James Cleverly also accused Labour of creating a "blank cheque" for asylum seekers as the Government cannot deport migrants to countries like Afghanistan, Iran and Syria.

It comes as Ms Cooper confirmed smuggling gangs are forcing migrants to wait in the water for a boat to pick them up.

And the Home Secretary revealed asylum seekers on a small boat "refused rescue and remained on the boat" despite a seven-year-old girl being trampled to death.

Ms Abbott said: "This is a difficult time to speak up for a fair and ethical immigration policy, with the tides of far right politics sweeping Europe and maybe even lapping on the shores of this country.

"But does (Ms Cooper) accept that she has a danger of sounding like she is trying to stigmatise desperate migrants rather than building a fair system?"

Ms Cooper replied: "Immigration has always been an important part of the UK, but in order for that to be so, the rules need to be respected and enforced, and we cannot allow the criminal gangs to end up putting lives at risk in this way, or to undermine our border security."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/travel/news/humiliation-for-keir-starmer-as-dozens-of-his-own-mps-fail-to-back-channel-migrant-plan/ar-AA1yLYUG?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=165d578303114eaefec9d51399299854&ei=116

Jimbuna
02-12-25, 02:03 PM
A bit rich coming from him but for once I agree with him.

Jacob Rees-Mogg rages over foreign aid and demands end to 'waste of money'

Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg has suggested Britain should copy Donald Trump and freeze foreign aid spending.

The US President paused all international aid after returning to the White House.

Former Tory MP Sir Jacob questioned whether the UK should follow suit.

The ex-Cabinet minister told GB News: "The UK is allocated a staggering £13.7 billion of your money to foreign aid.

"While the notion of supporting global development may seem noble, there have been repeated concerns about the effectiveness of such spending.

"Now we learn that £15.5 million has been committed to a climate smart jobs programme in Uganda, with the potential for an extension to £23.25 million.

"A smaller, yet equally egregious example, £50,000 was allocated to study shrimp health in Bangladesh.

"These expenditures forced us to ask, is the government entrusted with the hard-earned money of taxpayers truly justified in funding such initiatives abroad while pressing needs remain on our own shores?

"Is it time to reconsider and perhaps model ourselves on Donald Trump and cancel the whole thing?"

Sir Jacob added: "Trump and Musk have closed down USAID because they found within it so many of those sorts of examples of money being wasted. And isn't that the problem? That it undermines confidence in this type of spending because it goes on shrimp health and climate change jobs?

"What has reduced global poverty massively since 1990 is China and India joining the trading nations. And the trade and the investment that follows trade is much greater than the overseas aid.

"The overseas aid has all these problems of favouring dictators who siphon it off, of going to weird and wacky schemes that wouldn't be funded in this country, that gives it a bad name.

"I'm not against helping people with their health and with Rotary International and others, polio in India has been massively brought under control. Great steps have been taken. But it's the waste of money on frivolous projects that I object to.

"I think charity is a private matter, not a matter for the state to take money from poor people in this country and give it away."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/jacob-rees-mogg-rages-over-foreign-aid-and-demands-end-to-waste-of-money/ar-AA1yUd72?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=a392de2f210f4cf3a052d3c5e89a0cc1&ei=31

Jimbuna
02-14-25, 02:06 PM
No concerns raised with me about my expenses, says Reeves

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has said no concerns were raised with her about her expenses during her time working at Halifax Bank of Scotland.

A BBC News investigation found that while at HBOS, Reeves was subject to a detailed whistleblowing complaint which raised concerns about her use of company money.

Reeves said she "submitted and had her expenses signed off in the proper way".

However, the BBC has seen documents which show concerns about spending habits in the department Reeves worked in were raised with her.

A spokesman for the chancellor previously said she had no knowledge of the investigation, always complied with expenses rules and left the bank on good terms.

Asked what her understanding of the investigation was, Reeves told the BBC: "No one ever raised any concerns about my expenses when I worked for Halifax Bank of Scotland.

"I submitted and had my expenses signed off in the proper way, as you would expect."

Pressed over why some of her former colleagues were aware of an investigation, the chancellor said: "I don't know what they are saying and of course none of them have gone on the record.

"But I was never questioned, never asked to pay back any expenses."

Reeves said she was "really proud of the work that I did before I became an MP" but added: "In the end, people are going to judge me on the job that I'm doing now as chancellor of the exchequer to grow the economy and put more money in the pockets of working people."

A Facebook group for former HBOS employees included several joking about Reeves's expenses spending and the fact she was investigated.

In the late 2000s before entering politics, Reeves worked at HBOS as a senior manager.

The BBC has learnt that during her time at the bank concerns were raised about Reeves, and two other managers, using the bank's money to "fund a lifestyle".

The concerns raised about Reeves's spending included a £400 leaving meal for a colleague, a £49 handbag for her PA and £152 spent on another bag, along with some perfume as a present for her boss in a joint gift with another manager.

One of the other employees investigated was Reeves's manager and the person who signed off her expenses.

The bank's internal audit department carried out the initial investigation and found there was evidence expenses rules appeared to have been broken, a senior source said.

The BBC has not been able to establish what the final outcome of the investigation was, or whether it reached a conclusion.

In late 2008, a memo was circulated to Reeves and others calling for tighter cost controls.

It specifically raised concerns about "spending on travel" and on corporate spending cards, including Motivation cards which were used to reward staff.

The proposals it laid out for improving cost controls included monthly discussions with Reeves and another manager to look at "claims, invoices, Thanks card use and reports". That other manager was also one of those subsequently investigated over their use of expenses.

Separately, Reeves was emailed in mid-December 2008 by an HBOS employee who suggested they should give a presentation to raise awareness of how much was being spent on taxis and on Motivation cards.

Reeves replied to say that she was not sure a "huge analysis" was needed and she wanted to see the papers before they went any further.

The BBC investigation has also raised questions about the accuracy of Reeves's online CV on LinkedIn.

After she was accused of embellishing it last year, her profile was then changed to describe her role at HBOS to "retail banking", rather than "economist" as it had said previously.

The BBC has now established that she exaggerated her time at the Bank of England and left nine months earlier than she had claimed on LinkedIn.

Reeves was at the Bank of England for five and a half years, but nearly a year of that was spent studying for a Masters at the London School of Economics.

As recently as last year, she said she had spent "the best part of a decade as an economist at the Bank of England".

A spokeswoman for Reeves said the dates on her CV were inaccurate due to an administrative error by a member of the team and that Reeves had not seen it before it had been published.

Speaking on Friday, Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch said Reeves had "some very, very serious questions to answer".

"Keir Starmer said he was bringing in a government of integrity.

"Telling lies and untruths on your CV, expenses fraud which is what the allegations are, are very serious things. And I do think [Reeves] needs to come out and explain what is going on."

The BBC investigation relates to potential breaches of HBOS expenses rules, not fraud.

On Thursday, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer backed his chancellor, saying she had "dealt with any issues that arise" from "many years ago".

She has also been defended by Science Secretary Peter Kyle, who insisted she can "absolutely" be trusted.

He claimed the BBC's reporting had been "inaccurate", adding: "The head of HR at that bank at that time says it's untrue, said that she never, ever received a file on Rachel Reeves.

"And she says that before she left the bank, there was no investigation that passed her desk. And she's also said if there was one, it would have passed her desk."

However, the BBC's reporting did include quotes from Jane Wayper, who was an HR business partner, not head of HR as Kyle described her.

Wayper had told the BBC she "would have been made aware of any investigation which concluded there was a case to answer".

The BBC has not reported that the investigation reached a conclusion, or that there was a disciplinary process.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/clynd9l09w3o

Jimbuna
02-15-25, 02:11 PM
https://i.postimg.cc/x8SHP210/477535334-2127437097770785-8895467660779743518-n.jpg (https://postimages.org/)

Catfish
02-15-25, 02:31 PM
Hehe :D

Commander Wallace
02-15-25, 02:48 PM
:haha: That's just wrong, Jim.

Gorpet
02-15-25, 10:55 PM
A bit rich coming from him but for once I agree with him.

Just like here in America, All of these people have been in politics and government for years. What brings them out of the shadows now?

Jimbuna
02-16-25, 12:54 PM
Muslim MP opposing calls to scrap Christian prayers in the Commons

Calls to scrap Christian prayers at the start of every House of Commons sitting are being opposed - by a new Muslim MP.

Independent MP Shockat Adam sprang to the defence of the daily worship after nine MPs - including three new Labour members said ‘religious worship should not play any part in the formal business of the Commons’.

In a tradition dating back to 1558, each daily session at the Commons begins with a few minutes of private Christian prayer and contemplation.

Last month, the Mail on Sunday revealed how some of the new generation of Labour MPs had told the Commons’ modernisation committee that the practice was out of date.

And last week, nine MPs - led by newly-elected Labour politician Neil Duncan-Jordan - publicly called for the prayers to cease.

In a Commons early day motion, they say that ‘Parliamentary meetings should be conducted in a manner that is equally welcoming to all attendees, irrespective of their personal beliefs’.

The MPs - including three Labour and three Liberal Democrats - say Parliamentary prayers ‘are not compatible with a society that respects the principles of freedom of and from religion’.

And they are asking the modernisation committee to consider ‘alternative arrangements’.

But last night, Leicester South MP Mr Adam - who was himself only elected last July - disagreed.

He told the Mail on Sunday: ‘Prayers in the House of Commons are part of our Christian heritage and Parliament’s traditions.

‘They’re not compulsory, so MPs have a choice whether to attend or not.

‘So I see no reason for them not to continue.’

He added: ‘MPs of other faiths don’t need collective prayers in the Chamber but should remain free to pray in their own private way on the Parliamentary estate.’

Last month, veteran Conservative MP Sir John Hayes hit out at the ‘arrogance’ of ‘new kids in town’ who wanted prayers scrapped, accusing them of a ‘lack of respect’ for Parliament’s Christian traditions.

Sir John, first elected in 1997, said: ‘Whether you believe in the divine or not, it’s important to recognise our country is rooted in the Christian traditions.

‘Prayers are a reminder of that.’
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/other/muslim-mp-opposing-calls-to-scrap-christian-prayers-in-the-commons/ar-AA1z8hZi?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=120d067b593a4ceaf6c0f7ba1f8d4500&ei=21

Jimbuna
02-16-25, 01:03 PM
Labour civil war erupts as Rachel Reeves and Keir Starmer clash over defence spending

Sir Keir Starmer is reportedly set to overrule Rachel Reeves by calling for increased military spending in a bid to boost support for Ukraine.

The Prime Minister will scramble to Paris on Monday for emergency talks with European counterparts after the US heaped pressure on the continent to bolster its support for war-torn Ukraine.

Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said the need for increased defence spending is widely recognised, including by Ms Reeves.

He said: "The whole Cabinet, the whole Government, I think most people in this country recognise the pressures the world is under, recognise more will have to be spent on defence.

"Now the spending review will set out the roadmap towards that target."

The Chancellor will set out the multi-year plan for public spending on June 11, which is expected to set out how the UK will increase the share spent on defence to 2.5% of the size of the economy, although it is not yet clear when that target will be reached.

But the Government is under pressure from defence chiefs to go further and Nato's secretary-general Mark Rutte has suggested the alliance must set a target to spend at least 3% of gross domestic product.

"The Chancellor knows more than most people the pressures on public services across the board, but defence has to be the cornerstone of our national prosperity as well as our security," Mr Reynolds said.

"There's a whole range of things the UK does. Our contribution to the intelligence services, for instance, should be considered, I think, as part of that contribution to collective Western security."

It comes as David Lammy warned the Chancellor that defence spending may need to treble to Cold War levels if Russia is allowed to win in Ukraine.

Sir Keir is expected to overrule his Chancellor and call for increased defence spending in a bid to woo Donald Trump before he flies to Washington to meet the president at the White House.

Downing Street has maintained plans to boost defence spending since Labour entered power last year but has yet to give a timetable as to when they will reach their goal of 2.5% of GDP. The spending review will set out the roadmap for hitting this.

The UK is currently at 2.3% of spending - although there are calls to reach 2.65% of GDP.

Mr Reynolds tried to play down divisions with the United States over the future of Ukraine.

The Business Secretary told Sky News's Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips: "We all want the war to end. Desperately want the war to end. I think it's clear for that to be a durable peace, Ukraine has to be at the table, has to be part of that agreement.

"We believe Ukraine is on an irreversible path to Nato membership. But the US defence secretary has said everything is still on the table."

US defence secretary Pete Hegseth said Washington "does not believe that Nato membership for Ukraine is a realistic outcome of a negotiated settlement" to end the war.

Mr Reynolds said the UK could act as the "bridge between European allies and our US allies, we can be the bridge that strengthens that relationship".

Asked whether British troops could form part of a peacekeeping force after a ceasefire is agreed, he said: "We always say we'll play our part in a peace settlement. It's a little bit hypothetical at this stage, but of course it's in our national interests to make sure that's a durable peace."

Meanwhile Foreign Secretary David Lammy told the Munich Security Conference "Putin will not go away", and that, while it was positive 23 Nato countries were now spending at least 2% of their GDP on defence, "we all know we have to go upward".

He said the UK was "absolutely" committed to spending 2.5% and would set out a "pathway" to achieving that goal in a few months' time.

Mr Lammy's comments came after US Vice-President JD Vance told the conference on Friday that Europe must "step up in a big way to provide for its own defence".
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/labour-civil-war-erupts-as-rachel-reeves-and-keir-starmer-clash-over-defence-spending/ar-AA1z8HNj?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=120d067b593a4ceaf6c0f7ba1f8d4500&ei=51

Jimbuna
02-17-25, 02:10 PM
https://i.postimg.cc/50s89Vcf/480026082-2865081143673239-8780585345398542920-n.jpg (https://postimages.org/)

Jimbuna
02-17-25, 02:13 PM
Rachel Reeves dealt huge blow as unpopularity laid bare in new poll

Rachel Reeves was dealt a fresh blow after new polling found half of Britons say she has been doing a bad job as Chancellor.

Just 15% said the Chancellor had done well in the Ipsos survey, while the rest said neither or did not know.

Some 52% said Ms Reeves's decisions have made them less confident about economic growth, including a third of Labour voters.

Two in three disagree with the controversial policy of stripping most pensioners of winter fuel payments.

Just over half - 53% - oppose the hike in employers' national insurance contributions.

However, 72% support increasing NHS funding in the poll of 2,248 British adults carried out from February 7-11.

Gideon Skinner, senior director of UK Politics at Ipsos, said: "While increasing NHS funding is welcomed by a substantial majority, the public remain unconvinced about the overall direction of the economy under Rachel Reeves' stewardship.

"The fact that half of Britons believe she is doing a bad job as Chancellor, coupled with widespread pessimism about rising unemployment, should sound alarm bells in Downing Street.

"This negativity is likely fuelled by the significant proportion of the public (50%) who feel less confident about economic growth following her policy decisions.

"The Chancellor's efforts to highlight investment and a long-term vision for growth have yet to resonate with voters, who are continuing to feel pressures from the cost of living."

It comes as Ms Reeves has faced an ongoing backlash since her tax-hiking Budget last October.

There is speculation she could be moved out of 11 Downing Street in a reshuffle by Sir Keir Starmer.

Speaking last week, Ms Reeves said:"It's not possible to turn around more than a decade of poor economic performance in just a few months. But we are doing what is necessary to bring stability back to the economy.

"Reforming the economy, the planning system, regulation and pensions to encourage investment in our economy, which is the lifeblood of a successful economy. We need to go further and faster in doing that, to turn around our poor growth performance and to make working people better off."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/rachel-reeves-dealt-huge-blow-as-unpopularity-laid-bare-in-new-poll/ar-AA1zdu5Y?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=e13172c3be28449f9969e71874618200&ei=20

Jimbuna
02-19-25, 01:27 PM
Rachel Reeves and Keir Starmer 'must stop punishing hardworking Brits'

The news that nine in ten councils across England are being forced to impose the maximum council tax hike is a bitter pill for hardworking families, pensioners, and small businesses already grappling with higher outgoings from Labour's budget.

These soaring council tax increases come at a time when inflation is already driving up household food bills. Families are facing rising costs at the supermarket, higher mortgage rates and Labour's jobs tax is leading to higher costs for councils.

But instead of offering relief, Labour has doubled down on its tax-and-spend approach, squeezing people's finances while stifling economic growth.

It is especially shocking to hear that Angela Rayner has allowed many councils to increase their rate beyond the 5% cap without a referendum. Lib Dem run Somerset, and Windsor & Maidenhead councils, as well as Labour run Trafford and Birmingham City councils are all in this category which has left many thinking that Angela Rayner will only reward councils who live beyond their means.

It doesn't stop at council tax. Labour's introduction of the jobs tax and higher business rates levied on small businesses and pubs, means the Government are attacking the very backbone of our communities. Pubs, vital social hubs in towns and villages, are being hit with higher taxes leaving many on the brink of closure.

To make matters worse, Labour has taken the disgraceful decision to strip pensioners of the Winter Fuel Allowance. So we now have a situation where some of the most vulnerable members of society are going to be forced to pay more council tax so that Labour can reward the poor financial decisions of bankrupt councils.

Conservative run councils have always delivered better services for less money and on average have lower rates on Band D council tax bills.

We believe in keeping taxes low so that families can thrive, businesses can grow and communities can prosper. Labour's relentless tax hikes are an attack on aspiration and hard work and voters will remember who stood up for their interests come the elections in May.

It's time to stop punishing success, reward responsibility and give hardworking Brits the financial breathing space they deserve.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/rachel-reeves-and-keir-starmer-must-stop-punishing-hardworking-brits/ar-AA1znxuo?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=19ca8dd6ab9b4e67c140bc3f20cca692&ei=17

Jimbuna
02-19-25, 01:30 PM
Households face further squeeze as energy bills cap set to go up

Households face a further squeeze on their finances – with energy bills set to go up again and Britain’s biggest water firms looking to hike prices for millions.

Despite Energy Secretary Ed Miliband’s pre-election pledge to bring down bills by £300, an expected £85 rise in the price cap next week will mark the third such lift since Labour came to power.

The jump – equating to a £255 hit for the average home – is a fresh blow to millions of pensioners who last year were stripped of their winter fuel allowance payments.

Meanwhile, more than 27 million people face soaring water bills after three companies last night joined Britain’s biggest utility firm in urging for further price rises.

Thanks to cold weather and low gas storage levels in Europe, energy costs are set to rise again in April, taking the average bill to over £1,800 per year, a forecast says.

Consultancy Cornwall Insight predicted that the energy price cap, controlled by watchdog Ofgem, will jump to £1,823 from April, an £85 rise from the last change in January.

‘Once again, it’s more money out of working people’s pockets under this Labour government,’ said acting Tory energy spokesman Andrew Bowie MP.

He added: ‘During the election, they promised the public £300 off energy bills.’

When Labour entered government in July last year, the cap stood at £1,568 but since then has risen twice to £1,717 in October and then £1,738 last month.

If the latest prediction is accurate, it will mean the average annual energy bill will have leaped by £255 since the election.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/households-face-further-squeeze-as-energy-bills-cap-set-to-go-up/ar-AA1zjoao?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=19ca8dd6ab9b4e67c140bc3f20cca692&ei=69

Jimbuna
02-20-25, 09:36 AM
https://i.postimg.cc/JhktJTMZ/original-EE503869-F625-480-C-89-F7-65-CFA60-E0-D90.jpg (https://postimg.cc/5HfxWSH2)

Jimbuna
02-20-25, 09:44 AM
Keir Starmer's EU dream exposed as the farce it is on the world stage

The EU is left out of the room as talks continue over Ukraine, just as it recently emerged Russia is now outspending the rest of Europe combined when it comes to defence.

Does the Labour government seriously want to get back into bed with this underwhelming, underfunded and underachieving bloc?

Full disclosure, I voted Leave in 2016 for very specific reasons. For starters, given the binary yes/no nature of the referendum, my sense then - and now - is a Remain vote would have seen Britain go 'all in': single currency and the works.

That was a fate not worth having, and while perhaps the Swiss/Norway/EFTA model could have offered the best of both worlds, the binary nature of the vote, coupled with Britain's opportunities in the Commonwealth, alongside how sclerotic and tired the EU had become led me to vote out.

Sadly, since the Tories by and large never really believed in Brexit, that Leave vote has turned out to be symbolic rather than substantive. Yet, with a government which had confidence in the UK and its future beyond a tired EU, the benefits of Brexit could actually be realised.

Sadly, Sir Keir Starmer's government is even less willing to realise this potential than the Tories, and even more likely to want to drag the UK back in through the side entrance.

Yet what on earth would Britain gain from returning to an EU which cannot defend itself, wants to regulate tech to death rather than lead in it, and whose economy is barely growing?

Beyond Brussels is a burgeoning Commonwealth plus a "CANZUK four" of Australia, Canada and New Zealand and the UK which not only share a king, language and legal system, but which combined would be the world's largest polity and third largest economy.

In an era where cultural proximity outpaces geographic proximity, why would the UK wish to tie itself to a bloc of geriatric ex-imperial powers bandying together to somehow stay relevant?

Under Sir Keir, Britain risks a similar fate of irrelevance and sclerosis. It need not be this way. Commonwealth aside, Britain has its superstar universities to develop the growth technologies of tomorrow, an advantage the forlorn EU sorely lacks.

Perhaps the UK could have had its cake and eaten it with EFTA, able to rebuild its Commonwealth future while keeping some trade links with the EU, rather as the Swiss have. But, in the post-Brexit era, it is time for Britain to cut the apron strings and make a new future for itself entirely.

Not simply a bridge between Brussels and Washington, nor aching to join itself at the hip to either, the UK should seize the moment for a third and more dynamic option, forging its own path alongside the Commonwealth Realms and republics.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/keir-starmer-s-eu-dream-exposed-as-the-farce-it-is-on-the-world-stage/ar-AA1zqYHt?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=92a932d195ee48be8799b977193e113a&ei=29

Jimbuna
02-21-25, 06:44 AM
Labour still doesn't get one major reason UK is being laughed at on world stage

Welcome to Labour's Britain - where free speech is persecuted, dissent is silenced, and the very freedoms we once took for granted are slipping through our fingers.

When a senior US politician stands on the world stage and calls out Britain for its draconian suppression of free speech, you'd think any self-respecting government would sit up and take notice.

Instead, Labour's Business Secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, shrugged it off, demonstrating that he's incapable of grasping the gravity of his own words.

The UK, under this weak yet authoritarian government, is losing its standing as a bastion of democracy - and the world is watching in horror.

At the Munich Security Conference, US Vice President JD Vance took a sledgehammer to European hypocrisy, and rightly so. He didn't hold back in exposing the sheer double standards of our so-called "liberal democracies" - where freedom of speech is being sacrificed for Labour's radical left-wing ideology.

The UK was squarely in his sights, and for good reason. A British Army veteran was fined thousands for the "crime" of silently praying outside an abortion clinic. Read that again. A man stood quietly in his own thoughts and was punished by the state. If that doesn't send shivers down your spine, you've lost all sense of what a free society should be.

And how does Labour respond to this damning indictment? With platitudes, evasion, and a complete lack of accountability. Reynolds, a self-proclaimed Christian, had the gall to claim that "no one is arrested for what they are praying about" in Britain. Really? Tell that to Adam Smith-Connor, who was convicted for doing precisely that.

Labour's response isn't just weak - it's Orwellian gaslighting.

Labour's authoritarian streak is now plain for all to see. They claim to champion human rights, but only for those in "protected groups" that fit their ideological agenda. The rest of us? We get silenced, fined, or worse.

And the EU is no better. Brussels is openly threatening to shut down social media during times of unrest, police are raiding citizens for online "misogyny" and in Sweden, a Christian activist was jailed for a Quran-burning that led to his own friend's murder. These are not the actions of free societies. These are the hallmarks of creeping tyranny.

The reality is simple : Britain is no longer respected on the world stage. Under Labour, we have become a cautionary tale - a warning from the US that Western democracies are in retreat. And if anyone still doubted it, Trump himself doubled down, praising Vance's speech and affirming that Europe is "losing their wonderful right of freedom of speech".

This isn't just about reputation. This assault on free speech has real consequences. Once you give the state the power to police thought, there is no stopping its overreach.

Today, it's silent prayer outside an abortion clinic. Tomorrow, it's dissent against government policies. The creeping erosion of our rights has been disguised as "progress" but make no mistake - this is regression into tyranny.

Britain was once a beacon of liberty, a model for the world. Under Labour, it is fast becoming a

parody of itself - an insecure, censorious nanny state, mocked and pitied by our allies. And unless we fight back, that decline will only accelerate.

Free speech is not up for negotiation - and if Labour doesn't get that, it is Labour that needs to go.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/travel/news/labour-still-doesn-t-get-one-major-reason-uk-is-being-laughed-at-on-world-stage/ar-AA1zvqAX?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=25eb680c99924d03e4835d285a55a27a&ei=33

MGR1
02-21-25, 09:47 AM
As if we weren't already. How many Tory PM's did we have in quick succession due to the party fighting itself over Brexit and economic policy?

How did that look on the world stage? Not very flattering, I suspect.

The British Political Right can't exactly take the high-ground on this one.

For an ideology that's supposed to prize individual responsibility and freedom over the collective, they aren't very good at owning up to their own cock-ups.

Mike.:doh:

Jimbuna
02-21-25, 11:15 AM
First it was 'Rachel from Accounts' and now it is the governments Business Secretary :o

Business Secretary accused of falsely claiming he was a ‘solicitor’ — despite quitting training contract and never qualifying

The government’s Business Secretary is facing awkward questions after it emerged that he had apparently claimed to be a ‘solicitor’ despite not completing his training.

Jonathan Reynolds MP studied law at BPP Law School before securing a training contract at Addleshaw Goddard‘s Manchester office. However, 10 months into his two-year training contract, he is said to have decided against a legal career and instead pursued a path in politics.

While there’s nothing wrong with a change in careers, questions have been raised about why Reynolds has previously described himself as a “solicitor” in several places online, including on his LinkedIn profile.

The use of the term “solicitor” is strictly regulated under the Solicitors Act 1974. Only individuals who have been admitted as solicitors of the Senior Courts of England and Wales and whose names appear on the roll are allowed to use the title. A spokesperson for the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) confirmed Reynolds is not qualified as a solicitor.

The Business Secretary’s use of the term “solicitor” was first questioned by the political blog Guido Fawkes, which shared a screenshot purportedly showing Reynolds’ LinkedIn profile describing him as a “solicitor” at Addleshaw Goddard from May 2009 to May 2010. The reference appears to have been removed.

Reynolds did not respond to our request for comment, but his spokesperson told the blog that the reference was a mistake and that he has sought to make it clear he was a trainee solicitor before entering politics.

The revelations add to growing scrutiny over the accuracy of CVs among politicians. Chancellor Rachel Reeves recently faced criticism after edits were made to her online biography to clarify that her previous role at Halifax Bank of Scotland was in retail banking rather than as an economist.
https://www.legalcheek.com/2025/02/business-secretary-accused-of-falsely-claiming-he-was-a-solicitor-despite-quitting-training-contract-and-never-qualifying/

MGR1
02-21-25, 11:39 AM
I suspect that there will be some serious back peddling on this matter prior to Starmer heading to Washington:

Apple pulls data protection tool after UK government security row (https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cgj54eq4vejo)

Apple is taking the unprecedented step of removing its highest level data security tool from customers in the UK, after the government demanded access to user data.

Advanced Data Protection, external (https://support.apple.com/en-gb/108756#:~:text=Advanced%20Data%20Protection%20is%2 0designed,secured%20using%20standard%20data%20prot ection.) (ADP) means only account holders can view items such as photos or documents they have stored online through a process known as end-to-end encryption.

But earlier this month the UK government asked (https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c20g288yldko) for the right to see the data, which currently not even Apple can access.

Apple did not comment at the time but has consistently opposed creating a "backdoor" in its encryption service, arguing that if it did so, it would only be a matter of time before bad actors also found a way in.

Now the tech giant has decided it will no longer be possible to activate ADP in the UK.
It's another example of the basic incompetence of the Home Office. If it can't even understand the full ramifications of modern technology, what hope is there?

Although it is another example of how dependent we, and the larger "West" are on American tech. The US companies have become so prevalent that no-one can really function effectively without them. Thus it allows significant pressure to be exerted by the US over anyone who uses their tech.

Perhaps we should just surrender now and allow ourselves to become overseas territories of the US, like Puerto Rico or American Samoa.:hmmm:

Mike.

Catfish
02-22-25, 10:13 AM
Do not worry, your special relationship will save the UK :03:

Jimbuna
02-22-25, 01:25 PM
Do not worry, your special relationship will save the UK :03:

LMAO :haha:

Catfish
02-22-25, 01:30 PM
^ I'm sorry, I know this was a bit unfair :oops:

Jimbuna
02-22-25, 01:35 PM
^ I'm sorry, I know this was a bit unfair :oops:

Not at all....this is just the beginning for the UK and Europe :o

MGR1
02-23-25, 01:42 PM
https://i.imgflip.com/4dfdoa.jpg

:salute:

Mike.

Jimbuna
02-23-25, 02:25 PM
Quite possibly :)

Jimbuna
02-24-25, 10:51 AM
State pension row reignites as Waspi women threaten Labour with legal action over £3k compensation rejection

Women Against State Pension Inequality (Waspi) campaigners have threatened to take legal action against the Labour Government.

Activists are slamming ministers over their rejection of £10billion compensation for women affected by state pension age changes.

The Waspi campaign has sent a "letter before action" to the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), warning of High Court proceedings if the issue remains unresolved, giving 14 days to respond before filing their case.

This dispute centres on compensation for women born in the 1950s whose state pension age was raised to match men's, which campaigners say was not properly communicated.

Last March, the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman (PHSO) recommended compensation of up to £2,950 each for the affected women, arguing the changes had not been properly communicated.

Despite the PHSO's recommendation to the Government, Labour ruled out any compensation package for those affected last December.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer acknowledged concerns but remained firm on the decision, stating: "Ninety per cent of those impacted did know about the change – and in those circumstances, the taxpayer simply can't afford the burden of tens of billions of pounds of compensation."

The changes were first announced in 1995, with the process later accelerated under the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition Government.

Angela Madden, chair of the Waspi campaign, said members would not allow the DWP's "gaslighting" of affected women to go unchallenged.

"The Government has accepted that 1950s-born women are victims of maladministration, but it now says none of us suffered any injustice. We believe this is not only an outrage but legally wrong," she said.

Amid this standoff with the Government, the group has launched a £75,000 CrowdJustice campaign to fund their legal action.

"We have been successful before and we are confident we will be again," Madden added, urging the Secretary of State to "come to the table to sort out a compensation package.

"The current Labour leadership faces scrutiny over its stance, as several senior ministers backed the Waspi campaign while in opposition.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves and Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall were among those who previously supported the campaign's demands.

Approximately 3.6 million women in the UK were affected by the phased changes to bring their retirement age in line with men.

Labour MP Brian Leishman was one of 10 party members to support an SNP bill urging action on the ombudsman's findings.

Leishman warned that the next UK Government could be a "hardline far-right effort" if Labour failed to deliver "improved living standards".

A Government spokesman responded to the campaign's threat, saying: "We accept the ombudsman's finding of maladministration and have apologised for there being a 28-month delay in writing to 1950s-born women."

The spokesman added that evidence showed only one in four people remember reading unexpected letters, while by 2006, 90 per cent of 1950s-born women were aware of the state pension age changes.

"Earlier letters wouldn't have affected this. For these and other reasons the Government cannot justify paying for a £10.5billion compensation scheme at the expense of the taxpayer," they concluded.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/state-pension-row-reignites-as-waspi-women-threaten-labour-with-legal-action-over-3k-compensation-rejection/ar-AA1zFaT8?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=46adea6cee2e4cd9ccca2420e91502af&ei=22

Jimbuna
02-24-25, 01:16 PM
Who in Gods name does this self proclaimed tool think he is!!!

Starmer removes Churchill portraits from Parliament as Labour continues assault against greatest Britons

Sir Keir Starmer has removed portraits of Winston Churchill, the Duke of Wellington, and more British heroes from the Houses of Parliament.

Since Labour's General Election victory last summer, the Prime Minister has axed drawings, photographs and prints of historical British political leaders and monarchs.

As many as five images of Churchill have been removed from parts of the parliamentary estate occupied primarily by MPs' offices, according to a new report in the Telegraph.

One photograph removed from Portcullis House - the main office building for MPs, showed the Second World War leader standing at the Cenotaph in 1945.

Meanwhile, images of the Duke of Wellington - the country's second most popular PM in history after Churchill, according to YouGov - were removed from display after Labour's victory.

The portraits comprise part of the Parliamentary Art Collection, which oversees some 10,000 works which MPs can use to decorate their offices.

Back in 2020, the collection was subjected to a probe for "links to slavery and racism" in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests.

The audit was carried out by the cross-party Speaker's Advisory Committee on Works of Art, which compiled a dossier of artworks of historical figures which risked controversy.

Portraits of several figures included in the dossier were canned following the election - including five portraits of former PM William Gladstone just days after July 4.

Three portraits of the Duke of Wellington were removed in the week following the election, while anti-slavery campaigner William Wilberforce also saw his portrait taken down.

Further images of poet John Milton, King Charles I, and a painting of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were all canned after Labour returned to power for the first time in 14 years.

Most of the artworks were removed from the office buildings of Portcullis House, Derby Gate and the Norman Shaw building - which all house MPs' offices outside the Palace of Westminster

The Telegraph reports the artworks are now in storage.

Though inside the Palace of Westminster itself, several statues and paintings of Churchill remain.

The display and location of art in the Commons is overseen by the Heritage Collections Team and the Speaker's Advisory Committee on Works of Art.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/starmer-removes-churchill-portraits-from-parliament-as-labour-continues-assault-against-greatest-britons/ar-AA1zGUYP?ocid=msedgntp&pc=ENTPSP&cvid=5c2d1fb4356644c3b2137824047cdf3d&ei=18

Jimbuna
02-25-25, 11:42 AM
Reeves told to raise personal allowance by £1,000 to stop state pension tax raid

Rachel Reeves has been urged to raise the personal allowance to save state pensioners from falling into a “retirement tax” trap.

Campaigners have called for the incomes of retirees to be protected from being dragged into a tax bracket for the first time.

Silver Voices, an advocate group for pensioners, said those with no other income aside from the state pension risked paying income tax from next year due to frozen allowances.

To avoid this it has proposed increasing the personal allowance, currently £12,570, by £1,000 from April and then uprating it on the same basis as the pensions triple lock.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/reeves-told-to-raise-personal-allowance-by-1-000-to-stop-state-pension-tax-raid/ar-AA1zKAPH?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=ff00eec1652a4f3ff1ff79f26eef9caa&ei=26

Charities ‘shocked’ and ‘stunned’ by decision to cut aid to fund defence spending

Charities and aid organisations have criticised the Prime Minister’s “reckless” decision to cut the aid budget in order to increase defence spending, labelling it a “betrayal of the world’s most vulnerable”.

Sir Keir Starmer announced a dramatic increase in defence spending from its current 2.3% to 2.5% by 2027 in response to “tyrant” Vladimir Putin and amid uncertainty over the US’s commitment to European security.

The change means spending £13.4 billion more on defence from 2027, but, in order to find the increase, development assistance aid will be slashed form its current 0.5% of gross national income to 0.3% in the next two years.

Charities have said the changes will have “devastating” repercussions and will have “direct consequences for children and families in the UK as well as around the world”.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/charities-shocked-and-stunned-by-decision-to-cut-aid-to-fund-defence-spending/ar-AA1zKLnn?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=ff00eec1652a4f3ff1ff79f26eef9caa&ei=35

Jimbuna
02-25-25, 11:52 AM
You simply couldn't make this up!!

Labour MP jailed for punching man in street will receive full pay while in prison

Mike Amesbury will still be paid his £91,346 taxpayer-funded salary despite being handed 10-week sentence for ‘drunken brawl’
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2025/02/24/labour-mp-mike-amesbury-jailed-punching-man-in-street/?msockid=3cbf037a65306e9a2d01162464a76f6a

Commander Wallace
02-25-25, 12:03 PM
You simply couldn't make this up!!


Where do I sign up ? To be the puncher, not the punchee. :yep: :haha:

Jimbuna
02-25-25, 12:30 PM
Where do I sign up ? To be the puncher, not the punchee. :yep: :haha:

Any constituency held by a LIEbour MP :)

Jimbuna
02-26-25, 02:18 PM
Looks like the thug is also a softie.

Jailed MP Mike Amesbury to return to court to appeal against sentence

Jailed MP Mike Amesbury is to return to court later this week to appeal against his sentence.

The Runcorn and Helsby MP, who was given a 10-week prison sentence on Monday for punching a man in the street, will attend an appeal hearing at Chester Crown Court on Thursday morning, a court spokesman said.

The sentence leaves the 55-year-old at risk of being ousted if his constituents back a petition calling for a by-election.

The former Labour MP has been sitting as an Independent for the Cheshire seat since he was suspended by the party after his arrest last year.

There is no automatic suspension for MPs serving a custodial sentence, although opposition parties have called for Amesbury to resign so a by-election can be held.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/jailed-mp-mike-amesbury-to-return-to-court-to-appeal-against-sentence/ar-AA1zPYCq?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=d465166026b94b7b849f77a662633770&ei=46

Jimbuna
02-26-25, 02:21 PM
Ed Miliband is accused of breaking his election promise

Ed Miliband was last night accused of breaking his election promise to slash energy bills as millions of households face paying another £111 a year from April.

The Energy Secretary pledged during the election campaign that his controversial plan to decarbonise the electricity system by 2030 would reduce household bills by £300.

But yesterday, the regulator Ofgem announced the energy price cap will rise from £1,738 a year to £1,849 – 6.4 per cent – following a spike in wholesale prices.

The third consecutive rise will equate to £111 for an average household per year, or around £9.25 a month. It brings the average total rise in energy bills since Labour took power to £281.

Conservative energy spokesman Andrew Bowie last night said: ‘The latest hike in the energy price cap is a betrayal to the families who Ed Miliband promised to save £300 on their bills. Labour’s election promise is shot and bills are on the rise.

‘The Government are not being honest about the trade-offs required to fund their fantastical energy policies – it will be families who are hit with the bill.’

Mr Miliband said the price cap rise was ‘worrying news’ for many families but insisted that making Britain a ‘clean energy superpower’ would bring down bills.

He added that around 2.7million extra households, including nearly a million with children, would be eligible for the £150 Warm Home Discount next winter. This would bring the total number of recipient homes to more than 6million.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/ed-miliband-is-accused-of-breaking-his-election-promise/ar-AA1zMSFH?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=d465166026b94b7b849f77a662633770&ei=94

Catfish
02-26-25, 04:59 PM
Looks like the thug is also a softie.
I thought this is the U*K* Politics thread?
At least no one in the Yuck tries to enter Putin's or Trump's rectum.

Catfish
02-26-25, 05:48 PM
https://news.sky.com/story/rod-stewart-labels-vladimir-putin-an-a-e-and-urges-support-for-ukraine-right-to-the-end-13079586

Jimbuna
02-27-25, 06:44 AM
:haha:

Jimbuna
02-28-25, 06:32 AM
It's starting to become more embarrassing with each passing day.

Yvette Cooper new portrait is back-slapping self-congratulation while Brits struggle

Labour's failure on immigration is clear. Yet, instead of bringing forward any plan to fix the unfolding crisis in the channel, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has been busy on other matters - like hanging portraits of herself in Parliament replacing the great British Admiral, Nelson.

Because whilst illegals cross the channel and more and more asylum hotels are used, Labour is focusing on self-glorification and vanity. The numbers we have seen today prove it. More illegals in hotels that Labour pledged to shut. Deportations collapsing. And 96% of illegals crossing by boat, staying in this country indefinitely.

38,079 so-called asylum seekers are currently cosied up at our expense. And that's been on the rise since Labour took over.

And the asylum backlog is up under Labour, with 90,000 cases waiting for a decision.

Deportations of small boat arrivals are at rock bottom, with only 4% of those who waltzed up on our shores unlawfully being kicked out of this country.

Instead of sorting this out, Labour is actively choosing to make it easier for illegals to stay in our country. They're letting illegals claim asylum despite the Conservative government passing laws stopping it.

They are even fast-tracking a British passport for illegals, debasing the value of our citizenship and as good as stamping on what it means to earn a passport through service.

And they're watering down age checks, making it easier for illegals to pose as kids so they can skirt our laws and putting fully grown men in classrooms with teenage girls. Labour is rewarding criminality, and taxpayers are left picking up the tab.

The Home Secretary, Yvette Cooper, should be fixing this crisis, not toasting herself.

Her new portrait in parliament, which replaces that of Admiral Nelson, a national icon who defended Britain, symbolises the vanity, hubris, and ineptitude of this government. Under Yvette, our borders are left defenceless.

Nelson fought to protect Britain's sovereignty, but Cooper gave it to criminals. And whilst Labour indulges in back-slapping self-congratulation, hardworking Britons are struggling under the weight of this government's failures.

On every front, they are backing down or screwing up. The UK needs strong leadership and the restoration of control over our borders.

Whilst Labour celebrates itself, the Conservatives will fight to fix this crisis. Britons deserve so much better, and only the Conservatives will deliver it.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/travel/news/yvette-cooper-takes-break-from-failing-on-immigration-to-remove-nelson-s-portrait/ar-AA1zVt65?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=deab2a7c64e44be7dcefa1aafb099223&ei=11

Jimbuna
02-28-25, 08:14 AM
International Development minister quits over aid cuts

International Development Minister Anneliese Dodds has resigned over the prime minister's cuts to the aid budget.

In a letter to the prime minister,, external Dodds said the cuts to international aid, announced earlier this week to fund an increase in defence spending, would "remove food and healthcare from desperate people - deeply harming the UK's reputation".

She told Sir Keir Starmer she had delayed her resignation until after his meeting with President Trump, saying it was "imperative that you had a united cabinet behind you as you set off for Washington".

The MP said it was with "sadness" that she was resigning, adding she knew Sir Keir was not "ideologically opposed" to international development.

Ahead of his trip to meet Trump, Sir Keir announced aid funding would be reduced from 0.5% of gross national income to 0.3% in 2027 in order to fund an increase in defence spending.

Defending the move, the prime minister said it was "not a decision I wanted to make" but added there was "no driver of migration and poverty like conflict".

In her resignation letter, Dodds warned that the cut would "also likely lead to a UK pull-out from numerous African, Caribbean and Western Balkan nations - at a time when Russia has been aggressively increasing its global presence".

"It will likely lead to withdrawal from regional banks and a reduced commitment to the World Bank; the UK being shut out of numerous multilateral bodies; and a reduced voice for the UK in the G7, G20 and in climate negotiations."

Dodds said the post-war global order had "come crashing down" and that she welcomed an increase in defence spending.

"I stood ready to work with you to deliver that increased spending, knowing some might well have had to come from ODA [overseas development assistance].

"I also expected we would collectively discuss our fiscal rules and approach to taxation, as other nations are doing."

However, Dodds said that instead of taking this approach the prime minister had decided to allow the ODA to "absorb the entire burden".
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cpv44982jlgo

https://i.postimg.cc/T1PJ1DHR/oh-dear-how-sad-never-mind.jpg (https://postimages.org/)

Jimbuna
03-01-25, 02:19 PM
Coming from Two Tier Keir I'd have thought the words were worth nothing.

Starmer tells Zelensky he has 'full backing' of UK

Sir Keir Starmer has told Volodymyr Zelensky he has "full backing across the United Kingdom" as the two met in Downing Street.

The Ukrainian president told the prime minister he was happy his country had "such friends", after arriving in the UK in the wake of a White House meeting with US President Donald Trump that descended into a row between the two leaders.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cg4k137ezlgo

Catfish
03-02-25, 04:23 PM
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=57rv-3jxxew&pp=ygUKSGFyZCB0aW1lcw%3D%3D

Jimbuna
03-03-25, 10:05 AM
Angela Rayner dealt huge blow as major 'workers rights' plan faces chop

The Deputy Prime Minister is expected to be dealt a major blow after reports ministers are set to axe plans to give people the "right to switch off" outside working hours. The policy, which was championed by Angela Rayner, was a crucial part of the Government's manifesto promise of a "New Deal for Working People" designed to bolster employment rights.

The decision to cancel the policy has reportedly been taken by Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds and Chancellor Rachel Reeves amid concern it would have placed too much of a burden on businesses, the Sunday Times reports. A Government source told the newspaper the "right to switch off is dead". The policy would have followed similar laws already seen in France, Belgium and Ireland.

It did not appear in the Employment Bill which is currently making its way through Parliament, but there were promises from ministers it would emerge in future.

Ministers are now expected to say in this coming week that the policy has been dropped, when they table a series of amendments to the bill.

They are said to be making the change in a bid to boost business confidence, after the Budget placed extra costs on employers in the form of the National Insurance contributions hike.

Some of Britain's most famous piers have told the Daily Express Ms Reeves' Budget is having a devastating impact on the industry.

The Sunday Times' Government source added: "Growth that puts money in people's pockets is the number one priority of this Government's plan for change.

"That means making Britain the best country in the world to do business and a key part of that is removing unnecessary barriers."

Ms Rayner, who led Labour's workers' rights programme while in opposition, has reportedly agreed to the move, although it is unclear how supportive she is.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/angela-rayner-dealt-huge-blow-as-major-workers-rights-plan-faces-chop/ar-AA1A6AS3?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=647f9ac430bc4a98a1f463e226b46ee6&ei=46

Rockstar
03-04-25, 07:51 AM
https://youtu.be/EfIL12DzPOE

British media and herr Starmer driving a final wedge between us would be a spectacular achievement. To do it without a shot fired would be one of the most masterful strategic moves in history. A disaster for many nations and global security and the last straw on an already fragile so called ‘special relationship’.

Probably not a good idea for an island without a navy and more dandy’s prancing around on horses than infantry and armor.

Jimbuna
03-04-25, 08:51 AM
Boat loads of mostly men are breaking into Britain while leaders talk about protecting Europe

If only we put as much effort into defending our own borders as we are when it comes to protecting Ukraine's.

Nearly 600 illegal migrants crossed the Channel yesterday. The highest number for a single day this year.

2,716 have arrived this year - 20 per cent more than at the same point last year.

What's Home Secretary Yvette Cooper done? Agreed to send even more money to the French - in fact she's extended the deal until 2027.

Oh but it's on one condition...that they build a £12.5m migrant detention centre in Dunkirk. Yeh alright, they were supposed to do that years ago.

It's been held up due to planning rows. This mythical migrant detention centre was part of the £480m Britain agreed to pay for additional border patrols and surveillance equipment such as drones and night-vision binoculars.

You are paying for 730 of the 1,200 French police officers dedicated to patrolling France’s northern border.

The French, after all these years, have literally only just passed a law to allow police officers to intercept migrant boats in shallow water.

So this whole time they were operating under a law that prevented them from stopping migrant boats in the water - which is why people smugglers have been putting people in boats in rivers that lead into the Channel because once they get in those boats they can't be stopped.

Does that sound like the French really want to do anything about the problem?

A convenient law that prevented them stopping any migrants in the water, their new detention centre which Brits have already paid for, can't be built because of planning rows...we even paid for night vision cameras on the beaches that the French installed, didn't turn on and then when they did only a few of them worked.

Under Labour the number of migrant hotels has risen by at least seven.

A load of European leaders talking about our values and protecting Europe from invasion...and literally whilst that's happening boat loads of mostly men from the Middle East and Africa are breaking into Britain.

Starmer has formed a coalition of the willing to help Ukraine...Maybe we actually need a 'coalition of the willing' to prevent Britain from being invaded.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/travel/news/boat-loads-of-mostly-men-are-breaking-into-britain-while-leaders-talk-about-protecting-europe-says-patrick-christys/ar-AA1AaRuG?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=e1293a968c764ea3879c52bf30133802&ei=8

Catfish
03-04-25, 10:31 AM
^^
"We rate The Duran as a Questionable source based on far-right-wing bias, promotion of Russian propaganda, right-wing conspiracies, and lack of transparency."
Still both views may be true. But as we cannot know for sure this narrative is as credible as any other russian source. Or ukrainian, of course.
Regardless what the media say, there will be support from other countries, even if the US have gallantly chickened out.

Rockstar
03-04-25, 01:47 PM
Sir Keir Starmer has said he is "ready and willing" to put UK troops on the ground in Ukraine to help guarantee its security as part of a peace deal.

Good luck with that.


https://youtu.be/e4TmtkjcY9A

https://youtu.be/po9duwvipB0

Rockstar
03-04-25, 02:03 PM
^^
"We rate The Duran as a Questionable source based on far-right-wing bias, promotion of Russian propaganda, right-wing conspiracies, and lack of transparency."
Still both views may be true. But as we cannot know for sure this narrative is as credible as any other russian source. Or ukrainian, of course.
Regardless what the media say, there will be support from other countries, even if the US have gallantly chickened out.

Gallantly chickened out? Who do think is keeping European Asian trade routes through the Red Sea open the Deutsche Marine or Royal Navy? Hell we have more US Coast Guard cutters in theater than either of those two combined.

Catfish
03-04-25, 03:20 PM
Chickened out of supporting an ally called Ukraine?
Well maybe not in the long run, we will see.

Rockstar
03-04-25, 04:22 PM
Chickened out of supporting an ally called Ukraine?
Well maybe not in the long run, we will see.

Chicken out? You cowards are working both ends. On one hand you’re loaning Ukraine 19 billion in financial aid and on the other you’re paying Russia 23 billion for energy to keep the war going. Now you, Herr Starmer, Macron and Zelensky want US troops in Ukraine to protect that arrangement? Send your own soldiers to protect your interests you were warned by Trump in 2018 not to become dependent on Russian energy, it’s your bed, you sleep in it.

Catfish
03-04-25, 04:30 PM
^ Right :haha:
It it was my decision ... I know you are only here for trolling but seriously. We hope Europe does exactly that.

Rockstar
03-04-25, 04:34 PM
^ Right :haha:
It it was my decision ... I know you are only here for trolling but seriously. We hope Europe does exactly that.

Oh look more common ground! We hope Europe does exactly that too.

Catfish
03-04-25, 05:04 PM
^ there is no common ground left.
[...] you were warned by Trump in 2018 not to become dependent on Russian energy, it’s your bed, you sleep in it.

Hmm, can you explain this then?

"A former spy and close friend of Vladimir Putin has been engineering a restart of Russia’s Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to Europe with the backing of US investors, a once unthinkable move that shows the breadth of Donald Trump’s rapprochement with Moscow.

The efforts on a deal, according to several people aware of the discussions, were the brainchild of Matthias Warnig, an ex-Stasi officer in East Germany who until 2023 ran Nord Stream 2’s parent company for the Kremlin-controlled gas giant Gazprom.

Warnig’s plan involved outreach to the Trump team through US businessmen, the people said, as part of back-channel efforts to broker an end to the war in Ukraine while deepening economic ties between the US and Russia."

https://www.ft.com/content/dc9c51ab-03cb-47ba-ad0a-09c4deed9b50

B.t.w. the "Moscow Times" is not located in Russia, nor does it follow the Kremlin's propaganda:

https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2025/03/03/russia-and-us-held-secret-talks-on-restarting-nord-stream-2-pipeline-bild-a88225

https://www.firstpost.com/world/putin-ally-backed-by-us-investors-pushes-plan-to-restart-nord-stream-2-pipeline-13867961.html

Rockstar
03-04-25, 07:08 PM
^ there is no common ground left.


Hmm, can you explain this then?

"A former spy and close friend of Vladimir Putin has been engineering a restart of Russia’s Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to Europe with the backing of US investors, a once unthinkable move that shows the breadth of Donald Trump’s rapprochement with Moscow.

The efforts on a deal, according to several people aware of the discussions, were the brainchild of Matthias Warnig, an ex-Stasi officer in East Germany who until 2023 ran Nord Stream 2’s parent company for the Kremlin-controlled gas giant Gazprom.

Warnig’s plan involved outreach to the Trump team through US businessmen, the people said, as part of back-channel efforts to broker an end to the war in Ukraine while deepening economic ties between the US and Russia."

https://www.ft.com/content/dc9c51ab-03cb-47ba-ad0a-09c4deed9b50

B.t.w. the "Moscow Times" is not located in Russia, nor does it follow the Kremlin's propaganda:

https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2025/03/03/russia-and-us-held-secret-talks-on-restarting-nord-stream-2-pipeline-bild-a88225

https://www.firstpost.com/world/putin-ally-backed-by-us-investors-pushes-plan-to-restart-nord-stream-2-pipeline-13867961.html


According to a recent report by the Financial Times, which cites anonymous sources with knowledge of the matter,

Looking at your links the Financial Times article is the original source . The others links dont offer anything new and seem to simply regurgitate a mirror image of the original FT article.

I guess if you repeat the same thing enough times people may begin to believe it.

Gives me a Steele Dossier vibe, made up b.s.. My advice is to be wary of any article which cite anonymous sources. If history has shown us anything it’s how they made a lot of gullible people here look very foolish.

I guess my first question would be who the source is ? No sense in arguing anything else until that can be determined.

https://youtu.be/b3AN2wY4qAM

Jimbuna
03-05-25, 07:29 AM
Can there ever be an end to this insanity?

Express witnesses more migrants being escorted across Channel by French ship

Dozens of migrants have been intercepted crossing the Channel as a "surge" of boats from France continues.

The Daily Express witnessed the French navy ship Ridens escorting the inflatable - packed with scores of men - to the median line of the Channel on Wednesday before Border Force's Typhoon collected the asylum seekers and took them to Dover.

Some 326 crossed the Channel on Tuesday, adding to the 182 on Monday and 592 on Sunday, Home Office figures show.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/express-witnesses-more-migrants-being-escorted-across-channel-by-french-ship/ar-AA1AidYO?ocid=mailsignout&pc=U591&cvid=6d5c22f9887d4e5e8eb6d6bf98b255c9&ei=27

Jimbuna
03-05-25, 07:40 AM
With a bit of luck they'll manage to kill/destroy each other and Two Tier will closely follow.

Even Labour's had enough of Ed Miliband - now Rachel Reeves is moving in for the kill

Reports suggest the Labour cabinet is sick of his wild green dreams - with Chancellor Rachel Reeves leading the charge to put him out to pasture.

There was bound to be a backlash against Ed Miliband once the reality of governing sunk in. Because the Energy Secretary has zero connection with reality.

Miliband has a head full of eco dreams, and I'm sure they're lovely. But they're wreaking havoc in the real world.

Now the handful of grown-ups in the Labour cabinet have had enough. What took them so long?

Miliband is a man on a mission - a clean energy superpower mission. Unfortunately, it's now clashing with a more urgent task.

Which is building the economy to fund higher military spending and stand up to Vladimir Putin.

This mission may not always be clean, and it probably won't be green, but it is critical. And Miliband is standing in the way.

He's turned into the cabinet's number one blocker.

Reeves is desperate to deliver growth - as she should, given all she's done to destroy it as Chancellor.

Yet at every turn, Miliband is in the way.

Britain urgently needs cheap, abundant energy to grow. Yet the UK's own Energy Secretary is busy shutting down North Sea oil and gas, while blocking other options like fracking before they've been properly explored.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/other/even-labour-s-had-enough-of-ed-miliband-now-rachel-reeves-is-moving-in-for-the-kill/ar-AA1AhNIK?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=d37786787b2f4942a1a47d0490ada251&ei=18

Jimbuna
03-06-25, 01:50 PM
Nauseating is far too polite a word :)

WINSTON Starmer, cries the latest cover of The Economist.

It is a front page that Boris Johnson in his prime would have killed for.

But here he is, Sir Keir, made up as Sir Winston. And it is nauseating.

https://i.postimg.cc/ydrNW20f/Gl-YEHWXX0-AAk-Br-L.jpg (https://postimg.cc/N9mtzJJT)

Jimbuna
03-07-25, 09:58 AM
Fiscal drag in its finest form :nope:

Pensioners Caught in Tax Trap as State Pension Breaches Allowance

Millions of state pensioners in the UK may soon find themselves paying income tax on their pensions for the first time. According to Deutsche Bank forecasts, state pension payments could increase by 5.5% in April 2026, pushing them above the current tax-free personal allowance and triggering unexpected tax liabilities.

The government’s freeze on tax thresholds means that as pension payments rise, more retirees are being drawn into taxation. Experts warn that this “stealth tax” could significantly impact pensioners, particularly those relying solely on state support.

Critics argue that while the government maintains income tax rates have not increased, the effects of frozen thresholds mean more individuals will pay tax each year.

State Pension Increase Set to Breach Tax-Free Threshold
State pension payments are expected to rise to £12,631 in April 2026, surpassing the £12,570 tax-free personal allowance, according to Deutsche Bank. This would mean pensioners receiving only the state pension would have to start paying income tax—an obligation many have never faced before.

The increase follows the application of the triple lock mechanism, which ensures state pensions rise in line with either inflation, wage growth, or 2.5%, whichever is highest. While designed to protect pensioners’ income, it has inadvertently placed many in the tax net due to the frozen personal allowance.

According to Sarah Coles, head of personal finance at Hargreaves Lansdown, this policy has already led to a substantial increase in the number of taxpayers. “In 2024/25, there are an estimated 37.4 million income taxpayers, up 4.4 million since tax thresholds were frozen in 2021/22,” she said.

This trend is set to continue, meaning that pensioners who were previously untaxed will see a portion of their pension income deducted. Critics argue that this effectively amounts to a tax rise, even though tax rates themselves have not changed.

Critics Warn of Financial Strain on Pensioners
Campaigners and financial analysts have expressed concerns that this additional tax burden will hit pensioners at a time when many are already struggling with higher living costs.

Dennis Reed, director of Silver Voices, highlighted the impact on those reliant on fixed incomes. “Older people on fixed incomes are facing a cruel double whammy, squeezing their living standards to the point of poverty. The research nails the lie that older people will be better off under Labour this year.” he said.

The political debate surrounding pensioner taxation has intensified, with some blaming the current government’s policies and others pointing to Labour’s approach to pensioner support.

Tory MP Kevin Hollinrake accused Labour of failing to protect pensioners, stating: “First Labour snatched away the winter fuel allowance and is forcing councils to hike up council tax to pay for Labour’s new jobs tax despite Starmer promising ‘not a penny more’ during the election”.

Meanwhile, Sarah Coles argued that the ongoingtax threshold freeze is a discreet way for the government to increase tax revenues without explicitly raising tax rates. “Yet it feels like a crafty way to hike how much tax we pay – while still being able to say taxes haven’t risen.” she said.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/pensioners-caught-in-tax-trap-as-state-pension-breaches-allowance/ar-AA1ArW2j?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=bd92e3dbf62e471f8419ae751c49f69b&ei=42

Dargo
03-07-25, 01:01 PM
Who wants to be seen in a Tesla any more? With Elon Musk committed to the far-right and twice giving the Hitler salute, British Tesla owners are dumping their cars en masse. This is according to figures from Auto Trader. In February, there were 4,822 used Swasticars for sale on the site. That's 36 % more than in December and a whopping 70 % more than in the same period last year, reports The Telegraph (https://finance.yahoo.com/news/second-hand-teslas-flood-market-154526718.html). Meanwhile, prices of second-hand Tesla cars are falling fast. For a three-year-old second-hand Model 3,17 % less is paid than a year ago. For electric cars from other brands, the price drop is much less steep.

Tesla is not only suffering from Musk's support for Donald Trump, AfD and British right-wing extremist hooligan Tommy Robinson. Car buyers are also more likely to choose an electric vehicle from another brand, as other car manufacturers are now technologically inferior to Tesla. Falling sales are affecting Tesla's share price and thus Musk's wealth. The DOGE chief has already lost over $150 billion (https://qz.com/elon-musk-tesla-net-worth-loss-1851768417) this year. That still makes him the richest man in the world, by the way.

mapuc
03-07-25, 02:58 PM
Have nothing but contempt towards far left and far right.

Markus

Jimbuna
03-08-25, 08:48 AM
Military spending is touted as a remedy for Britain’s ailing economy. Here’s why it won’t work

Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves have announced their latest rescue remedy for Britain’s economy. Old promises – good jobs, thriving small businesses and regional equality – will now be delivered by an increased military budget, used to buy equipment from the private sector. More military spending is not a tonic, however, but a poison that will worsen our economic ills and make Britain less safe in the long run.

Assurances of prosperity for small businesses and ex-industrial towns rest on a misleading depiction of military spending. Last financial year, 56% of Ministry of Defence spending with UK businesses went to London and the south of England. In the same year, nearly 40% of the £37.6bn military equipment budget went to just 10 multinational companies. “Slashing red tape” and granting small businesses more access to the military budget will not build a family-run missile factory on every street corner of ex-industrial Britain.

BAE Systems, leading weapons dealer to government and happy recipient of 15% of the equipment budget, has just declared record orders and rising profits. Military contractors are large multinationals that reward their asset manager shareholders from government contracts: since 2015, BAE has paid out £9.8bn to shareholders while receiving more than a fifth of its global revenue each year from the British government.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/military-spending-is-touted-as-a-remedy-for-britain-s-ailing-economy-here-s-why-it-won-t-work/ar-AA1Askrv?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=bb630ae258d24185bc4304e3ca5b4aac&ei=39

Jimbuna
03-08-25, 09:05 AM
And so the madness continues

The English Channel is at the centre of a fresh migrant tragedy, after one person died while attempting to cross to the UK by small boat on Saturday.

A second migrant is reported to have fallen overboard from a small boat and is missing.

The tragedy comes as more small boats have made the illegal journey from France today, the eighth straight day of migrant crossings.

It takes the total number who have crossed since last Saturday to around 1,900 and has shattered all previous records for the number of migrant arrivals at this point in any year since the crisis began in 2016.

The latest death takes the number of migrants who have perished already this year to six.

French media are reporting that maritime authorities confirmed the migrant died early on Saturday morning near the community of Marck, in the Pas-de-Calais.

A lifeless body was dropped off on a local beach.

Despite efforts by rescue services to resuscitate the man, he was declared dead on the beach.

French newspapers said that migrant who died was a 60-year-old man from Kuwait.

The small boat that dropped his body on Marck beach is reported to have headed back out into the Channel and towards the UK.

GB News Kent producer said that the Border Force vessel Volunteer picked up those onboard one migrant boat, after it reached UK waters just before 10am.

He later counted 70 migrants being offloaded at the Border Force migrant processing centre at Dover harbour.

Another Border Force vessel Typhoon is picking up migrants from two more small boats that made it to British waters further along the Channel.

The latest arrivals mark a deepening crisis for Sir Keir Starmer, who promised to "smash the gangs."

Instead, the new Labour government is scrambling to deal with record migrant arrivals.

One senior maritime security source told GB News that on current trends, "this year is set to easily overtake last year" in terms of those arriving by small boat.

More than 36,800 migrants arrived illegally across the Channel in 2024, a figure that was 25% higher than the previous year.

This year already, with almost 4,000 crossings, the figure is some 17% ahead of the 2024 at this point.

A Home Office spokesperson said: "We all want to end dangerous small boat crossings, which threaten lives and undermine our border security.

"The people-smuggling gangs do not care if the vulnerable people they exploit live or die, as long as they pay.

"We will stop at nothing to dismantle their business models and bring them to justice."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/migrant-dies-as-more-than-150-head-for-uk-on-eighth-straight-day-of-small-boat-crossings/ar-AA1Avsru?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=eb2993456db54fae9c488cb01daa1d48&ei=65

Jimbuna
03-09-25, 10:38 AM
https://i.postimg.cc/ZK75JVJc/aaaa.jpg (https://postimages.org/)
https://i.postimg.cc/ZRSTwQLT/bbbb.jpg (https://postimages.org/)

Jimbuna
03-09-25, 02:00 PM
What will be in the chancellor's Spring Statement?

The chancellor will give an update on her plans for the UK economy when she gives a statement alongside an economic forecast on 26 March.

Rachel Reeves has previously ruled out further tax rises, but faces difficult choices because of the performance of the UK economy and world events.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c9qjn879lr4o

Jimbuna
03-10-25, 10:20 AM
A very well done to Rachel from Accounts....possibly the most useless Chancellor in modern times.

More than 300,000 small businesses plan to axe jobs as Budget starts to bite

Following recent government Budget measures targeting employment, indications of a deceleration in the jobs market are surfacing, with more than 300,000 businesses anticipated to dismiss staff.

The significant rise in national insurance contributions (NICs) implemented by the Chancellor last October, amounting to £25 billion, is expected to come into effect next month, as reported by City AM.

A study from digital lender Iwoca suggests that over 300,000 small business owners might reduce their workforce as a direct reaction to the upsurge in national insurance costs.

The company's research included a survey of 500 business proprietors, which revealed that 31% are contemplating smaller pay increases while 27% intend to put staff promotions on hold.

Additionally, the BDO’s employment index indicated a decline, falling from 94.72 last month to 94.30 currently, with a projection that it may sink to its lowest level since the financial crisis of 2008.

British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) research shows that a sweeping 82% of business leaders think the Labour Party’s national insurance increase will affect their companies negatively.

Moreover, the Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC) has reported a notable slowdown in job openings, marking the second sharpest reduction in five years. This report arrives on the heels of alarming data from the Adam Smith Institute (ASI) regarding a "crisis" in business confidence after the Budget was announced.

A meager 3.8% of those surveyed by ASI expressed 'high or very high confidence' in the UK as a conducive environment for business operations.

A spokesperson from the Treasury conveyed an optimistic outlook to The Times, referencing recent positive economic indicators: "Lloyds Banking Group reported last month that business confidence is at a six-month high. Since the general election, there have been three interest rate cuts, real wages are rising at the highest level in six months and working people's payslips have been protected from high taxes."

Looking ahead, the spokesperson emphasized the government's commitment to adapting to global shifts, adding, "The world is changing. That's why the government is going further and faster to deliver our Plan for Change to kickstart economic growth and put more money in people's pockets."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/more-than-300-000-small-businesses-plan-to-axe-jobs-as-budget-starts-to-bite/ar-AA1ABm5u?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=60b73c094b764eb08172ca585401e429&ei=21

Jimbuna
03-11-25, 01:51 PM
LIEbour ar at it again, taking from the poorest and most in need yet leaving the wealthiest in society alone.

DWP crackdown to push '700,000 PIP claimants into poverty' as thousands denied benefit payments

The growing controversy over potential cuts to Personal Independence Payment (PIP) has sparked urgent warnings from charities, with fears that such reductions could push 700,000 disabled households into poverty.

As Chancellor Rachel Reeves prepares to deliver the Spring Statement, concerns are mounting that any cuts would exacerbate the crisis, especially with PIP rejection rates already soaring above 332,000.

More than a dozen organisations have signed an open letter disputing Government claims that benefit cuts would encourage employment among disabled people.

The letter, signed by organisations including Disability Rights UK, Citizens Advice, Scope, and Sense, calls on Reeves to "safeguard" PIP benefits.

Charities emphasised that PIP is a "lifeline for disabled households" that often enables people to remain in work.

The letter stated: "We agree with the Government's ambition to support more disabled people into work. However, making cuts to disability benefits will not achieve this goal or fix the system."

The organisations warned that the rumoured £6bn worth of cuts could have a "catastrophic impact" on vulnerable households. They urged the Chancellor to "think again about cuts to disability benefits".

The warning follows recent data shared by Work and Pensions minister Sir Stephen Timms revealing that the DWP "disallowed" 332,800 PIP claims at assessment during the 2023/2024 financial year.

Of these rejected claims, only 13,500 were subsequently awarded PIP following an appeal - just four per cent of those initially disallowed.

A further 18,900 appeals have not yet been cleared, according to figures up to September 2024.

The high rejection rate comes amid criticism that the DWP is providing "unacceptably poor service" to disability benefits claimants. Many claimants face lengthy waits for their appeals to be processed.

A Government spokesperson defended the planned reforms, stating that the current welfare system is "broken and must change.

"Without reform, more people will be locked out of jobs, despite many wanting to work. That is not just bad for the economy, it's bad for people, too."

Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall has highlighted that 2.8 million people are out of work due to ill health.

The cost of working-age sickness and disability benefits has increased by £20 billion since the pandemic. It is projected to reach £70 billion over the next five years.

Charities insist there is "little evidence to suggest cutting benefits increases employment outcomes" and argue the benefits system needs reform, not cuts.

They acknowledge that while many disabled people want to work, they require appropriate support systems to help them find suitable employment. For others, work simply isn't a viable option due to their conditions.

Shelley Hopkinson from Turn2us criticised DWP delays, saying: "When payments are delayed, people struggle to afford basic essentials and care, their health deteriorates, and the stress can affect their ability to work."

She urged the Labour Government to prioritise creating a "fair, efficient, and accessible social security system."

The Chancellor is set to deliver her spring statement on March 26, with welfare reform expected to be a key target for savings.

Ministers aim to achieve an 80 per cent employment rate through what they describe as "meaningful, principled reforms rather than arbitrary cuts to spending."

With PIP rejection rates already high, disability advocates argue any further cuts would only deepen existing hardships.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/dwp-crackdown-to-push-700-000-pip-claimants-into-poverty-as-thousands-denied-benefit-payments/ar-AA1AHPwU?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=eec99cd0a9a14530b32f2925b198fad0&ei=77

Jimbuna
03-12-25, 01:46 PM
Indecent exposure ex-aide should quit - Streeting

Health Secretary Wes Streeting has called for his former assistant to stand down as an east London councillor after the aide admitted indecent exposure.

Sam Gould, 33, a Redbridge representative, pleaded guilty to two separate counts at Barkingside Magistrates' Court in Ilford on Monday.

The Labour councillor has been suspended from the party but "there is no process for his suspension" from Redbridge Council, the local authority says.

Mr Streeting, who said Gould had exposed himself to a mother and her daughter, said there were "no words to express his horror" at their ordeal, the trauma of which they would have to deal with for some time to come.

'Despicable behaviour'

He added: "As soon as I was made aware of his arrest he was suspended, and as soon as the guilty plea was entered, I took immediate steps to sack him through official HR processes.

"There are no excuses for his appalling behaviour. I am calling for him, again, to resign as a Redbridge councillor immediately."

Kam Rai, leader of Redbridge Council, said he was "shocked and appalled" by the "inexcusable betrayal of his residents".

He said: "As soon as Mr Gould's arrest was communicated over the weekend, he was rightly suspended by the party.

"Unfortunately, there is no process for his suspension from the council. My heart goes out to the victims who have had to endure his despicable behaviour."

Gould, of Hornchurch, east London, was bailed until sentencing on 7 April.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cwynxyxl9e1o

Jimbuna
03-12-25, 01:49 PM
Starmer says 'all options on table' on US tariffs

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has said the UK will "keep all options on the table" as US President Donald Trump's tariffs on imports of steel and aluminium take effect.

The UK exports hundreds of millions of pounds worth of steel to the US every year, which will be subject to the 25% levy.

The EU, facing the same tariffs, said on Wednesday it would impose counter-tariffs on €26bn (£22bn) of US goods, and Canada also responded with countermeasures, in an escalation of the wider trade war.

Sir Keir said the UK was taking a "pragmatic" approach and was pushing for a trade deal, but opposition politicians called for a more "robust" response.

When Sir Keir visited the White House last month, trade was high on the agenda, with the PM seeking a trade deal and exemptions to Trump's tariffs.

Asked at the time if the prime minister had convinced him not to impose trade tariffs on the UK, Trump said "he tried", adding: "He was working hard, I'll tell you that. He earned whatever the hell they pay him over there."

It is understood tariffs were also discussed during a phone call between Sir Keir and Trump on Monday.

However, as the latest tariffs came into effect, there were no exemptions for any country.

European Union President Ursula von der Leyen said the EU's retaliatory tariffs were "strong but proportionate" and that the EU remains "open to negotiations".

The EU tariffs will be imposed on "products ranging from boats to bourbon to motorbikes," the EU said, external. They will be partially introduced on 1 April and fully in place on 13 April.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cx2r3md0j84o

Jimbuna
03-13-25, 08:52 AM
So Two Tier Keir is taking on the mantle of God now.

NHS England to be abolished, Keir Starmer announces

Sir Keir Starmer has announced he will abolish NHS England as part of his plans to overhaul the public sector.

Explaining his decision during a speech laying out plans to make the "overcautious, flabby state" more effective, including putting the NHS "back into democratic control", the prime minister said decisions about billions of pounds of taxpayer money should not be taken by an “arms-length” body.

He said the move would free up cash for doctors, nurses and frontline services, and cut red tape to help speed up improvements in the health service amid frustrations about the pace of change.

Starmer said: "I don’t see why decisions about £200bn of taxpayer money on something as fundamental to our security as the NHS should be taken by an arm’s length body, NHS England.

"And I can’t, in all honesty, explain to the British people why they should spend their money on two layers of bureaucracy. That money could and should be spent on, nurses, doctors, operations, GP appointments.

“So today, I can announce we’re going to cut bureaucracy… focus government on the priorities of working people, shift money to the front line.

“So I’m bringing management of the NHS back into democratic control by abolishing the arms-length body, NHS England.

“That will put the NHS back at the heart of government where it belongs, free it to focus on patients – less bureaucracy with more money for nurses."

Answering a question from a cancer patient on how the decision would improve NHS services, Starmer said: “Amongst the reasons we are abolishing it is because of the duplication.

“So, if you can believe it, we’ve got a communications team in NHS England, we’ve got a communications team in the health department of government; we’ve got a strategy team in NHS England, a strategy team in the government department. We are duplicating things that could be done once.

“If we strip that out, which is what we are doing today, that then allows us to free up that money to put it where it needs to be, which is the front line.”

The government said work would begin “immediately” to return many of NHS England’s functions to the Department of Health and Social Care.

In a statement in the Commons about the abolition of NHS England, health secretary Wes Streeting said staff were “drowning in the micromanagement”, which could now be solved.

Streeting added that value for money was not achievable with the current system, telling MPS: “There is always a duty on ministers to get as much value for taxpayers’ money as is possible and I cannot honestly say that it is achievable with the way that my department and NHS England are set up today...

“Frontline NHS staff are drowning in the micromanagement they are subjected to by the various and vast layers of bureaucracy.”

What is NHS England?
NHS England was set up in 2013 by Andrew Langley, the former Tory health secretary under the Coalition government.

It was established to give the NHS greater independence and is responsible for overseeing and delivering health services across England.

While funded by taxpayers, NHS England is a quango and therefore is not controlled by central government.

It collaborates with local clinical commissioning groups to address regional needs, distinct from the devolved NHS bodies in other UK nations, which have their own governance.

NHS England currently employs around 15,300 people.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/nhs-england-to-be-abolished-keir-starmer-announces/ar-AA1AQ57p?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=7df9a72c0c33474e9e1f4b9304496f01&ei=15

mapuc
03-13-25, 08:55 AM
Talking about deviate from promises made during the election campaign.

Markus

Jimbuna
03-13-25, 09:01 AM
That's the crux of the matter Markus, they have failed thus far to keep any pre-election promise.

Jimbuna
03-13-25, 09:04 AM
And next we have.....

Jonathan Reynolds finally apologises to Parliament over fabricated CV claim

Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds has finally apologised for misleading MPs by claiming to have been a solicitor before entering Parliament. Mr Reynolds said he worked as a solicitor for law firm Addleshaw Goddard before becoming an MP.

As well as making claims on his constituency website, he also told the House of Commons in 2014 that he "worked as a solicitor in Manchester city centre" before switching careers. However, it later emerged he did not qualify for the title because he did not complete his training contract.

In a point of order in the House on Wednesday, Mr Reynolds finally asked to correct the record.

He told MPs: "It has come to my attention that in a speech I gave on 28 April 2014 on the subject of High Speed Rail I made reference to my experience of using our local transport system in Greater Manchester when I 'worked as a solicitor in Manchester City centre'."

"I should have made clear that specifically that was a reference at the time to being a trainee solicitor.

"It was an inadvertent error, and although the speech was over a decade ago as it has been brought to my attention I would like to formally correct the record."

Shadow Justice Secretary Robert Jenrick told the Express Mr Reynolds should apologise for his other claims outside the Commons.

The top Tory blasted: "Jonathan Reynolds has finally admitted he lied in Parliament about being a solicitor.

"He should apologise for the many other instances, spanning well over a decade, where he deliberately lied about his qualifications.

"As a former director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer knows Reynolds broke the law. Unless Starmer sacks him, it'll be another case of two-tier justice under two-tier Keir."

In February the watchdog in charge of regulating the profession said they had previously looked into the claims and dropped them, however has now announced it has opened a fresh line of inquiries.

Under s17 of the Legal Services Act 2007, pretending to be a solicitor is a criminal offence, something the Tories are saying demands Mr Reynolds' resignation.

In a fresh statement this afternoon, the Solicitors' Regulation Agency (SRA) confirmed a second inquiry is now underway into the top Labour minister.

A spokesman said: "We looked at that issue at the time we became aware of it and contacted Mr Reynolds about the profiles."

"The materials were corrected, and we closed the matter with no further action based on all the evidence we had at the time.

"However, we've now become aware of further information, so we will look at this."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/jonathan-reynolds-finally-apologises-to-parliament-over-fabricated-cv-claim/ar-AA1ANgzb?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=7df9a72c0c33474e9e1f4b9304496f01&ei=43

Jimbuna
03-14-25, 06:27 AM
Fury as thousands sign petition to stop Rachel Reeves' 'ludicrous' state pension tax

Rachel Reeves is under pressure to stop pensioners from being skewered with a further hit to their finances as an online petition continues to grow. More than 80,000 people have singed the petition started by campaign group Silver Voices as they call on the Chancellor to stop pensioners from being taxed on their state pension.

Triple lock increases and frozen thresholds have left OAPs at risk of being taxed on their state pension, which for many, is their only source of income. Labour pledged to maintain the triple lock - which sees the state pension go up each year by whichever is highest out of 2.5%, inflation, or average earnings growth - in its election manifesto. Silver Voices director Dennis Reed said: "Because of the Silver Voices/Daily Express campaign it was impossible for the government of the day to scrap the vital triple lock, but now Labour is intending to erode it by stealth."

Mr Reed warned that countless other pensioners could begin to see their pension taxed from early next year with frozen tax personal allowances meaning that many might cross the current personal allowance of £12,570 in 2026.

He added: "If the basic state pension starts being taxed it undermines the whole principle of a safety net in retirement to ensure that the basic necessities in life can be afforded. And if Triple Lock increases each year are also taxed then that safeguard, to protect against sudden increases in the cost of living, is also undermined."

The Chancellor, who has already fallen foul of the pensioner community over her decision to scrap the winter fuel allowance, will deliver her spring statement on March 26. The tax-free personal allowance has been frozen at £12,570 until 2028, but the new state pension is due to increase to £11,973 next month.

But if it does not exceed the threshold next year, it will the year after as the triple lock means there will be a rise of at least 2.5% in April 2026 and 2.5% in April 2027.

Independent Age director of policy and influencing said: "Many of the older people on a low income that we support are worried about the prospect paying income tax on their state pension. These are people that are already cutting back on essentials like food and heating. Their budgets are already stretched to breaking point.

"By April, the gap between the new state pension and the tax-free personal allowance will be less than £1000. This will lead to people with small private pensions facing taxation that will put their finances under even more strain.

"We should all be able to live a later life in financial security, to live well rather than just survive. We need a consensus among all the political parties on the adequate income needed to prevent poverty in later life. Following this, long-term plans must be put into place to ensure every older person is able to receive this amount."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/fury-as-thousands-sign-petition-to-stop-rachel-reeves-ludicrous-state-pension-tax/ar-AA1AS8MI?ocid=msedgntp&pc=ENTPSP&cvid=ab6aaeeb060547bb8970177ab9d1741f&ei=14

Jimbuna
03-14-25, 11:39 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CReq3grLhz4

mapuc
03-14-25, 12:01 PM
I can understand Keir Starmer has some nicknames
Lier Starmer-Which I understand why
Two tier Starmer-This one is a riddle for me-Why is he called Two tier Starmer ?

Markus

Jimbuna
03-14-25, 12:17 PM
Take your pick my friend but the first two examples are spot on.

https://www.quora.com/What-does-the-phrase-two-tier-Keir-mean

mapuc
03-14-25, 02:49 PM
Thank you, it comes as a surprise no one tried to prosecute him. Or was there ?

What baffle me most is that British People do put their vote on this party.

Markus

Jimbuna
03-15-25, 07:04 AM
I doubt they'll get a second term in office Markus because it has eventually dawned on the British public precisely the kind of sh!t show Liebour have created.

And I speak as a former party member.

Jimbuna
03-16-25, 07:02 AM
One man is doing more damage to UK than Putin, Trump and Rachel Reeves combined

Trump wasn't to blame for GDP contracting by 0.1% in January. The world wasn't taking the US president's tariff threats seriously at that point.

His shameful bullying of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the Oval Office didn't happen until the end of February.

If the economy slumps more than expected in March, Reeves can pin some of the blame on Trump. But not today.

Reeves is known for playing fast and loose with the truth. She bizarrely assumes we won't notice, but we always do.

Russian leader Vladimir Putin is a cruel dictator but he isn't to blame for the January slump either.

Rachel Reeves herself is the most obvious culprit.

She's made a total hash of the economy since becoming Chancellor. I could spend the rest of this article listing her errors, but thankfully, there's no need. Here's a list of 20 disastrous mistakes I prepared earlier.

At least Reeves has woken up to the damage she's inflicted by talking the UK economy down and hiking taxes.

She's suddenly obsessed with growth, which is ironic, given how much she's done to destroy it.

Yet Reeves isn't the only Labour figure wreaking havoc on our productive capacity.

Another key player has arguably inflicted even more pain on UK industry. Worse, he won't stop. And he certainly won't admit his mistakes.

That man is Energy Secretary Ed Miliband.

Climate change is a serious issue. But his madcap response has driven him to commit an unforgivable act: deliberately sabotaging the UK economy.

Unlike Reeves, who stumbled into her mess through incompetence, Miliband's damage is intentional.

The UK's high energy prices are the highest in the developed world, putting a huge burden on households and making it impossible for energy-intensive manufacturing businesses to compete.

Miliband's priority was to drive energy prices down. Instead, his policies will do the opposite.

His first move? Shuttering remaining North Sea oil and gas projects, leaving us even more dependent on imported fossil fuels.

Then, throw tens of billions at unproven green tech while slapping extra levies on industrial energy to fund the transition.

Miliband has also been dishonest, claiming Net Zero will lower household bills when in practice they'll cost us a fortune.

The result? UK industry is shutting down. We've just dropped out of the world's top 10 manufacturing nations for the first time since the Industrial Revolution, according latest data from trade body Make UK.

Under Miliband's watch, Scotland's last oil refinery at Grangemouth has shut down. Port Talbot's final blast furnace has gone. Vauxhall owner Stellantis is closing its Luton car factory. Oil giants BP and Shell are threatening to quit the FTSE for New York.

No other country is sabotaging itself like this. Others balance their energy policies, keeping power affordable while gradually shifting to green alternatives.

Miliband doesn't care. While he remains in post, he's doing more damage than Trump, Putin and Rachel Reeves put together.

Starmer knows this. If he's serious about rebooting his struggling government, he must decommission his misfiring Energy Secretary now.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/one-man-is-doing-more-damage-to-uk-than-putin-trump-and-rachel-reeves-combined/ar-AA1B1eEq?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=310975f3e7914ad48304212928b172de&ei=15

Jimbuna
03-17-25, 01:11 PM
Reform UK pledge to stand candidates at all council elections in May

Reform UK has promised to stand candidates in all the council elections in May.

Chairman Zia Yusuf has pledged the party will stand candidates in all council seats at the local elections on May 1.

Speaking at a press conference in central London, Yusuf said: “Last May, Reform failed to stand in 88 per cent of the council seats that were up. This year, Reform will stand in all of the council seats that are up.”

He insisted: “It’s clear Reform has all of the momentum in British politics.”

The announcement came ahead of Reform leader Nigel Farage welcoming 29 new councillors to the party at a press conference in Westminster – and with the latest YouGov voting intention poll putting Reform on 23 per cent of the vote just shy of Labour’s 24 per cent.

The party leader slowly read aloud of a list those who are joining Reform – including 11 previously independent councillors, 15 former Conservatives, and an ex-Liberal Democrat – who all gradually joined him on stage. One defector was elected as a Labour member before becoming independent.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/reform-uk-pledge-to-stand-candidates-at-all-council-elections-in-may/ar-AA1B5oLX?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=6418f94606bf4cd4b2088e57dc4bdb4a&ei=88

Jimbuna
03-18-25, 12:56 PM
https://i.postimg.cc/g0WGnLWD/11111.jpg (https://postimages.org/)
https://i.postimg.cc/ZRYZLk0v/22222.jpg (https://postimages.org/)

Not a cat in hells chance.

Jimbuna
03-20-25, 11:33 AM
Scores of Labour MPs raise concerns over welfare changes

Scores of Labour MPs have voiced significant doubts about the government’s welfare changes in a tense meeting with the work and pensions secretary.

About 100 MPs attended a private meeting in parliament with Liz Kendall and the disability minister, Stephen Timms. MPs said there were grave concerns in the room about the huge hit to incomes that the changes would mean, and one said a party whip appeared to be taking notes of who was raising their concerns.

Many voiced particular concerns about how hard some disabled people would be hit if they were found newly ineligible for personal independent payments (Pips) – which can be claimed by those who are both in work and out of work. The criteria is set to be significantly tightened, saving about £5bn.

There was also considerable anger about the effect on young people and that those under 22 will no longer be able to claim the incapacity benefit top-up to universal credit. MPs also questioned why many of the most controversial changes would not be subject to consultation.

Those who are not in work who are found newly ineligible for Pips would also lose their universal credit top-up and potentially other benefits linked to disability, which would mean a huge cut to incomes.

One MP said there was only one colleague in the room who defended the reforms without qualifications and that dozens of others had voiced concerns.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/scores-of-labour-mps-raise-concerns-over-welfare-changes/ar-AA1Bg2Gz?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=30661614e038487e89a0577d537f2ead&ei=70

Otto Harkaman
03-20-25, 09:29 PM
https://youtu.be/O2Z0Y-mFMBk?si=aJzOPUicKs6BC3zk

Jimbuna
03-21-25, 05:26 AM
Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves dealt huge new poll blow

Sir Keir Starmer and Chancellor Rachel Reeves face a crisis of support among Labour members according to new research which lays bare the scale of unhappiness with the Government. The Prime Minister is only the 17th most popular member of the cabinet and Ms Reeves is the least favourite. Thirty-one percent of respondents said Labour should have a change of leader before the next election.

Half of Labour members (48.9%) say the party is going in the wrong direction and there is much more worry about the challenge from Reform UK than from the Conservatives. Nearly one in 10 (9%) expects Reform to lead the next Government.

The Survation survey of more than 2,000 LabourList readers who said they were party members found just 6% expect Labour will win another large majority at the next election - with 24% anticipating Labour being the largest party in a hung parliament and 43% expecting the party will win a small majority.

When asked which party poses the greatest threat to the Conservatives, 71% named Nigel Farage's Reform UK. Just 16% named Kemi Badenoch's Conservatives; a mere 3% thought the Liberal Democrats were the greatest danger, with the same share of members naming the Greens.

While 1% expect Reform to win the next election with a large majority, 3% think it will win a small majority and 5% see it forming the Government in a hung parliament.

The polling found Energy Secretary Ed Miliband is the most popular member of the cabinet with a favourability rating of +68.6. He is followed by Deputy PM Angela Rayner (+62.95) and Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy (+38.87).

In contrast, Sir Keir's rating is just +13.83 and the Chancellor is in negative territory. Ms Reeves has a rating of -11.19, and Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall - who this week announced controversial welfare changes - had a rating of -7.49.

The Prime Minister had a negative approval rating in Scotland (-14) and the North West (-3.62).

Nearly half of respondents (49.4%) gave Sir Keir credit for changing Labour for the better but 40.6% thought the party is governing badly - and one in eight is unsure how they would vote at the next election.

He can take comfort in strong percentages of members saying the party has been competent (65.8%), decisive (60.6%), trustworthy (56.1%) and strong (53.8%).

Nearly half of those surveyed (48.4%) named health as one of the most important issues facing the country is facing - more than the economy (46.2%), the cost of living (42.1%), defence and security (38.7%), housing (36.9%) and the environment (29.5%).

Tom Belger, editor of LabourList, said: "It should raise alarm bells with the leadership that there's so much unease even among the so-called 'party faithful', less than a year into office. The grassroots mood matters if Labour wants a strong ground operation in upcoming elections."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/tories-could-lose-all-councils-won-in-2021-if-general-election-voting-repeated-admits-kemi-badenoch/ar-AA1Bj4WP?ocid=mailsignout&pc=U591&cvid=d6038bbbf1c64846f22f4eed3cc23c3f&ei=12

Jimbuna
03-21-25, 11:42 AM
Ed Miliband tops a poll of Labour party activists

Ed Miliband has topped a poll of Labour activists – as party members urged Sir Keir Starmer to move further to the Left.

The controversial Climate Change Secretary had the highest approval rating of any Cabinet minister in a survey of more than 2,000 party members.

Mr Miliband's zeal for achieving net zero at any cost had alarmed some of the PM's allies and triggered rumours he could be moved aside in a Cabinet reshuffle this summer.

But, his popularity among Labour activists could make him almost unsackable.

The Survation poll for the website LabourList found Mr Miliband has a net approval rating of 68.6 per cent among Labour members, putting him narrowly ahead of Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner on 62.3 per cent.

The Left-wing pair are both far ahead of Sir Keir, who is on just 13.8 per cent.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is in last place, with Labour members giving her a net approval rating of -11.2 per cent.

Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall, whose £5 billion cuts to welfare triggered a Labour backlash this week, has a rating of -7.5 per cent.

The survey also found that Labour members believe the Government is going in the wrong direction by a margin of 49:40.

Tom Belger, editor of LabourList, said: 'It should raise alarm bells with the leadership that there's so much unease, even among the so-called party faithful, less than a year into office.

'The grassroots mood matters if Labour wants a strong ground operation in upcoming elections.

'But it's no surprise given how many controversial decisions ministers have felt forced into in tough fiscal circumstances, when hopes are high after so long out of power.'

The poll also revealed that Labour members fear the rise of Reform UK, with 71 per cent saying Nigel Farage's party now presents the biggest electoral threat compared with just 16 per cent identifying the Conservatives and 3 per cent naming the Liberal Democrats and the Greens.

Despite the Government's rocky start, more than half of party activists (52 per cent) said they want Sir Keir to lead Labour into the next election, while 31 per cent want a new leader.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/other/ed-miliband-tops-a-poll-of-labour-party-activists/ar-AA1BliFb?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=42f762c9d75244edb67a47977a39c9a0&ei=65

Jimbuna
03-22-25, 09:36 AM
Someone must be getting desperate.

https://i.postimg.cc/B6sgZB2H/11111.jpg (https://postimg.cc/rdnWQWnw)
https://i.postimg.cc/hjr0XQ0w/22222.jpg (https://postimages.org/)

Jimbuna
03-22-25, 09:42 AM
Chancellor rules out ‘tax and spend’ policies ahead of spring statement

The Chancellor has ruled out “tax and spend” policies ahead of her spring statement next week.

Rachel Reeves is under pressure to increase taxes or cut spending to meet the financial rules she set at the budget in October amid disappointing growth figures and higher-than-expected borrowing.

Figures released on Friday came as a further blow, showing that government borrowing had soared past forecasts in February.

She signalled that she would neither raise taxes nor Government budgets in an interview with the BBC.

“We can’t tax and spend our way to higher living standards and better public services. That’s not available in the world we live in today,” she said.

The defence budget has already been boosted by slashing spending on aid, and sweeping cuts to welfare were announced this week.

When she delivers her spring statement on Wednesday, Ms Reeves will be responding to new forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibility made after the Bank of England reduced its forecasts for growth this year.

Public sector net borrowing was £10.7 billion in February, £4.2 billion more than had been forecast by the OBR.

Former Labour work and pensions secretary Lord Blunkett has urged the Chancellor to loosen her fiscal rules.

“I would like the Chancellor to loosen a little the self-imposed fiscal rules, this is Treasury orthodoxy and monetarism at its worst,” he told BBC Radio 4’s the Week in Westminster.

“I would lift them marginally. I would raise the self-imposed rule by at least £10-15 billion and I would spend a great chunk of it on what we did back in ‘97 with the new deal for the unemployed.”

Treasury minister Darren Jones denied the Government was “blindly cutting spending” and moving towards austerity earlier this week.

Government departments have been asked to go through their spending line by line.

Experts estimate that around a million people in England and Wales will lose their disability benefits as part of a welfare overhaul that the Government believes will save more than £5 billion a year by the end of the decade.

Ms Reeves told the BBC: “I recognise that with the privilege of doing a job like the one I’m doing today also comes a great deal of scrutiny. I absolutely believe that every policy that I announce, every pound of public money, of taxpayers’ money that I spend, and every pound that I take from people is properly scrutinised. That’s part of the job.”
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/chancellor-rules-out-tax-and-spend-policies-ahead-of-spring-statement/ar-AA1Bra6h?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=dc3cfcf1d2d6494e95aaa36bf56e53ad&ei=27

Jimbuna
03-23-25, 01:46 PM
Fraudsters and scroungers the whole bunch of them.

Reeves defends taking free Sabrina Carpenter tickets

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has defended accepting free tickets to a Sabrina Carpenter concert, adding she will declare them.

Speaking on the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg, Reeves said she attended the concert a couple of weeks ago with a family member.

"I do now have security which means it's not as easy as it would have been in the past to just sit in a concert," she said.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer tightened rules on ministers accepting gifts and hospitality in November after he and a number of cabinet ministers faced criticism over donations.

Sir Keir paid back more than £6,000 worth of his own gifts and hospitality that he had received since becoming prime minister after the backlash. The figure included the cost of six Taylor Swift tickets.

Nonetheless, the prime minister did defend his acceptance of corporate hospitality from the Arsenal football club in September – citing security as his reason for doing so.

The Premier League football club made two seats available for Sir Keir in the corporate area of the Emirates Stadium.

The prime minister explained at the time he had been advised that necessary security costs for him to sit in the stands would cost the taxpayer more.

The new rules introduced last year did not ban ministers from accepting donations but do now require them to consider the "need to maintain the public's confidence".

Reeves was asked by Kuenssberg why she did not pay for the tickets. The chancellor responded that they were not tickets you could pay for.

"There wasn't a price to those tickets," she said, as she underlined she would declare the value of them.

Her confirmation follows reporting from a number of media outlets on the story earlier this week.

In September 2024, the chancellor said she would not accept clothing donations while in her current role after it emerged that she had accepted such donations while in opposition.

She had been one of a number of Labour politicians who faced questions after accepting thousands of pounds worth of clothes as gifts before the election.

Reeves previously told the BBC that accepting donations to pay for clothes was not something she had planned to do as a government minister.

As a government minister, Reeves would receive a salary as an MP which was £91,346 as of April 2024, as well as an additional sum for being a minister.

The salary for the Chancellor of the Exchequer for the financial year 2022/23 was £67,505.

Shadow chancellor Mel Stride was also quizzed about gifts on Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg with respect to ski passes and Bafta tickets accepted by shadow business secretary Andrew Griffith.

Griffith's registered interests, which are detailed on Parliament's website, include a declaration of two tickets with hospitality to the 2025 British Academy Film Awards (Bafta) estimated to be worth £4,000.

The shadow business secretary has also declared discounted ski-passes and guiding for two worth £973 for a trip to Switzerland in January.

Stride said on Sunday that he does not know the specific details.

Speaking of both Griffith and Reeves, Stride said: "I think it's for them to justify what they do."

In a statement to the BBC, Griffith said: "Clearly my attacks on Labour's devastating impact on business have got under someone's skin."

He added that he "diligently" registers hospitality he receives and did so for the two cited instances.

"The Baftas are a celebration of the creative sector - one of the UK's largest exporters - and were also attended by Labour ministers," he said.

"It might be more of a story had the shadow business and trade secretary not attended."

Regarding the ski passes for the Parliamentary Ski Trip, he said it was a "long standing and cross-party event" as he underlined that he personally covered the costs of flights and accommodation.

"It does include social events with Swiss parliamentarians, and these are the elements which were properly disclosed on my register of interests," Griffith added.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cg70k2l5759o

Jimbuna
03-24-25, 08:28 AM
Rachel Thieves latest scam to snatch more money in taxes.

Chancellor set to increase punishment for late tax returns

Businesses and landlords will be hit with huge fines for completing their tax returns late under plans to tackle tax avoidance.

Rachel Reeves will drastically increase late-payment penalties to incentivise people to pay their tax on time as part of a bid to raise £1 billion a year by the end of the decade.

A total of 1.1 million people missed the self-assessment tax return deadline last year.

The plans will be announced in the Chancellor’s Spring Statement on Wednesday, in which she is expected to announce swingeing public sector cuts and a huge reduction in the number of civil servants.

Taxpayers with an income of more than £20,000 will be hit with a penalty worth 3 per cent of the outstanding amount if they are late by 15 days.

And people who are late by more than a month will face a penalty of 10 per cent on the outstanding amount.

Ms Reeves will also employ more third-party debt collectors and HMRC staff to help them collect more tax.

It will lead to fears that small businesses will bear the brunt of the Government’s plans to claw back more money through tax.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/chancellor-set-to-increase-punishment-for-late-tax-returns/ar-AA1BvaPv?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=81ba5d3871cc4c04a77164d91ab72155&ei=13

Jimbuna
03-25-25, 02:08 PM
Always check the background before posing for an image.

https://i.postimg.cc/0QBt6WwM/Image.jpg (https://postimg.cc/1nD02KMs)

Jimbuna
03-26-25, 01:09 PM
Labour's disastrous Spring Statement is a warning of more horror from Rachel Reeves ahead - Richard Tice

Rachel Reeves’ Spring Statement is exactly what we expected — full of empty promises, while laying the blame on Trump, Putin, previous Tory governments… basically anyone but herself. All the while, the Chancellor continues to pretend that she is a champion of the working man.

Following intense criticism over her Autumn Budget — which included £40 billion in tax hikes, a reduction in the tax threshold from £9,100 to £5,000, a 50% increase in bus fare caps, and sharp rises in Capital Gains Tax — her Spring Statement delivers yet more gloomy news.

Rather than acknowledging the consequences of her policies, she today pointed the finger at almost everyone - but herself.

For those still oblivious to Labour’s shortcomings, just look to the Office of Budget Responsibility (OBR) for answers.

The OBR has halved the UK’s economic growth forecast to just 1% this year, while government borrowing is expected to exceed previous projections by £10 billion. It could even be much higher.

Additionally, it gives Reeves a 50-50 chance of meeting her own fiscal rules. Yet magically the OBR forecasts higher growth from 2026 onwards despite higher taxes and more costs. The OBR is delusional, and this administration is a disaster for the UK. They are an outright attack on hardworking British people.

Labour has failed on every front. Since taking office, real GDP per capita has fallen. No matter how much they try to cook the books by importing millions of people from abroad, the average person in Britain is getting poorer.

Meanwhile, their much-touted pledge to build 1.5 million homes remains empty rhetoric, making little difference in combating the housing crisis.

Why? Because the OBR also (optimistically) projects that Britain will see an additional 1.5 million new migrants by 2030—on top of the 1.2 million Labour has already allowed in over the past two years. Nowhere in their budget is border security made a priority, despite it being a top concern for the British public.

Housing prices are set to rise from £265,000 to £295,000 by 2029—not due to a housing shortage, but because Labour has allowed net migration to spiral out of control.

Labour’s policies have driven up costs, crushed growth, and left British citizens struggling to afford homes of their own. Instead of delivering real solutions, Reeves offers only deflection and failure.

Despite Reeves’ repeated claims that she will not raise taxes on working people, the OBR forecasts that the tax share of the economy will reach a historic high within the next three years. With only £9.9 billion in fiscal headroom, if economic forecasts shift even slightly, what taxes will she be forced to raise in the Autumn Budget?

Thanks to this Labour government, the downgraded growth forecast has pushed the tax burden to a record high. The OBR predicts that taxes will rise from 35.3% of gross domestic product (GDP) to a historic 37.7% by 2027-28.

The overall tax take remains on course to rise to 37.6%, a level last reached just after the Second World War and never sustained.

Her promises of welfare cuts to encourage employment have also fallen flat. The National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) has dismissed these cuts as “unlikely to incentivise work as much as the government states.”

This is a country that, just a year ago, was growing at the fastest rate in the G7. Britain is home to a tremendously talented population and vast untapped potential. Yet successive Conservative and Labour governments continue to prioritise net zero, killing free speech, and indoctrinating our youth over pursuing true economic growth.

To turn this around, we must abandon net zero, lower energy costs, and take full advantage of drilling opportunities in the North Sea and rolling out new small modular nuclear reactors. No country can succeed with energy prices as high as ours.

To put this in perspective: the United States has energy prices some 50% lower than the UK and its economy is growing at 3%. There is a direct correlation between energy prices and economic growth.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/labour-s-disastrous-spring-statement-is-a-warning-of-more-horror-from-rachel-reeves-ahead-richard-tice/ar-AA1BInL3?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=041f82d709da4011abb8918d84204fd5&ei=9

Jimbuna
03-27-25, 09:43 AM
https://i.postimg.cc/CLRXJNTg/485694034-1113540864149551-7669886143294970136-n.jpg (https://postimages.org/)

Jimbuna
03-28-25, 08:28 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zr8Hnl3VLVc

Jimbuna
03-29-25, 07:53 AM
Government's defence spending increase 'more spin than substance'

An entire fleet of military helicopters - the Royal Air Force's Puma aircraft - was retired this week as part of a cost-saving plan to scrap older kit that was announced in November.

The sight of old but still airworthy helicopters being taken out of service before a replacement is ready - creating a capability gap - contrasts with statements by Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, and John Healey, the defence secretary, about boosting the defence budget.

Sir Ben Wallace, the longest-serving Conservative defence secretary, said he had expected better given the urgent need to rearm at a time of heightened threats and following Donald Trump's warnings to Europe to stop relying on the United States to bankroll its security.

"We are at the dawn of a new era of insecurity across the world," Sir Ben said.

"The US has warned us for a decade about not taking them for granted, and we all did nothing. In Germany, Poland, and France the penny has dropped and they have embraced a necessary culture change and re-prioritisation of government spend.

"In the UK, the government still thinks it is about spin and tinkering. It fools no one, and we risk losing our credibility and leadership on defence amongst allies."

In her spring statement on Wednesday, the chancellor announced an extra £2.2bn for defence this coming financial year.

Ms Reeves told MPs it was a further "down payment" on a promise by the prime minister to lift expenditure on defence to 2.5% of GDP from April 2027. Defence spending is currently around 2.3% of gross national income. The new money will help inch it up to 2.36%.

The chancellor, defence secretary and prime minister have repeatedly phrased their plan to inject cash into the armed forces over this parliament as "the biggest sustained increase in defence spending since the end of the Cold War".

But defence insiders say, while any new money is welcome, this claim is more spin than substance because the defence budget largely suffered repeated cuts since the Soviet Union collapsed. Also, focusing on a slogan does not answer the question of whether an extra £2bn over the next 12 months is enough to transform the British Army, Royal Navy and Royal Air Force at the speed that is necessary, they said.

Asked whether it was sufficient, multiple military sources and a defence industry source collectively said "no".

"This is just another sticking plaster that overlooks decades of underinvestment and chronic financial mismanagement of our armed forces," the defence industry source said.

"Increasing spending or a focus on 'novel technologies' ignores the fact that we have let a broken system flourish.

"Time and time again, we see celebration over procuring outdated solutions while their manufacturers get away with significant delays or overspends with seemingly few repercussions.

"While we continue to spin and fight over tiny percentages of spending, we are allowing our armed forces to get hollowed out in front of us, hoping that government soundbites will provide the deterrence that our current equipment can't."

A military source said the additional £2.2bn for the year to March 2026 was a step in the right direction, but said it would merely keep defence on "life support".

The situation only starts to improve marginally in two years' time when the defence budget is finally forecast to hit 2.5% of GDP, the source said.

This is despite the UK being a leading member of the "coalition of the willing", with Sir Keir Starmer pledging to deploy forces to secure any ceasefire deal in Ukraine - a move that would put huge additional strain on his already stretched armed forces.

While the UK talks about 2.5% for the defence budget, Mark Rutte, the secretary general of NATO, says allies must spend more than 3%, while Mr Trump wants them to aim for 5%.

In 2020, Boris Johnson, as the prime minister, said a plan to increase the defence budget by £16bn over four years, on top of a commitment to lift defence spending by 0.5% above inflation for each year of the parliament - so what was described at the time as an additional £24bn in total - was the biggest boost to defence expenditure since the Cold War.

Sir Keir has added the word "sustained" when describing the size of his defence spending boost - though that will depend upon the accuracy of forecasts that GDP will expand at the rate predicted in the coming years.

Sir Ben said: "The UK is facing some of the highest threats in a generation, yet John Healey thinks spin is the appropriate response. He fools no one - not the men and women of the armed forces and not our enemies. I had expected better of him."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/government-s-defence-spending-increase-more-spin-than-substance/ar-AA1BTAMu?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=ENTPSP&cvid=cd733d4ce738434c855b1ac6092a10a9&ei=18

Jimbuna
03-29-25, 07:59 AM
https://i.postimg.cc/6p7SRsgN/Untitled1111.jpg (https://postimg.cc/MnSd2Lzs)
https://i.postimg.cc/v83SNHds/Untitled2222.jpg (https://postimages.org/)

Exocet25fr
03-29-25, 10:11 AM
Papers strewn on Newcastle street feared to be sensitive army documents !

MoD urgently investigates after member of public finds documents reportedly including emails and shift patterns

The documents reportedly included army soldier ranks, emails, shift patterns and weapon-issue details. Other papers contained information that appeared to relate to an armoury and an intruder-detection system.

“Details of the perimeter, the patrol, checking weapons in and out, requests for leave, mobile phone numbers, high-ranking officers.”

He said to his wife: “This shouldn’t be here. Anyone could pick it up.”

One document was headed “armoury keys and hold IDS codes”, thought to stand for intruder-detection system. Others contained general medical information and ingredients order sheets.

Another document was footnoted with the words “official – sensitive”. According to government guidance, the unintended disclosure of such documents “can lead to moderate damage (including to the UK’s longer-term strategic/economic position) and, in exceptional circumstances, it could lead to a threat to life”.

“The documents have now been handed to the Ministry of Defence.”

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2025/mar/28/papers-strewn-on-newcastle-street-feared-to-be-sensitive-army-documents

Jimbuna
03-29-25, 01:41 PM
Rachel Reeves's benefit cuts will hit UK armed forces veterans who served their country

British veterans who served in conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan face losing essential financial support because of the Government's benefit cuts, charity Help for Heroes has warned. The charity's helpline is receiving calls from veterans and their families who fear a "vital lifeline" will be taken away.

There is particular concern that the Government's decision to cut the number receiving Personal Independence Payments (PIP) by 800,000 will lead to ex-service personnel with mental health issues without support. Carol Betteridge, a Help for Heroes director who ran the field hospital in Helmand Province during British presence in Afghanistan, said: "Within this package of benefit reforms also lies the tightening of PIP eligibility, threatening to strip away a vital lifeline for many, which may be especially difficult for veterans who need mental health support.

"Mental health issues are often given less consideration compared with physical health issues, but they can be just as devastating. According to research, there are over 700,000 former serving personnel who find their mental health challenging - and the real figure is surely higher, as we know that many veterans delay seeking help due to stigma and pride.

"Stricter rules could shut them out completely, leaving the charity sector to pick up the pieces. It is therefore no surprise that at Help for Heroes, our helpline is already receiving calls from veterans and their families worried what this means for them and their future.

"The Government says these reforms are about getting more people back into work."

She said veterans were keen to work but needed support.

She added: "Let's remember, these are highly skilled, disciplined men and women who have dedicated their lives to service. If we expect them to risk everything for their country, we must ensure their country is there for them when they most need it."

And she warned that serving their country left many veterans with genuine and serious physical and mental health issues.

Ms Betteridge said: "I have seen first-hand the devastating impact of conflict. In 2011, it was my honour to Command the military hospital in Helmand during the Afghanistan war, treating our wounded on the front line.

"There, we were able to meet the immediate needs of those who came in through our doors - but we knew that for many, their lives had changed forever. Injuries, trauma, mental scars - these do not always fade when service ends, and our duty to support those who have given us their service does not end when the plane lands back in the UK."

Benefit cuts announced by Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall and Chancellor Rachel Reeves mean 370,00 current PIP recipients are expected to lose entitlement an average of £4,500 a year, and 430,000 future recipients who would have received the money will no longer be eligible.

In addition, 2.25million recipients of the health element of Universal Credit are to lose £500 per year on average while 730,000 future recipients will lose £3,000 a year.

Some Labour MPs have vowed to fight the cuts, with left-wing Labour MP Richard Burgon predicting "the mother of all rebellions".
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/rachel-reeves-s-benefit-cuts-will-hit-uk-armed-forces-veterans-who-served-their-country/ar-AA1BUwSe?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=0667b5a301dd431b83a6d48b15996f2d&ei=43

Jimbuna
03-30-25, 07:12 AM
Another pig finds a space in the trough to get their snout in.

Labour MP charges taxpayers £900 ‘pet rent’ for her cockapoo named Bella


A Labour MP has claimed back £900 from the taxpayer in “pet rent”.

Taiwo Owatemi, a Government whip and the MP for Coventry North West, made the expenses claim in August last year, a document published by the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (Ipsa) revealed.

Ms Owatemi’s landlord at her second home in London issued the extra charge in order to let the MP’s dog stay at the property, according to The Times newspaper.

Parliamentary authorities paid the expenses claim, which is not in breach of the rules governing MPs’ expenses.

Labour defended Ms Owatemi’s expenses claim, with a party spokesman telling The Times: “MPs are required to work in two locations, and this is a requirement for living in this house.

“It is the same for many other MPs and has been approved by the parliamentary expenses watchdog.”

Ms Owatemi has frequently posted on social media in the past about her dog, a cockapoo named Bella.

She is also a supporter of the Battersea Dogs and Cats Home and other pet-related charities.

MPs can claim back rent on their accommodation in London if they have a constituency outside of the capital.

Ipsa told The Times it agreed to fund the pet rent surcharge for Ms Owatemi, but “gave incorrect advice as to how it should be described”.

“We have apologised directly to the MP and are sorry for any confusion,” the parliamentary watchdog said.

A spokesman added: “MPs are required to work in two places: their constituency and in Westminster.

“IPSA is committed to supporting a Parliament where people without the private finances to fund working from two locations themselves are not prevented from becoming an MP.

“That is why we fund accommodation costs, within strict limits. It is common for landlords to include additional surcharges in rental agreements."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/labour-mp-charges-taxpayers-900-pet-rent-for-her-cockapoo-named-bella/ar-AA1BUQGn?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=24cacb8f6f5d4c73ac75d530daefb6fa&ei=42

Jimbuna
03-31-25, 12:58 PM
Keir Starmer admits UK to be hit by Donald Trump's tariffs in Rachel Reeves blow

Britain is set to be hit by Donald Trump's tariffs, Downing Street has admitted. Sir Keir Starmer's government had been trying to negotiate an exemption from the taxes on imports into the US which come into force later this week.

The US President has announced a 25% import tax will be introduced on all cars imported to the US, a measure expected to hit British luxury car makers such as Rolls-Royce and Aston Martin. The levy is on top of a series of tariffs set to come into effect on April 2, which could include a general 20% tax on UK products in response to the rate of VAT.

Sir Keir Starmer's official spokesman said today: "When it comes to tariffs the Prime Minister has been clear he will always act in the national interest and we've been actively preparing for all eventualities ahead of the expected announcements from President Trump this week, which we would expect the UK to be impacted by alongside other countries.

"Our trade teams are continuing to have constructive discussions to agree a UK-US economic prosperity deal.

"But we will only do a deal which reflects this Government's mandate to deliver economic stability for the British people, and we will only act in the national interest."

Asked whether the Government had given up hope of an economic deal between the UK and the US being signed before Wednesday, the spokesman said he is "not going to put a time frame on those discussions" but that they are "likely to continue beyond Wednesday".
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/keir-starmer-admits-uk-to-be-hit-by-donald-trump-s-tariffs-in-rachel-reeves-blow/ar-AA1C0c1C?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=77a2e8ac27634a019578d56cf1f010d9&ei=94

Moonlight
04-01-25, 06:03 AM
EXCLUSIVE From preventing diabetic foot ulcers in Peru to teaching Pakistanis about their country's 'violent past', see ALL the 3,250 projects Britain's foreign aid funding is being spent on

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14539641/diabetic-ulcers-Peru-Pakistan-violent-past-search-table.html

I've said it more than once before, this Foreign Aid Budget must be scrapped immediately, countries around the world are taking the piss out of the British taxpayers and, these WetBack MPs are letting them get away with it.

There are thousands of more examples of this madness taking place but, the Foreign Office won't release the details to the press or the taxpayers, I wonder why?. :O:

Catfish
04-01-25, 07:04 AM
^ Because it obviously is not the task of the "taxpayers", nor have they the knowledge how to help other nations' peoples best, nor are they aware of Britain's past and show commitment, or obligation ;)

Jimbuna
04-01-25, 08:25 AM
Sentencing guidelines ditched after 'two-tier' row

New rules on sentencing criminals from ethnic minorities have been abandoned following a weeks-long standoff between senior judges and the government.

Shabana Mahmood, the justice secretary, believed the proposals from top judges would have created a "two-tier" justice system.

The new guidelines, which had been in development for months, told judges to seek extra information before deciding how to punish offenders from certain minority groups.

The proposals had sparked condemnation from politicians across both main parties in recent weeks and, following the Sentencing Council refusing Mahmood's demands to reconsider, she was set to overrule them with emergency legislation.

The Council, made up of some of the most senior legal figures in England and Wales, was adamant that the guidelines would have helped address disparities between how different ethnicities are treated in the justice system.

The new rules, which would have been binding on judges, were set to take effect on Tuesday but were delayed on Monday because of the inevitability that they would be overturned by parliament anyway.

Government sources had said it would be all but impossible to pass such legislation before Parliament breaks for Easter.

In a statement, the Sentencing Council said its chairman, Lord Justice William Davis, met Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood on Monday morning.

In the meeting, Lord Davis indicated the guidelines would not be brought in while there was a "draft bill due for imminent introduction that would make it unlawful".

"On that basis, the council, an independent statutory body, has chosen to delay the in force date of the guideline pending such legislation taking effect," the statement said.

Mahmood said she was "grateful" to the Sentencing Council for delaying the implementation of its new guidelines.

The minister said: "These guidelines create a justice system where outcomes could be influenced by race, culture or religion.

"This differential treatment is unacceptable - equality before the law is the backbone of public confidence in our justice system.

"I will change the law to ensure fairness for all in our courts."

Conservative shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick claimed the Sentencing Council had "folded under the pressure" after he had threatened a legal challenge against the guidelines.

The guidelines advise that magistrates and judges get a pre-sentence report - giving further details of an offender's background - before handing out punishment for someone of an ethnic or faith minority, alongside other groups such as young adults, abuse survivors and pregnant women.

The Sentencing Council, made up of some of the most senior legal figures in England and Wales, said the guidance would address disparities in the punishments meted out by judges.

Official figures, external show that offenders from ethnic minorities consistently get longer sentences than white offenders for indictable offences.

Earlier on Monday, the prime minister had said he was "very disappointed", after the Sentencing Council previously refused to reconsider the guidance.

Sir Keir Starmer said the government would bring forward legislation to reverse it.

"There's no other option, so we will do that. We will fast-track it," he told GB News.

The Ministry of Justice said the legislation would "clarify that guidance relating to sentencing reports should not single out specific cohorts for differential treatment".

The Sentencing Guidelines (Pre-sentence Reports) Bill will be introduced on Tuesday.

However, it needs to be debated and approved by MPs and peers before it becomes law.

The House of Lords breaks for Easter on Thursday, while MPs break up on 8 April, and Parliament is not due to return until 22 April.

This means there is limited time for the bill to complete its passage.

Some in government believed the law could and should have been rushed through before the Easter break.

Others are understood to have raised concerns that it would be obstructed in the House of Lords, especially by eminent lawyers, if the government were seen to be moving with excessive speed.

Jenrick first raised concerns about the guidelines earlier this month, saying they were biased "against straight white men" and amounted to "two-tier justice".

In response, Mahmood said she also opposed a "two-tier sentencing approach" and that she "did not stand for any differential treatment before the law".

The Sentencing Council was established in 2010 to try to ensure consistency in sentencing. Sir Keir, at the time Director of Public Prosecutions, was one of its founding members.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c5yg887m6qdo

Moonlight
04-01-25, 05:04 PM
^ Because it obviously is not the task of the "taxpayers", nor have they the knowledge how to help other nations' peoples best, nor are they aware of Britain's past and show commitment, or obligation ;)

What a load of Bollocks, I'll put you in the same clique as those WetBack MPs of ours, they spout as much Bollocks as you're doing. :O:

Moonlight
04-02-25, 08:55 AM
Rayner blames Tories for Birmingham bin crisis

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/rayner-blames-tories-for-birmingham-bin-crisis/ar-AA1C4YVL#

Labour have been in charge since 2012, it's quite clear that those councillors are out of their depth, after reading about the Taxi Fiasco in Birmingham in 2023, I'm not surprised that the rest of the council is being run by a set of bleeding idiots.

Jimbuna
04-02-25, 12:45 PM
Rachel Reeves refuses to rule out MORE tax hikes for Britons during intense grilling from MPs

Rachel Reeves refused to rule out fresh tax hikes for Britons following her Spring Statement, while being grilled by the Treasury Select Committee of MPs.

Reeves admitted Labour had made "a number of difficult decisions around taxation" in her October Budget, but was pressed on whether taxpayers will be hit with more increases in the future.

Conservative MP John Glen asked the Chancellor: "Can you confirm to the committee today that you won't be raising taxes?"

Reeves attempted to dodge answering directly, stating: "I said in the Budget last year that it was a once in a Parliament budget, to wipe the slate clean after the mismanagement of the previous administration. We made a number of difficult decisions around taxation.

"We increased taxes on the wealthiest in our country, and we also increased, as we've already discussed, taxes on business. I think that was the right balance to restore stability to our public finances."

Pressing again, Glen asked: "So you can rule out tax rises?"

Only willing to not carry out tax hikes on the same scale as six months ago, Reeves replied: "I'm not going to write another four years worth of budgets, that would not be responsible.

"But I can ensure the committee that I will not need to repeat a budget on that scale, because we have now wiped the slate clean and put our public finances on a firm footing."

Noting the upcoming spending review in June, Reeves made clear to the committee that plans for "capital and day-to-day spending" will be laid out "for the next few years".

She told the committee: "The spending review in a few months time on June the 11th, we're going to be setting spending for departments, capital and day to day spending for the next few years.

"And public services now need to live within the limits that that we've set out."

The Chancellor also rejected calls for "posturing" over potential US tariffs, as the world braces for Donald Trump to announce global trade barriers later today.

Speaking to MPs, Reeves emphasised her belief in free trade whilst addressing concerns about the impact on the UK economy.

"I do believe in free trade, the UK has balanced trade with the US," the Chancellor said.

Shestressed the importance of maintaining open trade channels with the US.

"We do not want to see trade barriers go up," she told the committee.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/rachel-reeves-refuses-to-rule-out-more-tax-hikes-for-britons-during-intense-grilling-from-mps/ar-AA1C9XKh?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=3b9cbe422d5c471dbe8217714a2c4924&ei=13

Jimbuna
04-03-25, 11:33 AM
Skulduggery in its finest form.

Council tax premium on second homes rises but 'loophole for MPs means they don't have to pay'
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/council-tax-premium-on-second-homes-rises-but-loophole-for-mps-means-they-don-t-have-to-pay/ar-AA1CeY2c?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=888997f86b3442db93e43181b9c56503&ei=13

Jimbuna
04-04-25, 10:36 AM
Rachel Reeves dealt blow as expert warns tax will ‘decimate' sector key to Angela Rayner

Rachel Reeves' National Insurance tax hike will "decimate" a sector key to Angela Rayner's plans, an expert has warned. Steven Mulholland, Chief Executive of the Construction Plant-hire Association (CPA), said: "The National Insurance hike is a direct threat to the future of family-run construction businesses across the UK. It's a tax on jobs that will drive up employment costs, making it harder to recruit and retain the workers we so urgently need - all while the industry is already battling a growing skills crisis."

He then suggested the measure would be counter productive as Ms Rayner, Sir Keir Starmer's housing secretary, aims to build more than a million new homes before the end of this Parliament. Mr Mulholland added: "If Labour is serious about delivering growth, it must urgently reassess this tax on jobs. Family-owned construction companies and their supply chain are the backbone of our sector - undermining them now will only risk delaying critical infrastructure projects like the Heathrow third runway and dampen housebuilding, making it far harder for Labour to deliver its 1.5million new homes."

The policy will make some firms unsustainble, the construction boss then warned.

Mr Mulholland said: "This hike, combined with further tax burdens coming down the track from changes to Business Property Relief and Inheritance Tax, will push independent family-run businesses to the brink of extinction."

On March 24, the planning reforms cleared their first Commons test, amid warnings that changes risk undermining efforts to accelerate the delivery of new homes.

MPs voted 330 to 74, majority 256, to approve the Planning and Infrastructure Bill at second reading on Monday evening.

Ms Rayner said the Bill would speed up the planning system, help achieve her build target, allow for an expansion of Britain's energy network and give greater environmental protections.

She told the Commons: "Make no mistake, this Bill will transform the lives of working people and Britain's prospects for years to come. It is hugely ambitious and rightly so, because everywhere I go I hear the same frustrations.

"We just can't build anything any more. We desperately need more homes and more development. But for too long, the answer has always been no, and that is choking off growth, leaving working people worse off, and leaving Britain behind."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/rachel-reeves-dealt-blow-as-expert-warns-tax-will-decimate-sector-key-to-angela-rayner/ar-AA1CiAf5?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=b57cad0b0a77491487f8078fc994a341&ei=18

Jimbuna
04-04-25, 10:42 AM
Rachel Reeves confirms whether Brits will see new tax hikes after Donald Trump tariffs

Rachel Reeves has said working people will see "no rise in taxes in their pay slips" amid swirling concerns her wiggle room at the Treasury will run out.

Economists have warned the Chancellor that the cash left to give her room to manoeuvre with the public finances could be eaten up by Donald Trump's huge tariff announcement. It has raised fears she could be forced to hike taxes or cut public spending at the next Budget in the Autumn.

But, for the first time since the US President's bombshell move, Ms Reeves has reassured the public that she will not raise taxes on workers. "W orking people will see no rise in taxes in their pay slips, whether that's their national insurance, income tax, or indeed their VAT, or fuel duty,” she told broadcasters.

British businesses are facing a double whammy of 10% tariffs on all British products sold to the US and an increase in employers' National Insurance Contributions (NICs). Asked if one of the best ways to negate the impact of tariffs was to reverse the NICs hike, Ms Reeves said: “When I became Chancellor, we faced a £22billion black hole in the public finances.

"The decisions that I took in the budget last year both stabilised the public finances but also enabled us to invest £25billion in the NHS, and that money has meant that for the last five months in a row, we've seen NHS waiting lists fall, and within the first few months of this Labour government taking office, two million additional appointments are in our NHS.

"That's the difference that we are making, only possible because of those decisions that we took but working people will see no rise in taxes in their pay slips, whether that's their national insurance, income tax, or indeed their VAT, or fuel duty.”

Ms Reeves said that the Government is "determined to get the best deal we can" with the US after Mr Trump slapped tariffs on goods from the UK. "Well, of course, we don't want to see tariffs on UK exports, and we're working hard as a government in discussion with our counterparts in the US to represent the British national interest and support British jobs and British industry," the Chancellor said on Friday.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/rachel-reeves-confirms-whether-brits-will-see-new-tax-hikes-after-donald-trump-tariffs/ar-AA1Ci4fF?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=e86a528dd4004bbda51dfb8e1c69aa9e&ei=14

Jimbuna
04-05-25, 10:44 AM
Ed Miliband told to 'accept reality' and stop 'dragging us down with Net Zero'

Energy Secretary Ed Miliband needs to "accept reality" rather than pursuing Net Zero policies which are "dragging the whole economy down", director of Net Zero Watch has claimed.

Andrew Montford made the claim after figures revealed that Miliband's Department for Energy Security & Net Zero spent over £40,000 on UK flights in Labour's first six months in office.

New figures show the total bill for Miliband's department topped £43,644 bill for internal flights between July and December last year.

The spending on domestic air travel exceeded the £40,279 spent under the Conservatives in the first half of 2024.

Speaking to GB News, Montford said: "I live in Scotland, and I have to travel to London quite often. If I want to take the train, I get on the first one in the morning, but I don't arrive in London until lunchtime.

"So, that's half the day gone. If I take the first flight, I'm in London by 9:00. So, yeah, that’s absolutely the only way of doing it.

"The problem with high-speed rail is that it’s not really suited to the UK. We're a highly densely populated country, and high-speed rail needs to travel in straight lines, which just isn’t going to happen. So, the reality is that we’re stuck with airplanes here.

"The airplane service is very, very good in a way that the rail service isn’t. The railways tend to be quite unreliable.

"A lot can go wrong — if one train breaks down, it can cause a tailback. Whereas with airplanes, there are no such barriers.

"Again, it's this issue of the climate "religion," if you like, that says we’ve got to deal with airplanes. But the practical reality is that there isn’t actually an alternative.

"I just wish Ed Miliband would start dealing with reality, rather than this fairy tale of net zero. Because that is what’s really dragging the whole economy down and making him look like a hypocrite."

The spending figures have drawn particular attention as they come from a department focused on achieving Net Zero carbon emissions.

Shadow Energy Secretary Andrew Bowie highlighted what he called a contradiction in Labour's approach to environmental policy.

"In opposition, Miliband was all too happy to lecture the rest of us — but now in Government, it's one rule for him and another for everyone else," Bowie said.

The Conservative MP further criticised Miliband as an "eco-zealot" who is "forcing the country to suffer under his sanctimonious eco agenda."

A spokesman for the energy department defended ministers and officials using domestic flights, adding: "Ministers and civil servants are required to travel for government business.

"While most journeys are by train, flights are sometimes necessary to ensure ministerial and officials’ time is used as efficiently as possible.”
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/ed-miliband-told-to-accept-reality-and-stop-dragging-us-down-with-net-zero/ar-AA1ClSwv?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=0b14b2da2aed4a4ea78f9f2558ba190a&ei=13

Jimbuna
04-05-25, 10:53 AM
Starmer speaks to world leaders as FTSE 100 plunges after Trump’s tariffs

The UK’s FTSE 100 suffered its worst day since the start of the pandemic as Sir Keir Starmer agreed that “like-minded countries must maintain strong relationships” in the wake of Donald Trump’s tariffs.

Trading across the world has been hammered in the aftermath of the US president unveiling his full range of import taxes on countries around the world.

The Prime Minister spoke to the leaders of Australia and Italy on Friday – the first in a series of calls expected with world leaders over the weekend – as nations reel from the economic hit.

London’s top stock market index shed 419.75 points, or 4.95%, to close at 8,054.98 on Friday, the biggest single-day decline since March 2020 when the index lost more than 600 points in one day.

From Saturday, UK goods imported into the US will be subject to a 10% import tax, and the car industry has already been hit with a 25% levy which came into effect in the early hours of Thursday morning.

Downing Street has said that Sir Keir, Anthony Albanese and Giorgia Meloni “all agreed that an all-out trade war would be extremely damaging”.

Issuing a readout of the separate discussions on Friday, a Downing Street spokesperson said the PM “has been clear the UK’s response will be guided by the national interest” and officials will “calmly continue with our preparatory work, rather than rush to retaliate”.

“He discussed this approach with both leaders, acknowledging that while the global economic landscape has shifted this week, it has been clear for a long time that like-minded countries must maintain strong relationships and dialogue to ensure our mutual security and maintain economic stability,” the spokesperson added.

“They all agreed that an all-out trade war would be extremely damaging and is in nobody’s interests, while agreeing to keep in close contact in the coming days.”

It is expected that Sir Keir will take further calls with counterparts over the weekend.

All but one stock on the FTSE 100 fell on Friday, with Rolls-Royce, banks and miners among those to suffer the sharpest losses.

Mr Trump claimed on Thursday that Sir Keir was “very happy” with Britain’s treatment over tariffs, telling reporters on board Air Force One that the pair “have a very good dialogue”.

Number 10 contradicted the characterisation, and said the UK is “disappointed” by the President’s decision.

Asked on Friday whether Mr Trump’s characterisation was accurate, a Downing Street spokesman said: “We’re disappointed by the tariffs that have been brought in.

“Clearly, there will be an economic impact from the decisions the US has taken, both here and globally, but both the Prime Minister and the Business Secretary have been very clear over the last 24 hours that we will continue to act in the best interests of the UK, and we’re prepared to do so.”

Analysts for AJ Bell estimated that about 4.9 trillion US dollars (£3.8 trillion) had been wiped off the value of the global stock market since the US president announced his tariffs on Wednesday evening.

“China’s retaliation to Trump’s latest round of tariffs means that both sides are not backing down.

“It caps off a horrible week for financial markets and dragged share prices even lower,” AJ Bell investment analyst Dan Coatsworth said.

“The escalation in tariffs is bad for US companies who buy goods from China, and vice versa, because their costs will go up.

“It’s also bad for the world in general as we now have a repeat of the heightened geopolitical tensions between the US and China which dominated Trump’s first term in office.

“The rapid pullback in stocks and shares over the past few days has put a dent in people’s investments, including those in the US who were meant to have benefited from Trump’s actions.

“Instead, his tactics have caused shockwaves in every corner of the world.”

Wall Street was also facing another punishing day of trading on Friday, with US stocks tumbling after both the S&P 500 and Dow Jones indexes suffered their worst days since 2020.

The S&P 500, which tracks the country’s leading listed companies, was sliding by about 4% to 5,179 when European markets closed.

This took the index down to its lowest level since August last year.

The Dow Jones, which tracks 30 large US companies, had also plunged 3.6%, while the technology-focused Nasdaq index was also dropping about 3.6%.

Ministers are still hoping for a deal with the US that could secure some exemption from the tariffs, with Sir Keir promising businesses on Thursday that he would “fight for the best deal for Britain”.

Ministers have so far avoided criticism of Mr Trump as they seek to secure an agreement with America. However the Government has drawn up a list of products that could be hit with tariffs in retaliation and is consulting with businesses on how any counter measures could impact them.

Rachel Reeves said on Friday that the Government is “determined to get the best deal we can” with Washington.

“Of course, we don’t want to see tariffs on UK exports, and we’re working hard as a government in discussion with our counterparts in the US to represent the British national interest and support British jobs and British industry,” the Chancellor said.

However, she declined to give a timeframe for when she expected those discussions to bear fruit.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/starmer-speaks-to-world-leaders-as-ftse-100-plunges-after-trump-s-tariffs/ar-AA1CjoIv?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=0b14b2da2aed4a4ea78f9f2558ba190a&ei=80

Jimbuna
04-06-25, 07:43 AM
I simply don't believe him.

He is trying to keep the pensioners vote after robbing them of the winter fuel payment amongst other things.

Keir Starmer Makes Bold Statement on Future of State Pension Triple Lock

Keir Starmer, Leader of the Labour Party, has recently reaffirmed his commitment to the state pension triple lock policy amidst growing discussions about its future. The triple lock ensures that pension payments increase every year by the highest of inflation, wage growth, or 2.5%, offering a crucial level of security to millions of pensioners. As Birmingham Mail reports, from April 7, pensioners are set to receive up to £470 more in their payments.

While the policy has long been a safeguard for pensioners, its sustainability has become a contentious issue. The ongoing debate about the future of the triple lock is gaining traction, especially as some Conservative leaders have questioned its long-term viability.

A Pledge for Stability
During Prime Minister’s Questions, Keir Starmer took the opportunity to address the growing concerns surrounding the triple lock. He emphasized that the Labour Party was fully committed to the policy, stating, “We can commit to the triple lock because we restored stability after they (the Conservatives) crashed the economy.” Starmer pointed out that, under Labour, the country had achieved economic stability, and in return, pensioners would benefit from an increase of up to £470 in their payments. This increase, he argued, was evidence of Labour’s dedication to ensuring pension security, especially as the nation faces economic challenges.

Despite this, the issue of whether the triple lock can be sustained long-term remains under heavy scrutiny. Starmer added that, while Labour fully supports the policy, the Conservative Party has made comments suggesting it is unsustainable. He went further, claiming that the Shadow Chancellor had referred to the triple lock as “unsustainable,” and “the leader of the opposition wants to means test the triple lock so she can cut it.” This remark was aimed at the growing Conservative push to reconsider or reform the policy, calling into question its future under a potential Conservative government.

Conservative Pushback: Is the Triple Lock Under Threat?
The Conservative Party’s stance on the triple lock is becoming increasingly vocal, with figures like Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative leader, offering their own critiques of the policy. Badenoch was quick to point out that the triple lock was, in fact, “Conservative policy,” originally brought in under the Tories. Despite this, she, along with other party members, has raised concerns about its long-term affordability, especially as public finances come under increasing strain.

The conflict over the future of the triple lock highlights a larger debate about balancing financial sustainability with the need to protect pensioners. While the Labour Party remains steadfast in its commitment to the policy, Conservative leaders are pushing for changes, arguing that the growing costs associated with the triple lock are unsustainable.

As Starmer continues to defend the policy, it is clear that the debate is far from over, with both parties holding opposing views on how to best secure the future of pension payments in the UK.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/keir-starmer-makes-bold-statement-on-future-of-state-pension-triple-lock/ar-AA1CnCkt?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=4bcc3ddb804144ecb813e276a64e0135&ei=53

Jimbuna
04-07-25, 12:46 PM
Way way out of her depth.

Government will meet target of 1.5m homes, says Rayner after watchdog forecast

The Government will meet its target of building 1.5 million homes over five years, the Deputy Prime Minister has said, as she took questions about a watchdog forecast which appeared to lower this figure to 1.3 million.

Angela Rayner said the Office for Budget Responsibility’s forecast, that the UK’s housing stock would rise by 1.3 million by 2029-30, “will increase” once further reforms are agreed, including the Planning and Infrastructure Bill.

Speaking in the Commons on Monday, Conservative former minister Graham Stuart asked Ms Rayner to “confirm today that the 1.5 million target has gone”.

Ms Rayner told MPs that the OBR forecast scored changes last year to national planning rules, known as the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF).

She said: “I don’t know if my Mancunian accent will help, as opposed to the minister (Matthew Pennycook) who answered this question just a moment ago, the OBR scored the NPPF changes we’ve already made, that’s where that figure came from.”

The Deputy Prime Minister added: “Our other plans, including the homes acceleration plan and the money that we’re investing since then, and the Planning Infrastructure Bill changes will mean that that number will increase and we will meet our 1.5 million homes target.

“I don’t think I can say it much clearer than that.”
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/government-will-meet-target-of-1-5m-homes-says-rayner-after-watchdog-forecast/ar-AA1CsMsZ?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=2c2365de92bd403296f43c848f5a5e37&ei=73

Jimbuna
04-07-25, 12:54 PM
Workers face hit of up to £11k by 2030 due to Labour's 'job tax'

Workers are facing a hit of up to £11,000 over the next five years due to Labour's 'jobs tax', an analysis has found.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves' hike to employer National Insurance contributions (NICs), which she announced in October, is now in effect and is set to keep down wages.

From 6 April, the rate of employer NICs rose from 13.8 per cent to 15 per cent as the Treasury attempts to raise around £25billion a year.

The Chancellor has also cut the threshold at which firms become liable to pay NICs on an employees' earnings.

Business chiefs have warned of a devastating impact from the tax rise, which they say is putting many firms at risk of closure due to hiked costs.

New research has also set out the 'grim reality' of the NICs rise on workers' pay packets. It is estimated most of the tax hike will be passed on to employees through lower real wages.

A Liberal Democrat analysis found, on average, an employee would be worse off by roughly £2,900 by 2030. It also showed how workers are set to experience a hit of nearly £470 in the next year on average.

The analysis revealed that of the £25.7billion hit to firms from Ms Reeves' 'jobs tax' in 2029/30, around £19.5billion would get passed on to workers.

Kensington and Chelsea was the worst impacted area in the country, with employees expecting to see an average hit of £10,800 in total by the end of the decade.

Some 60,043 payrolled employees in the London borough were forecast to be hit by a combined £649million due to the NICs rise over the next five years.

The next worst impacted area was the City of London, where employees were found to be facing an average hit £10,469 over the next five years.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/workers-face-hit-of-up-to-11k-by-2030-due-to-labour-s-job-tax/ar-AA1CpvOO?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=b1431798a67d4f53abc4e7abeb12c273&ei=94

Jimbuna
04-08-25, 12:26 PM
What a lying hypocrite this individual is.

Dignity is what drives me, Starmer says in Commons grilling on welfare cuts

Sir Keir Starmer suggested ministerial language on welfare reform has sometimes been misguided and insisted “dignity” is what drives his politics as he defended Government plans to slash the benefits bill.

The Prime Minister said people “occasionally don’t get it quite right” with the words they use and are “quite right” to apologise for doing so as he faced a grilling from MPs over the spending squeeze.

He said dignity was “probably the most important word in my dictionary” and has guided his decision-making in Government after being asked whether he agreed it was important to prevent language which “demonises” claimants.

It comes after Chief Secretary to the Treasury Darren Jones apologised for likening benefits to “pocket money” following a backlash over his remarks made in the wake of Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ spring statement.

Asked whether there would be efforts to clamp down on the use of such language, Sir Keir told the Commons Liaison Committee on Tuesday: “Of course language matters.

“I think every member of Cabinet knows that. Occasionally people don’t get it quite right. They usually apologise and are quite right to.”

He added: “The two values that have driven me in everything I’ve done as a lawyer and as a politician are dignity and respect. Dignity is probably the most important word in my dictionary.”

Mr Jones had sought to explain that extra funding to learn new skills and get into work would make people better off than if they relied on benefits payments alone.

Ms Reeves later said he had made a “clumsy” analogy when he compared the uplift for skills to his children working a weekend job on top of receiving pocket money.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/dignity-is-what-drives-me-starmer-says-in-commons-grilling-on-welfare-cuts/ar-AA1CxjX9?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=643e8e2035b84084833e805a1d5986f9&ei=45

Jimbuna
04-10-25, 12:28 PM
Rachel Reeves deals another blow to pensioners with £2.7k in extra bills

Pensioners must now pay £2,700 more in tax to maintain their lifestyles than four years ago. In 2020-21, a pensioner would have paid £5,058 in income tax to live a "comfortable" retirement, whereas this rose to £7,787 in 2023-24, as per The Telegraph. This is due to higher living costs and frozen tax thresholds that have sent tax bills rising by £2,729, the equivalent of 54%.

The Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association (PLSA) defines a "comfortable" retirement as spending £70 on groceries and £60 on meals out each week, while still having enough for activities such as theatre trips, holidays, and regular beauty treatments. The cost of maintaining this lifestyle shot up from £32,800 a year in 2020-21 to £43,100 in 2023-34 as the cost of energy, groceries, holidays, and driving have all increased, as per the PLSA.

Compounding this, income tax thresholds have been frozen since 2020-21 until 2027-28, but Rachel Reeves has not ruled out extending this period.

This has forced pensioners into higher brackets as incomes rise in a failed effort to keep up with inflation.

Jon Greer, head of retirement policy at Quilter, told The Telegraph: "Retirees are increasingly finding themselves caught paying ever increasing amounts of tax.

"The cost of maintaining a decent standard of living in retirement has risen sharply in recent years, yet income tax thresholds have remained unchanged.

"As a result, pensioners are now paying significantly more tax than they were just a few years ago - not because their incomes have grown, but because the system hasn't kept pace with inflation.

"This creeping tax burden risks undermining retirement security for thousands of people who did everything right.

"They saved diligently, planned carefully, and expected a stable system in return. Instead, they are being taxed more heavily simply to stand still."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/rachel-reeves-deals-another-blow-to-pensioners-with-2-7k-in-extra-bills/ar-AA1CFrug?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=e585ecef377c47dcbc347160f837d6a0&ei=12

Jimbuna
04-12-25, 09:39 AM
https://i.postimg.cc/cCwSwRvM/11111.jpg (https://postimages.org/)
https://i.postimg.cc/v8VMJs0g/22222.jpg (https://postimages.org/)

Jimbuna
04-12-25, 10:27 AM
The British town where homeless men sleep rough opposite a migrant hotel

Walking around a near-empty Hull city centre on a quiet, drizzly Tuesday afternoon, it is difficult to imagine that just eight months ago it was ablaze with far-right riots. The historic port city was thrust into the national spotlight for all the wrong reasons, as shop windows were smashed in and bricks hurled at mosques.

Less than a year on, and the city has once again faded from the nation's consciousness. The Lush cosmetics store, which was emptied out by opportunistic looters, has been repaired to new, and people are once again dealing with their daily trials. However it's clear that the discontent, anger and financial woes that culminated in last year's riots have gone nowhere. Two issues repeatedly come up speaking to residents in both Hull, and the city's leafy outskirts - migrants and benefits.

Multiple hotels in the city centre have been appropriated for that exact use, including the grand Royal Hotel, where Queen Victoria stayed in 1854.

Sitting opposite its grand visage, a white British homeless man cannot comprehend why the council and the government have given illegal migrants free accommodation, while he sleeps rough.

John, 50, voiced sadness and resentment at being allowed to slip through the country's welfare safety net following a divorce and health complications.

In the village of Cottingham, an elderly couple reveal they went on a local protest march when there was a threat that other former student halls in the large village was also on track to become more migrant accommodation.

A shop owner on the high street says that while he personally refuses to pay any attention to politics, his wife is a big fan of Tommy Robinson, hardline media personality Katie Hopkins and Nigel Farage.

In a Cafe Nero in Hull, a man inquires about our trip to the city before quietly saying "I'm a fascist" and performing a Nazi salute.

The riots may have faded, but political extremism, and the government failures that fuel such fury, are still here.

It's clear homelessness, benefits and poverty are a massive issue here too, thus underlining the huge political risk being made by Rachel Reeves' recent welfare cuts with Reform breathing down Labour's neck in parts of the country like this.

Aaron, 22, voted Labour last year, but appeared intrigued by Nigel Farage and his local celebrity candidate, boxer Luke Campbell.

He says he's on Universal Credit and has only just been awarded personal independence payment for his mental and physical health, although didn't address Rachel Reeves' recent cut to the budget.

Another passing local raises the recent benefit cuts unprompted, voicing concerns that while she's not on PIP she may be affected by the changes.

Margaret, 63, says she often visits local homeless shelters and is eyeing opening up a business to help people navigate the bureaucracy getting in the way of accessing financial support from the council and the government.

The state of the high street is also at the forefront of locals' minds. While wealthier areas like Cottingham and Beverly have avoided the worst of recent years, Hull city centre is filled with empty shop fronts, and the loss of both M&S and House of Fraser in particular hit hard.

In the place has been the ever-growing numbers of vape shops, Turkish barbers and Vietnamese-run nail salons, which raise consternation and disappointment from locals.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/travel/news/the-british-town-where-homeless-men-sleep-rough-opposite-a-migrant-hotel/ar-AA1CMCch?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=7f88d02b7ee24bd9e64ce4d49c57f22d&ei=7

Dargo
04-12-25, 01:35 PM
British Steel heads for nationalisationThe nationalisation of the UK's very last blast furnaces has moved a step closer. The UK Parliament, in a rare emergency session, passed a bill transferring the running of British Steel's blast furnaces in S****horpe, England, to the UK government. The House of Lords also still has to agree to it, but that is a formality. King Charles is likely to put his signature to the bill tonight. According to the Labour government, the move is urgent because negotiations with the Jingye Group had completely stalled. Jingye is the Chinese group that owns British Steel. With the negotiations deadlocked, the blast furnaces were in danger of shutting down within about 10 days. Once the last fire is put out, it is incredibly difficult to restart the blast furnaces. Hence, Prime Minister Starmer's government submitted an emergency bill to parliament.

The government is now taking over the supply of iron ore and coke needed to keep the blast furnaces running. This gives negotiating parties time to look for a better solution, although the government no longer has much faith in Jingye. Ideally, Labour would like other investors to take over the blast furnaces with a big bag of money from the government. But that chance is extremely slim given the company's huge losses. Officially, Jingye is still the owner, but Trade Minister Reynolds acknowledged in the debate that nationalisation is ‘the most likely’ end result. Nationalisation does require another separate law.

Britain's steel industry has been in deep trouble for years. The pandemic disrupted the industry, followed by a sharp rise in energy prices, which sent the cost of energy-guzzling blast furnaces skyrocketing. Moreover, the British steel industry struggled to compete with cheap imported steel from China. This already led to the closure of Tata Steel's blast furnaces at Port Talbot in Wales last year. What remained were the S****horpe blast furnaces, the last in the UK, but they too were in big trouble. British Steel went bust back in 2019, with Jingye Group taking over the blast furnaces in S****horpe a year later. Despite a €1.4bn investment, the Chinese owners failed to make the blast furnaces profitable. It was Trump's import duties on steel in March that gave the final push towards the abyss. The British government offered Yingye €600 million in subsidies to keep the blast furnaces afloat, but that was not enough. The Chinese owners judged that the blast furnaces were ‘no longer financially viable’ and decided to pull the plug.

This was a painful moment for the British. Not only is the UK the cradle of modern steel industry, it was in danger of becoming the only major economy in the world that could no longer produce high-quality steel on its own soil. It explains the urgency of the emergency session of parliament, which is very rarely called back from recess. All parties voted in favour of the emergency bill. The debate on nationalisation of the steel industry gained new momentum in the UK when Donald Trump entered the White House in January. He started a trade war, introduced import tariffs on steel and made it clear that America is washing its hands of Europe's security.

This was a painful moment for the British. Not only is the UK the cradle of modern steel industry, it was in danger of becoming the only major economy in the world that could no longer produce high-quality steel on its own soil. It explains the urgency of the emergency session of parliament, which is very rarely called back from recess. All parties voted in favour of the emergency bill. The debate on nationalisation of the steel industry gained new momentum in the UK when Donald Trump entered the White House in January. He started a trade war, introduced import tariffs on steel and made it clear that America is washing its hands of Europe's security. Translated from: https://nos.nl/artikel/2563343-britten-koersen-aan-op-nationalisatie-staalindustrie

Jimbuna
04-13-25, 09:08 AM
'Do as I say, not as I do.'

Ed Miliband has carbon footprint 12 times the size of average Briton's

To listen to Ed Miliband you might well come to the conclusion that he wasn't terribly keen on air travel, considering it a threat to the Earth's climate and indeed the entire human race.

'Any aviation expansion will only be able to go ahead if it is consistent with our carbon budgets,' he said earlier this year when the Government revisited the idea of constructing a third runway at Heathrow.

In February, when the Government's Climate Change Committee proposed that air travel be discouraged through a frequent-flyer tax, an increase in Air Passenger Duty and a reduction in the number of domestic flights, he declined to rule out any of these measures, saying: 'We owe it to future generations to tackle the existential climate crisis.'

But just like the celebrities who preach to the rest of us about climate change as they flit around the globe in their private jets, with Miliband it appears to be a case of, 'Do as I say, not as I do.'

In practice, Miliband is one of the country's most prolific air travellers, notching up at least 44,600 air miles since he became Energy and Climate Change Secretary in July. That is the equivalent of more than 12 return flights to Tenerife.

With astonishing hypocrisy, he began his aviation odyssey in August by flying to Brazil 'to signal Britain's resurgent ambition for global leadership on international climate'.

This is how his trip was justified in a document published by the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero.

His trip took in the capital Brasilia and the northern cities of Fortaleza and Belem.

If he travelled business class he would have been responsible for 19.7 tons of carbon dioxide for this excursion alone, according to the carbon calculator on the website myclimate.org.

That is four times the average annual carbon emissions per capita for the UK population.

But that was a mere dip of the toe into Miliband's overall carbon footprint over the past nine months.

A month later he was airborne again, flying to the Big Apple with three officials to attend New York Climate Week. That was another 7,000 air miles or so and another 7.7 tons of carbon emissions.

If he took a scheduled flight, that is. In fact, records show that one of the legs was a 'non-scheduled flight' – for which read 'private jet', in which case his emissions could have been several times higher.

In October he was off to Washington to attend a meeting of G20 energy ministers, racking up a further 7,300 air miles and 8.4 tons of carbon.

November saw him fly to Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, for the COP29 summit. That was another 4,900 air miles and at least 5.4 tons of carbon. As his trip involved at least one 'non-scheduled flight', however, his true emissions total would have been much higher.

Official records show that Miliband flew with five officials from his department.

But, in all, more than 100 civil servants from the Energy Department were registered to attend the conference. Presumably they flew separately.

Then, in March, Miliband flew to Beijing, again to discuss climate change. This time he ran up 10,600 air miles, totting up another 12.5 tons of carbon emissions – and that's ignoring the CO2 created in the course of transporting the officials he took with him.

And these are just Miliband's international travels.

A Freedom of Information request published last week revealed that his department spent £43,644 on flights within the UK between July and December – the very sort of flights which the Climate Change Committee has suggested banning.

Although the figures don't break down how much of this was spent on getting Miliband himself about the country and how much was travel by his officials, we know he visited Aberdeen on October 17 last year and that the timings of his trip mean that he must have undertaken the journey by air.

That is a further 800 miles and 0.6 tons of carbon emissions.

By the way, the British Airways website is showing return flights from Heathrow to Aberdeen from about £200.

If the Energy Department spent more than £40,000 on domestic flights in a period of just six months, it suggests either that officials are routinely taking flights for journeys that could have been completed by train, or possibly that they are paying well above the odds, perhaps because they were hiring private jets.

Miliband's air travels alone mean he has been responsible for at least 54.2 tons of carbon emissions in the past nine months – more than 12 times the annual emissions of the average Briton.

How ridiculous for someone who in November told us that Britain was already suffering 'extreme impacts' of climate change.

Needless to say, it is the rest of us, not him, whom he expects to change lifestyles in order to save the planet.

He wants us to ditch our gas boilers and buy expensive heat pumps (Miliband does at least have one of these), and to ditch our petrol and diesel cars for pricey electric models and a lifetime of range anxiety.

The Energy Secretary's hypocrisy over air travel does not end with his own personal travel.

At the same time he was making energetic representations against a third runway at Heathrow, he was lobbying hard for the reopening of Doncaster Sheffield Airport, which served his own constituency between 2005 and 2022 before closing after the now defunct airline Flybe withdrew its services.

His lobbying worked. In December the airport welcomed its first flight for two years thanks, in part, to an injection of £3 million of taxpayers' money from the South Yorkshire Mayoral Combined Authority.

It seems that it is one rule for his own constituency and another for the rest of the country.

Nor did Miliband see fit to criticise the Prime Minister when he was grilled about why Sir Keir Starmer took a private jet to attend the Euro 2024 football tournament in Germany last year.

All Miliband did say was: 'He's the Prime Minister of the country. He needs to get about.'

That is no answer at all. And there is no reason whatsoever why a Prime Minister – accompanied by the appropriate level of security – should not travel on a scheduled flight. Many of Starmer's predecessors have happily travelled in this way over the years.

Of course, arguments can be made for ministers criss-crossing the world, and sometimes this can involve travelling to destinations not served by scheduled flights. But if Miliband is going to lecture the rest of the population about

the urgent need to tackle climate change by curtailing our lifestyles, you might think that he would at least make some effort to cut his own emissions.

To fail to do so invites ridicule and contempt.

How does Miliband expect us to spend, say, £13,000 on a heat pump – the average cost of such an appliance installed under the Government's Boiler Upgrade Scheme, before grants of £7,500 are taken into account – if he is not prepared to rein in his air travel?

A case might be made that he had to travel to Baku for COP29, but he certainly didn't have to fly to Brazil, New York and Washington for meetings in the weeks leading up to the conference. Has he not heard of Zoom?

Miliband has become the face of Government climate policy, zealously promoting measures that have given us the highest energy prices in the world and contributed to Britain's industrial decline.

Thanks to Miliband's mad dash to Net Zero, we are on the verge of losing the bulk of our steel industry and in danger of losing our chemicals industry as well.

Either he should practise what he preaches – or stop preaching.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/travel/news/ed-miliband-has-carbon-footprint-12-times-the-size-of-average-briton-s/ar-AA1CO57n?ocid=mailsignout&pc=U591&cvid=c7ea18f8197649c3c87bd0b94191a731&ei=29

Jimbuna
04-13-25, 09:11 AM
Rachel Reeves torn apart on GB News with stinging six-word British Steel law swipe

Rachel Reeves was slammed on GB News after emergency proposals to save British Steel's S****horpe blast furnaces were approved by Parliament. Legislation giving the Government the power to instruct British Steel to keep the plant open passed both the Commons and Lords in a single day unopposed. Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds accused British Steel's Chinese owners, Jingye, of failing to negotiate "in good faith" after it decided to stop buying enough raw materials to keep the blast furnaces at S****horpe going.

Addressing the new bill on GB News on Sunday (April 13), presenters Cameron Walker and Anne Diamond questioned how Rachel Reeves is going to fund it. Speaking to James Heale, Cameron asked the political correspondent on how much this legislation is going to cost taxpayers. James said it is believed to be in the "hundreds of millions". He explained: "The full cost is yet to be worked out. But I think Jingye lost about £650 million between 2020 and 2023. It's likely to be hundreds of millions but even a billion or so."

Anne declared that the Chancellor has been claiming there is no money, but agreed this bill must have been passed. James added: "There will be a lot of Labour MPs will be pleased they have done this even if a few conceived it's a bit belated, perhaps."

In a brutal swipe to the Chancellor, Cameron quipped: "It's amazing how much money Rachel Reeves can find down the back of the sofa, isn't it?"

Anne pointed out that the money can always be found from somewhere, but also took aim at the politician as she realised what this could mean for British taxpayers. She added: "Not necessarily good news for us."

On Saturday, the Tories accused Labour of "indefensible incompetence" for almost allowing British Steel to collapse. Shadow Business Secretary Andrew Griffith accused the Government of behaving like "sulky teenagers".

But Labour MPs attempted to hit back as they claimed the crisis was caused by leader of the opposition Kemi Badenoch, back when she was Business and Trade Secretary in the previous Conservative government.

Mr Griffth told a packed House of Commons: "This is a botched nationalisation plan revealing the Government has no plan."

He added: "It's indefensible incompetence. Despite years to prepare, it's clear they came into office with no plan," before insisting the Government "hasn't really thought this through".
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/rachel-reeves-torn-apart-on-gb-news-with-stinging-six-word-british-steel-law-swipe/ar-AA1CPbCq?ocid=mailsignout&pc=U591&cvid=4680cfbd26834f9bb751e61dc00521aa&ei=7

Jimbuna
04-14-25, 05:50 AM
Ed Miliband let China wreck British Steel and is serving them UK energy sector on a plate

Unless you're jet-setting Energy Secretary Ed Miliband. His reckless net zero crusade is stamped Made in China. And the nationalisation of British Steel shows just how dangerous outsourcing key industries to hostile powers really is.

Once a pillar of our industrial strength, British Steel is now a cautionary tale of decline. Successive governments let it slide, including Boris Johnson, who allowd Chinese firm Jingye to buy S****horpe's steelworks in 2020.

Now, Jingye has cancelled vital orders to keep the UK's last blast furnaces running. They're the only ones capable of producing virgin steel.

Shadow Business Secretary Andrew Griffith says Miliband's green madness has left us with energy costs twice as high as Germany's.

Steel isn't just another industry. It's the backbone of tanks, turbines, trains - and ironically even wind farms. Yet as China floods global markets with cheap subsidised coal-fuelled steel, he let domestic supply go to the wall.

In Westminster, there are whispers that Jingye's real goal wasn't to revive S****horpe but to run it down. Workers recently blocked access to the site, fearing sabotage from within.

Meanwhile, Miliband vetoed a new Cumbrian mine that could have supplied homegrown coking coal. Instead, we now import it at twice the cost, under Royal Navy escort. Brilliant.

Last September, Labour nodded through Tata Steel's plan to shut Port Talbot's blast furnaces - losing 2,800 jobs. Miliband looked the other way.

The Tories are in no way blameless, and not just Boris. Theresa May hiked the target for cutting greenhouse gas emissions to 100%.

But Miliband's in charge now and his hostility to North Sea oil and gas takes economic self-harm to new heights.

Blocking new licences means we now import more from unfriendly regimes, while losing billions in tax revenue.

This isn't energy security. It's surrender.

Ed says solar panels and wind farms will set a global example. They already are - to Xi Jinping, as China cashes in on our green obsession.

Chinese firms are embedded in a third of UK offshore wind projects. This isn't a green revolution, it's a Chinese Communist Party export strategy.

The US gets it. They're banning Chinese tech from critical infrastructure and blacklisting firms linked to the Chinese military. We did it with Huawei, blocking its tech from our 5G networks and other critical infrastructure.

But Miliband? He's rolling out the red carpet. Chinese firm Mingyang is building turbines for Europe's largest wind farm.

Here. In our North Sea. Defence objections were overruled.

These state-linked companies can spy on our Navy, switch off power, or worse. And Chinese hackers have already targeted UK energy firms.

This isn't theory - it's happening.

Some of their tech is made with slave labour. How does that sit with Red Ed?

And for what? Net zero doesn't even work on its own terms.

We block coal mines here, then import dirtier fuel from abroad. We scrap gas licences, then pay despots for LNG. We shut steelworks, then import carbon-heavy Chinese steel.

That's not saving the planet. That's exporting pollution, jobs, and security.

Miliband has already been embarrassed over Heathrow's third runway, the electric car chaos, and now British Steel.

He's not just a political liability, he's an economic and national security threat.

Keir Starmer must reshuffle him out. Fast. Before even more damage is done.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/ed-miliband-let-china-wreck-british-steel-and-is-serving-them-uk-energy-sector-on-a-plate/ar-AA1CSjuN?ocid=hpmsn&cvid=2916f46bdb544162db44ce940bece570&ei=30

Jimbuna
04-15-25, 09:45 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J398GCgs4q8

Jimbuna
04-15-25, 11:08 AM
I've read small print of Trump's tariffs - and it spells utter disaster for Rachel Reeves

There was a flicker of optimism this morning, as US Vice President JD Vance expressed confidence in securing a "great" trade deal with the UK.

He pointed to President Trump's admiration for the British monarchy and his longstanding cultural and business ties with Britain.

The FTSE 100 nudged up 1.1% on the back of this charm offensive, but the bounce was short-lived.

Investors, like the rest of us, have started to realise that the devil is in the detail. And the small print of Trump's latest tariff plan is terrifying.

Tariffs of up to 25% UK steel and car experts are currently due to take effect after Trump's 90-day pause. Along with a flat 10% tariff on all other British exports.

Businesses hate uncertainty more than they hate tax. Thanks to Trump and Reeves, they have both in spades. Firms don't know how much their exports will attract in tariffs, when rates will change, or what Trump's next target will be.

This threatens to blow apart carefully structured supply chains and completely upend business planning.

It's a nightmare for Reeves too.

These tariffs could shave an eye-watering £24billion off GDP over the next two years.

The Office for Budget Responsibility has already warned that they could also obliterate what's left of the Chancellor's fiscal headroom.

This could force Reeves to either cut spending and hike taxes in her Autumn Budget, or most likely both.

Otherwise bond investors could lose faith in the UK's ability to balance the books, sending our borrowing costs through the roof.

As I've written before, Reeves has made mistake after mistake. The last thing she needed was Trump exposing just how vulnerable her missteps have left us.

Take pharmaceuticals. This is not some fringe sector. AstraZeneca is now the biggest company listed in the UK, valued at £160billion.

It's bigger than Shell, HSBC, Unilever and Rolls-Royce. Rival drugs maker Glaxo is also huge, with a total value of around £54billion.

Both are now in Trump's crosshairs.

Britain exported almost £5billion in pharmaceuticals to the US last year, supporting tens of thousands of jobs.

Traditionally, the sector has been spared from trade wars. Not anymore.

Trump has said he wants to slap tariffs on pharma to force companies to "come roaring back" to the US.

As he puts it: "All I have to do is impose a tariff. The higher I do it, the faster they come."

It gets worse.

Britain exported £3.65billion in electronics to the US last year. Trump is now reviewing the entire electronics supply chain as part of a "national security" probe.

He wants those jobs in America too.

Vance might be right. Trump may soften his stance and negotiate some of these tariffs away. But if he doesn't?

Rachel Reeves has already put herself in a difficult position. Thanks to Trump, it could soon become impossible.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/i-ve-read-small-print-of-trump-s-tariffs-and-it-spells-utter-disaster-for-rachel-reeves/ar-AA1CXFCM?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=762a047255db4a09a2160dfdaf8f691f&ei=46

Jimbuna
04-19-25, 10:41 AM
https://i.postimg.cc/k508wh65/11111.jpg (https://postimg.cc/f3vJRCv4)
https://i.postimg.cc/rm54HCxN/22222.jpg (https://postimages.org/)

Jimbuna
04-22-25, 12:34 PM
Yet more hypocrisy and double standards.

Ed Miliband adviser who backed levy on frequent fliers racked up 40,000 air miles in a year

One of the Government's climate advisers has been accused of 'rank hypocrisy' after they racked up 40,000 air miles in a year by jetting to environmental conferences.

Nigel Topping is one of six members of the Climate Change Committee, which advises Ed Miliband, the Energy Secretary, on reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

In February, the committee backed a 'frequent flier levy' to help reach Net Zero. This would see Britons who take the most flights, or fly the furthest distances, taxed more.

According to The Telegraph, Mr Topping attended conferences in Barbados, Azerbaijan, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, the Netherlands and the US in the last 12 months.

An analysis by the newspaper showed he accrued 11 times more air miles in the last year than the average Briton.

It also found that Mr Topping's carbon footprint from flights alone was about 40 per cent more than the average Briton produces in total in a year.

Mr Miliband himself was recently criticised after it was revealed he had notched up at least 44,600 air miles since he became Energy Secretary last July.

It meant he was responsible for at least 54.2 tons of carbon emissions in nine months – more than 12 times the annual emissions of the average Briton.

Mr Topping was revealed to have attended the International Mangrove Conservation and Restoration Conference in December in Abu Dhabi.

This was held at the five-star Bab al-Qasr hotel, which boasts a private beach, infinity pool and chauffeur service.

The climate adviser was also said to have attended the UN's desertification conference in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, earlier the same month.

Mr Topping, who was the UK's high-level climate action champion for the COP26 summit in Glasgow in 2021, attended the Sustainable Energy For All Global Forum in Barbados last month.

Tory MP Andrew Bowie, the shadow energy secretary, said: 'This is rank hypocrisy.

'Once again we see those preaching this Mr Miliband-driven Net Zero zealotry are all too happy to impose significant burdens on others, but won't practise what they preach.

'It's one rule for them and another for everyone else. Kemi Badenoch and I have been clear that Net Zero by 2050 would involve significant cost to the country and to the consumer and it is simply not sustainable.

'It is a shame this Labour Government is still not prepared to do the same.'

The Climate Change Committee did not comment as Mr Topping's travel was not part of his work as a committee member.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/ed-miliband-adviser-who-backed-levy-on-frequent-fliers-racked-up-40-000-air-miles-in-a-year/ar-AA1DnStW?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=f0cada7300924281a5533eed1ca23adc&ei=28

Jimbuna
04-23-25, 10:59 AM
https://i.postimg.cc/T1g77N6c/11111.jpg (https://postimg.cc/MfZmXDXc)
https://i.postimg.cc/xjz418zb/22222.jpg (https://postimages.org/)

Jimbuna
04-23-25, 11:11 AM
This mindless idiot will achieve nothing apart from splitting an already divided country.

Miliband poised to charge homes in South more for electricity

Ed Miliband is poised to approve changes that would mean households in the South pay more for electricity than those in Scotland and the North.

The Energy Secretary has been weighing up whether to push ahead with zonal pricing, which would split the country’s single national power market into different regions.

Supporters say the change will cut household electricity bills overall by reducing the need for grid upgrades, while opponents counter that it will create a “postcode lottery” and deter investment in wind and solar farms.

But in a blow to critics, The Telegraph has been told that government officials have advised Mr Miliband to press ahead with the policy.

Whitehall sources did not deny the claim, but stressed that no final decision had been made. One said Mr Miliband continued to debate the policy with his inner circle.

It could also still be blocked or watered down in later stages when other government departments are consulted. Ministers have promised to announce a decision by mid-2025.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/miliband-poised-to-charge-homes-in-south-more-for-electricity/ar-AA1DsDJM?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=3d98888753764db6b29882cd153c8bef&ei=144

Jimbuna
04-25-25, 08:35 AM
Huge boost to Nigel Farage after yet another Reform by-election win

The Reform Party has secured another council seat after a major win in a by-election, giving Nigel Farage a fresh boost. Britain Elects shared the results of the Arun District Council Marine ward by-election on X, confirming Reform UK gained the seat from an Independent.

Reform candidate Giuliano Pinnelli won 26% of the vote, just edging out Liberal Democrat Paul Wells, who polled 25.2 %. Labour's Alison Terry came third with 20.1%, followed by Conservative Diana Thas with 16.3 %, Green Party candidate John Erskine on 9.8 %, and Independent Phil Woodall on 2.6 %.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/other/huge-boost-to-nigel-farage-after-yet-another-reform-by-election-win/ar-AA1DBFNk?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=85f57966fe8a4f5d9685a75681290b30&ei=15

Jimbuna
04-27-25, 05:40 AM
Everybody is welcome, come on over, free housing and hotels are assured.

REVEALED: Keir Starmer's list of towns where taxpayers could pay rent for Channel crossing migrants - Is your area impacted?

The full list of towns and cities where taxpayers could end up paying the rent for Channel crossing migrants has been revealed.

According to the website of Serco, one of three private contractors working for the Home Office, the firm's full dispersal portfolio currently spans across 120 local authorities.

It comes just hours after Serco was revealed to be offering landlords five-year guaranteed full rent deals at the taxpayer's expense.

The list is split into three areas, the North West, the Midlands and the East of England, with Serco admitting: "We are continuing to work with new Local Authorities across our region to extend the Serco footprint." However, the company's website also stated: "All areas are currently closed for Procurement in the North West."

The towns listed in the East of England are:

・Babergh/Mid Suffolk

・Breckland

・Broadlands/South Norfolk

・Cambridge

・East Cambridgeshire

・East Suffolk

・Fenland

・Great Yarmouth

・Ipswich

・Kings Lynn & West Norfolk

・Mid Suffolk

・North Norfolk

・Norwich

・Peterborough

・South Cambridgeshire (Cambourne, Sawston)

・South Norfolk

・West Suffolk (Bury, Newmarket, Brandon, Haverhill, Mildenhall)

The towns and cities listed in the Midlands are:

・Amber Valley

・Ashfield

・Bassetlaw

・Birmingham

・Blaby

・Bolsover

・Boston

・Bromsgrove and Redditch

・Broxtowe

・Cannock Chase

・Charnwood

・Chesterfield

・Derby

・Derbyshire Dales

・Dudley

・East Lindsey

・East Staffordshire (Burton-upon-Trent and Uttoxeter)

・Erewash (Derbyshire)

・Gedling

・Harborough

・Herefordshire County

・High Peak

・Hinkley & Bosworth

・Huntingdonshire

・Leicester

・Lincoln

・Lichfield

・Malvern Hills

・Mansfield

・Melton

・Newark and Sherwood

・Newcastle-under-Lyme

・North East Derbyshire

・North Kesteven (Lincolnshire)

・North Northamptonshire (Kettering, Corby, Wellingborough)

・North Warwickshire

・North West Leicestershire (Coalville)

・Nottingham

・Nuneaton and Bedworth

・Oadby & Wigston

・Rugby

・Rushcliffe

・Rutland

・Sandwell

・Shropshire

・Solihull

・South Derbyshire (Swadlincote)

・South Holland

・South Kesteven (Lincolnshire)

・South Staffordshire

・Stafford

・Staffordshire Moorlands

・Stoke-on-Trent

・Stratford-on-Avon

・Tamworth

・Telford and Wrekin

・Walsall

・Warwick ( Leamington Spa, Kenilworth)

・West Lindsey

・West Northamptonshire (Northampton & Daventry)

・Wolverhampton

・Worcester

・Wychavon

・Wyre Forest

The towns and cities listed in the North West are:

・Allerdale

・Barrow-in-Furness

・Blackburn & Darwen

・Blackpool

・Bolton

・Burnley

・Bury

・Carlisle

・Cheshire East

・Cheshire West and Chester

・Chorley

・Copeland

・Eden (Penrith)

・Flyde

・Halton

・Hyndburn

・Knowsley

・Lancaster

・Liverpool

・Manchester

・Oldham

・Pendle

・Preston

・Ribble Valley

・Rochdale

・Rossendale

・Salford

・Sefton

・South Lakeland

・South Ribble

・Stockport

・St Helens

・Tameside

・Trafford

・Warrington

・West Lancashire

・Wigan

・Wirral

・Wyre

There are approximately 1.3 million people on the social housing waiting list as cheaper private rented accommodation is in high demand.

One council leader told LBC: "It’s Serco who are encouraging landlords to exploit taxpayers, then it’s blamed on councils because of the impact it has on local rents, services and social cohesion. I don’t think it’s good for the fabric of society or the individuals involved."

A Home Office spokesman said the department is "intensifying" collaboration with France and other countries over tackling gangs' business models, and introducing tougher enforcement powers under new legislation.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/fire-in-manaknagar-apartment-narrow-escape-for-25-residents/ar-AA1DG89X?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=a21241544b934a9ba16e58ee9f5a986a&ei=22

Jimbuna
04-27-25, 10:58 AM
https://i.postimg.cc/jSMLk8Yp/dfg.jpg (https://postimages.org/)

Jimbuna
04-28-25, 09:32 AM
You'll be extremely lucky if you ever get an answer from this chancer.

Ed Miliband gets furious telling off for breaking promise on net zero plans

Energy Secretary Ed Miliband has been ordered to come clean about plans for net zero carbon emissions "without delay". He pledged in January to reveal plans for a dramatic cut in the pollution linked to global warming, which is likely to involve a huge increase in onshore windfarms and solar power stations - and could mean forcing people to eat less meat.

But he has now been reprimanded by the Commons Environmental Audit Committee, chaired by Labour MP Toby Perkins, which has written to Mr Miliband complaining that he failed to keep his promise. Mr Perkins said he had been forced to make his complaint public because of the long delay. Mr Miliband is working on a "carbon budget", which will be a legally-binding limit on the amount of carbon emissions the UK produces between 2037 and 2042. The goal is to achieve "net zero" emissions by 2050.

The Climate Change Committee, which advises Mr Miliband, said earlier this year that cutting emissions would involve a reduction in meat and dairy consumption. It said: "In our pathway, meat products will be mainly replaced by existing alternative protein products, some plant-based whole foods and, in the later years, novel alternative proteins."

It also said more taxes on flights were needed to curb the growth in aviation, and more homes would need heat pumps instead of boilers.

Mr Miliband told MPs in January that he would share his plans with them. But Mr Perkins said: "In January, we were encouraged to hear the Secretary of State's warm words about Parliament's role in scrutinising plans for the Seventh Carbon Budget.

"But those warm words have not yet translated to any form of detail. What, if anything, will Ministers offer for scrutiny before Parliament is invited to agree the next Carbon Budget?

"Our role must be more than a rubber stamp; we need to know exactly what the Government intends to do, to reduce emissions sufficiently by 2042. I therefore urge the Secretary of State to respond without delay."

He revealed that he wrote privately to Mr Miliband in February asking for the information. And he said he had now decided to make his concerns public.

In a new letter to the Energy Secretary, Mr Perkins said: "I am concerned to note that the Committee is yet to receive a response, some eight weeks after the date by which the information was requested to be provided." And he insisted: "Please arrange for a response to the letter to be sent without further delay."

Mr Miliband last week insisted there would be no u-turn over controversial plans for net zero, even though the Climate Change Committee warned it will cost the UK around £4 billion every year.

Last week he said: "The critics will not shut up, I'm sure. But the critics need to know, if they want to fight about this, this Government says bring it on. Let's bring on the fight.

"Let's have the argument and any day of the week, any hour of the day, any month of the year we will have the argument between cheap, clean renewables that give you energy security, lower bills, the biggest economic opportunity of the 21st century, against their case to say no to all that, to stick simply with expensive, insecure fossil fuels which gave us the cost-of-living crisis, which ruined family finances, which ruined public finances, which ruined business finances, and they will say no to these huge job opportunities that are on offer.

"So whether it is political parties or other forces that want to take on net zero and the clean energy transition, they need to know that this Government is not for bending, this Government is not for buckling, this Government is standing firm.

"And, you know what, I think the British people are on our side on this."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/cars/news/new-mot-test-changes-could-see-uk-launch-european-union-regulations-for-millions-of-cars/ar-AA1DL7dQ?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=5fbb3a47b1e344c4beac094b2174443b&ei=14

Jimbuna
05-01-25, 10:51 AM
Blow for Keir Starmer as Reform set to sweep to victory in two major mayoral contests

Reform is poised to sweep to victory in two major mayoral contests today, as a former Labour adviser warned that Sir Keir Starmer's party is 'toast' in local elections.

Polling yesterday suggested Nigel Farage's party is on course to have two mayors, in Lincolnshire and Hull, with Labour pushed into third place in both.

Bookmakers have also installed Reform as odds-on favourites to seize one of Labour's safest parliamentary seats in Runcorn and Helsby in a by-election.

Voters go to the polls today in 23 local authority areas and six mayoralties in England in the biggest electoral test since the general election.

Polls suggest both Labour and the Conservatives are likely to be punished by disillusioned voters.

John McTernan, who was a senior No 10 adviser to Tony Blair, yesterday warned Labour was set to take a beating because of the Government's unpopularity.

He told Times Radio: 'Labour are toast. There's nothing that can be done in the next 24 hours that can change the election results.

'You look at all the focus groups, if you go to any of them, what do people associate the Labour Party with?

'Taking winter fuel payments away from pensioners. Why are they attacking pensioners? Why are they now attacking the disabled? That's what people are saying.'

A Labour source dismissed Mr McTernan's criticism, but acknowledged the party faced a 'difficult' set of elections.

The Conservatives face the heaviest losses. Kemi Badenoch yesterday acknowledged a 'plague on all your houses vibe' among voters about the traditional parties.

But Mrs Badenoch's spokesman insisted she would not resign, regardless of how bad the losses may be.

He added: 'It is a statement of fact that it is going to be a tough night.

'But she was elected on the basis of a long-term plan and she is only five months in.'

Polling yesterday suggested Reform is set to win in the inaugural mayoral contests in both Lincolnshire and Hull and East Yorkshire.

The YouGov poll suggested outspoken former Tory education minister Dame Andrea Jenkyns, who defected to Reform last year, is set to secure 40 per cent of vote in Lincolnshire – well ahead of her Tory rival on 25 per cent.

In Hull and East Yorkshire, Reform's Luke Campbell is on 35 per cent, 15 points clear of his rival. The poll also suggested Labour is set to lose the West of England mayoral contest to the Greens.

Labour sources last night insisted the Runcorn by-election was not a 'lost cause' – but struggled to explain why Sir Keir has failed to visit the constituency, which Labour won at the general election with a majority of almost 15,000 votes.

The by-election was called after former MP Mike Amesbury admitted assaulting a constituent on a drunken night out.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/other/blow-for-keir-starmer-as-reform-set-to-sweep-to-victory-in-two-major-mayoral-contests/ar-AA1DX69n?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=6ef09186ad4b4e5eacb14597d6c75824&ei=22

Jimbuna
05-01-25, 11:05 AM
The bugga is at it yet again!

MPs watchdog probes Reeves' theatre tickets declaration

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is being investigated by Parliament's standards watchdog after failing to declare on time that she received free theatre tickets.

It is understood the chancellor attended an event at the National Theatre over Christmas but did not add the donation to the MPs' register of interests within the specified timeframe.

The BBC has been told Reeves did declare the trip on her ministerial register, which is separate from the MPs' register. The parliamentary code of conduct states that MPs must register their financial interests and update any changes within 28 days.

A spokesperson for Reeves said: "The chancellor's interests are fully declared and up to date."

Reeves' register of interests, external show that on 27 December 2024 she received four tickets to the National Theatre with an estimated value of £276. She registered the donation on 27 March 2025.

Sanctions for breaching the rules vary depending on the seriousness of the case, ranging from asking the MP to make an apology to suspension from Parliament.

Earlier this year, the chancellor defended accepting free tickets to a Sabrina Carpenter concert at London's O2 arena.

Speaking to the BBC, she said she had gone with a family member, adding: "I do now have security which means it's not as easy as it would have been in the past to just sit in a concert."

A few days later she told ITV she faced a "balancing act in my job to try and be a good parent" alongside security requirements.

She added: "I felt I was doing the right thing, but I do understand perceptions. I recognise the feeling here. I have no intention of doing that again."

Following a row over freebies last summer, the government has introduced new rules which do not ban ministers from accepting donations but require them to consider the "need to maintain the public's confidence".

In 2022, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, then the leader of the opposition, was found to have breached the code of conduct by failing to register financial interests including tickets to football matches.

He apologised and said it had been the "result of an administrative error".
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c2lzqr8055go

Jimbuna
05-02-25, 11:35 AM
Couldn't get much worse for Two Tier Keir

Reform gains control of a string of councils in England and secure their second mayor after winning the Runcorn and Helsby by-election

Keir Starmer says Labour's by-election loss is "disappointing", while Nigel Farage says today "marks the end of two-party politics"

Labour narrowly holds three mayoral races in North Tyneside, the West of England, and Doncaster - but loses control of the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough mayoralty to the Conservatives

On the basis of today's results Reform UK has 30% of the projected national vote share, with Labour on 20%, the Lib Dems on 17%, the Conservatives on 15% and the Greens on 11%, polling expert Professor Sir John Curtice says

Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch says she's "determined to win back" trust, while Ed Davey says the Liberal Democrats are "the party of middle England"

Jimbuna
05-02-25, 11:40 AM
POLL: Should Keir Starmer step down after thumping by-election loss?

After suffering a bruising battle against Reform UK at the ballot box perhaps it was fitting that the Prime Minister was visiting a British defence industry firm today. Sir Keir Starmer visited Leonardo UK in Luton, Beds, where he trumpeted the firm's contributing to the new £19 million RAF StormShroud radar jamming system.

But there was no escaping the fact that at the ballot box Sir Keir's Labour Party had just been blitzed by political new kids on the block, Nigel Farage's Reform UK. Mr Farage declared the "end of two-party politics" as Reform won scores of council seats from both Labour and the Tories. Reform also won the Runcorn and Helsby by-election, with new MP Sarah Pochin beating her Labour rival by an astonishing six votes.

Speaking today, Sir Keir tried to assure voters his party "get it" and the result in Runcorn was "disappointing". But there are already rumblings in the Labour Party that the PM is on the wrong track, with MPs such as Diane Abbott and Brian Leishman both publicly calling for action.

Mr Leishman, who was first elected last year, said: "The first 10 months haven't been good enough or what the people want and if we don't improve people's living standards then the next government will be an extreme right-wing one."

Reform UK leader Mr Farage said the result was a sign that the Prime Minister had "alienated so much of his traditional base, it's just extraordinary".

He said: "For the movement, for the party, it's a very, very big moment indeed, absolutely, no question, and it's happening right across England."

Speaking in County Durham on Friday afternoon, Mr Farage said the results marked the "beginning of the end of the Conservative Party" and "the end of two-party politics". He said Reform had had "the Labour Party for lunch" and "wiped out" the Conservatives in parts of England.

Despite the losses, Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch insisted that the "renewal" of the Conservatives has "only just begun" as she thanked those who had campaigned.

In a post on X, she said: "These were always going to be a very difficult set of elections coming off the high of 2021, and our historic defeat last year - and so it's proving.

"The renewal of our party has only just begun and I'm determined to win back the trust of the public and the seats we've lost, in the years to come."

The Runcorn and Helsby contest ran alongside local elections across England, having been triggered when former Labour MP Mike Amesbury quit after admitting to punching a constituent.

Amesbury won 53% of the vote less than a year ago at the general election, and the defeat, along with Reform gains in other Labour heartlands, will cause unease in Downing Street.

Labour said by-elections are "always difficult for the party in government", and the events surrounding the Runcorn and Helsby vote made it "even harder".
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/poll-should-keir-starmer-step-down-after-thumping-by-election-loss/ar-AA1E3V0X?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=7c599b914ccf49dcb887af7a745b35ff&ei=14

Moonlight
05-02-25, 03:21 PM
Labour and Tory voters have given their parties a major slap for taking their votes for granted, if this doesn't give those two parties a wake up call they'll probably give them a kick in the nuts as well, just to prove their point. Both parties are on a road to no where and they're hell bent on flooring the pedal, this is not going to end well for either of them. :o

Jimbuna
05-03-25, 08:38 AM
What might Reform do with its newly-won power?

Town hall Doge

Asylum seeker accommodation

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cdjl4k8jyxeo

Jimbuna
05-04-25, 05:39 AM
I've more chance winning the national lotter on two consecutive weeks than there is of 'Rachel from Accounts' granting WFA payments to those she stole them from.

Rachel Reeves told to restore Winter Fuel Payment for EVERY pensioner

On 29 July, just three weeks after Labour's landslide win, Rachel Reeves made her first political mistake. And it was a biggie.

She announced that households in England and Wales would no longer be entitled to the Winter Fuel Payment unless they receive Pension Credit or certain other means-tested benefits.

At a stroke, she stripped 10 million pensioners of up to £300 in support for gas and electricity bills.

While some recipients are comfortably off and won't feel the loss, around two million sit just above the threshold for help and definitely will.

For them, it was a bitter blow. And millions still haven't forgiven her.

The Winter Fuel Payment cut was only the beginning. Her £40billion Budget tax raid and the £5billion disability benefit squeeze in March have further fuelled anger.

Along with immigration, these policies have been blamed for Labour's ballot box meltdown last Thursday.

For furious MPs and activists, the Winter Fuel Payment cut is symbolic of a government that lost its way from day one.

Now Reeves is being urged to reverse course.

Doncaster mayor Ros Jones, who held on by just 698 votes ahead of Reform, said: "The Prime Minister must start listening to those calling for a U-turn on cuts to Winter Fuel Payments and disability benefits."

Leeds East MP Richard Burgon added: "By pushing policies like cuts to disability benefits and scrapping the Winter Fuel Allowance, the leadership is driving away our own voters and letting Reform squeeze through."

Corbynities including former shadow home Secretary Diane Abbott and shadow chancellor John McDonnell have also railed at the Winter Fuel Payment cut, along with the £25billion employer's NI hike on jobs and threats to disability benefits such as the Personal Independence Payment, or PIP.

Unite leader Sharon Graham has previously called the Winter Fuel Payment axe "a disgraceful betrayal of older voters".

They don't just want it restored for the hard up, but for every pensioner to shore up voter support for Labour.

Until now, Starmer and Reeves could afford to ignore Labour's left flank. After last week, it can't.

So will Reeves climb down?

Scrapping the Winter Fuel Payment saved the Treasury just £1.5billion. That's a rounding error against our £150billion annual deficit.

Yet Reeves will be reluctant to change course.

Politicians hate being accused of U-turns. Giving in would be seen as a loss of authority, proof she's now at the mercy of her critics.

As I wrote yesterday, Labour is boxed in. It daren't raise taxes, daren't cut benefits and daren't borrow more.

This puts Reeves in an impossible position. If she holds firm, Labour bleeds votes. If she caves in, Britain risks slipping even deeper into financial trouble.

Restoring the Winter Fuel Payment is one of the few retreats the bond markets could tolerate.

The question is whether Reeves can stomach the climbdown. Millions of shivering pensioners won't care. They just want their payment restored.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/rachel-reeves-told-to-restore-winter-fuel-payment-for-every-pensioner/ar-AA1E8c79?cmp_prftch=2&ocid=hpmsn&cvid=083bb37f76b44c8ea3f05b038a60df2f&ei=18

Jimbuna
05-04-25, 12:22 PM
Huge blow to Ed Miliband as Reform councillors declare war on net zero plans

Reform UK has launched a campaign against net zero developments in rural areas, dealing a significant blow to Ed Miliband. Deputy leader Richard Tice announced that the party will use its newfound control over ten councils to obstruct renewable projects at every turn. The MP for Boston and Skegness plans to pen letters to potential developers involved in Lincolnshire projects following Reform's landmark victories in the local elections on Friday, The Telegraph reports.

He said: "I'm now going to write again to them, saying now that we've won these elections, you need to be under no illusion. This is war. We will wage war against you people and your terrible ideas. If you think that you're going to do this in the county of Lincolnshire, you are going to regret it."

He added: "You're going to waste your money. It's going to be very painful financially, so you might as well take your money and your daft ideas elsewhere.

"Whether it's planning blockages, whether it's judicial reviews, whether it's lawsuits, whether it's health and safety notices, we will use every available legal measure to an extreme way in order to frustrate these people."

Mr Tice said voters had their backing for the party's anti-net zero stance, having "voted in huge numbers to Endorse our stance".

Reform has taken control of eight authorities from the Conservatives, including in Kent and Staffordshire, while also claiming victory in Durham council and taking Doncaster from Labour.

In Lincolnshire, Dame Andrea Jenkyns was elected mayor and the party took control of the county council.

Mr Tice insisted that any new cables in Lincolnshire should be placed underground or "around the Wash offshore", which he claimed would be "the smarter, quicker thing to do".

He also told the outlet of a meeting with senior figures in the National Grid, informing them about the party's plans if it wins the next general election.

This comes after Nigel Farage advised council workers involved in climate change or diversity, equality and inclusion (DEI) initiatives to seek "alternative careers very, very quickly".

He issued similar warnings to local authority employees who believe that "they can go on working from home".

In February, Reform outlined its energy policy, which proposed taxes on the renewables sector and new legislation to prevent new pylons from being built.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/huge-blow-to-ed-miliband-as-reform-councillors-declare-war-on-net-zero-plans/ar-AA1E8Prc?cmp_prftch=2&ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=73c073d8e4a24b81a2d667ed3d2c2ea6&ei=23

Jimbuna
05-05-25, 12:49 PM
Russian spies attended Brexit event in Parliament

Three Bulgarian nationals convicted of spying for Russia attended a Brexit event in Parliament.

Orlin Roussev, a Kremlin agent, Biser Dzhambazov, his second-in-command, and Katrin Ivanova, his girlfriend, attended the event in a committee room in May 2016.

The three made up a team of Russian agents who in March were found guilty following the biggest spying investigation in Britain.

The spy ring plotted kidnaps, disinformation campaigns, surveillance against Ukrainian troops and secret weapon trades with China from their base in Great Yarmouth.

Their orders came from Moscow via Jan Marsalek, a fugitive tech boss and one of the most wanted men in Europe.

Photographs unearthed by the BBC show the spies seated at the Brexit event with representatives of European political parties.

Roussev’s identity as the man in the photograph was verified by two people who knew him during the period, according to the BBC, which said that it visually reviewed the images to confirm Dzhambazov’s presence. Ivanova is also visible in the photographs.

The event was organised and attended by representatives of European political parties, including the Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP), of which Dzhambazov and Ivanova became members in 2016.

The photographs, published on Facebook, show Roussev, Dzhambazov and Ivanova seated behind Georgi Pirinski, a US-born former Communist who at the time of the meeting was a member of the European Parliament for the BSP.

The use of the room for the event was sponsored by Baroness Brown of Silvertown, the former West Ham MP, who was nominated for a life peerage by Sir Keir Starmer.

She told the BBC she had “absolutely no memory” of the event. She also said that she did not believe she had “met or spoken to the three individuals”.

A parliamentary spokesman told the BBC that Parliament was a public building with “robust” security processes.

After a four-month trial at the Old Bailey, Ivanova was convicted of offences between August 2020 and February 2023, alongside Tihomir Ivanchev and Vanya Gaberova.

Roussev and Dzhambazov had previously pleaded guilty, along with another man, Ivan Stoyanov. All six will be sentenced this week.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/russian-spies-attended-brexit-event-in-parliament/ar-AA1EbVnp?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=502fd302eb204a67a7eb8c99906dc468&ei=91

Jimbuna
05-05-25, 12:53 PM
Reform promise to ban migrant hotels in areas where they control the local council

Reform UK has vowed to do everything it can to stop asylum seekers from being housed in its council areas.

Leader Nigel Farage promised to ‘resist’ asylum seekers when he triumphed in last week’s local elections.

And yesterday the party’s chairman Zia Yusuf said ‘every instrument of power available’ would be used to meet their leader’s pledge.

He told the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg: ‘Judicial reviews, injunctions, there’s planning laws... A lot of these hotels, when you suddenly turn them into something else which is essentially a hostel, that falls foul of any number of regulations, and that’s what our teams of lawyers are exploring at the moment.’

Over the weekend Mr Yusuf also said young people needed a moral re-education and schools would teach a love of Britain if his party was in power. He told The Sunday Times: ‘Look, the British Empire was not perfect, but I actually think overall the British Empire did much more good than it did bad.’

He said the party was ‘realistic’ about how councils ‘pale in comparison’ to the powers of Westminster, ‘that’s why this is part of a journey to making Nigel the prime minister with a Reform majority.’ Mr Yusuf said they would ‘deport everybody who is currently in this country illegally’ if elected.

Mr Farage has warned council staff working on diversity or climate change to seek ‘alternative careers’.

Meanwhile the new Reform Greater Lincolnshire mayor, Dame Andrea Jenkyns, doubled down on her suggestion migrants could be housed in tents.

‘This is taxpayers’ money and it should actually be tents, not rent,’ she told LBC.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/other/keir-starmer-told-raise-taxes-to-fight-off-nigel-farage-as-labour-in-panic-mode/ar-AA1E9ulB?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=502fd302eb204a67a7eb8c99906dc468&ei=106

Catfish
05-05-25, 03:47 PM
And forgotten are brexit, Dominic Cummings, Boris Johnson, and Nigel Farage's role in it, along with Cambridge Analytica and Stephen Bannon. Good that leaving the EU has freed up the £ 350m for the NHS. And Nigel's Reform Yuck is all over it again :D

JU_88
05-05-25, 05:11 PM
And forgotten are brexit, Dominic Cummings, Boris Johnson, and Nigel Farage's role in it, along with Cambridge Analytica and Stephen Bannon. Good that leaving the EU has freed up the £ 350m for the NHS. And Nigel's Reform Yuck is all over it again :D


Brexit was a waste of time - because the EU will be lucky to make it to the end of this decade without some kind of implosion (most likley financial), Europe is NOT in very good shape either. In fact cant think of a more Doomed institution. Nations can bounce back from anything as they have Language history and culture to back them up, the EU is backed up by nothing of any substance and must rely on ECB money printing and top down lawfare for its own survival, because when it blows up (and it mathmatically has to), there is no come back for what is little more than a bunch of ideological pen pushers.
I dont trust Farage, but Conservatives and Labour just need to Die completely, Zero seats, Let Reform, Libdems and Greens take a shot, its not like they can do much worse, given the current state of the UK, Kill off those two utterly stupid arrogant corrupt parties have done enough damage between them.

To anyone here still thinking in terms of 80s/90s Tories Vs Labour, and is unable to recognise that they are essentially the same party in terms of actual policy, well, good luck to you.

Skybird
05-05-25, 05:36 PM
^ The EU will take a bit longer to fall apart than just until the end of this decade, but ultimately falling apart it will and must.



However, it wont be a smooth transition or a pleasant ride, but quite disruptive. But as the saying goes: better an end with horror than a horror without end.

JU_88
05-05-25, 05:46 PM
^ The EU will take a bit longer to fall apart than just until the end of this decade, but ultimately falling apart it will and must.



However, it wont be a smooth transition or a pleasant ride, but quite disruptive. But as the saying goes: better an end with horror than a horror without end.


It depends, you know the saying, "We have Decades where nothing happens, and then we have years where decades happen." We are due a 2008 global recession part II quite soon, but this time 'bailouts' will not really be possible without currency collapes, I guess We will see who is still left standing after that.

Shadowblade
05-06-25, 10:00 AM
it would be nice if Brussels eurobolsheviks would be gone.


They want to order emission allowances on fuel and heating which would make everything expensive here. Our current government is afraid to approve it because it would be its suicide for the next elections.



I hate that Greendeal madness and that band of robbers in Brussels.

JU_88
05-06-25, 11:07 AM
Here in spain, by 2033, effectivly one in four of all properties in the country will be unsellable and unrentable by new Net zero legislation which will have come in to force by that date. - unless people invest in upgrading, (estimated average cost is 10 -20k Euros for most properties)
Maybe you can apply for grants fromt he spanish government? (if your are lucky.).
Not great.

Cant help but get the feeling by 2030 there will be some emergency 'net zero non complient property liquidation service' probably courtosy of some horrible asset manager like black rock, they cant wait to gobble up all the cheap property for bargain bucket prices.
Net Zero will see a large transfer of assets from lower middle class to the super rich. -by design.

Shadowblade
05-06-25, 11:31 AM
Here in spain, by 2033, effectivly one in four of all properties in the country will be unsellable and unrentable by new Net zero legislation which will have come in to force by that date. - unless people invest in upgrading, (estimated average cost is 10 -20k Euros for most properties)
Maybe you can apply for grants fromt he spanish government? (if your are lucky.).
Not great.

Cant help but get the feeling by 2030 there will be some emergency 'net zero non complient property liquidation service' probably courtosy of some horrible asset manager like black rock, they cant wait to gobble up all the cheap property for bargain bucket prices.
Net Zero will see a large transfer of assets from lower middle class to the super rich. -by design.


yes, I have read about new requirements for buildings which would make them even more expensive. And we have overpriced properties by about +60% in Czech republic already.
Plus new EU requirements will ban 90% of boilers for heating on market.
More and more orders to make our life very expensive.

Jimbuna
05-06-25, 12:23 PM
Here in spain, by 2033, effectivly one in four of all properties in the country will be unsellable and unrentable by new Net zero legislation which will have come in to force by that date. - unless people invest in upgrading, (estimated average cost is 10 -20k Euros for most properties)
Maybe you can apply for grants fromt he spanish government? (if your are lucky.).
Not great.

Cant help but get the feeling by 2030 there will be some emergency 'net zero non complient property liquidation service' probably courtosy of some horrible asset manager like black rock, they cant wait to gobble up all the cheap property for bargain bucket prices.
Net Zero will see a large transfer of assets from lower middle class to the super rich. -by design.

Looks like I'm selling my property just in the nick of time :03:

Jimbuna
05-06-25, 12:31 PM
Ed the Chipmunk strikes again!!

Low winds leave south of England reliant on French power

Southern England has been left reliant on French power after low winds curtailed domestic energy supplies.

More than half of the electricity used in the South East was imported on Tuesday morning, according to data from the National Energy System Operator. The bulk came from France, alongside imports from Belgium and the Netherlands.

Similarly, the North East also imported 52pc of its electricity, largely from Norway, as wind power contributed to just 2pc of the region’s power.

It comes amid mounting pressure on Ed Miliband’s clean power revolution, as the Energy Secretary has vowed to turbocharge the roll-out of renewables to hit net zero by 2050.

An increasing reliance on wind and solar has sparked fears of energy shortages across Britain, particularly after net zero was blamed for recent blackouts across Spain and Portugal.

Overall, around 25pc of the power consumed by the UK over the last 24 hours came from overseas, with France providing around 12.7pc.

The picture was, however, very different in the South West, where high levels of sunshine on Tuesday meant the region was drawing nearly 70pc of its electricity from solar.

The UK’s reliance on imported power has grown in recent years after the mass closure of coal and gas-fired power plants.

Strain on the UK’s energy supplies has also been exacerbated by the power grid’s inability to transmit large swathes of power from northern wind farms to cities in the South.

Pressure often builds during periods of low wind, such as this week when speeds dropped to as low as 1mph.

The UK’s growing reliance on electricity generated by its European neighbours is both politically awkward and expensive.

The system works via an expanding network of subsea, high-voltage power cables connecting the UK to France, Norway, Belgium, Holland, Denmark and Ireland.

In theory, electricity can be exported or imported, but the UK’s lack of reliable generation means the traffic is largely one-way.

This means the UK is increasingly reliant on costly energy imports from Europe, which are ultimately paid by consumers.

According to the Office for National Statistics, electricity imports cost the UK £3.1bn last year, up from £1.2bn in 2018.

Andrew Bowie, Tory MP, said: “Far from providing energy security, Ed Miliband’s ideological obsession with net zero means that the UK has to pay extortionate prices to import electricity from other countries when the wind doesn’t blow and the sun doesn’t shine.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/low-winds-leave-south-of-england-reliant-on-french-power/ar-AA1Egdgz?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=b1e661555f0047a29df6cdabd3b36b4a&ei=62

Catfish
05-06-25, 04:31 PM
it would be nice if Brussels eurobolsheviks would be gone.

They want to order emission allowances on fuel and heating which would make everything expensive here. Our current government is afraid to approve it because it would be its suicide for the next elections.

I hate that Greendeal madness and that band of robbers in Brussels.
You are so right. It's not this climate change fraud, ignore all that could be inconvenient. Just look at what you have to pay, not scientific research which should be deleted or cut off anyway like in the US. Kill the messenger, not the cause, it is the EU bolshevic gender gay communist socialist women's rights black revenge transgender weapons of the third Reich muslim euro climatechange andwhatever conspiracy but never yourself or your fault and you are so helpless.
But wait, didn't brexit solve it all, no? And if not, UK REFORM will? So don't be afraid and "desperation is the english way", it will all be better with some splendid isolation and ignoring everything learned in the past centuries.
So easy, really :arrgh!:

Shadowblade
05-07-25, 05:59 AM
You are so right. It's not this climate change fraud, ignore all that could be inconvenient. Just look at what you have to pay, not scientific research which should be deleted or cut off anyway like in the US. Kill the messenger, not the cause, it is the EU bolshevic gender gay communist socialist women's rights black revenge transgender weapons of the third Reich muslim euro climatechange andwhatever conspiracy but never yourself or your fault and you are so helpless.
But wait, didn't brexit solve it all, no? And if not, UK REFORM will? So don't be afraid and "desperation is the english way", it will all be better with some splendid isolation and ignoring everything learned in the past centuries.
So easy, really :arrgh!:


sorry, but we cannot afford the Greendeal here. Maybe Germany can afford that, but Germans have 3x higher salaries than us. The inflation hit hard here, we have the highest electricity costs in Europe, our government increased taxes for us. And more EU taxes are waiting for approval.


Greendeal is good just for killing industry and make everything expensive for us.

Catfish
05-07-25, 06:24 AM
Sorry when this was too rude, it was rather meant with a :03: smiley. I just can't look at someone like Farage w/o almost vomiting. Truth is most here cannot afford the green projects either, and a lot refuse them because the change was commanded instantly "per ordre mufti", instead of a slow transition that would let the people time. Well, the greens here got their bill with the elections.

Shadowblade
05-07-25, 06:43 AM
Sorry when this was too rude, it was rather meant with a :03: smiley. I just can't look at someone like Farage w/o almost vomiting. Truth is most here cannot afford the green projects either, and a lot refuse them because the change was commanded instantly "per ordre mufti", instead of a slow transition that would let the people time. Well, the greens here got their bill with the elections.


ah, ok. Yes, slow transition would make sense, eg. keep both classic cars and electrocars and improve their technologies and let people choose the better.
Not the way of commands like EU does - ban classic cars and make them more expensive.

Jimbuna
05-07-25, 12:33 PM
Bit rich coming from 'Rachel from Accounts' who is quite happy to seeing those pensioners many of whom pay tax paying for her energy bills.

Reeves insists she understands voters’ concerns after Labour election setbacks

Rachel Reeves refused to back down over the decision to strip winter fuel payments from millions of pensioners but insisted she understood voters’ concerns about the cost of living.

The Chancellor’s decision to means-test the payment has been blamed for contributing to Labour’s hammering at the ballot box in contests across England last week.

The Chancellor said: “That policy stands, it was necessary to put the public finance on a firm footing.”

She told reporters: “I do get people’s concerns about the cost of living.

“That’s why, whether it’s the triple lock, the national living wage, the cuts in interest rates, we are determined to put more money into people’s pockets.”

The decision last July to restrict the winter fuel payment to the poorest pensioners was intended to save around £1.5 billion a year, with more than nine million people who would have previously been eligible losing out.

Anger about the policy on the doorstep has caused unease within the Labour ranks after Reform UK won hundreds of council seats and took the previously safe Runcorn and Helsby seat in last week’s parliamentary by-election.

The Red Wall Labour group told the Prime Minister that “responding to the issues raised by our constituents, including on winter fuel, isn’t weak, it takes us to a position of strength”.

They called on the Government to “break away from Treasury orthodoxy otherwise we will never get the investment we desperately need”.

Welsh First Minister Baroness Eluned Morgan, mindful of her party’s own electoral battles at next year’s Senedd contests, has also called for a “rethink” on the winter fuel policy.

The Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds told Good Morning Britain that he understands “where people are coming from” and has heard concerns from his own constituents.

Mr Reynolds said: “You’ve got to be clear, sometimes you can’t do everything at the same time, sometimes there are difficult decisions, and means-testing winter fuel payments to the people who need it most, making sure every pensioner is better-off by having the triple lock in place, I think is the right decision between those two key policy areas.”

He told the ITV programme: “We want to go faster, and we will, but we understand where people are coming from and I say again, those were a tough set of election results, I’m not shying away from that at all.”

It comes as new YouGov data suggests Labour are polling at their lowest level since the era of Jeremy Corbyn.

The latest voting intention figures show Reform on 29%, with Labour lagging behind on 22% and the Conservatives on 17%.

According to YouGov, this is the lowest the party has polled since October 2019 under Mr Corbyn, as Mr Farage’s party continue to out-poll the Government.

In another sign of discontent within Labour, former Cabinet minister Louise Haigh suggested hostile briefings appeared targeted at female ministers.

After reports Lisa Nandy and Bridget Phillipson could face losing their jobs in the next reshuffle, she said: “I was really angry at the weekend to see the response to the electoral defeat that we had suffered at the hands of Reform to be that we should sack two female northern cabinet ministers and two of our best communicators with those voters that we need to communicate with most.”

She told BBC’s Newsnight: “I only ever seem to read briefing against my female former colleagues.”

Asked whether she thought the briefing was sexist or misogynistic she said “all of the above”.

The Prime Minister’s press secretary said: “No one wants to see any briefing against any member of the government.”

Asked if the Prime Minister agreed with Ms Haigh’s analysis that the hostile briefings were sexist, the press secretary said: “I’m just going to condemn any briefing against any member of the government.”
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/reeves-insists-she-understands-voters-concerns-after-labour-election-setbacks/ar-AA1Eli8k?cmp_prftch=2&ocid=msedgntp&pc=ENTPSP&cvid=45cfc92fa9d84885b875f651c391d9ba&ei=22

Jimbuna
05-07-25, 12:36 PM
Speculation over Rachel Reeves’s future as demands for winter fuel cuts U-turn mount

Sir Keir Starmer is under growing pressure from his own MPs and political opponents to reverse his decision to strip 10 million pensioners of winter fuel payments.

The row has exploded after Reform’s huge surge in the local elections last week, causing panic among many MPs that Nigel Farage’s party could win their seats.

But it has also fuelled speculation that the prime minister could soon be forced to reshuffle his cabinet, with question marks over whether Rachel Reeves can survive as chancellor.

One Labour source suggested: “Rachel is running out of friends. It is just not working.”

Others have suggested that if Sir Keir is to reverse the decision on winter fuel cuts, Ms Reeves “would need to be replaced first”.

Questions remain over who would be a viable candidate to replace her in the Treasury, as another MP noted that Sir Keir has promised Ms Reeves will be chancellor until the next election. Meanwhile, Downing Street has continued to stand by the chancellor.

It comes as new polling from The Times and Sky News – conducted by YouGov – put Reform UK at its highest recorded vote share, sitting seven points ahead of Labour.

Mr Farage’s party was on 29 points, while Labour was on 22. Lagging behind were the Tories on just 17 points, while the Liberal Democrats were on 16.

The anger over the local election results and the fear of Reform seizing power at the next election has brought despair to many MPs.

One MP told The Independent: “I’m not exactly experiencing the sunny uplands at the moment.”

Another darkly added: “It feels very Weimar Republic at the moment. Post hyperinflation, but pre Nazi.”

Meanwhile, the red wall group of Labour MPs, made up of around 45 MPs from red wall constituencies, warned that Sir Keir’s response that he would “go further and faster” in delivering his plans had “fallen on deaf ears”.

They warned that voters across the UK had told the Labour Party “loudly and clearly that we have not met their expectations”.

“Responding to the issues raised by our constituents, including on winter fuel, isn’t weak – it takes us to a position of strength,” a statement added, urging the prime minister to “break the disconnect between Westminster and the red wall areas”.

The red wall is made up of areas in the Midlands and northern England which have typically supported the Labour Party.

On Tuesday, the prime minister acknowledged his government needed to “explain the decisions that we’ve taken” after a “disappointing” set of election results, but his press secretary said the government will not be “blown off course”.

While there were reports that the government was considering whether to increase the £11,500 threshold over which pensioners are no longer eligible for the allowance, the prime minister’s official spokesperson ruled out such a move, saying there will “not be a change to the government’s policy”.

The spokesperson added that the decision “was one that we had to take to ensure economic stability and repair the public finances following the £22bn black hole left by the previous government”.

But there is mounting pressure from within his own party – and from the opposition benches – for Downing Street to U-turn on the issue.

Veteran Labour MP Diane Abbott urged the government to restore the winter fuel allowance in full, saying a review of the policy alone wouldn’t be enough for pensioners, nor would it be enough to “restore Labour’s battered reputation”.

Meanwhile, Labour peer and Welsh first minister Eluned Morgan warned she is “losing patience” with UK Labour, urging the government to have a rethink.

And former transport secretary Louise Haigh said Labour’s “unpopular decisions are overshadowing the good ones”, calling for the party to explore a wealth tax to win back voters following Reform UK’s success in the local elections.

Speaking to BBC Newsnight, the MP for Sheffield Heeley said: “I don’t think we can underestimate how catastrophic those results were last week for the Labour Party. I think the unpopular decisions are overshadowing the good ones.”

Labour MP for Leeds West, Richard Burgon, told Times Radio Labour cannot be “stubborn” on winter fuel payments, saying the policy was both “deeply unpopular” and wrong.

“If the government wants to show that it actually gets it, in the words of the prime minister, then the government must fully reinstate the winter fuel allowance, not just tinker around the edges. And we can’t be dragged, kicking and screaming, into rethinking on this policy,” he said.

The issue blew up in Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday with Tory leader Kemi Badenoch going on the attack while Labour MPs watched uncomfortably from the other side.

Meanwhile, Liberal Democrat deputy leader Daisy Cooper also piled in, saying the government’s refusal to change course was “a completely tone deaf” response to the local elections.

“The public are rightly furious at the government’s decision to rip vital support from millions of the most vulnerable, yet ministers simply are not listening”, she said.

The decision last July to restrict the winter fuel payment to the poorest pensioners was intended to save around £1.5bn a year, with more than 9 million people who would have previously been eligible losing out.

But cabinet ministers acknowledged the winter fuel payment decision had hit the party at the ballot box.

Asked whether the cut had been part of Labour’s poor electoral performance, business secretary Jonathan Reynolds said: “I think that has been a feature. I think the prime minister himself has said that, and we’re not sugar-coating those results; they’re very challenging for us.”
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/speculation-over-rachel-reeves-future-as-demands-for-winter-fuel-cuts-u-turn-mount/ar-AA1EjwLS?cmp_prftch=2&ocid=msedgntp&pc=ENTPSP&cvid=45cfc92fa9d84885b875f651c391d9ba&ei=57

JU_88
05-07-25, 01:42 PM
You are so right. It's not this climate change fraud, ignore all that could be inconvenient. Just look at what you have to pay, not scientific research which should be deleted or cut off anyway like in the US. Kill the messenger, not the cause, :arrgh!:


And the sarcastic counter argument can use the same tone.
"If only it wasnt for these stupid white working class poor people, and those truckers and farmers ugh, what have they ever done for society? just trust the scientists, accademics and experts, they never lie, make mistakes, follow blind zelotry or get paid off do they, - just do as you're told and we will have a perfect carbon free, LGBTQ freindly multi cultural rainbow sh1tting, rent every thing from your solar powered shoebox apartment - utopia tomorrow, right?" Just dont go out, incase you get stabbed by a knife with mental health problems, or run over by a car with mental health problems. Theres nothing to buy in the shops anyway because they all shut down after we bascially legalized stealing, and even if there was, you couldnt afford it, lol. What could possibly go wrong? :up:


^And that my friend, Im sure will not shift you towards the right anymore than what you said will shift me back to a left that now spits on the working class under the self rightious banner of pretending to care about minority groups while being in cahoots with all the big co-orperations. The right will likley screw them too in the end, but at least they offer them some form of hope, and the working class will take that over lefts utter contempt anyday of the week. So I guess thats, that.

Catfish
05-07-25, 03:16 PM
^ Right, and I deserved that :D
I still believe that truth, logic and science are the only way to go, even if some scientists can be bribed, or do not act like they should. This has nothing to do with left or right. The current US government wants to silence science and supports the rich, they have the right slogans to make people angry and polarize, and they were, or are, successful. There is also a pattern to blame scientists if they do not follow the easy or populist way. The patronizing and arrogant behaviour of those who think they know it all surely did not help.
Still, ignoring what you do not like will not improve the situation.

JU_88
05-07-25, 04:45 PM
No worries dude, for the record My wife is left, my mum is left :)
I used to be on the Left- 100% but in the 20teens it got weird, I found my self just covering my eyes more and more over the stuff they started doing and saying. Ive not done a compass test for a while, but im pretty sure i lean right by now.
An I agree hearing things which make us most uncomfortable are the things which we need to hear the most - truth is nice, its so damn hard to find any though sometimes.

Otto Harkaman
05-07-25, 11:48 PM
Trump To Announce Trade Deal With UK Thursday: US Media

On Thursday, May 8, 2025, at 10 a.m. EDT, President Donald Trump is scheduled to hold a news conference to unveil a new trade agreement between the United States and the United Kingdom.
The announcement follows months of negotiations prompted by Trump's imposition of steep tariffs on trading partners starting April 2, including steel and autos.
Britain and the US have made significant headway in negotiations on a trade agreement that is expected to reduce tariff limits on steel and automobiles amid ongoing discussions.
Trump described the agreement as a significant trade arrangement with officials from a prominent and well-regarded nation, calling it the first in a series of similar deals.
If finalized, the deal will be Britain's second free trade agreement this week, suggesting efforts to strengthen global trade ties after Brexit and amid US tariff pressures.

https://archive-images.prod.global.a201836.reutersmedia.net/2019/06/04/LYNXNPEF530LR.JPG

I thought this was a fun picture, I am not trying to imply Trump is pushing anyone around. I hope we can forge a good trade alliance that benefits both countries.

Jimbuna
05-08-25, 12:54 PM
What a load of rubbish.

The first thing you need do is get rid of Ed the Chipmunk.

He was a nut job when I knew him and certainly hasn't changed to this day.

His brother David was far more intelligent and trustworthy.

Labour Party explains how it will cut £300 a year from UK energy bills
Labour has shed more light on its ambitious plan to slash energy bills by £300 annually by 2030. The party repeatedly touted this promise during its General Election campaign last year, and Prime Minister Keir Starmer has reaffirmed the commitment since taking office.

SNP MP Seamus Logan queried the Government in Parliament about from what level the Government plans to bring down energy bills £300 when the change is achieved. Energy minister Miatta Fahnbulleh responded, saying: "The Government believes that our mission to deliver clean power by 2030 is the best way to break our dependence on global fossil fuel markets and protect billpayers permanently.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/labour-party-explains-how-it-will-cut-300-a-year-from-uk-energy-bills/ar-AA1EmKxJ?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=ba9caefb18454b7fb34bdd43d7e23663&ei=24

Jimbuna
05-08-25, 12:58 PM
I'm not particularly a fan of Farage or Reform but the Tories and Labour are nothing more than the two cheeks of the same backside.

They've had multiple attempts and failed so give Reform an opportunity.

Keir Starmer just sealed Labour's fate - and the retributions will be severe

UNTIL recently, our democratic system was like a pendulum that oscillated between Labour and the Conservatives. But now the pendulum has been replaced by a demolition ball that threatens to pull down both the main parties. Last week's local election results dramatically illustrated the crisis of credibility that has gripped the traditional duopoly. As Nigel Farage's Reform movement surged, Labour were pulverised and the Tories obliterated.

The scale of the carnage was highlighted by estimates of the projected national share of the vote from the municipal elections, with Reform on 30%, Labour down to just 20% and the Conservatives on only 15%, behind the Liberal Democrats. An opinion poll this week confirmed Reform's ascendancy, with the party on 29%, compared to 22 for Labour and 17 for the Tories.

Historians like to draw a parallel with British politics exactly a century ago, when the Liberals were suddenly eclipsed by Labour as the main opposition to the Conservatives. But the crucial difference is that today, both the main parties are in desperate trouble. Their dual collapse is occurring because much of the electorate is fed up after years of mismanaged services, misspent cash and misguided priorities.

Voters want a welfare system that combats poverty rather than rewards freeloaders, a justice system that punishes criminals rather than curtails liberties, and a state that focuses on efficiency rather than ideology and bureaucracy.

Above all, they yearn for a government that puts its people first.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/other/keir-starmer-just-sealed-labour-s-fate-and-the-retributions-will-be-severe/ar-AA1EpuWw?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=57b98bc83c674609aa03c66852f0dd45&ei=14

Jimbuna
05-09-25, 07:49 AM
Keir Starmer blasted as hundreds of convicted migrants set to avoid deportation

Robert Jenrick has taken aim at "two-tier Keir" immigration "gimmicks" with hundreds of convicted illegal migrants set to avoid deportation because of lax Sentencing Council guidelines

Draft guidance by the council would allow migrants convicted of immigration offences to escape with sentences below the threshold for automatic deportation.

This is because the council's "starting points" for sentences are below the cut-off point of 12 months in prison, after which convicted migrants automatically face deportation.

Based on the number of prosecutions for these offences in 2022, it will mean hundreds of immigration offenders a year would avoid deportation.

Shadow Justice Secretary Robert Jenrick said: "Under Two-Tier Keir immigration sentences are set to be watered down, meaning hundreds of foreign offenders will avoid the threshold for automatic deportation each year.

"This makes a complete mockery of Labour's immigration gimmicks. The Justice Secretary's representative signed this off and now our borders will be blown further open.

"The only people benefiting from this Labour Government are the trade unionists, criminals and illegal migrants.

"Starmer must accept my Bill to block these ludicrous guidelines and sack the members of the Sentencing Council responsible for yet more madness."

The draft proposals for the facilitation offence were first discussed by the Sentencing Council on July 26th 2024.

The wider array of immigration offences were first discussed by the Sentencing Council on 15th November and then later on the 24th January.

It is understood that Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood had a representative at a meeting signing off the changes.

Ms Mahmood said last month she will review the role of the Sentencing Council following a "two-tier" justice row over its latest guidelines.

Labour and the Conservatives have criticised the council's plan to advise judges in England and Wales to seek extra information before deciding how to punish offenders from certain minority groups.

The guidelines have now been abandoned after ministers tabled an emergency law to override them.

But Ms Mahmood also told MPs she would launch a review of the "proper role" of the council and how it makes guidelines, to begin in the coming months.

A Ministry of Justice spokesperson said: "This Government is committed to deporting eligible Foreign National Offenders as quickly as possible. Immigration offenders receiving sentences of less than 12 months can still be deported."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/keir-starmer-blasted-as-hundreds-of-convicted-migrants-set-to-avoid-deportation/ar-AA1Eq0Zq?ocid=hpmsn&cvid=ba703b29ca0d428ea9172c2f69ae5ecf&ei=19

JU_88
05-09-25, 12:42 PM
I'm not particularly a fan of Farage or Reform but the Tories and Labour are nothing more than the two cheeks of the same backside.

They've had multiple attempts and failed so give Reform an opportunity.


1000% Vote Reform, Greens, Lib Dem, or Anyone else...
Labour and Tories need to be buried - destroyed. Zero Seats.:D The Uk need a complete rejection of the current trajectory its on, or its in big trouble.

Jimbuna
05-09-25, 12:46 PM
I'm not too sure we aren't already too far gone to be saved :)

Skybird
05-09-25, 07:43 PM
Brits will not like this video, I assume, but I fully agree with what it says. Memories of the past do not win the present, and the UKs military does not have the huge numbers anymore. The Americans are right. Its simply realism.

https://youtu.be/YPmCwQIE958?si=IrdP5OuwUh0AiYaK

JU_88
05-10-25, 03:47 AM
Brits will not like this video, I assume, but I fully agree with what it says. Memories of the past do not win the present, and the UKs military does not have the huge numbers anymore. The Americans are right. Its simply realism.

https://youtu.be/YPmCwQIE958?si=IrdP5OuwUh0AiYaK


Not at all, i think thats pretty much spot on. :up:

Jimbuna
05-10-25, 12:22 PM
Says it all for me.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=po9duwvipB0

Jimbuna
05-10-25, 12:28 PM
The lunatics will try and foist illegal migrants on Reform councils but voters aren't stupid - Ann Widdecombe

As I said in my speech to a Reform rally not so very long ago, when we win on May 1st that will not be the end but the beginning and now indeed the age of Reform UK has begun and what those councils which we control do between now and the next general election will determine our fate when Keir Starmer is finally forced to face the country.

What happened last week was nothing short of a revolution, a quiet, very British revolution. In short, the people rejected the parties which have dominated our politics for over a hundred years and looked for answers elsewhere. Reform went from controlling no councils to controlling ten, along the way taking 674 seats, two mayoralties and a by-election.

A gloomy Keir Starmer announces, “I get it”. So, it having been got, what does he intend to do? He himself made that clear enough: he intends to continue on the same road, only further and faster. His logic appears to be “the people have rejected us, so we will give them more of the same”.

No wonder those same people are beginning to believe that the lunatics have taken over the asylum. Meanwhile, the Tories look irrelevant.

As I wrote on my Substack over the weekend, I recently challenged two very senior Conservatives at a debate at the Cambridge Union to name one single original idea that Kemi Badenoch had produced, and the answer was a shaming silence.

Meanwhile, the boats carry on coming … and coming. Almost daily, a fresh collection of illegal migrants arrive on our shores to be welcomed and put in hotels.

It is not going to reassure a worried population if, instead, they are put in houses, scattered throughout the community. Yet that appears to be all Keir Starmer can offer while the Conservatives still bang on about the Rwanda scheme, despite having failed to put it into effect while in office.

Reform alone offers a comprehensive answer: automatically refuse all asylum claims from anybody who has reached us via a safe country; turn the boats round; make deportations a separate ministerial responsibility; house those who do get through in secure reception centres until deportation.

Where possible, we will reach agreements, as Britain did with Albania, for other countries to accept their nationals back immediately, and we will cease all financial arrangements with France, as the French have done nothing in return for payments so far. So what can mere councillors do? They can resist any attempt to use local hotels, going through the courts if necessary. They can oppose the use of houses of multiple occupation.

Meanwhile, they can also get rid of all Diversity, Equality and Inclusion posts and spend the money on potholes instead. They can and must carry out immediate audits to eliminate waste.

And Reform HQ can make sure the world knows about it. It won’t be easy. A large number of our councillors are completely new to the job, but a large number of Labour MPs were new to the job in 2024. When Blair won in 1997, most of his front bench had no ministerial experience whatever and nor did he. What counts is the agenda and the will. Reform has both.

We can expect an attack from left, right and centre. The government will almost certainly try to foist illegal immigrants onto Reform Councils, but the electorate is not stupid. There will be pacts, both formal and informal. Some officers will be obstructive. The press will be hostile in places. There will be the usual falling out and the occasional scandal, as there is for any party. And all that will be a test of our will and our nerve.

If we keep both, we really can be running the country in 2029.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/other/the-lunatics-will-try-and-foist-illegal-migrants-on-reform-councils-but-voters-aren-t-stupid-ann-widdecombe/ar-AA1EwSZn?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=d5eb6dc7d78d48a68d623a3f8fe2bfd9&ei=83

Jimbuna
05-11-25, 12:33 PM
Labour cannot tear Reform apart limb from limb unless it reverses its most suicidal decision - Bill Rammell

There is no way of denying that the local election results were very disappointing for Labour. For the Tories, they were existentially bad.
It is no longer clear what the Conservatives are for and whether they will be the main challenger to Labour at the next election. And I cannot deny that Reform had a very good night.
However, the evidence does not show that these results presage that Reform will win the next General Election and that Nigel Farage will become Prime Minister.
For every one voter Farage attracts, he repels two or three more, and that is an insurmountable challenge for him to overcome.
Rather, these election results show a fractured political landscape, with a hung parliament likely unless Labour delivers and persuades people it has delivered.
Polling following the election by “More in Common” showed that the main motivator for Labour defectors to Reform was “to send a message to the Government”. A message that these voters were not happy. In other words, a protest vote.
And we have been here before with midterm protest votes. Lib Dem surges which expired by the time of the General Election.
And in 1981, the newly created SDP was polling at 50 per cent (not the 30 per cent Reform got this time), yet by the General Election, the then Tory Government was re-elected by a landslide. So, history tells us Labour can win back those protest votes.
But it is not guaranteed, and we could be heading for a hung parliament unless Labour makes changes to address the concerns of protest voters.
And Labour probably needs a symbolic change to demonstrate it has got the message and listened. I have argued until I’m blue in the face that you can make a case for means-testing the Winter Fuel Allowance. But the decision has badly sapped trust in Labour. It's time to find the money to reverse the cut and restore the fuel allowance in full. Showing Labour has listened.
And the Government needs its good policies on cutting immigration to bear fruit. Further progress on deportations, reframing article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights to stop the ridiculous “chicken nugget” rulings, cracking down on dodgy immigration lawyers, offshore processing in the Balkans and a mandatory 24-week limit on appeals.
All current Labour Government policies, but they need to demonstrate they are cutting numbers urgently. And Labour needs to find a language to demonstrate that it gets voters' concerns about immigration. And Labour needs to move further and faster with the delivery of change.
There is a good story to be told. Wages outstripping prices for the first time in 10 years. NHS waiting lists have fallen for seven months in a row. Deportations up 30 per cent. 13,000 new neighbourhood police. A 40 per cent increase in funding to every council to fill potholes. Fast-tracked workers' rights. Increasing the minimum wage by three times the rate of inflation.
Housing and planning reform is bringing homes which are desperately needed and giving the biggest boost to economic growth on record.
There is a good story to be told. Labour, since the election, has been hopeless at telling it. This needs to change and change fast. And Labour needs to tear Reform and Farage politically limb from limb. Showing the populists for the chancers they are bringing simplistic solutions to very complicated problems.
Going after Farage on Putin and Trump, which is not where the British people are. Exposing Farage’s support for private health insurance for the NHS. And showing clearly how Farage would cripple the economy just like Liz Truss. Not for nothing did the Institute for Fiscal Studies say at the General Election that Reform's sums do not add up.
But more than anything, Labour needs to communicate much better. In the Labour Government I served in, we told a story every day, every week, every month of what the Government was doing, how and why. By God, we need that now. With it, Labour can recover the protest votes and win again.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/other/labour-cannot-tear-reform-apart-limb-from-limb-unless-it-reverses-its-most-suicidal-decision-bill-rammell/ar-AA1Eyv1V?ocid=msedgntp&pc=ENTPSP&cvid=a359390bf890450da8fde166a91ecd12&ei=50

Jimbuna
05-12-25, 11:09 AM
Looks like her next target is going to be the small investors and not the wealthiest.

Rachel Reeves to launch massive ISA shake-up as pressure mounts to cut £20,000 tax-free allowance

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is preparing to launch a review of the ISA market within weeks, according to new reports.

The move comes as pressure mounts to reform the current £20,000 tax-free allowance system.

The review aims to encourage savers to channel more money from tax-free cash into British stocks.

The Treasury consultation could be unveiled at Reeves' Mansion House speech to City executives in July, when the Government plans to publish its Financial Services Growth and Competitiveness Strategy.

The UK currently has four main ISA products, with the cash ISA being by far the most popular, housing £300billion of savings at present. ISAs allow individuals to save and invest up to £20,000 a year free of income and capital gains tax.

City firms have been urging Reeves to scale back tax breaks for cash ISAs, with savers pouring £4.2billion into these accounts in March alone.

This represents an increase of almost one-third compared with the previous year, according to investment site Hargreaves Lansdown.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/rachel-reeves-to-launch-massive-isa-shake-up-as-pressure-mounts-to-cut-20-000-tax-free-allowance/ar-AA1ECQU4?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=d3c1922718d1453cadd6400374e1c1aa&ei=16

Jimbuna
05-12-25, 11:15 AM
Something tells me he has got the fundamentals all wrong.

The British public want the daily surge of small boats stopped.

Labour's plan to tackle spiralling immigration was last night dismissed as 'laughable' for not containing a cap on numbers.

Sir Keir Starmer's pledge to cut migration will be unveiled in full today, but critics immediately questioned how he would measure its success.

The Prime Minister will vow that 'migration numbers will fall'. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said the plan would mean a 'substantial' drop on last year's net migration figure of 728,000, but refused to put a cap on numbers, saying it was a 'failed approach'.

Today's announcement comes less than a fortnight after Reform UK rode a wave of rising public anger on immigration to triumph in the local elections, delivering a string of damaging defeats to Labour.

Sir Keir will today talk about overhauling the system and making those who come to Britain earn the right to stay. But critics said the plans were nothing new and questioned Labour's appetite to implement them.

Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said the failure to impose a cap on numbers was 'laughable'. He told the Mail: 'Labour won't set a migration target because they know they'd blow it.

'When it comes to immigration, Starmer doesn't back workers, he backs down.

'Starmer is the same man who wrote letters protesting against deporting dangerous foreign criminals and has overseen the worst-ever start to a year for illegal immigrants crossing the Channel.'

A tweet by the Prime Minister yesterday, in which he said 'British workers – I've got your back' was also mocked given that, just last month, his party increased National Insurance contributions for businesses, leading many to cut jobs while others have slowed or stopped hiring.

Under today's proposals, migrants will be required to spend a decade in the UK before they can apply for citizenship and will need to have a good grasp of English.

The White Paper will also attempt to end the scandal of failed asylum seekers and foreign criminals using human rights laws to block deportation. Ministers are expected to change the law to constrain judges' interpretation of elements of the European Convention on Human Rights. They will target Article 8, which protects the right to a family life and is often used by lawyers to block removal on spurious reasoning.

But ministers faced a backlash from the care sector yesterday, with a warning of possible collapse, after Ms Cooper said she would ban recruiting from overseas, while demanding companies train British workers. The number of people claiming asylum climbed from 91,811 in 2023 to a record 108,138 last year. More than 11,500 people have crossed the Channel in small boats this year – also a record.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/labour-s-immigration-crackdown-is-dismissed-as-laughable-for-having-no-cap-on-numbers/ar-AA1EzHz1?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=d3c1922718d1453cadd6400374e1c1aa&ei=52

Jimbuna
05-13-25, 12:50 PM
Just about sums up Two Tier for me.

Keir Starmer's critics don't believe anything he says and I've just realised why

For the first time I'm really beginning to understand how Labour left-wingers feel about Keir Starmer. They've been complaining for years that he made a series of promises during the Labour leadership contest in 2020, when he presented himself as someone who follow in the footsteps of ex-leader Jeremy Corbyn, for example by supporting "common ownership" of water and power firms.

Then, once Sir Keir became leader, he did a huge u-turn and abandoned all of Mr Corbyn's policies. For people like left-wing journalist Owen Jones, this was a huge betrayal. Those of us who thought Jeremy Corbyn had led his party to disaster, and would do the same to the country if give half a chance, were less upset. But in recent weeks it's become clear that Sir Keir has no firm principles.

He doesn't seem to believe anything, or perhaps he just believes whatever's convenient at the time. When the wind changes, his beliefs will too.

First he backtracked on women's rights and trans issues - but acted like nothing had happened.

He used to claim that "trans women are women" and publicly told off a Labour MP who said that "only women have a cervix" - which is another way of saying that someone with a female body who claims to be a man isn't a real man.

Sir Keir also claimed that "for 99.9%" of women have female bodies, suggesting one in a thousand women had male bodies.

That's all changed. Ever since the supreme court ruling, he's abandoned these beliefs and cheerfully insists that only biological women are really women. There's no hint of an apology to all the people, including Labour MPs, that received abuse in the past for saying the same thing.

And now we have the Prime Minister championing controls on immigration. In the past, he supported freedom of movement and insisted: "The benefits of immigration are obvious and should be celebrated."

Now, he's promising to cut the numbers and says: "We risk becoming an island of strangers."

This language goes much further than anything the Tories have ever said. In fact, as some Labour MPs point out, it's similar to comments made by Enoch Powell in his controversial "rivers of blood" speech, when Powell said the existing population "found themselves made strangers in their own country" (Powell was a Conservative MP but was sacked from the Government by Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath because of the speech).

Can Sir Keir possibly believe what he's saying? Or at least, can he possibly believe what he says now and also believe what he said a couple of years ago? No he can't - it's not possible.

The question, then, is whether he actually believes anything at all.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/other/keir-starmer-s-critics-don-t-believe-anything-he-says-and-i-ve-just-realised-why/ar-AA1EHgeN?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=4b8e10fcfa6e466fb5a6404b23e9fe9b&ei=14

Gorpet
05-13-25, 10:48 PM
And the sarcastic counter argument can use the same tone.
"If only it wasnt for these stupid white working class poor people, and those truckers and farmers ugh, what have they ever done for society? just trust the scientists, accademics and experts, they never lie, make mistakes, follow blind zelotry or get paid off do they, - just do as you're told and we will have a perfect carbon free, LGBTQ freindly multi cultural rainbow sh1tting, rent every thing from your solar powered shoebox apartment - utopia tomorrow, right?" Just dont go out, incase you get stabbed by a knife with mental health problems, or run over by a car with mental health problems. Theres nothing to buy in the shops anyway because they all shut down after we bascially legalized stealing, and even if there was, you couldnt afford it, lol. What could possibly go wrong? :up:


^And that my friend, Im sure will not shift you towards the right anymore than what you said will shift me back to a left that now spits on the working class under the self rightious banner of pretending to care about minority groups while being in cahoots with all the big co-orperations. The right will likley screw them too in the end, but at least they offer them some form of hope, and the working class will take that over lefts utter contempt anyday of the week. So I guess thats, that.

Stay, your course in life JU. I will talk to this dog.

Gorpet
05-14-25, 12:00 AM
^ Right, and I deserved that :D
I still believe that truth, logic and science are the only way to go, even if some scientists can be bribed, or do not act like they should. This has nothing to do with left or right. The current US government wants to silence science and supports the rich, they have the right slogans to make people angry and polarize, and they were, or are, successful. There is also a pattern to blame scientists if they do not follow the easy or populist way. The patronizing and arrogant behaviour of those who think they know it all surely did not help.
Still, ignoring what you do not like will not improve the situation.

So, You believe in truth and logic and science? Why don't you tell him the truth?
We live on the only planet as far as a telescope or a space satellite can see.
We have nowhere to go...So now back on Earth.
It's Starmer who will Smack Trump in the face. He and Macron and their collitian of the willing. Who will because of their low IQ ,Will Start the a Global War. Catfish and your logic and science. and Democracy. Oh Catfish ? where will you be ? When Mushrooms start. Screaming on the beach like a female ?

Jimbuna
05-14-25, 12:47 PM
This will not end well and Starmer and his government are solely responsible.

Fury as Labour reopens migrant hotel in UK town with locals scared to leave their homes

Asylum seekers living in a 3-star hotel in Essex have been accused of spitting at local residents, kicking their cars, chasing them around the streets, and stealing from local shops. The Bell Hotel in Epping was closed to illegal migrants by the last Conservative government, but in early April Labour reopened it-despite Sir Keir Starmer's pre-election promise to "smash the gangs" and stop Channel crossings.

Two residents that the Daily Express spoke to live on the same street as the 79-room hotel on the edge of north-east London, but neither wanted to be named for fear of "reprisals" from the hotel's security.

When our reporter approached security staff at the Bell they, like the Home Office, refused to confirm whether asylum seekers were living there.

However, both residents were adamant that the asylum seekers had returned, as were representatives from Epping Forest District Council (EFDC), and this newspaper saw multiple young men gathered in the garden of the hotel. One local resident, a 61-year-old mother-of-two, claimed that in May 2022 her car was kicked by the illegal migrants living there and that she and her family had been spat at by them.

"We were spat at a few times", she alleged. The former fire safety trainer also claimed that the asylum seekers had been physically violent towards her family's vehicle. Speaking from her garden, she said: "My son was driving and I was next to him, and we came out [of the shared drive] and all of a sudden I felt a bump and they kicked our car".

Since the hotel was reopened to asylum seekers in April 2025, she said that her 24-year-old son has had to stop running around the affluent Essex town, after he was followed by a mob "in excess of ten" during his training for the recent London Marathon. Describing the incident, she said: "He started running and he felt something hit him, and they were throwing things from behind him, so he went on the other side of the road and started running back... they were running [after him] and throwing things.

"It really perturbed him, he was shaken when he came back in. It's bizarre isn't it, someone who works in Liverpool Street feels comfortable running through Hoxton and all those areas and yet they're frightened to run [in Epping]".

The retired mum said she herself no longer feels safe to walk out of her front door and feels "totally" trapped.

"I would walk to the shops", she said. "I wouldn't do that now. Not even [in the] daytime. My door when I go in now will be locked, however warm it is."

She added that the family would move if they could, but a local estate agent has warned her that selling her home would be "financial suicide" because the asylum accomodation had decimated its value. She and her husband, a 63-year-old Green Grocer at London's famous Spitalfields Market, had spent £250,000 on home renovations, but have had to leave their property unfinished because they could not afford to "waste any more money".

Continues in link below.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/travel/news/fury-as-labour-reopens-migrant-hotel-in-uk-town-with-locals-scared-to-leave-their-homes/ar-AA1EMm8j?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=1491876659064abba77b6cfe58bc4600&ei=10

Jimbuna
05-14-25, 12:57 PM
This cheeky bugga has more neck than a giraffe.

Calais migrant expects Britons to pay for EVERYTHING as he speaks to Patrick Christys ahead of Channel crossing attempt

GB News presenter Patrick Christys travelled to Calais to investigate the migrant crisis firsthand, revealing the stark reality behind Channel crossings.

More than 12,000 migrants have crossed the Channel so far this year, marking a record for the first five months since data collection began in 2018.

The current total for 2025 is up 31 per cent compared to the same point last year, according to Home Office figures.

In his interviews, Patrick spoke with migrants who openly expressed expectations that British people would provide for their needs upon arrival.

One migrant told Patrick: "I think in England they can help me with anything, maybe."

When asked why Britons should help, the migrant responded: "We have a lot of people in Great Britain who need money and need a house."

He continued: "Maybe they can give me a house or anything they need."

The same migrant described British people as "perfect" and when asked if he thought all Britons were rich, he simply replied: "Yes."

Patrick attempted to correct this misconception, telling him: "Let me tell you, we are not all rich people."

When another migrant was asked why he wouldn't stay in France, he appeared lost for words, merely shrugging and raising his arms.

"No problem in England," claimed another, to which Patrick responded: "We have lots of problems in England, my friend."

During his visit, Patrick discovered a boat ready for crossing, positioned just two miles from the Channel.

The vessel was marked with a red cap on a plinth and contained makeshift life vests "that look like old tyres" and some fuel.

"What we know is that they don't give them enough fuel to get across the channel. They just give them enough to get out," Patrick reported.

He noted that French police had driven past the boat without taking action.

Later, Christys observed a French patrol boat monitoring the coastline for migrant vessels attempting to cross.

He witnessed French authorities winching a migrant boat out of the water, preventing a potential crossing.

"That is one boat stopped from crossing the English Channel. Now, bear in mind that just one of those boats can have up to 70 people on it," Patrick noted.

He described the situation as "chaotic" with migrants being "brazen" about their crossing attempts.

The Home Office has vowed to crack down on people smuggling gangs with counter-terror powers under the Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/lee-anderson-rips-apart-jeremy-corbyn-in-fiery-commons-exchange/ar-AA1EIuYw?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=1491876659064abba77b6cfe58bc4600&ei=106

Jimbuna
05-15-25, 07:41 AM
Keir Starmer refuses to commit to fighting next election as Reform UK surges AGAIN

Sir Keir Starmer has refused to commit to fighting the next General Election in an exclusive interview with GB News.

The Prime Minister was asked on a visit to Albania about his "plans for the future" and whether he would be fighting the next election.

But Starmer refused to commit to taking on the task of securing another five years in No10, telling Britain's News Channel: "You're getting way ahead of me."

"I'm absolutely clear that my task is to rebuild our country," Starmer vowed. "The security that we need, we're getting on with that.

"You've seen it over the last few days - trade deals with India, with the US, hopefully a trading relationship with the EU, very strong growth figures today reflecting the decisions that we've made for interest rate cuts, the actual living wage, waiting lists to come down."

The Prime Minister's words came just as Reform UK - which he has admitted he would face at a national poll - were handed a major polling boost.

Data from Survation has revealed that 30 per cent of Britons would Reform at a General Election, four percentage points higher than two weeks ago.

Labour, on the other hand, has lost one percentage point's worth of support to sit at 25 - while the Tories have lost four, plummeting to just 18 per cent.

"Another poll showing Reform UK leading Labour," Richard Tice said in response. "The minor parties are a long way back."

Over the weekend, the Prime Minister acknowledged that Labour will pivot from battling the Conservatives to Reform in 2029.

"We were planning on the basis we were likely to be facing Reform at the next election in any event," the PM told The Sun - and added that the local election results confirmed internal party "thinking".

He also admitted that the locals had taught Labour a lesson - but rather than attack Farage, he turned his fire on Kemi Badenoch, whose party also slumped across England on May 1.

"I think the Tory Party is a busted flush," Starmer spat. "They haven't learnt the lessons of the last General Election. They have no idea where they are heading."

But just two days later, the PM was accused of "playing catch-up" to Reform by its leader Nigel Farage after the Government unveiled its Immigration White Paper.

Farage told GB News: "They weren't concerned before May 1 were they?

"Keir Starmer has spent his whole career campaigning for free movement of people wholly unconcerned about this subject, so much so that their massive parliamentary majority was gained without immigration even being one of their five main priorities.

"Now, of course, he knows that amongst the great British public, this issue rates even higher than the health service. And he's just basically playing catch up with Reform."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/other/keir-starmer-refuses-to-commit-to-fighting-next-election-as-reform-uk-surges-again/ar-AA1EPwkZ?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=703a2cf2a0b7427a9851bd18c630eb80&ei=14

Jimbuna
05-15-25, 12:42 PM
You simply couldn't make this up :haha:

'He lives in fantasy land!' Ed Miliband handed fresh net zero blow as British Gas boss issues stark warning

Former Chief Executive of Energy UK, Angela Knight, has hit out at Energy Secretary Ed Miliband after his plans for net zero were dealt a fresh blow.

British Gas boss Chris O'Shea has issued a stark warning that the UK's transition to renewable energy will not lead to lower electricity prices for consumers, directly contradicting Miliband's claims.

The chief executive of Centrica, British Gas's parent company, stated that while the shift to net zero power sources may deliver greater price stability, it "will definitely not reduce the price" of electricity from current levels.

In a LinkedIn post, O'Shea claimed: "The build-out of renewables will not materially reduce UK electricity prices from current levels. They may give price stability and avoid future price strikes... but will definitely not reduce the price."

Discussing the revelation on GB News, Knight claimed that the cost of Britain becoming more green has been something that Miliband has "always sidelined".

She explained: "I don't think Ed Miliband's promise was a great promise, and I'm not sure how many people believed him, because there's no way that you can start a programme of huge investment and somehow it doesn't get paid for.

"So under any sort of circumstances, the big push for renewables, wind farms, for solar and so on is an expensive one. It might be much better for the environment, but the reality of cost has always been there and has been one of those things which Ed Miliband has unfortunately tended to sideline."

In a direct criticism of Miliband, Knight added that the Energy Secretary "lives in fantasy land" when it comes to his plans for Britain.

Knight told GB News: "I often think that either he lives in complete sort of cloud cuckoo fantasy land of fanatics, or he actually is knowing that in many respects he is not really telling the people of this country the truth."

When pressed by host Emily Carver on whether she believes Britain's energy bills will "eventually go down" once the UK is "completely green", Knight disagreed.

She explained: "It can't be the case because how are you going to be completely green? After all, renewable energy - it comes free in the sense that the wind will always blow and the sun will always shine - but they'll only do it for some of the time.

"So even though it may reduce cost now to build a wind farm, you've still got to build the backup."

Emphasising the need for a "reliable backup" as opposed to "relying on imports", Knight added: "Right now, we're increasingly relying on being able to import power from continental Europe. That comes at a price and it comes at quite a significant price.

"And so actually building the back up is now where the investment needs to go, because we've closed down our coal fired power stations and our nuclear power stations are old."

She concluded: "Even if we were to build huge battery farms, they will only keep a town or whatever running for not a very long period of time. And so it is that reliable backup that is needed.

"And in fact, baseload is where we should be looking. That is stuff that just goes on and on and on steadily."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/he-lives-in-fantasy-land-ed-miliband-handed-fresh-net-zero-blow-as-british-gas-boss-issues-stark-warning/ar-AA1EQTxy?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=c369010d66a941ecbd094fa1c7c04486&ei=22

Jimbuna
05-16-25, 11:48 AM
Reform deals even more council election blows to Labour and Tories with huge swings

Reform UK has smashed the Tories and Labour in a further two council by-elections overnight, just two weeks after their incredible local election results. Nigel Farage swept Labour away in the Stoke-on-Trent council seat of Birches Head & Northwood, with a mega 40 point swing to Reform.

His party, having not stood in the seat when it was last fought in 2023, came from nowhere to pick up 58.5% of the vote. Meanwhile Labour collapsed in half, down 22.4 points to 21.4%. The Tories performed even more poorly, coming in fourth with just 3.5%, behind a local residents' association.

Reform also dealt a blow to Kemi Badenoch, taking a seat in Norfolk with a swing of 29.3%.

Mr Farage's party took the Acle constituency in Broadland with 33.2% of the vote, again having not stood in the seat when it was last fought in 2023.

The Conservatives dropped 25.4 points, down to 21.4%, with the Greens coming in third and pushing Labour into fourth with just 19.2%, down 23.2 points from 2023.

The victory in Broadland hints at how Reform may have done in Norfolk more broadly, had the local elections for the council not been delayed due to local government reforms.

A third council by-election overnight saw Labour cling on in Barnet, with London proving one of the few regions still providing some relief for Sir Keir Starmer.

However Labour still took a big hit, losing 18 points from their vote share compared to the last time the Whetstone seat was fought in 2022.

Reform came in third with 20.5%, still suggesting Nigel Farage is proving more popular in London than with any of his previous parties.

The further council election victories come just two weeks after Reform UK beat all expectations in the local elections, picking up hundreds more seats than expected.

Reform won 678 seats in total, and took full control of 10 councils, bringing them up to 804 councillors in total.

In addition, Mr Farage also won the Runcorn by-election by six votes, and two mayoralties in Hull and East Yorkshire, and Lincolnshire.

Ed Davey came second with 370 new seats, pushing the Tories into third having lost 676 seats.

Labour came fourth, losing 187, but were rescued by the face very few Labour seats were up for election this year.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/reform-deals-even-more-council-election-blows-to-labour-and-tories-with-huge-swings/ar-AA1ESUw1?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=589e6337206e45b19b815959b19778ab&ei=16

Jimbuna
05-16-25, 11:55 AM
Don't worry Rachel, you can always tax the elderly and infirm a bit more to make up for it.

Rachel Reeves slammed as world's super rich flee over tax crackdown

The UK has suffered the biggest fall in billionaires on record after Chancellor Rachel Reeves' non-dom tax crackdown, according to the Sunday Times Rich List. The annual list of Britain's wealthiest people was once again topped by the Hinduja family, who are worth more than £35 billion.

Famous figures including Sir Elton John, Andrew Lloyd-Webber, Sir Lewis Hamilton, David and Victoria Beckham, and the King all appear in the list of the UK's 350 richest individuals and families. The biggest loser on the list is Manchester United co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe, 72, who has seen his wealth decline by around £6.4billion for the second consecutive year. He's still seventh on the overall list with a £17bn wealth.

But the most alarming headline from the latest publication however reveals a third consecutive slump in the number of billionaires residing in the UK - blamed on Rachel Reeves's policies.

The number of billionaires slid to 156 this year from 165 in 2024, representing the sharpest decline in the Sunday Times Rich List's 37-year-history.

"Our billionaire count is down and the combined wealth of those who feature in our research is falling," said Robert Watts, compiler of the Rich List.

"We are also finding fewer of the world's super rich are coming to live in the UK."

He said he was also "struck by the strength of criticism for Rachel Reeves's Treasury" when speaking to wealthy individuals for the publication.

Mr Watts said: "We expected the abolition of non-dom status would anger affluent people from overseas.

"But homegrown young tech entrepreneurs and those running centuries-old family firms are also warning of serious consequences to a range of tax changes unveiled in last October's budget."

The Labour Government abolished the non-dom tax status in April, which is where UK residents whose permanent home or domicile for tax purposes is outside the UK.

Last year, former Conservative chancellor Jeremy Hunt revealed plans to scrap the tax status before successor Rachel Reeves sped up the process.

Akshata Murty, the wife of former prime minister Rishi Sunak, is among those who were well-known non-doms.

The couple once again appear in the Rich List, although their wealth slipped to £640 million from £651 million a year earlier, after her shares in Infosys - the tech company founded by her father - fell over tariff concerns.

Other notable figures on the list included the King, whose wealth matched that of Mr Sunak and Ms Murty at £640 million.

Gopi Hinduja and his family, who are behind the Indian conglomerate Hinduja Group, were named Britain's richest again in 2025, despite their wealth dipping to £35.3 billion from £37.2 billion.

The Hindujas were followed in the list by real estate moguls David and Simon Reuben, who moved up to second after increasing their wealth to £26.9 billion.

They were followed by investor Sir Leonard Blavatnik, entrepreneur Sir James Dyson and shipping tycoon Idan Ofer.

Meanwhile, the biggest risers were the Russian-born brothers Igor and Dmitry Bukhman who built a fortune on mobile games such as Gardenscapes and Fishdom, who saw their wealth almost double to £12.5 billion.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/rachel-reeves-slammed-as-world-s-super-rich-flee-over-tax-crackdown/ar-AA1EU8WH?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=589e6337206e45b19b815959b19778ab&ei=39

Jimbuna
05-17-25, 09:39 AM
Keir Starmer set for huge winter fuel u-turn in June after huge defeat

Sir Keir Starmer has opened the door to an embarrassing u-turn over means-testing Winter Fuel Payments amid fears that furious voters are abandoning Labour over the policy. The Prime Minister declined to rule out a reversal when he spoke to the Daily Express last night - and suggested the economy had improved since the "difficult decision" to cut payments was made last year.

Sir Keir was asked about reports he is holding talks with aides about changes which could mean scrapping means-testing entirely or increasing the threshold so that more pensioners are eligible for payments of up to £300. He said: "Look, we took difficult decisions, but the right decisions, at the budget, including the decision that we took on winter fuel.

"As a result of those decisions - I mean, they were taken specifically with the purpose of stabilising the economy. And I think we're seeing the evidence of that in the interest rate cuts and the growth figures. So, they were difficult decisions but they were right decisions."

The suggestion that economic stability has now been achieved could allow the Prime Minister to argue that means-testing was essential last year but is no longer required.

Sir Keir's advisers believe the policy is so unpopular that it is worth carrying out a humiliating rethink and an announcement could be made as soon as next month.

It comes after anxious Labour MPs warned Number 10 that anger over means-tesing, which robbed millions of pensioners of money to help them stay warm in winter, contributed to Labour's huge losses in local elections earlier this month.

And focus groups have reportedly reassured the Prime Minister that voters will back a change of heart.

The most likely option is to increase the means-testing threshold, currently £11,809 for most single pensioners, so that far more people are eligible for the payment. Another option is to scrap means-testing entirely and return to a situation where all pensioners are usually eligible for the money, but this is less attractive because of the huge cost.

An announcement could come as soon as the Spending Review on 11 June. Alternatively, the change could be announced in Rachel Reeves' Budget statement in the autumn.

The move would be a particular embarrassment for Chancellor Rachel Reeves, who announced the means-testing policy last year. However, Sir Keir is said to be determined to protect the Chancellor and will make it clear she has his full support.

More than nine million pensioners no longer receive payments of up to £300 as a result of means-testing, which means only people eligible for pension credit usually qualify for the benefit.

The Government has admitted the policy will plunge 100,000 pensioners into poverty. Increasing the threshold at which payments are made would significantly cut this number even if wealthier pensioners continued to be excluded.

An analysis of this month's local elections by professor Sir John Curtice found Reform received 31% of the vote with Conservatives on 23%, Liberal Democrats on 17% and Labour on 14%.

Labour's poor showing partly reflects the areas where voting took place, including county councils where Labour has traditionally performed badly, but it still marks a sharp decline from 2021 local elections held largely in the same places, when Labour gained 27% of the vote.

Some of Sir Keir's MPs have publicly warned that winter fuel payment means-testing helped cause the defeat, while many more have expressed private concerns.

Labour MP Rachael Maskell said following the May 1 local elections that Labour was being damaged by "all of these poor decisions that are being made" including the decision to refuse compensation to "Waspi" women hit by the state pension age increase. She warned: "Policies that have been introduced since July that weren't in our manifesto - the cuts to winter fuel, not honouring the Waspi women, taking away the vital lifeline of support for disabled people - of course people are confused."

Fellow Labour MP Emma Lewell said earlier this month: "Labour was elected on the promise that we would be committed to serving the public and in doing so improve their lives.

"Within months of that General Election there was the 'freebies' scandal and the removal of winter fuel from millions of pensioners."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/keir-starmer-set-for-huge-winter-fuel-u-turn-in-june-after-huge-defeat/ar-AA1EV9Ru?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=2af9e07a5bb546fda3af5932bb4f3c6d&ei=12

Jimbuna
05-18-25, 01:37 PM
Why Starmer’s Brexit reset won’t bail out Rachel Reeves

Signing a new “Brexit reset” deal with the EU will boost the economy but not enough to end the squeeze on public finances, Rachel Reeves has been warned.

Multiple economists said that agreeing a closer economic relationship with Brussels would help improve the UK’s growth – though it remains highly uncertain how much difference it will make.

A deal could also add as much as £10bn-20bn to the Chancellor’s fiscal headroom at future Budgets, but that would not represent a fundamental shift in the Government’s finances. Treasury insiders said the agreement was only one part of ministers’ growth plans.

Read Next: Treasury has ‘things up sleeve’ in desperate bid to avoid tax hikes

Reeves has faced warnings that amidst global economic turbulence there is a high chance she will need to raise taxes or cut spending again in the autumn, to avoid breaking her self-imposed borrowing rules.

One estimate suggested that the shortfall would be as much as £60bn, while a former senior aide in No 10 has said that higher taxes are inevitable.

Negotiations with the EU are intended to ease trade by securing a deal to reduce checks on imports and exports, as well as making it easier to hire some workers across borders, and closer co-operation on security and defence. An outline agreement is expected to be announced on Monday at a summit in London.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/why-starmer-s-brexit-reset-won-t-bail-out-rachel-reeves/ar-AA1EZzTa?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=ENTPSP&cvid=f41a330048cf4edaa9b0f0240f849a24&ei=23

Catfish
05-19-25, 03:45 AM
So, You believe in truth and logic and science? Why don't you tell him the truth?
We live on the only planet as far as a telescope or a space satellite can see.
Yes I do believe in in these first three, and deleting databases and destroying evidence of unpleasant facts (like Trump just did) found out over decades is maybe not the right way, don't you think so? It is more like burying your head in the sand.
We have nowhere to go...So now back on Earth. No objection here, though Musk burns millions to take you to Mars?
Will return to the rest later though I admit I do not understand what you are writing here.

Jimbuna
05-19-25, 09:30 AM
If recent rumours are true, Two Tier Keir will never be forgiven by those who voted for BREXIT and forever be known as a traitor to his country.

Starmer strikes post-Brexit reset deal with EU

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has agreed a deal with the EU ahead of a major summit with the bloc, the PA news agency understands.

After Government sources said talks were “down to the wire” on Sunday, there was a major breakthrough.

The deal has now been approved by the EU ambassadors’ committee, it is understood.

The UK has reportedly agreed to 12 years of fishing access for EU boats in UK waters.

There will be no change to current access to fish for coastal communities and no reduction in the British quota or increase in the quota the EU is allowed to catch, it is understood.

Further details of the deal are expected to be announced at the first UK-EU summit on Monday, at which Sir Keir will meet European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen.

Other issues under discussion included defence and security, with reports of talks on a potential agreement allowing British firms access to a 150 billion euro (£125 billion) EU defence fund.

Deals on allowing British travellers to use e-gates at European airports, cutting red tape on food exports, and setting up a youth mobility scheme with the EU, were also thought to be on the table.

Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds described the deal as a “solid eight” out of 10.

“I’m not the kind of man to get hyperbolic about these things, but look, this is a good deal for borders, for bills, for security in the UK and for jobs,” he told GB News.

Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch criticised the fishing agreement, saying: “12 years access to British waters is three times longer than the Government wanted.

“We’re becoming a rule-taker from Brussels once again.”

Mrs Badenoch and Reform UK leader Nigel Farage had already described the deal as a “surrender” before knowing the details.

Youth mobility could prove a major sticking point for the Opposition, and Mrs Badenoch said she feared it would involve a return to free movement “by the back door”.

The Tories have also set out a series of “red lines” on fishing rights, including ensuring exclusive access to Britain’s territorial sea and resisting “a multi-year agreement which only benefits France”.

The Liberal Democrats meanwhile have called for a new UK-EU customs union.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/starmer-strikes-post-brexit-reset-deal-with-eu/ar-AA1F2t4f?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=8834ff7dcabe4dd49c8c97312852efde&ei=14

Catfish
05-19-25, 01:53 PM
[...] There will be no change to current access to fish for coastal communities and no reduction in the British quota or increase in the quota the EU is allowed to catch, it is understood.
[...]
Other issues under discussion included defence and security, with reports of talks on a potential agreement allowing British firms access to a 150 billion euro (£125 billion) EU defence fund.

Deals on allowing British travellers to use e-gates at European airports, cutting red tape on food exports, and setting up a youth mobility scheme with the EU, were also thought to be on the table. [...]

And this is so bad. Hmm.

Mrs Badenoch and Reform UK leader Nigel Farage had already described the deal as a “surrender” before knowing the details. [...]
Of course... :/

Jimbuna
05-20-25, 06:45 AM
The problem where fish are concerned is the fact that the current deal ends in 2026 and it was decided renewals to said agreement would be on a yearly basis but Two Tier Keir in his eternal wisdom has just signed an agreement for a further twelve years.

Jimbuna
05-20-25, 06:58 AM
Eamonn Holmes fumes ‘nobody seems to care’ as Keir Starmer sparks fury with Brexit ‘betrayal’

GB News star Eamonn Holmes has expressed frustration about a key British industry being ignored in the wake of Keir Starmer’s ‘surrender’ to the EU.

The Prime Minister unveiled his Brexit ‘reset’ alongside EU leaders at a Central London summit yesterday and has been accused of making major concessions to the bloc.

His decision to allow European trawlers 12 years of access to UK waters has sparked backlash and Eamonn said on the People’s Channel the concerns of Britain’s fishermen are going unheard.

“They will try and make out farmers are going to do very well, I don’t know, but they say they will”, he said.

“But I think, who cares about the fishermen? Nobody seems to care. They are on their own.”

Former Tory MP Anna Firth told GB News she is furious about the agreement that she sees as a “shabby sellout of our historic fishing industry”.

She said: “When we came out with Brexit, one of the things fishermen weren’t happy about was being kept in the orbit of Brussels for five years.

“That was due to come to an end next year and we were going to be able to get complete control of our fishing waters.

“What this has done is given this away. Fishermen have had a bad time for decades. The fishing industry has halved in the last 40 years.

“This is probably going to be the end of our small fishing fleet.”

Government sources have hailed the major deal as one that is “mutually beneficial” and would “deliver for British working people”.

Last-minute stumbling blocks are said to have arisen as disagreements over fishing rights and youth mobility presented challenges.

The Scottish Government has expressed concern, stating it has not been briefed on fisheries negotiations despite agriculture and fisheries being devolved to Scotland.

Ex-Prime Minister Boris Johnson branded Keir Starmer the “gimp of Brussels” in a brutal verdict while speaking to GB News about what he called a “hopelessly one sided” deal with the EU.

Both Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch and Reform UK leader Nigel Farage have already described the deal as a "surrender", despite the details not yet being known, and indicated they would tear it up if they came to power.

Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey urged the Prime Minister to be "bold and ambitious", comparing Badenoch and Farage to "dinosaurs fighting old battles".

He argued that "a new UK-EU customs union would be the single biggest thing ministers could do to boost public finances", warning that "anything less would be a choice to limit growth".
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/other/eamonn-holmes-fumes-nobody-seems-to-care-as-keir-starmer-sparks-fury-with-brexit-betrayal/ar-AA1F6Eyj?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=637bef25dc624a038065f2774c3b908d&ei=10

Moonlight
05-20-25, 11:19 AM
Keir Starmer's EU sellout perfectly skewered in seven-word slapdown of PM

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/keir-starmer-s-eu-sellout-perfectly-skewered-in-seven-word-slapdown-of-pm/ar-AA1F79Vf

Starmer and his Boneheads will pay dearly for this at the next GE, Reform are gathering pace, and if they rid themselves of the cretins that are currently in the party, I can see them challenging the other political parties in the next 10 years or so. What a coup that would be, a Prime Minister, not to be from the Labour or Tory parties, if only dreams could come true.

That person won't be Nigel Farage, that job will be too much for him to take on, it will have to be someone younger and with a clearer vision than the current set of candidates, give it another 10 years and I'm sure they will emerge, could it be a Maggie Thatcher part two, now that would set a fire under their asses at Westminster. :O:

Jimbuna
05-20-25, 12:06 PM
https://i.postimg.cc/CKJd63vg/111.jpg (https://postimg.cc/bGDzZBcC)
https://i.postimg.cc/xTHvFdLV/222.jpg (https://postimages.org/)

Moonlight
05-22-25, 04:33 AM
Shambles as High Court STOPS Keir Starmer signing Chagos deal in 2am injunction - hours before PM was due to confirm British territory being handed to Mauritius

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14738233/Shambles-High-Court-STOPS-Keir-Starmer-signing-Chagos-deal-2am-injunction-hours-PM-confirm-British-territory-handed-Mauritius.html

Mauritius is going to be handed billions of pounds in rent for Diego Garcia, an island in the territory that is home to a major UK/US airbase. That's a great piece of business for Mauritius who didn't even exist when the UK first settled there. And that begs the question, how in the hell can they (Mauritius) claim the Chagos islands as there's then?, you don't think that China are pulling some strings in the background do you?. Nah, not China, they wouldn't do anything like that would they?. :haha:

Jimbuna
05-22-25, 08:31 AM
Absolutel disgusting as well as disgraceful.

HMRC collects £780m in just one month of inheritance tax

HMRC have collected almost £0.8bn in the space of a month through inheritance tax (IHT) receipts - and the expectation is of this continuing to rise, as more families are pulled into scope for paying the tax due to frozen thresholds and regulation changes.

The £780m collected in the first month of the new financial year is the second-highest monthly total ever recorded, with OBR forecasts predicting IHT will raise more than £9bn for the Treasury across 2025/26.

Industry experts are warning families to ensure they know the state of their estates ahead of time to allow for inheritance planning, with pensions also due to fall within these tax considerations from 2027 onwards - pulling more into this sphere of taxpayers at a moment which will already be difficult.

“IHT receipts are only going in one direction and that’s up,” Andrew Zanelli, head of technical engagement at Aberdeen Adviser, said. “The government’s plans to bring pensions into the tax’s scope from April 2027 is one of the reasons for the continued rise and we’re still waiting for the details which is making many people understandably concerned.

“But there’s also a large amount of people who still don’t realise their estate will be taxed on death, and we see in the data that the number of estates where tax is due is concentrated in the smaller estates.

“Knowing exactly how much you’re worth and good planning is key because it is possible to manage IHT risk. Careful and comprehensive planning, supported by expert advice, is critical for managing exposure in a way that still supports overall financial goals.”

There could be additional changes on the way, too.

Shares held in companies listed on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM) are currently exempt from inheritance tax, but proposals have suggested this could be slashed by 50 per cent - or removed altogether.

“Over the last 20 years the inheritance tax tab has increased from £3.3bn to £8.2bn. With such a strong start to the 2025/26 tax year this is only going one way - and that is up,” said Nicholas Hyett, investment manager at Wealth Club. “This is no accident – leaked government documents made it clear this week that inheritance tax is still seen as a cash cow by some members of the cabinet.”

In addition to the inheritance tax windfall, changes to employers National Insurance contributions helped to boost the Treasury by £1.7bn in April. Meanwhile, while borrowing came in at £20.2bn - £1bn more than last April - debt interest was £0.5bn lower than April 2024 as a result of lowered interest rates.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/hmrc-collects-780m-in-just-one-month-of-inheritance-tax/ar-AA1FgHdx?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=9b5b2e4249ff48c3903300a84ff71f49&ei=69

Jimbuna
05-22-25, 08:42 AM
That is a big YES from me.

POLL: Should Keir Starmer resign over winter fuel U-turn?

Keir Starmer caused chaos in the House of Commons today when he announced a major U-turn on the winter fuel payment.

Labour stripped pensioners of the crucial cash boost last year, prompting widespread fury from both inside and outside the party.

However during Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday, Starmer said he wants to make more pensioners eligible for winter fuel payments. "I recognise that people are still feeling the pressure of the cost-of-living crisis, including pensioners," he told the Commons.

"As the economy improves, we want to make sure people feel those improvements in their days as their lives go forward. That is why we want to ensure that, as we go forward, more pensioners are eligible for winter fuel payments.

Tory leader Kemi Badenoch challenged him over the "U-turn", calling him "desperate".

Asked if he was planning a U-turn, the Prime Minister said: "As the economy improves, we want to take measures that will impact on people's lives, and therefore we will look at the threshold, but that will have to be part of a fiscal event."

Mrs Badenoch said: "I wonder how the public feel about a man can't give a straight answer to a simple question, and you look at all of them behind him, all of them cheering: when this inevitable U-turn on winter fuel comes - and it will, from a desperate Prime Minister - what will he say to the 348 MPs who went over the top and voted for the winter fuel cut last September?

"Just like the British public, how can any of them ever trust him again?"
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/poll-should-keir-starmer-resign-over-winter-fuel-u-turn/ar-AA1FcHbd?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=d7ab402eb2664b3093e2d81882d24a9b&ei=37

Jimbuna
05-24-25, 08:47 AM
The 12 biggest lies Keir Starmer has told us - now they're coming back to bite him.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/the-12-biggest-lies-keir-starmer-has-told-us-now-they-re-coming-back-to-bite-him/ar-AA1Fo6Wo?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=652140430131430d9a6fe0c01d74812d&ei=14

mapuc
05-24-25, 05:42 PM
Some of the top in the Tories are working to get Boris back.

A senior Tory said: “Some of the old gang around Boris Johnson are back texting and in talks to get him to return.

“The feeling is he is the only man who can take on Nigel Farage and win. They want to bring back Boris."

https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/politics/35107052/boris-johnson-tory-leader-plot/

Markus

Moonlight
05-25-25, 06:32 AM
That's not going to happen, Boris Johnson is a busted flush, that's why they got rid of him in the first place, the currant leader of the Tories (Kemi Bad News Badenoch) isn't even a shadow of Theresa May, never mind being a (Maggie Thatcher Milk Snatcher) type.
No, the Tories have stitched themselves up like a kipper, and you can blame every Tory leader since John Major for that, political suicide is the Tories only true achievement over the last 35 years and, the Labour Party are heading down that same road and, they aren't heeding the warning signs either.

Jimbuna
05-25-25, 08:00 AM
True that.

JU_88
05-26-25, 04:31 AM
https://i.postimg.cc/CKJd63vg/111.jpg (https://postimg.cc/bGDzZBcC)
https://i.postimg.cc/xTHvFdLV/222.jpg (https://postimages.org/)


Please tell me you dont still donate to them...

Jimbuna
05-26-25, 10:55 AM
Left the party the day after Steptoe beat Andy Burnham to the party leadership :)

Jimbuna
05-26-25, 11:04 AM
Farage commits to reinstating winter fuel payment

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cvg9v0ylv8vo

Catfish
05-26-25, 02:58 PM
What a leader!

mapuc
05-26-25, 04:56 PM
What a leader!

He have seen how angry many British people are about this cut, he is therefore taking chance to gain political points by saying what these angry people want to hear.

If elected, there's a good chance he wouldn't touch it, but let it be as it is.

Markus

Jimbuna
05-27-25, 09:38 AM
Rachel Thieves at her finest.

Rachel Reeves 'to ditch Labour manifesto by hiking one of the big 3 taxes in £30bn raid'

Reeves entered the Treasury promising to make tough decisions. She's no longer in a position to do that.

She began with the symbolic gesture of axing the winter fuel payment for 10 million pensioners, triggering an almighty backlash.

The Chancellor sank her reputation and only saved £1.5billion in the process. Probably less, as many affected rushed to claim other benefits such as pension credit.

In her Spring Statement, she had another shot at appearing tough, this time by targeting the spiralling bill for disability benefits.

Reeves hoped to save £5billion. In practice, she'll claw back £3.5 billion at most. And even that's looking unlikely.

The proposal sparked a Labour Party civil war, with Deputy PM Angela Rayner insisting Reeves drop the cuts and hike taxes instead.

Reeves lost that battle.

Now Labour is rowing back on the winter fuel payment decision, and it will probably abandon the disability cuts as well. That means even less is saved.

Starmer has also signalled he may review the two-child benefit cap, following a sharp rise in child poverty.

Scrapping that would cost a further £3.5 billion over this Parliament.

The fight has gone out of Reeves. As I wrote last week, she's now Chancellor in name only.

Reeves was happy enough to bludgeon taxpayers in last year's Budget, but now she's under constant fire from her own party.

She responding by embarking on an old-style 1970s Labour spending spree, funding a fresh wave of public sector pay increases.

Many workers received bumper rises last year. They will now get inflation-busting uplifts again.

Reeves just waved them through. But somebody has to foot the bill, and it will arrive in her Autumn Budget.

Economists reckon she'll need up to £30billion in extra tax to balance the books. If correct, that's only £10billion less than the record £40billion she hit us with last year.

Stephen Millard, acting director at the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, has sounded the alarm.

He warned the pressure is so intense that Labour will have to break its core manifesto pledge not to raise income tax, National Insurance or VAT, according to The Daily Telegraph.

"It is pretty much inevitable now that she will have to raise one of those big taxes," Millard said.

There will be uproar if she does.

Starmer and Reeves were clear during the campaign. The big three taxes would not rise. If they break that promise, many will accuse them of lying all over again.

But that's unlikely to deter them. They're used to it.

Those three taxes are the only ones capable of raising the vast sums Labour now needs to sustain its current spending path.

The Spring Statement left Reeves with just £9.9billion of fiscal headroom. Donald Trump's trade war has since wiped out half of it.

The economy grew by 0.7% in the first three months of the year, but that momentum is expected to reverse.

Growth could stall altogether. Especially if Reeves lines up another tax raid, draining yet more life from the economy.

The Chancellor has dug herself a hole. She needs taxpayers to pull her out. And they will, whether they like it or not.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/rachel-reeves-to-ditch-labour-manifesto-by-hiking-one-of-the-big-3-taxes-in-30bn-raid/ar-AA1FysGO?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=f0992f771e884abc82410c5f3d8a720d&ei=14

JU_88
05-28-25, 02:39 AM
Farage commits to reinstating winter fuel payment

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cvg9v0ylv8vo


wouldnt trust him, If theres one thing Nigel has proven, its that hes not very good at commiting to anything.

Jimbuna
05-28-25, 05:23 AM
wouldnt trust him, If theres one thing Nigel has proven, its that hes not very good at commiting to anything.

True that :yep:

Jimbuna
05-28-25, 05:31 AM
https://i.postimg.cc/5N9MbCcD/500910508-1275145754169635-3143983566036762282-n.jpg (https://postimages.org/)

Moonlight
05-28-25, 11:08 AM
Yeah, that's my favourite one too. :up:

Jimbuna
05-28-25, 11:50 AM
Rachel Reeves 'in last chance saloon' as she faces huge Cabinet clash

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is in the "last chance saloon" as she battles furious Cabinet colleagues in the run-up to spending announcements which are expected to impose huge cuts for years to come. One veteran Labour politician and former minister said: "If this goes wrong then either the Chancellor or the Prime Minister will have go to, and it won't be the Prime Minister."

A Whitehall source complained the Chancellor is "trapped by rules she made herself" which require day-to-day spending to be funded by revenue such as taxes without requiring borrowing. It means departments face cuts in the Spending Review to be announced on June 11, when Ms Reeves will set out departmental budgets up to 2028-29.

Richard Fuller, Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury, said: "Rachel Reeves is completely out of her depth. Addicted to borrowing she has hiked taxes to record levels and is driving inflation in the wrong direction. We are all paying the price for Labour's economic incompetence.

"Given her dire record, it's no wonder she's now drinking in the last chance saloon with even her own Labour cabinet colleagues looking on with alarm."

While total Government spending will rise, the extra cash will not be enough to fund planned increases in defence, health and childcare. It means "unprotected" departments are threatened with real-terms cuts, with policing, the environment and some education funding all in the firing line.

Think tank the Institute for Fiscal Studies has predicted that schools could face cuts of £2 billion in government funding while sources at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs revealed that funding for Environmental Land Management schemes, currently £1.8 billion, could be slashed. National Farming Union President Tom Bradshaw said: "If this story proves to be correct it will be another blow, not just for farmers and growers, but for the viability of nature friendly farming and for the environment."

Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner, who visited a new housing development in Oxfordshire to announce plans to support small business housebuilders, has been pushing for more funding to ensure the Government achieves its aim of providing 1.5 million additional homes.

Ms Reeves has been keen to cut the costs of welfare and support for the elderly, which comes to more than £360 billion including the state pension. But ongoing rows over winter fuel means-testing, cuts to disability benefits and the two-child benefit cap highlight the enormous difficulty of getting spending down.

Concerns about these were raised at a meeting of Labour's National Executive Committee (NEC) last week, attended by Ms Rayner and party chair Ellie Reeves, sister of the Chancellor, NEC member Ann Black said in a written report that she highlighted "unpopular national decisions, led by withdrawing most winter fuel payments three weeks into government. Keir Starmer's apparent rethink has left pensioners unsure about who will now get it back and when."

But a former Labour Minister insisted: "You have got to cut back on welfare spending. The question is, what are your priorities? You can't do it all at once. They have probably tried to take on too much in one go."

One Labour MP predicted Ms Reeves would be gone before she has a chance to deliver her planned Budget statement in the autumn. The MP said about the Prime Minister: "I am surprised he has not reshuffled his Cabinet yet. He has to reshuffle."

But they also accused Sir Keir and his advisers of failing to understand that politics has changed since the last time Labour was in power with Tony Blair as Prime Minister. The Labour MP said: "People in Number 10 are playing by the Blairite pay book. They don't understand that the centre-ground has shifted and everything has moved right-wards."
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/rachel-reeves-in-last-chance-saloon-as-she-faces-huge-cabinet-clash/ar-AA1FDIxv?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=37195bb1538a46d59680499df7d37b4d&ei=10

Moonlight
05-28-25, 05:04 PM
The Labour Party have always been incompetent where the economy is concerned, saying that though, the Tories record isn't that much better either. The Tories have been in power the most over the last 100 years so they should take most of the blame with the Labour Party just half a step behind them.

They both have a piss poor record of government mismanagement and I can only see it getting worse while ever the current ideology is prevalent, a huge U-Turn is needed before it's too late, or is it already too late and we've just ignored all the warning signs.