Friday 7 June 2024

Election Latest

Purdah doesn't apply around here and it's never been very politically balanced any way, but rather prides itself on trying to get to the bottom of things and ferret out truth from humbug, hypocrisy and lies. I'm not just grumpy any more, I'm beginning to get angry. 

So lets try and get this straight. You get caught out lying about tax hikes by a future Labour government by using dodgy figures you say were agreed by HM Treasury, who then publicly refute that claim and prove you were given prior warning not to use them, so you decide to simply 'double-down' and as Prime Minister fly back from D-Day commemorations avoiding a photo-call with three world leaders thus dissing last surviving veterans to do a political interview with ITV which won't be broadcast until next Wednesday and in the process facilitate a photo call between Keir Starmer and President Zelenskyy of Ukraine, oh and in the process lose support of key Tory commentators such as Tim Montgomerie of ConservativeHome. 

You need to watch last night's BBC Newsnight which annoyingly is not yet on iplayer. Youtube here.

Even the Spectator are proving Rishi's figures are dodgy:-

On Sunak’s maths, Tories will lift taxes by £3,000 per household

My colleague Ross Clark has shown how the Tories cooked up that £2,000 figure. They worked out the total cost of what they think Labour will do, using standard HM Treasury costings. Then, they divided that by the number of in-work households (18.4 million). This is a subset of the 21.4 million total UK households, so no pensioners or workless households. By choosing a smaller denominator, you concentrate the increase and conjure up a scarier figure. Then they quadruple-counted. So they took each year’s estimate for tax rise and then added them together over four years and – presto! – you end up with £2,000.

But let’s apply a similar method to the published plans of the Conservative government. We don’t need to guess what the cost of government would be: the projected tax haul figures were published by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) and updated in March after the Budget. It will be £1.02 trillion in the current financial year. That’s with the tax/GDP ratio at 36.5 per cent. Let’s use that as our baseline. The OBR says the Tories plan to increase taxes to 37.1 per cent of GDP by 2028/29. So the 0.6-point increase works out at £20 billion more tax raised in that year than if the tax/GDP ratio (below) had stayed flat.

Add up all four years (as the Tories did for their Labour calculation) and you end up with a £320 rise in year one, £620 in year two, £930 in year three and £1,150 in the final year. So: a sum of £3,020 per working household. Except this would be just as misleading as the £2,000 figure that Sunak used so often in the debate last night.

Given that this is a nonsense exercise, there are several other ways to cut it. If you take this year's tax take in cash as a baseline (rather than the tax/GDP ratio) you can get conjure up a figure of £9,000 of Tory tax rises. Or add a fifth year of government. But spin aside and we're left with one significant and important fact: the Tories genuinely do intend to take the tax burden to the highest seen in the lifetimes of most voters. They are in a big old glass house when in comes to tax rises – yet here they are, still throwing stones. It’s a risky strategy.

There are serious issues at stake in this general election and the Tories have just released nonsense figures with fake attribution then given them to newspapers, who took it on trust. I’m not sure that this will help their chances.

--oo00oo--

The political techtonic plates are definitely shifting.

7 comments:

  1. The more significant damage inflicted by sunak & all politicians who insist on lying is that their behaviour is copied & exercised by everyone else.

    Since thatcher the erosion of morals, scruples, integrity - call it what you will - has been escalating at pace.

    tories continue to use the least moral creatures on the planet to expedite their election campaign. This article from 2019 gives a flavour:

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7790007/The-24-hour-meme-machines-classic-Dom-Cummings-backroom-team-Boriss-win.html

    In 2020:

    https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/dark-money-investigations/revealed-tory-linked-pr-firm-given-3m-covid-19-contract-without-tender/

    and more recently:

    https://inews.co.uk/news/politics/why-tiktok-new-zealand-and-an-australian-expert-could-be-rishi-sunaks-last-hope-for-general-election-victory-2700545


    So who needs Truth when you have trendmongers exploiting social media, deep fakes & memes?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Ooops, looks like little half-mast & current liar-in-chief has had to own up to fucking up (almost as catchy as eat out to spread covid) by abandoning the DDay vets in order to double down on his lies.

    "Once parliament is dissolved each seat in the House of Commons becomes vacant until polling day. There will be no MPs until after the general election on 4 July 2024... Parliament and Government are two separate institutions.

    The Government does not resign when Parliament is dissolved. Government ministers remain in charge of their departments. The role of minister is independent of the role of MP.

    Ministers keep their ministerial titles after dissolution, but MPs can no longer use MP in their name."

    But who gets paid what? Do ministers still get their ministerial salary? Do MPs still get paid?

    ReplyDelete
  3. BBC news website:-

    Some more reaction from within the Conservative Party now - following Rishi Sunak's apology for leaving D-Day commemorations in Normandy prematurely.

    Veterans Minister Johnny Mercer has told the Sun's Election Countdown programme that Sunak's decision was "a significant mistake".

    He says he's spoken to the prime minister and "he knows this is a mistake, right, and he takes responsibility because he is the prime minister" - adding that he gets "the outrage and it's a mistake, it's a significant mistake, for which he has apologised".

    "But I'm also not going to join the howls of fake veteran supporters, suddenly upset that he doesn't treat veterans correctly, because that's not the case", Mercer says.

    He also urges people to remember the progress that's been made on veterans' issues, such as Northern Ireland prosecutions, claiming headway had stalled until Sunak - "someone who actually believes in it" - assumed office.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Mercer is a real arsehole he has a playboy crush on fame he is not a capable MP and he will suck up to whoever gives him limelight. He writes appallingly piss poor communication and is crapping himself for losing his seat. The failure and greed of his faux vets activities is stunning and his constant attacks on labour candidates personally is despicable. Looking forwards to seeing him dropped the bottle is in the fridge to drink to that.

      Delete
  4. BBC News website:-

    It's put to Sunak that he seems more exasperated than apologetic, and he's asked why he couldn't "give up an afternoon" for people who "gave up their lives".

    The prime minister says he attended various D-Day events, both in Portsmouth and France, and that he should be judged on his record supporting the Armed Forces: "In this campaign, it's the Conservative Party led by me which is increasing the amount of investment that we're putting into our Armed Forces to 2.5% of GDP."

    "I care deeply," Sunak goes on to say, when it's suggested he doesn't. He also repeats that his itinerary was set weeks ago.

    "I stuck to the itinerary that had been set for me as prime minister weeks ago, before the election, fully participated," he says. "As I said, on reflection it was a mistake not to stay longer and I've apologised for that, but I also don't think it's right to be political in the midst of D-Day commemorations."

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "I stuck to the itinerary that had been set for me as prime minister weeks ago..."

      So the uk pm's disdain for the 80th anniversary of D-Day - likely to be the last significant event that most, if not all, veterans could attend - was "planned weeks ago". It wasn't even a spontaneous miscalculation or lack of judgement; it was fucking planned.

      Was 22 May - the day he announced the GE, "weeks ago"?

      It was two weeks ago at most, but in liar-speak that would of course count as "weeks ago".

      Delete
    2. Sunack says stuck to an itinerary like he was also claiming elections in November. When at a memorial you do the job your supposed to. That means show respect for our fallen but of course sunack won't realise they died for people like him and me. The bastard.

      Delete