Crash Bang Wallace
Libertarian political blog from Mark Wallace; political opinion, breaking news and exclusivesUnions are set to go on a mass walkout tomorrow in the name of protecting the status quo – a status quo in which public sector workers with better salaries and better pensions are subsidised by prviate sector workers who earn less and get poorer pensions. Tomorrow the nation’s lucky few will be striking and marching for the right to be permanently propped up by struggling masses worse off than them.
Conveniently the RMT, one of Britain’s most extreme defenders of systemic public sector privilege and the voice of well-paid tube drivers everywhere, have a poll on their website, asking:
Should public sector workers take strike action to protect their pension entitlements?
The results already stand at 53% No, 45% Yes, so it’s not looking good for Big Bad Bob Crow. Let’s give it a helping hand – cast your No vote here (it’s on the top right of the RMT site), and help drive the message home.
The poison of taxpayer-funding for political parties
markwallace | 5 Comments » Posted on November 23, 2011Just as politicians’ attempts to get hold of more power will likely never cease, the same is almost certainly true of the attempts of political parties to get their hands on taxpayers’ money.
This week we’ve seen yet another push to give taxpayer funding to political parties – under a system once championed by Chris Huhne where parties with sitting MPs would get a set amount of cash for every vote they win. Let’s call it the “cash for votes” system, a negative name for a negative idea.
This time round, the main parties have publicly distanced themselves from the plan – a welcome sign that at the moment the political class are afraid of public opinion on the cost of politicians to the taxpayer. But we can’t rely on that always being the state of play. Privately, all three parties would love to have a guaranteed income from taxpayers without having to do all that tiresome fundraising – they just can’t get away with saying so in the current climate. We need to be constantly watchful to ensure they never succeed in this private desire.
So let’s look at exactly why taxpayer-funded political parties are such a bad idea.
First off, there’s the ethics of the matter. It’s deceitful to equate a vote for a party with a desire to donate to it. If a vote indicated a happiness to donate, then people would donate. The fact is that they don’t – often because they don’t have money to spare, but also because they may be voting begrudgingly or even tactically. The supposed link underlying the cash-for-votes system simply doesn’t exist.
Why should anyone be forced to fund a political party if they don’t want to – and even one they would never consider supporting? After all, if voter A who is a net beneficiary of the state votes for party A, then their “donation” is subsidised by voter B, a net contributor to the Treasury, who might well be a supporter of their deadly enemies party B.
Just as important are the practical effects on our democracy.
The reason this system is regularly put forward is that the parties struggle to raise money. We should look at why that is the case, rather than simply crudely address the symptom. In truth, our politicians fail to really inspire people – voting, party membership and donation have dropped off, as what used to be called apathy has grown into outright anger and disillusionment.
From the point of view of many, our political class are too self-interested, too out of touch and too close to each other ideologically. Unsurprisingly, that failure on their part has put people off donating to fund them, just as a company giving dreadful service and neglecting its customers will lose business and see turnover and profits decline. Rewarding that failure would be to allow them to escape accountability for their actions and – worse – guaranteed taxpayer-funding would serve to reinforce this disconnect from the public by removing the pressure to inspire people.
At the same time as it would protect the main parties from the consequences of their failure, taxpayer-funding of those parties with MPs would also serve to fossilise British politics in its current, unpopular form. The current big parties would be in a bolstered, protected position, with even more of a headstart than they currently have over insurgents and upstarts. Proponents of taxpayer-funding are effectively saying that the Labour, Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties have some form of divine right to exist indefinitely.
In reality, what would be wrong with one or all of them being put out of business if a new, more active and more popular party emerged on their patch of politics? It can happen – the emergence of Labour in the late 19th Century, the strange near-death of the Liberal Party in the inter-war period, the emergence of the SDP in the 1980s, the growth of the SNP and Plaid Cymru and so on.
We should have a system that allows that to happen – both because it’s right that such change should be able to occur and because the possibility of it will keep the current parties on their toes. If anything, we need to make our system of politics more open to new competitors, not less. Bunging taxpayers’ cash to reinforce the status quo would make things even worse than they already are.
Taxpayer-funded striking union sponsors Ice Hockey team
markwallace | 14 Comments » Posted on November 17, 2011
The Trade Unions are large-scale consumers of taxpayers’ money. They eat tens of millions of pounds on the supposed basis that they are strapped for cash and ordinary taxpayers somehow have a responsibility to pay for their political campaigning and fat cat bosses. In 2009/10 their subsidies totalled a remarkable £85.8 million of taxpayers’ money.
But are they really so hard-up that they need the public to be forced to bolster their funding?
The GMB, for one, apparently has plenty of cash going spare. It turns out that they sponsor their own, err, Ice Hockey team – the Nottingham Panthers. Or, to give them their full and official title the GMB Nottingham Panthers.
What public good does it serve for the GMB to splash cash in this way? For that matter, how does it serve their members to dish out sports sponsorhip?
If they can afford to become the name and shirt sponsor for a sports team, then they clearly don’t need so much support from the ordinary taxpayers of this country.
Of course, in return for their subsidy from hard-working taxpayers, the GMB is repaying us by going on strike on 30th November.
Any GMB members unsure to do with this extra day off need not worry, though – they can always go to see their pet team the GMB Nottingham Panthers play away against Cardiff Devils on the same day…
The ever-tenacious David Hencke has a report of some worrying attempts by Barnet Council to muzzle local bloggers.
Wasting goodness knows how much taxpayers’ money, the local authority has now twice tried to secure rulings that would mean in effect that no blogger may write about public officials.
A local blogger, Mr Mustard, identified a £50,000-a-year (plus perks) non-job, Barnet’s new “Change and Innovation Manager“. He was doing a good public service by spotting a wasteful post stuffed full of management-speak twaddle – taking up the charge much as the TaxPayers’ Alliance has encouraged people to do for some years now.
To properly investigate how this money was being spent, Mr Mustard investigated the public blog of the person appointed to the post – a Jonathan Tunde-Wright. This was perfectly reasonable – particularly when it turns out Mr Tunde-Wright appears to be a big fan of management mantras, such as:
I am persuaded that organisational culture eats strategy for breakfast.
All in a day’s work for a blogger scrutinising public spending. But that’s not how Barnet Council saw it.
Barnet have now twice tried to secure a ruling from the Information Commissioner that Mr Mustard was in breach of the Data Protection Act by daring to blog about someone who was not part of his own family or household. If successful, they could have had him slapped with a £5,000 fine – and, of course, silenced.
Mercifully, the ICO ruled against Barnet both times – but the fact they even tried to go down this route is disturbibg.
On the surface this attempt to silence a blogger in this way is pure aggression and censorship from a public body. They wanted to shut him up regardless of the fundamental right to free speech or the entirely positive influence of bloggers and the transparency agenda because they thought it would be better that way for Barnet Council.
Look deeper than that and it gets more concerning. Numerous times in my years at the TPA we encountered attempts by public bodies to draw a false distinction between public roles and the people who occupy them. We could, we were told, talk about a job title and the associated salary, but criticising the actual public servant was not allowed.
During the compilation of the annual Public Sector and Town Hall Rich Lists we regularly got FOI responses that refused to name even a council’s Chief Executive. Tellingly, Tunde-Wright repeats this mantra in David Hencke’s article:
I also do feel that by going beyond the Post to naming the Post Holder, referencing my personal blog and making particular comments, the said blogger may have crossed the line and placed myself and my family in this uncomfortable place of feeling harassed online.
This is a pernicious attack on transparency and accountability. The Post and the Post Holder should be open to scrutiny by the public who fund both of them. The existence of a job is only one element of public spending and administration – how well the person who holds the post actually does the job is equally important.
Barnet’s argument effectively means individual incompetence or other personal failings would be beyond the realm of public scrutiny. It would be like saying no-one could cover the Liam Fox scandal because talking about him as an individual was beyond the pale, and as everyone would accept the need for a Defence Secretary then he should have stayed in post.
It is good that the ICO was robust in defence of the free speech of bloggers – but appalling that a local authority would think public scrutiny is a bad thing and then try to use legal intimidation funded by taxpayers to silence their critics.
We clearly still have a long way to go until we have a proper transparency culture.
Apologies for the lack of posts for the last few days – a switch of server combined with a busy week conspired to keep me away from the keyboard.
The biggest news, which cannot be ignored, is the so-called “solution” to the Eurozone crisis. As some have pointed out, it would be surprising if the EU’s leaders were even able to agree on a workable dinner menu for the summit, never mind a unifying solution to the vast economic crisis that they have created through their political foolishness and fiscal blindness.
So claims that they’ve got it all sewn up and everything is going to be fine should raise our suspicions. Lo and behold, as soon as you look at the plan the problems are clear. The BBC’s three-bullet summary of the package is as follows, with my comments in bold:
- Banks holding Greek debt would accept a 50% loss
Forgive me for pointing it out, but Europe’s banks – and still less the rest of the world’s – are not run by the EU Commission or the premiers of member states. The precedent of politicians enforcing these losses in a laughably named “voluntary” deal is dangerous and will further deter international investors from backing EU ventures.
- A mechanism to boost the eurozone’s main bailout fund to about 1tn euros (£880bn; $1.4tn)
Where is the money coming from? If as many suggest it will be from sovereign wealth funds from around the world, what financial and political price do we expect Saudi Arabia and China to demand in return for stepping in?
- Banks must also raise more capital to protect them against losses resulting from any future government defaults
Yes, having enforced 50% losses on the banks who lent to Greece, the EU is now attacking them for not having enough capital. Again, where will the money come from? The Eurozone crisis has severely damaged global confidence in European economies and businesses, and we’re not exactly awash with credit at the moment. If the markets won’t bet their house on the dodgy nag which is the Eurozone, will we see Governments stepping in? If so, err, isn’t it Government indebtedness which is already the problem driving this crisis?
Just as worryingly, can anyone rely on Italy, Greece and other Eurozone flops to carry out the reforms needed to become competitive and shed their zombie economy status? Sure, they may be pledging to now, but they pledged to when they joined the Euro and signally failed to live up to their promises and treaty pledges.
Most disturbing of all, we are also seeing a trend amongst the EU elites – emphatically separate to the peoples of Europe – towards a “consensus” in favour of fiscal union. The architects of European integration have never been ones to let a good crisis go to waste, so behind their furrowed brows and mutters of concern there can be little down that plenty of them are jumping for joy about the prospect of Brussels siezing power over the budgetary affairs of 17 countries.
If you think the EU is undemocratic and bossy now, you’d be right – but this is a walk in the park compared to what will happen when the EU Budget Inquisition start stretching national Chancellors on the rack until they agree to obey the diktats flowing from Brussels.The protests and chaos in Athens will multiply and spread to other countries once Brussels starts to enforce its measures against the will of voters across Europe with a minimum of accountability.
Of course, the EU’s own accounts are famously full of holes, and fraud and waste are rife, so even if they get this central bullying power we can be certain they will fail to use it responsibly or successfully. There will be pain without any gain – a further recipe for disillusionment and disturbance.
Critics of the EU – including myself – have long said we should dismantle it carefully and responsibly before it tears itself apart painfully. This latest deal puts on the path to yet more economic misery, yet more antidemocratic abuse of power and yet more suffering for ordinary people. In its death throes, I fear the EU will harm a lot of people.
Senior Civil Servants expecting five-figure bonuses
markwallace | 1 Comment » Posted on October 12, 2011It never rains but it pours for the public finances. I gather that the senior ranks of the civil service right across Whitehall are currently having their annual bonuses agreed – with large numbers of them expecting to receive lump sum payments running into the tens of thousands of pounds.
It scarcely needs saying that with the deficit crashing ever onwards, the eurozone crisis at the door, junior civil servants losing their jobs, dire forecasts about the income prospects of ordinary taxpayers and unemployment continuing to rise, the prospect of paying five figure bonuses to well-paid mandarins at the top of Whitehall departments sticks in the throat.
Thanks to the recent improvements in spending transparency, we’ll find out how much of our cash is given to them, but only after it’s been handed over. The public who fund and are served by these departments will have no say in how generous their bonuses are, and will be left to howl in the wilderness should any of them appear to be excessive or undeserved after they’ve been paid.
Given the prevailing circumstances in the economy and the public finances, the very least these public servants could do to serve the public would be to voluntarily waive their bonuses this year. Ministers have already taken a pay cut, and tens of millions of people across the country have no bonus (still less generous gold plated pension) at all. Will Sir Humphrey chip in and do his bit?
Shaun Woodward says cuts are Northern Ireland’s “new troubles”
markwallace | 4 Comments » Posted on September 29, 2011Shaun Woodward is the Shadow Secretary of State for Northern Ireland – a job that requires unusual levels of historical understanding and diplomatic language. Given that, I couldn’t help but wince at his speech to the Labour conference. It started with a flourish of historical references, mentioning the Croke Park Bloody Sunday of 1920. Unfortunately, he then moved on to the economy:
But there are new challenges. New troubles. For the whole island. The crisis faced by the economy of Ireland. Compounded by austerity cuts by the Tory Coalition, felt as harshly in Northern Ireland as any other part of the UK.
The word “troubles” isn’t really the most appropriate for Northern Ireland, given the history of the Troubles with a capital “T”. Shaun Woodward cannot be ignorant of the meaning of the word, so is he just insensitive or is he deliberately joining Guido’s Order of the OTT by comparing the cuts to the Troubles?
In a desperate defence of his party’s continuing and increasingly absurd support for Britain joining the Euro, this morning Nick Clegg told the Today Programme that:
“I don’t think any of us could have predicted…that the rules on which the Euro was created should have been so spectacularly flouted”
His claim was that the concept of the Euro has always been and still is a good idea both in principle and in practice. The Lib Dems’ latest line of defence on the Euro is that it has never been implemented properly – that the failure of some countries to abide by the Stability and Growth Pact which regulates Member States’ budgets had undermined what was actually a really good idea.
This is getting increasingly ridiculous.
The inherent and fundamental flaw of the Euro is that it sought to bind together utterly disparate economies without any democratic or market accountability. It takes the bloated civil service of Greece, the housing market of Spain, the manufacturers of Germany and tries to force them all into the same straghtjacket. It tries to buck the market, the laws of economics and public opinion all in one go. It was always going to fail and wreak economic havoc, and the Commission’s attempt to pretend that wasn’t so was the introduction of the Convergence Criteria in the Maastricht Treaty, which later became the Stability and Growth Pact.
As many people pointed out at the time, and as history has shown us since, it was a fantasy to imagine that the Southern European countries in particular would be able or willing to keep their deficits below 3% and their Government Debt to GDP ratio below 60%. As a politically-motivated project, it was always likely that the Commission would fail to enforce these rules in order to keep the Eurodream of “ever closer union” on track no matter how great the risks. (You can see the woeful track record of adherence to the Pact here)
To say it was never predicted that this would happen is simply untrue – it has always been a mainstay of the Eurosceptic case that many EU states flout regulations and rules while others like Britain try to abide by them at great cost. It has also always been part of our critique that the Commission will bend and break as many rules as it feels necessary to keep forging ahead blindly with their obsession for EU integration.
Nick Clegg is experienced enough to know that when you have sunk to defending an ideology by claiming that “it’s never been implemented properly” – an argument normally used by student Trots defending communism from the claim that it has always resulted in tyranny and slaughter – then reality has disproved your idea and the day is lost. In fact, I think you can hear a slightly depressed realisation of this in his voice a couple of times in the Today Programme interview.
Euro-enthusiasm is a totem for the Lib Dems. It’s been one of the few things that has kept Liberals and SDPers bound together despite their many private disagreements on other topics. But given the judgement of history on the Euro, and the clear judgement of the opinion polls on the EU as a whole, isn’t it time they abandoned it?
Now that would be a proper Clause 4 moment – facing up to reality, ditching what has become an albatross around their necks, moving closer to overwhelming public opinion and finally being able to move on from an issue that, as Nick Clegg found out this morning, will otherwise keep rearing its head to bite them.
Guardian runs adverts from tax avoidance experts
markwallace | 1 Comment » Posted on September 06, 2011The Guardian’s view on tax avoidance by others is well known – they regularly and deliberately conflate tax evasion (a crime) and tax avoidance (not a crime), and take the position that everyone should go out of their way to pay as much tax as possible. Regardless of how whether you pay what the law demands, the Guardian will be the final and ultimate arbiters of whether you pay your “fair share”.
However, their own affairs are less than consistent with the high standards they demand of others – as Guido has documented in the case of Polly “you should pay more tax, but why should I?” Toynbee, and their own record of careful tax avoidance through offshoring and other mechanisms.
Not content with hectoring others whilst practicing tax avoidance themselves, the Guardian has now taken things a step further – profiting by running advertising for firms of specialists who offer advice to tax avoiders and even how to deal with an HMRC tax investigation. This is a screengrab of their “Reading the Riots” web page – take a look at the ad circled in red at the bottom right:

Appleton Richardson, the advertisers in question, describe their service as “tipping the scales of justice in your favour”, will help you learn “how to play the game” and offer help to “survive a tax investigation by HMRC”. They absolutely rightly say that tax avoidance is perfectly legal, but in Guardian land it is unacceptable – how do the champions of high taxes square taking advertising from a firm like this with their crusading morals? Or is it just yet another case of Guardian double standards?
PS you’ll note that with further delicious irony the other two adverts are for Personal Injury Lawyers and, yes, a Scientology magazine. The Guardian: where Comment Is Free, but principles can be bought.
The taxpayer funds a Union to preach to nobody
markwallace | 18 Comments » Posted on August 30, 2011I’m back from holiday, so it’s a return to service as usual.
The row over taxpayer-funded Trade Unions has grown steadily over the last few months, particularly as the unions have greedily clung onto their subsidies for non-front line activities that often stray into political activism while other areas face spending reductions.
A great example of taxpayers’ money being funnelled into unions only to be wasted has come to my attention in the form of the Creative Toolkit website launched by BECTU, the media and entertainment union. According to BECTU’s website the Creative Toolkit was funded by the Union Modernisation Fund, one of the two main routes by which millions of pounds of taxpayers’ money is poured into the unions.
The site is intended to campaign against unpaid internships and volunteer posts – some would say that if you want to work for free to beef up your CV you should be allowed to, while BECTU argue that it is fundamentally wrong to let anyone give labour for free, ever. We can leave that debate aside, though, and look at whether the project has delivered value for money to the taxpayers that funded it.
I don’t know how much the project and the website cost, though it’s a fairly shiny site and appears to be run by at least one BECTU member of staff. Given the profligacy of publicly funded digital projects, it’s safe to say it didn’t come cheap.
In return for our money, what impact has it had? Well, the site launched on the 10th of August, and so far it has….drumroll…58 signed up users. Including me, as well as several BECTU staff and members of their NEC.
So far there have been a mighty 7 posts made on their Community forum – of which three are from Sharon Elliott, a BECTU staffer, one is from Benetta Adams, a BECTU NEC member, and only three are from other users.
If a company had funded this, they would be furious – undoubtedly thousands of pounds spent on a campaigning website that has engaged 50 people. When will BECTU be asked to justify this taxpayer-funded failure and to give the money back? For that matter, when will taxpayer funding of trade unions cease outright?