Feared. But only by rickety furniture
You think I jest? There it is on the Fawkes blog: “Why Didn’t Cameron Declare Blairmore In 2009 Register Of Interests?” asks the question. But after it is conceded “Today brings some of the worst front pages for David Cameron since be became PM”, we get “it is worth remembering there is nothing wrong with investing in a foreign fund. Crucially - and wisely - he sold the shares in 2010”. So he’s in the clear, then?
Looks like it: “several top journalists and tax experts agree Blairmore was not a tax avoidance scheme. There is currently no dispute that Cameron paid all the UK taxes on his income from his shares”. And the Register of Members’ Interests? “MPs are not required to declare shareholdings in unit trusts, holdings below £70,000 or 15% of a partnership”. It could have been dictated by CCHQ. And there’s more.
“So this is a blind alley for Labour. Cameron was not the beneficiary of an offshore trust while PM, he appears not to have avoided any tax, and he did not breach parliamentary rules”. Gosh, what a jolly good chap Dave is! Labour, on the other hand, get the full smear treatment: shadow chancellor John McDonnell gets a guilt-by-association connection with Suliman Gani, and Jeremy Corbyn is accused of “losing it” with an LBC journalist.
What the Fawkes rabble manage not to tell readers is that Corbyn had asked the media to desist from doorstepping him, and LBC later apologised. None of that full explanation that Dave got, eh? Then Labour MP Karl Turner gets called a liar for suggesting that a Tweet had gone missing from George Osborne’s feed. It’s something and nothing, and he was not making an assertion. Still, it’s Labour, and so in goes the boot.
Then to round things off, someone in Labour has to be accused of avoiding tax, just to make sure the audience “looks over there”. So the boot gets put in on Ken Livingstone, who, as he had to explain to po-faced right-wingers, was not being serious when he said Dave should go to jail for his offshore activities. The excuse for kicking Ken was that he was paid through a limited company. Like, er, Paul Staines.
The Great Guido might as well go the full hog and use the Tory Party’s branding, such is the slavish and subservient behaviour. Another fine mess, once again.
Hic chaaabliiisss
ReplyDeleteGrand national today. I'm runnninning in it hic
Whip me rider, whip me!!
I've been such a naaaaughty boy!
Chabliiisssdd
"“several top journalists and tax experts agree Blairmore was not a tax avoidance scheme."
ReplyDeleteNot according to a Michael Crick tweet who had read the prospectus and he tweets further
"Why were investors in Blairmore obliged not to divulge contents of 2006 prospectus to outsiders? Why the secrecy?"
The joys of the free market where transparency is paramount? Actually it's indicative of Freeandopenmarket UK where secrecy gains you a competitive advantage.
This youtube video encapsulates the stuation up quite nicely. I suspect Guido might disagree.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tJVKzvCEcio
That Guido mob get more and more comical when they try to be "serious."
ReplyDeleteAn assault by them is the equivalent of an attack by a rabid moth.
Meanwhile......"Blairmore"?......Is that ironic or what?
I'm waiting for his neck to explode. Just don't want to be near when it does.
ReplyDeleteIf Cameron didn't invest his money off sure to make a profit why else would he have done it. Presumably investing money in unstable countries like Panama involves a certain amount of risk so people would only take such a risk if they thought it would be worth the return.
ReplyDeletePerhaps Guido think Cameron sent his money yo Panama because he thought it needed a holiday!