[Politics] The Labour Government

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Bozza

You can change this
Helpful Moderator
Jul 4, 2003
57,318
Back in Sussex
So prospective - and now actual PM - Sir Keir Starmer has averaged £20K a year in freebie for the last 5 years. Who cares?? That's just one big lunch to Boris and his Bullingdon buddies.

Sue Gray earns £170K a year - that'll buy you one tennis match with Boris Johnson if you are the wife of a Russian oligarch.

It is pathetic that the new government is being peppered with these trivial stories in a sad attempt to strangle it at birth. What is WRONG with our media?? Run the stories if you must, but try being even-handed and tell how Starmer is overseeing pay agreements being signed with striking unions to help get Britain back to work.

Everybody loses with stories like this. Who knows who Starmer was meeting at these freebie events? Presumably he was making some useful introductions and contacts with people who can help clear up this Tory mess.
Amen.

There needs to be more focus on the poor and vulnerable pensioners they are throwing under a bus this winter.
 




LamieRobertson

Not awoke
Feb 3, 2008
48,434
SHOREHAM BY SEA
So prospective - and now actual PM - Sir Keir Starmer has averaged £20K a year in freebie for the last 5 years. Who cares?? That's just one big lunch to Boris and his Bullingdon buddies.

Sue Gray earns £170K a year - that'll buy you one tennis match with Boris Johnson if you are the wife of a Russian oligarch.

It is pathetic that the new government is being peppered with these trivial stories in a sad attempt to strangle it at birth. What is WRONG with our media?? Run the stories if you must, but try being even-handed and tell how Starmer is overseeing pay agreements being signed with striking unions to help get Britain back to work.

Everybody loses with stories like this. Who knows who Starmer was meeting at these freebie events? Presumably he was making some useful introductions and contacts with people who can help clear up this Tory mess.
Nice bit of Whatsboutery oh and it’s the media to blame 🤦‍♂️
 




Bry Nylon

Test your smoke alarm
Helpful Moderator
Jul 21, 2003
20,576
Playing snooker
Who knows who Starmer was meeting at these freebie events? Presumably he was making some useful introductions and contacts with people who can help clear up this Tory mess.
Very true. He probably thrashed out the final details of the ASLEF deal with Ray Parlour and Barry from Barnet - regional winner of Manager of the Month for Tops Tiles.
 


Guinness Boy

Tofu eating wokerati
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Jul 23, 2003
37,358
Up and Coming Sunny Portslade
So prospective - and now actual PM - Sir Keir Starmer has averaged £20K a year in freebie for the last 5 years. Who cares?? That's just one big lunch to Boris and his Bullingdon buddies.

Sue Gray earns £170K a year - that'll buy you one tennis match with Boris Johnson if you are the wife of a Russian oligarch.

It is pathetic that the new government is being peppered with these trivial stories in a sad attempt to strangle it at birth. What is WRONG with our media?? Run the stories if you must, but try being even-handed and tell how Starmer is overseeing pay agreements being signed with striking unions to help get Britain back to work.

Everybody loses with stories like this. Who knows who Starmer was meeting at these freebie events? Presumably he was making some useful introductions and contacts with people who can help clear up this Tory mess.
To put that in context the salary of the Prime Minister is approximately £166780. The DPP gets £226000. Even with 20k added on he's on less to run the country than he was on as a civil servant managing just one of its systems.

E.on CEO Leonhard Birnbaum makes an estimated FIVE MILLION a year and the global group had revenues and profits in the BILLIONS.


So the issue is definitely Starmer's specs and not overcharging corporate robbers mugging off old people.
 




beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
36,026
fuss over Starmer getting some comp tickets is silly, it really doesnt matter. outdone in silliness by the sublime whataboutery and epic pedantry on statistics along the way. well done everyone.
 


hart's shirt

Well-known member
Jul 8, 2003
11,082
Kitbag in Dubai
"Can someone gift the prime minister a designer spade? He wants to keep digging. If Keir Starmer were a celebrity, this week we’d be looking for the black hole in his publicist’s brain. Alas, these are mildly testing times for anyone who bought into the always ridiculous idea of No Drama Starmer. The prime minister has officially graduated into his Some Drama Starmer era, and – like all prime ministers ever – is on the ineluctable journey towards his All Drama Starmer era.

That all this should be taking place in the final weeks of a three-month scare buildup to the budget seems at best unfortunate, and surely something that either one’s chief of staff or political adviser or tailor should have spotted as a danger area. Even while he was wanging on about his corporate hospitality, Starmer was declining to discuss next month’s doom budget on the basis that, “I don’t want to risk putting the fear of God into people.”

Well, it’s a bit late for that. Labour took office and immediately declared things to be so dire that they were going to have to do awful and painful things to combat them – but will have left it three months before they finally explain what those awful and painful things are. This, as the former chief economist to the Bank of England Andy Haldane and many others have pointed out, has created a sense of "fear and foreboding and uncertainty among consumers, among businesses, and among investors”.

But the much bigger vulnerability, in my appraisal, is that thing that maps on to what a lot of people are always, always prone to thinking about Labour: that they’re very free and easy when they’re spending other people’s money.

According to Ipsos polling in the FT today, half of British voters say they are disappointed in how Labour has governed so far, with Starmer’s approval ratings worse than those of any of his predecessors except Liz Truss. Considering that this comes more than a month before the doom-budget outlines their plans for our money, Starmer may find the next set of ratings well worth misplacing his many pairs of spectacles for."


- Marina Hyde
Full article: https://www.theguardian.com/comment...ey-keir-starmer-pm-approval-ratings-liz-truss
 


Weststander

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2011
69,334
Withdean area
To put that in context the salary of the Prime Minister is approximately £166780. The DPP gets £226000. Even with 20k added on he's on less to run the country than he was on as a civil servant managing just one of its systems.

E.on CEO Leonhard Birnbaum makes an estimated FIVE MILLION a year and the global group had revenues and profits in the BILLIONS.


So the issue is definitely Starmer's specs and not overcharging corporate robbers mugging off old people.

Politicians, especially those in power, shouldn't receive lavish gifts and hospitality. The public seemed very against it under other PM's, Blair and Johnson were derided for the luxurious holiday freebies laid on for them.

Two separate issues on what parliament/bodies decide is the appropriate pay for ministers and MP's, also the remuneration packages paid by private enterprises. The EU/UK/USA seem to have no appetite to meddle, no matter how much we find it a disgrace.
 




Bozza

You can change this
Helpful Moderator
Jul 4, 2003
57,318
Back in Sussex
Well, it’s a bit late for that. Labour took office and immediately declared things to be so dire that they were going to have to do awful and painful things to combat them – but will have left it three months before they finally explain what those awful and painful things are. This, as the former chief economist to the Bank of England Andy Haldane and many others have pointed out, has created a sense of "fear and foreboding and uncertainty among consumers, among businesses, and among investors”.

The BBC ran an article today related to this - there seem to be indications that a government striving for economic growth has, in the short-term at least, scared the shit out of people to the point that some are reducing their economic activity...

A long-running measure of how consumers feel about their finances and the economy has fallen sharply, raising concerns that the government's warning that the Budget will be "painful" has shaken people's confidence.​
GfK's Consumer Confidence Barometer has tumbled further into negative territory since the end of August.​
The index had been recovering after the years of the Covid pandemic, rising prices and higher interest rates had dented the outlook for many.​
GfK said the latest measure did not provide "encouraging news" for the UK's new government, while some economists have linked the drop to Labour's downbeat rhetoric about the Budget.​

 


Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
Ok, let's do this slowly.

In 2008, Fayed, the then owner of Harrods, was interviewed by the Metropolitan Police under caution after a 15-year-old girl told detectives he had sexually assaulted her at the London department store.

In February 2009, when Sir Keir was director of public prosecutions (DPP), the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) announced that no charges would be brought because there was “no realistic prospect of conviction”.
You can do it as slowly as you like but with CPS lawyers reviewing eight cases every day each, the chances of the DPP seeing every single case, with supported evidence is microscopic.
Rape and sexual assault are the hardest cases to prosecute, as victims unfortunately have to prove it, when usually it’s one persons word against the other. They often withdraw their support for the case.
Without immediate DNA evidence, it is the most difficult to bring to trial. Hence the wording realistic prospect of conviction.

It is appalling but women really do feel it increases their trauma rather than bringing justice.
 


Zeberdi

“Vorsprung durch Technik”
NSC Patron
Oct 20, 2022
6,941
Nice bit of Whatsboutery oh and it’s the media to blame 🤦‍♂️
It’s not ‘whataboutery’, it’s all part of the same system and how corporate business, lobbyists and politics has worked for a millenia. Everyone trying to get political access - and political parties depending on funding from their supporters. The political leanings of respective media also play a part in how stories are presented.

Anyone who doesn’t think private sector vested interests and corporate lobbying/favours doesn’t pervade the political life of every developed liberal democracy regardless of party, or that our MSM is not all political impartial when it comes to reporting that is being naive.

The sleaze is when those interests are deliberately and knowingly not declared and trust is broken - every party relies on funding and the key is transparency - especially when if there are questions around unfair political access for unelected influencers or potential scandalous behaviour by elected representatives.

Some Parties deserve the ephithet of being ‘the Party of Scandal and Sleaze’ more than others though.

Is it really this bad? :lol:

IMG_1275.jpeg
 
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Guinness Boy

Tofu eating wokerati
Helpful Moderator
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Jul 23, 2003
37,358
Up and Coming Sunny Portslade
Politicians, especially those in power, shouldn't receive lavish gifts and hospitality. The public seemed very against it under other PM's, Blair and Johnson were derided for the luxurious holiday freebies laid on for them.

Two separate issues on what parliament/bodies decide is the appropriate pay for ministers and MP's, also the remuneration packages paid by private enterprises. The EU/UK/USA seem to have no appetite to meddle, no matter how much we find it a disgrace.
So, in conclusion, this has always happened but you're not allowed to mention the relative scale as that would be whataboutery?

And do you agree that an organisation turning over billions could easily identify vulnerable customers if they wanted and put them on a lower tariff? And that this would be preferable to hand outs of state benefit?
 




Weststander

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2011
69,334
Withdean area
It’s not ‘whataboutery’, it’s all part of the same system and how corporate business, lobbyists and politics has worked for a millenia. Everyone trying to get political access - and political parties depending on funding from their supporters. The political leanings of respective media also play a part in how stories are presented.

Anyone who doesn’t think private sector vested interests and corporate lobbying/favours doesn’t pervade the political life of every developed liberal democracy regardless of party, or that our MSM is not all political impartial when it comes to reporting that is being naive.

The sleaze is when those interests are deliberately and knowingly not declared and trust is broken - every party relies on funding and the key is transparency - especially when if there are questions around unfair political access for unelected influencers or potential scandalous behaviour by elected representatives.

Some Parties deserve the ephithet of being ‘the Party of Scandal and Sleaze’ more than others though.

Is it really this bad? :lol:

View attachment 189136

Good article. On ties with businesses and donors who'd very much their foot in the door, and why this should end.
https://www.theguardian.com/comment...l-without-new-probity-rules-worse-will-follow
 




zefarelly

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 7, 2003
22,793
Sussex, by the sea
So prospective - and now actual PM - Sir Keir Starmer has averaged £20K a year in freebie for the last 5 years. Who cares?? That's just one big lunch to Boris and his Bullingdon buddies.

Sue Gray earns £170K a year - that'll buy you one tennis match with Boris Johnson if you are the wife of a Russian oligarch.

It is pathetic that the new government is being peppered with these trivial stories in a sad attempt to strangle it at birth. What is WRONG with our media?? Run the stories if you must, but try being even-handed and tell how Starmer is overseeing pay agreements being signed with striking unions to help get Britain back to work.

Everybody loses with stories like this. Who knows who Starmer was meeting at these freebie events? Presumably he was making some useful introductions and contacts with people who can help clear up this Tory mess.
This

I bet Tony invited him to the Amex with open arms regardless of political persuations. It's in everyones best interest to have competent governance . . .a few footy/gig tickets is nothing compared to what's been bribed and embezzled this last 15 years.

our press/media is disgraceful.
 


Weststander

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2011
69,334
Withdean area
So, in conclusion, this has always happened but you're not allowed to mention the relative scale as that would be whataboutery?

And do you agree that an organisation turning over billions could easily identify vulnerable customers if they wanted and put them on a lower tariff? And that this would be preferable to hand outs of state benefit?

I won't fall for the very deliberate muddying of the waters with the distraction of the overpaid company boss. Was anyone on nsc saying when Blair and Johnson received lavish gifts, whatabout the salary handed to European utilities bosses?

Sticking to politics and government of the UK, ministers in particular should imho pay for their own way in life. Belatedly declaring it doesn't make it palatable.
 


Guinness Boy

Tofu eating wokerati
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Jul 23, 2003
37,358
Up and Coming Sunny Portslade
This

I bet Tony invited him to the Amex with open arms regardless of political persuations. It's in everyones best interest to have competent governance . . .a few footy/gig tickets is nothing compared to what's been bribed and embezzled this last 15 years.

our press/media is disgraceful.
They could, for example, have been discussing the football regulator, which Starmer is for but Bloom against (so I hear anyway).

Disgracefully, the BBC suggested this morning that the fact Starmer was an Arsenal fan meant this was now a conflict of interest, rather than the equally compelling argument that he's regularly among ordinary football fans (or was till moved for security reasons). Neutral my arse.
 


Guinness Boy

Tofu eating wokerati
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Jul 23, 2003
37,358
Up and Coming Sunny Portslade
I won't fall for the very deliberate muddying of the waters with the distraction of the overpaid company boss. Was anyone on nsc saying when Blair and Johnson received lavish gifts, whatabout the salary handed to European utilities bosses?

Sticking to politics and government of the UK, ministers in particular should imho pay for their own way in life. Belatedly declaring it doesn't make it palatable.
Probably not, because no one at that time was predicting that the European utilities boss was about to kill 4000 pensioners with his prices :shrug: The WFP is only an issue because energy isn't fairly priced.
 




Bodian

Well-known member
May 3, 2012
14,283
Cumbria
Last week I heard a lady in her 70's talking about her life with her husband. They each have a heart condition and he is very incontinent. They never leave their home and he a recurring cycle of washing. If they use the tumble dryer, it's expensive. If they drape the washing over the radiators which they need anyway to keep warm, they have to use dehumidifiers to stop the house getting damp. They are trapped in a financial and poor health moneypit and the loss of the WFA left her tearful and wondering how they will manage. Not ashamed to say my eyes were moist as I listened. I know that I and many others don't need it, but taking it away from the needy like that is brutally cruel. The social cost of sorting the wheat from the chaff is not worth the modest financial saving.
This sounds heartbreaking. I am really torn on the WFP issue - precisely because of the things raised above.

But then I do think about the amounts as well, and the contextual changes. I know that much has been mentioned about the increase in the state pension coming in April - but it's also worth looking at last April. In the context of the couple you quote - between them, they will be having a benefit cut of £200 this winter (it's £200 per couple for under 80s). In April 2024 if they were on a full pension, they would have had an increase of £902 each (£1,804 between them - 8.5%) and in April 2025 it will be £460 each (£920). Yes, I know that other prices have risen, but if you look at it as losing £200 of the £1,804 increase over last winter - it does seem to make more sense from the Government's point of view. They will still have had a £1,604 increase in pension since last winter. 7.53%. Not many of us will have had a 7.5% pay rise last year - and none on other benefits had such an increase so far as I know?

Of course, it's harder for single people because the proportion lost is higher. And for those not on a full pension as well.

I'm not defending the Government here - but I can see how they may be viewing it in the round.

Like others though - I would much rather they had taken more time and examined a full impact assessment before bringing this is - as I am sure they would have set the cut-off level higher than it is, and given more thought to how to go about it. Personally I think they would have been better off removing the Triple Lock.



Let's re-visit that, briefly, because it's interesting given what business secretary Jonathan Reynolds said yesterday.

The Guardian reports that, when pressed on Sue Gray's salary, Reynolds said:

"I think it’s important people understand that the pay bands for any official, any adviser, are not set by politicians. There’s an official process that does that. I don’t, for instance, get to set the pay for my own advisers who work directly for me. So, there’s a process, we don’t have political input into that.​
There’s a process that sets these things. It is widely recognised. It’s long-standing. It hasn’t changed and that is how pay bands are set for any adviser."​
So, any criticism of Keir Starmer for Sue Gray's salary is mis-directed.

But, then, errrm.....



If there's a long-standing, unchanged, non-political process for adviser pay, why was the now Prime Minister seeking to make political capital out of Cummings' salary?

Did he simply not know how adviser pay worked? That seems highly unlikely doesn't it?

Or was he seeking to score cheap political points based on something he knew not to be true? Also unlikely for a man of such high integrity.

What a conundrum!

But I guess the point is that he has now given a bigger pay rise to NHS staff (Junior Doctors at least - with presumably others to follow). So - he's actually following in line with the point he was making then - more equal payrises across the board (percentage-wise at least). Of course, he is also being criticised for giving that pay rise to doctors ('giving in' has been mentioned on here).
 


LamieRobertson

Not awoke
Feb 3, 2008
48,434
SHOREHAM BY SEA
It’s not ‘whataboutery’, it’s all part of the same system and how corporate business, lobbyists and politics has worked for a millenia. Everyone trying to get political access - and political parties depending on funding from their supporters. The political leanings of respective media also play a part in how stories are presented.

Anyone who doesn’t think private sector vested interests and corporate lobbying/favours doesn’t pervade the political life of every developed liberal democracy regardless of party, or that our MSM is not all political impartial when it comes to reporting that is being naive.

The sleaze is when those interests are deliberately and knowingly not declared and trust is broken - every party relies on funding and the key is transparency - especially when if there are questions around unfair political access for unelected influencers or potential scandalous behaviour by elected representatives.

Some Parties deserve the ephithet of being ‘the Party of Scandal and Sleaze’ more than others though.

Is it really this bad? :lol:

View attachment 189136
It is.
 


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