There was much fanfare when the so-called Taxpayers’
Alliance (TPA) launched its campaign against
further rises in beer tax. This was held to demonstrate that the TPA was on
the side of beer drinkers, the kind of customers that keep public houses
viable. It therefore followed that, especially as the campaign was launched in
a pub, the TPA did not want to see further closures in that sector.
But, apart from trying to associate closures with beer tax,
the TPA has
done precisely nothing to stop the onward march of closures, which are
often enforced by PubCos, with tenants finding their business has been sold
from under them and they are therefore out of a job. Insult is added to injury
with around half of UK licensees existing on less than £15,000 a year.
So when Zelo Street invited
the TPA to join a gathering at the Caledonia, a street corner pub in
Liverpool that had been revived by tenant Laura King, only to be sold from
under her by Admiral Taverns, there was no surprise that none of their
dubiously talented array of non-job holders turned up to enjoy the fine choice
of cask beers and the bonus of an excellent open mic night.
After all, businesses like PubCos are just the kind of people
that the TPA can target for donations: the synergy of organisations wanting to
please themselves and an Astroturf lobby group championing the freedom for them
to do just that is obvious. But in the meantime, locals, Liverpool Council, and
Mayor Joe Anderson worked behind the scenes to get the enforced closure
reversed.
And, to the
great relief of all concerned, the new owners of the Caledonia have visited
the pub, seen that it is a thriving and most certainly viable business, sat
down and talked with Ms King, and decided
that they do not, after all, want to close it. Moreover, the pub will
now become a genuinely free house, so Ms King can buy the beers she wants
from whom she wants.
That is another downside of the PubCos: despite their not
having the interest in beer that the brewers (like Marstons, Robinsons and
Greene King) have, they maintain the “beer
tie”, forcing tenants to source beer via the PubCo, with prices dictated by
the PubCo. This is another less than attractive part of the PubCo deal that the
TPA has managed not to campaign on.
So much for that campaign to keep beer costs down: the TPA
wants you to “look over there” at
beer tax, while allowing its pals in the PubCos to screw over their tenants and
eject them on a whim. In the meantime, fortunately, it’s great news about the
Caledonia, and well done Laura King.
Which means, as Arnie might have said, I’ll be back. And so
will many more. But the TPA won’t be there, because
ordinary people don’t matter to them.
No comments:
Post a Comment