“Help what is this fascinating word you just said; where did it come from as I must admit I’ve never heard of this word. Do you mean take generous gifts from donors in exchange for tax cuts? If so we can do that” – Poundland Thatcher
The Tory voter way is to have your cake and eat it, demand low taxes, but any expenditure which is beneficial to you no matter how trivial, must be maintained.
Tory voter holy grails include
* Pensions
* Free parking
* Bin collections
* Verge mowing
* Bobbys on the beat
* Filling potholes
> Mr Sunak said Ms Truss would put the public finances in “serious jeopardy” and stoke inflation if she becomes PM.
It’s kind of bizarre to see this message coming from Sunak.
He’s been Chancellor for about two and a half years (give or take a few weeks where Zahawi has been a caretaker Chancellor who hasn’t changed any of Sunak’s policies) and inflation has reached a 40 year high.
If Sunak is saying that Government policy on tax and spend is what drives inflation, doesn’t it stand to reason that he’s the last possible person we should trust to take over as PM and “solve” the problem?
Alternatively, if he’s going to claim that inflation isn’t his fault and doesn’t have anything to do with his polices, why would spend the entire leadership contest trying to focus on inflation and the suggestion that the Government’s next set of policies are going to be what decides whether inflation stays high or gets under control?
Neither of these individuals have any serious plans to address the seemingly endless number of things that the Conservatives have managed to ruin in the last decade.
Labour have a serious opportunity in the coming election, not that I’m particularly convinced they’d do much better. Still, it would be hard for them to be any worse than the current clowns.
Tax cuts it is.
Here comes baked in stagflation with Mad Liz.
Still, good times for PORK MARKETS.
Are they going to tax these multi-nationals that get away with paying the bare minimum in taxes?
7 comments
Tax cuts do help with bills though.
“Help what is this fascinating word you just said; where did it come from as I must admit I’ve never heard of this word. Do you mean take generous gifts from donors in exchange for tax cuts? If so we can do that” – Poundland Thatcher
The Tory voter way is to have your cake and eat it, demand low taxes, but any expenditure which is beneficial to you no matter how trivial, must be maintained.
Tory voter holy grails include
* Pensions
* Free parking
* Bin collections
* Verge mowing
* Bobbys on the beat
* Filling potholes
> Mr Sunak said Ms Truss would put the public finances in “serious jeopardy” and stoke inflation if she becomes PM.
It’s kind of bizarre to see this message coming from Sunak.
He’s been Chancellor for about two and a half years (give or take a few weeks where Zahawi has been a caretaker Chancellor who hasn’t changed any of Sunak’s policies) and inflation has reached a 40 year high.
If Sunak is saying that Government policy on tax and spend is what drives inflation, doesn’t it stand to reason that he’s the last possible person we should trust to take over as PM and “solve” the problem?
Alternatively, if he’s going to claim that inflation isn’t his fault and doesn’t have anything to do with his polices, why would spend the entire leadership contest trying to focus on inflation and the suggestion that the Government’s next set of policies are going to be what decides whether inflation stays high or gets under control?
Neither of these individuals have any serious plans to address the seemingly endless number of things that the Conservatives have managed to ruin in the last decade.
Labour have a serious opportunity in the coming election, not that I’m particularly convinced they’d do much better. Still, it would be hard for them to be any worse than the current clowns.
Tax cuts it is.
Here comes baked in stagflation with Mad Liz.
Still, good times for PORK MARKETS.
Are they going to tax these multi-nationals that get away with paying the bare minimum in taxes?