Monday 18th November 2019
Posted: Mon 18 Nov, 2019 6:59 am
Morning all.
Tim Donovan
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@BBCTimDonovan
37m37 minutes ago
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CBI conference chairman desperate for BJ to finish his speech
adam wrote:1. We're going to cut taxes, because cutting taxes raises revenue.
2. We're going to cancel the tax cut, and cancelling the tax cut will raise revenue.
I thought perhaps it was some kind of 'moron'.PorFavor wrote:adam wrote:1. We're going to cut taxes, because cutting taxes raises revenue.
2. We're going to cancel the tax cut, and cancelling the tax cut will raise revenue.
Isn't that rather like what's known as a "compensating error"?
Eh?James Woudhuysen | Carshalton&Wallington
@TBPCarshWall
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I am absolutely delighted to be standing in Carshalton and Wallington against the LibDems' 22-year undemocratic, Remain stranglehold over a 56.3% #Leave constituency which really deserves much, much better. #ChangePoliticsForGood @brexitparty_uk
Good.The Federation of Small Businesses has welcomed Jeremy Corbyn’s promise to tackle the late payments crisis which has left many small businesses waiting without cash for invoices to be honoured.
“Our late payment crisis remains the biggest scourge afflicting the UK’s small business community. It destroys 50,000 firms a year at a cost of at least £2.5bn to the economy,” said chairman Mike Cherry.
Two figures from the CT receipts history show that well.Corporation tax revenue has increased since 2010 even while the headline rate has been cut. But that does not mean that rate reductions have increased revenue.
First ... much of the rise in revenue since 2010 is simply recovering from the effects of the financial crisis and recession. We would have expected a recovery in profits even if the corporation tax rate had not been cut.
Second, while the government has reduced the headline rate of corporation tax, at the same time it has increased corporation tax in other ways, including reducing capital allowances for investment, introducing the bank surcharge, restricting companies’ ability to offset past losses against future profits, and a raft of anti-avoidance measures ... Taken together these measures recoup around £10bn of the £13bn spent reducing the headline rate.
Ian Dunt
@IanDunt
God knows what we did a previous life to deserve a choice between Boris Johnson and Jeremy Corbyn, but it must have been fucking terrible.
Well said.simon wren-lewis
@sjwrenlewis
Replying to
@IanDunt
We (the country) voted for Cameron rather than Miliband.
Oh dear, what a shame, never mind.gilsey wrote:The Liberal Democrats and SNP have lost a high court challenge against ITV over its decision to exclude their party leaders from a televised election debate.
https://www.theguardian.com/business/20 ... ical-indexG4S has no place on ethical index, London Stock Exchange told
Campaigners say conscientious investors would be ‘horrified’ by link to controversial firm
Human rights campaigners have criticised the London Stock Exchange Group for including G4S on ethical investment indices, after the British security company was accused of contributing to human rights violations.
The FTSE4Good index, run by the London Stock Exchange Group’s FTSE Russell subsidiary, has included G4S for the past three years.
During that time, G4S, one of the world’s largest public sector employers, with 546,000 employees in 90 countries, has been at the centre of multiple controversies over its treatment of workers. (Guardian)
Hard to know whether this should be a or aWelcome to the Conservative party election campaign. I have been a political reporter for almost three decades and have never encountered a senior British politician who lies and fabricates so regularly, so shamelessly and so systematically as Boris Johnson. Or gets away with his deceit with such ease.
Trailer5 Broken Cameras is a first-hand account of protests in Bil'in, a West Bank village affected by the Israeli West Bank barrier. The documentary was shot almost entirely by Palestinian farmer Emad Burnat, who bought his first camera in 2005 to record the birth of his youngest son. In 2009 Israeli co-director Guy Davidi joined the project. Structured around the destruction of Burnat's cameras, the filmmakers' collaboration follows one family's evolution over five years of turmoil.
Judging by some of the comments I've seen from rabid leave types, I don't think they care. Brexit is everything and they don't care whether their PM is a serial liar.AnatolyKasparov wrote:All that can be done is to keep saying it and hope enough people notice.....
Yes, but how many of them are there actually? I suppose we could be about to find out soon......RogerOThornhill wrote:Judging by some of the comments I've seen from rabid leave types, I don't think they care. Brexit is everything and they don't care whether their PM is a serial liar.AnatolyKasparov wrote:All that can be done is to keep saying it and hope enough people notice.....