While their MPs and cheerleaders talk of securing an overall
majority in next May’s General Election, the Tories’ actions suggest they
expect Mil The Younger and “Auguste”
Balls to be Downing Street neighbours after the votes have been counted.
Nowhere can this be seen to better effect than their reaction at both national
and local level to the proposed Mansion Tax.
Across London, the panic button has been well and truly
struck as occasional Mayor Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson has lent his name
to a letter asking the party faithful to donate to help him – and Dave, natch –
hold the Red Menace at bay. The suggested level of donation, as
Laurence Durnan at Political Scrapbook
has noted, starts at the kind of level the Mansion Tax would start – then gets
a lot higher.
So the idea is that all these poor people who can’t afford
to pay should pay anyway – on the off-chance that Bozza and his pals can keep Labour
out. Then, if they fail in their endeavour, they have to pay again. Sounds like
the kind of value for money for which Bozza has become infamous. But over in
Kensington and Chelsea, there is a yet more blatant sob story being spun.
As London Weekly News
has told, council leader Nick Paget-Brown “is
calling on residents to join a ‘peoples’ movement’ to stop the retired and
elderly being forced from their homes over the threatened ‘Mansion tax’”.
And he’s got a petition to sign: “if we
are going to stop the tax, the campaign has to be less about the politics of
the Mansion Tax and more about the real people who will end up paying it”.
So another meaningless soundbite, then. But Paget-Brown is
serious: “Many residents of Kensington
and Chelsea are now in a state of very great fear and worry about the Mansion
Tax proposals. They are just ordinary people who have paid rather a lot of tax
already; many of them are now retired and on fixed incomes. The Mansion Tax
will destroy their well-earned retirements”.
And to which I call bullshit: as the LWN goes on to say, the
Mansion Tax proposals provide for “those
on incomes below £42,000 [to be] allowed to defer until they sell their homes
or die”. If retirees defer a £250 a month tax for 25 years, that takes
£75,000 off the value of a £2 million property, or less than 4%. Nobody would
have their retirement “destroyed”,
and nor would they be “forced from their
homes”.
Paget-Brown’s blatant and obvious scaremongering just
underscores that there is a real belief that not only will the Tories lose next
May, but also that whatever Government takes over, it will introduce the
Mansion Tax, with the intention of using the funds raised to help the NHS. This
idea is popular enough not only to frighten Tories, but also make more voters
choose Labour.
From Bozza to Nick Paget-Brown, that’s one hell of an
admission. Thanks chaps!
Lets hope there is the introduction of a punitive charge on foreign registered properties that often sit emmpty for years purely as investment chips. Also as I understand it barely a couple of the multi-million pound flats at One Hyde Park pay council tax despite their owners relying on services the rest of us pay for, to protect their investment such as police and fire brigade, the rule of law, stable society etc
ReplyDeleteSee here ://diamondgeezer.blogspot.co.uk/2014/11/mansion-tax-map.html
ReplyDeletefor more on mansion tax.
Tony Martin