User avatar
By Dalem Lake
#91931
This Welfare Bill is turning out to be a right fiasco. Was it really worth it? Changes to PIP kicked into the grass, hardly any savings made, just makes Starmer look stubborn and stupid. Should've killed the bill and went back to the drawing board.
User avatar
By Abernathy
#91938
The Welfare Reform Bill passed Second Reading (the “rebel” reasoned amendment was easily defeated) with a government majority of 75. There seem to have been quite a large number of abstentions.
User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#91940
All the people who should be running the government are cutting hair, driving cabs and posting on Bluesky.

There's not a low priority placed on policy. There's loads of it, lots of it looks pretty good.

User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#91944
Here's more from Bush. Not sure what he's objecting to exactly here. Sure, some obligations have been placed on business, but business taxation hasn't risen much. That's kind of what I'd expect from a Labour Government, and there's the quid pro quo of the greater infrastructure investment and planning reform, which business is happy with.

They did the non-doc tax reform, that's pretty major. So is the anti-avoidance stuff. How does he know there's near zero interest in other reforms? You'd not expect it all to go in the first finance bill. And true, nationalisation doesn't necessarily work, but I reckon Peter Hendy isn't sat back there assuming it will.

User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#91946
How No 10 went from bullish to badly damaged as rebels forced further welfare bill concessions
Tumultuous 24 hours capped by last-minute welfare bill concessions could define rest of Starmer’s time in No 10
"Could define", says paper who are going to play their full role in defining it like this. Surprised they didn't use a sly passive there for added value.
User avatar
By The Weeping Angel
#91953
Tubby Isaacs wrote: Tue Jul 01, 2025 8:17 pm Here's more from Bush. Not sure what he's objecting to exactly here. Sure, some obligations have been placed on business, but business taxation hasn't risen much. That's kind of what I'd expect from a Labour Government, and there's the quid pro quo of the greater infrastructure investment and planning reform, which business is happy with.

They did the non-doc tax reform, that's pretty major. So is the anti-avoidance stuff. How does he know there's near zero interest in other reforms? You'd not expect it all to go in the first finance bill. And true, nationalisation doesn't necessarily work, but I reckon Peter Hendy isn't sat back there assuming it will.









I believe it is NI raises and raising the minimum wage, plus employment law.
  • 1
  • 140
  • 141
  • 142
  • 143
  • 144
Reform Party

Tee Hee. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4ge[…]

Labour Government 2024 - ?

Here's more from Bush. Not sure what he[…]

Trump 2.0 Lunacy

No Republican is going to side with Musk over Trum[…]

The Very Online Left latest

Bits of the left were less keen on Sinn Fein once […]