Man of Honour
- Joined
- 27 Sep 2004
- Posts
- 25,821
- Location
- Glasgow
That will do for me...and yes i am being serious.
Fair enough then, you may guess that I'm never likely to agree with that viewpoint but I can't knock the honesty.
That will do for me...and yes i am being serious.
Oh and don't forget we have the Tories to thank for the fact our electricity and gas bills have VAT applied to them. They never used to, because VAT is supposed to be for luxury goods, not the essentials of life. And if it wasn't for the opposition, it would be full rate at 17.5% because that's what the Tories wanted to do. Never forget that.
Yes, it is. But they did.I am not questioning the authenticity of your statement but is there anything I can read about that? It seems extremely unlikely any party would do this as it's practically robbing those on lower incomes in broad daylight.
9. "I have no plans to raise the...level of national insurance contributions." (John Major, 28 January 1992)
November 1993, National Insurance Contributions increased from 9% to 10%.
Cost: £520.94
10. "We have no need and no plans to extend the scope of VAT." (John Major, 27 March 1992)
November 1993, VAT on domestic fuel and power imposed at 8% with a provision to rise to 17.5% in November 1994.
Cost: £197.19
11. "Lower tax - that's my aim for Britain." (John Major, 20 March 1992)
November 1993, Insurance tax at 2.5% on home contents insurance.
Cost: £7.65
12. "We want to bring tax down." (John Major, 25 March 1992)
November 1993, Insurance tax at 2.5% on home buildings insurance.
Cost: £12.05
13. "The future lies in bringing taxes down further - not shoving them back up." (John Major, 18 March 92)
November 1993, Insurance tax at 2.5% on vehicle insurance.
Cost: £20.77
14. "In the next Parliament we'll go on tax cutting." (John Major, 7 April 1992)
November 1994, Air Transport tax.
Cost: £60.00
Oh and don't forget we have the Tories to thank for the fact our electricity and gas bills have VAT applied to them. They never used to, because VAT is supposed to be for luxury goods, not the essentials of life. And if it wasn't for the opposition, it would be full rate at 17.5% because that's what the Tories wanted to do. Never forget that.
VAT on domestic fuel was initially announced in Norman Lamont's March 1993 budget. He introduced the tax at a starting rate of 8% rate in 1994.
That fails to list tax cuts which took place and there are some substantial time differences between claims and actions, during which economic conditions can fluctuate or change vastly. It's also irrefutable that Labour have been far worse since 1997 with regards to feeding complete and utter lies to the public. Labour's lies on budgetary prudence, educational standards, support for the Armed Forces, the economic benefits of immigration, a referendum on the European constitution, figures on violent crime, weapons of mass destruction, the abolition of quangos, British jobs for British workers and tackling welfare abuse have since been exposed for what they are: cynical manipulation of credulous voters.
Yes? That's what I said. Domestic gas, domestic electricity. 8% rising to 17.5%.
Of course. Which is why I wouldn't vote for either of them again. But people need to be educated about the last Tory government because many here are too young to have been working and paying bills back then.
I agree but the fact is both parties have changed quite remarkably and seem to be moving towards centre political ground. Is the past really that relevant? Political parties like people make mistakes and can change.
For me she introduced poll tax the first year I started work. I was earning £28 per week down a chippy (first ever job). My dad was on £62000 per year.
Thatcher decided we both should pay identical tax to the penny 'as it's fairest'. Effectively I was paying about 75-80% tax on my £28 per week. Dad, being rich, naturally got a lot lot richer. Which is of course the cornerstone of conservative thinking (his amazing sudden riches should have inspired me to earn more or something so the theory goes!!)
The tories actually, seriously, stood up in the house and said that this was the fairest form of taxation. I disagree personally. It VERY BADLY directly affected me.
Dolph, you are knowingly presenting a very fundamental ideological question there, in such a way that makes it a little tricky to answer
So, I shall add:
Why should we not ensure that everyone in society has equal access to the product of the society?
SNP. Scottish voting has no impact on the will of middle England and as such
Of course it does. Often the Scottish vote has decided who governs England. In the past most Scots voted Labour, yet got a Tory government in Westminster. In recent years most English voted Tory, yet got a Labour government.
Disagree all you like but you're wrong.So where do you get those figures from? The population of Greater London is a million more than here in Scotland but you say that Scotland holds more sway over British politics than the combined population of England and Wales. I disagree.
Yes and I think I acknowledged that.Do you remember the dark years of Thatcher? The Tory vote in Scotland was almost non-existent (and one year we returned no Tory MP's at all) yet we had to endure several anti-Scottish Tory governments.
Labour won 92 more seats than Conservatives in England with slightly over 50,000 less votes.