S’not Me Guv, s’the System Innit
Something surely is rotten at the heart of Westminster these days, though perhaps it’s been this way for years, who knows? We surely don’t, nor will we ever fully understand the true scope of the MP expenses bonanza extravaganza. After all if it wasn’t for the FOIA and the courage shown by the Telegraph to bring us, the great unwashed, the unredacted, unsanitised truth, inviting us to make our own minds up, (yes politicians, even we, the great herd of vote cows have minds) none of this would have come to light. After all, just look at how hard they fought to remove their expenses claims from the scope of FOIA in the first place. Well done Norman Baker MP and others for making sure this particular jolly wheeze failed.
If you listen to any of those caught with their hands in the cookie jar that is MP’s expenses, they will all tell you the same thing:
“The expenses currently in question were claimed in full consultation with the Fees Office in the House of Commons, and I have always followed their guidance and stuck to the rules.” – Margaret Moran MP
“All Hazel Blears’ claims for allowances are in line with the rules, and have been approved by the fees office.” – Spokesperson for Hazel Blears MP, Communities Secretary
“All of his claims have been approved by the Fees Office as within the parliamentary rules” – Spokesman for Ben Bradshaw MP
“Everything I have claimed has been legitimate and approved by the fees office.” – Alan Duncan MP
And so it goes, on and on and on. Contrition…what contrition? Of course the system’s rotten but it’s THEIR system, they put it in place and they maintained the status quo throughout the last 30 odd years and it’s absolutely no good to say that one or two may be whiter than white if they too have kept schtum in regard to any changes to it.
Of course, the Lib Dems as a group may fare better than most (and the latest polls seem to bear that out somewhat) but they wont escape some individual criticism Im sure. They have after all, campaigned tirelessly for substantial changes to the system for years, but such is the imbalance in our political system that without the help of Joanna Lumley it seems Lib Dems victories will be few and far between for some time yet.
So now of course, as Parliament drowns in a sea of David Heathcoat-Amory’s horse manure (£388.80p cost to the tax payer over three years) instead of reaching for the hair shirts and humble pie (paid for out of their own pockets of course) they are seeking a scapegoat, a deflection, a smokescreen, anything to avoid taking responsibility for making rotten decisions under a system rotten to its very core.
Throughout the autopsy on the financial crisis it was Robert Peston who was to blame, the BBC, the FSA, the Americans, the bankers, especially that pantomime cad Sir (but maybe not for long) Fred “The Shred” Goodwin, the Press, the system, the philosophy, the shadow banking system, offshore tax havens… all of them, each and every one was to blame and true to form, just like Macavity no politician allowed their own fingerprints to be found at the scene. But rest assured all you citizens of these sceptered isles, lessons will be learned. I didn’t realise running this country was a YTS scheme, but I shouldn’t be too surprised.
True to form the scapegoating has begun again in regard to MP’s expenses. It’s the system, it’s the Press, it’s the Telegraph, it’s the person who leaked the documents, it’s Kate Hoey, it’s Norman Baker, it’s Sky News, it’s the Commons Fees Office. MP’s are surely just as much victims of the system as everyone else, no? The Common’s Fees Office didn’t need to sign off on Barbara Follett’s Chinese rug repairs (£528.75) after all and if only Norman Baker and his mates had just shut the hell up none of this would have ever come to light and MY GOD the Press… don’t they have a celebrity divorce to cover or something?
Of course all of this mess is having a terrible effect not only on the participants in politics but the process of government itself. At the time of writing, our great leader was delivering an “important” speech on crime… he was? Oh yes, he certainly was… or so I was informed… but no-one seemed to care…typical response to the utterances of Golden Brown you may say and I would be the very last person to disagree but this issue seems to be so pervasive that it threatens to if not de-rail then to side-track the business of running this country until the mess is sorted out. We have very big problems in this country and we rely on our politicians to at least have some clue as to the process of sorting those problems out. If they don’t even have a clue as to how foaming at the mouth angry most people are at the arrogant “other planet dwellers” how the hell can they get a clue on anything else?
Some suggestions:
– House of Commons Commission should resign en mass
– All MP’s living within reasonable commuting distance to London should be denied any and all second home allowances
– MP’s within London should be paid a “London Weighting” allowance in addition to their basic salaries to recognise increased costs of things like transport within or to and from the capital
– Any MP receiving grace and favour accomodation should not be allowed to claim for any second home, anywhere
– Commons Fees Office should be replaced by a professional independent body of accountants and auditors with full FOIA obligations
– Any MP found found guilty of “flipping” to avoid taxes or to make a pecuniary gain at tax payers expense should be sacked from any ministerial position, have the whip removed and face possible deselection depending on the severity of the incident (s). Playing the property markets should not be a perk of the job.
– Salaries should be linked to cost of living index and all matters of pay should be and should remain the remit of an independent body outside of Parliament
– All MP’s regardless of party or position must be forced to repeat 100 times before bedtime, the following, until they not only recognise the words but understand their meaning…
“Claims must only be made for expenditure that it was necessary for a Member to incur to ensure that he or she could properly perform his or her parliamentary duties.” – The Green Book p7
Hell Hath No Fury Like A Luvvie Scorned
Talk about an opportunity missed!
Sheesh, here we are with a deeply unpopular, unelected Prime Minister leading one of the most distrusted and unpopular Governments in our history, during the worst financial climate in living memory. If anyone, ever, needed a PR boost it’s our Gordy but incredibly, he seems hell bent on serially missing the boat.
Whilst Dubya may have had Karl Rove as Brain-in-Chief, Damian McBride was well known for being “His Masters Voice”, if security had patted him down before he hot footed it out of Downing Street they may have found him to be in possession of our Great Leader’s spine as well as his much vaunted “moral compass” as both, seem to have mysteriously deserted him in recent months.
On one issue, that of the shameful treatment of the Gurkhas, (admittedly not just by this particular Government), the Great Clunking Fist has had opportunity after opportunity not only to chime with public opinion but to get ahead of the curve, take command of the situation and do the right thing by these men who, for over 200 years have fought and died alongside British and Commonwealth troops in conflicts from Malaya to the Falklands and continue to do so in Iraq and Afghanistan to this day.
Imagine what a coup it could have been, if only our wise and benevolent leaders had actually seen this coming. Not like they didn’t have adequate warning after all. The court of public opinion, much loved of Harriet Harman, has been foaming at the mouth for months through the red tops and broadsheets, don’t these people read?
On matters of morality it seems that while the British people get it, whether it’s a million marchers against the war in Iraq, snouts in troughs, bent bankers screwing the world up for the rest of us, the 10% tax fiasco, the breaking of the military covenant, the reneging of promises on the Lisbon Treaty, 42 days detention, ID cards, Equitable Life or indeed the issue of the Gurkhas it is increasingly obvious that the current crop of Whitehall occupants simply don’t.
By trying to make the argument against Gurkha parity with other Commonwealth soldiers one of finance over morality the Government has painted itself as a bunch of penny pinching, mealy mouthed accountants rather than the Guardians of the Nation’s morality it should be. Against the trillion pound bail-out of the finance system, the far-fetched £1.4 billion worst case scenario scare tactic figure spouted by various immigration figures pales into comparative insignificance.
Not content though, with over egging the cost pudding, more sinister Nu-Lab tactics seem to be rearing their ugly but unsurprising head. At the recent commons committee meeting, it was suggested that should the Gurkhas become too expensive it may be financially expeditious to cut the Regiment, the sub-text unmistakable. Scandalous.
By way of contrast, the spokespeople for Gurkha Justice have conducted a brilliant campaign in a spirit of dignity and integrity throughout, neatly marrying up the outrage of the general public, the mood in the commons and the support of the entire Fourth Estate to devastating effect, culminating in defeat for the Government and an embarrassing set of U turns and climb downs. Thank Heaven for La Lumley.
Where Gordon Brown’s shame really lies on this, and other matters alluded to above is that he just couldn’t see it coming, his cronies couldn’t see it coming, his whips couldn’t see it coming. Nick Clegg could, David Cameron could, the Press could and bet your bottom dollar Tony Blair could have and would have used them to dig himself out of this hole should he still have been PM, just like he used the death of Princess Di to ingratiate himself with the British people. People’s Princess my arse, oily bastard he may have been but astute enough to have recognised manna from heaven when he saw it.
What Now For The Tax Havens?
Unprecedented and historic, were just two of the many words used to describe the recent G20 summit in London. Other words, used mainly by those made cynical by years of summit watching, (where high minded rhetoric has a history of swift dissolution into weak communiqués diluted by political compromise or just plain belligerence, broken promises and pledges forgotten almost as soon as the ink was dry), used different words. Words like talking shop and complete and utter waste of time, effort and money.
In a post G20 snuggle with the Today programme, The UK Chancellor, Alistair Darling proclaimed that the G20 leaders had pledged to “support their economies and sort out the banking system”, grist to the mill for the cynics there then, after all, isn’t that exactly what our leaders are supposed to be doing?
In some respects though, this summit had the potential, if not to break the mould but then to crack it, albeit ever so slightly. On one topic, our world leaders were almost entirely united, that of, as Stephen Timms, the financial secretary to the Treasury, put it “the problem of tax havens”. Even on this though, a last minute spat between the French and the Chinese threatened to scupper what unanimity there was. Some deft footwork and no doubt a whole heap of horse trading later and it was all smiles again, at least for the cameras.
Within hours of the summit’s conclusion the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) was issuing a list of those countries who had failed in varying degrees to comply with its guidelines. That list included China, but the financial centres of Macau and Hong Kong were omitted. For now.
Of course, all the tough talk on tax havens is one thing, it makes great headlines after all and one could be forgiven for thinking that headlines would be all that emerged, except for one small thing. Unbound by the shackles of the Bush administration’s illogical policies towards “tax competition” and years of meek acquiescence to Washington from Europe, a newly emboldened OECD seems more willing to tackle this thorny issue than ever before.
In a robust defence of the OECD’s stance on Switzerland for example, director-general Angel Gurría, stated “Switzerland does not yet have a single agreement on the exchange of tax information that conforms to the OECD standard.” In a separate move, and as tax authorities in Washington step up their pressure on offshore centres, the Swiss press was reporting that Credit Suisse (with an alleged 2,500 and 5,000 US clients with Sfr3bn (£1.78bn) in accounts undeclared to the Internal Revenue Service) has offered those clients “a choice of moving their money to a subsidiary, CS Private Advisers, which would declare financial details to the US authorities. Alternatively, they will be sent a cheque for the balance of their funds.” (http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/apr/13/credit-suisse-us-tax-avoidance)
Gordon Brown himself has appeared similarly robust in opening a new front in the assault, not only against tax evasion but in a letter to the OECD he implored them to “address urgently the issue of tax avoidance” a practice that may indeed be costing the Treasury hundreds of millions of pounds a year.
As most crime writers will tell you, for motive, follow the money and whilst in a brave new world of transparency, developing countries may benefit from a reduction in the tax abuses which cost them dear ($160 billion in corporate taxes, according to Lord Wallace of Saltire), you can be sure that Treasuries around the world will seek to gain from a much larger claw back.
It is almost universally agreed (amongst the politirati at least) that having given Fred the Shred a good kicking, castigated the bankers, roasted the regulators (whilst neatly sidestepping any question of blame themselves), it was the shadow banking system that was in great part to blame for the construction and disemination of much of the poisonous debt bundles which brought the entire financial system to the edge of a very dark precipice, a precipice bridged only by the socialisation of vast amounts of private debt.
Such public assistance has a price.
So, does all the current aggression towards tax havens finally sound their death knell? Well maybe not, sadly it isn’t the beginning of the end for these “sunny places for shady people” and unlike Barack Obama, it is highly doubtful if Gordon Brown has the testicularity for such a fight, especially as so many of them are British dependencies, despite his bluster. Perhaps, just perhaps the new found post G20 consensus may signal the beginning of the beginning of the end at least for those practices buried deep within the intricate web of offshore complexities that the tax payer has an absolute right to be protected from.