With the
story splashed all over the Super Soaraway Currant Bun still fresh in some
memories, the so-called Taxpayers’ Alliance (TPA) has re-heated it in another
lame attempt to demonise another branch of Government, in accordance with their
true principles. Thus non-job holder Chris Daniel has
told of supposed excess by NHS Procurement, which has two sites in
Scotland.
More guff from Tufton Street
To no surprise at all, the full range of pejorative language
has been trowelled on: “fleet of luxury
cars ... executive cars ... flashy, taxpayer funded cars ... rub even more salt
in taxpayers’ wounds ... expensive cars”. There is also the usual canard: “mileage reimbursement rates in the public
sector are way above the actual costs of fuel and reasonable wear and tear”.
Let’s dispose of the last-mentioned at the outset: this
comes from the TPA asserting – with characteristic dishonesty – that the HMRC
tax free mileage allowance is somehow a “recommended
mileage rate”. It is not. HMRC is not in the business of making
recommendations as to what is reasonable, and so it does not. This is like
saying that the personal income tax allowance is the “HMRC recommended salary”.
And that is palpable nonsense. So, on mileage rates, the TPA
has proved nothing, other than its ability to indulge in false assumptions and
logic leaps. Moving on to Daniel’s case against NHS procurement, which has also
appeared
in the Scottish Sun (to no
surprise) and has
also made the Maily Telegraph,
this is the same sleight of hand that was deployed against NHS Trusts last
month.
That is, employees whose business mileage requirement means
that they qualify for a lease car get a base model Vauxhall Corsa or Ford
Fiesta, and if they want something more upmarket, pay the difference
themselves. All non-business mileage costs are paid by the employee, and of
course no mileage allowance need be paid by the employer, so the taxpayer ends
up getting a good deal.
Any organisation that claims to be “sticking up for taxpayers’ money” (the form of words used by the
TPA’s Emma Boon when she appeared on Question Time recently) would therefore be
expected to applaud such arrangements. That the TPA does exactly the opposite
underscores that their purpose is rather different, as I’ve pointed out on many
occasions in the past.
The TPA is an organisation committed to the demonisation of
Government – any Government – together with public service and public works. In
does this in pursuit of its objective of cutting the public sector down to a
size which its overmonied, greedy and cowardly backers deem ideologically
acceptable, and, as was shown by the report of its “2020 Tax Commission”, that means dismantling the NHS.
And those backers will lap this one up, so that’s all right, then.
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