- Sat Dec 20, 2025 2:02 pm
#102290
Also, in some cases it's the local councils themselves who have requested the delay.
Prof Sue Yeandle, the UK’s leading expert on unpaid carers, said ministers and senior officials had issued “really misleading” claims that the failures affected only a small number of people.While also
Ministers last month pledged about £75m to fix the scandal and ordered about 200,000 historical cases to be reassessed.Is 200,000 a small number?
Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Sat Dec 20, 2025 6:11 pm There's something odd going on with serious policy people, like they're being hypercritical. Reeves seems to have got more stick for saying that income taxes wouldn't be raised, which (what? raised the cost of borrowing for a few days, before it fell a lot?) than Osborne did for all those ridiculous budgets that passed up the chance for virtually free investment borrowing. The only budget where Osborne did get more stick was the "omnishambles" budget, where a load of taxes had to be cancelled. Reeves' budget, by contrast, didn't "unravel", whether you agreed with it or not.Negative polarisation is a key factor. As for the budget, considering the buildup, it's remarkable how it's been forgotten, as it hasn't crashed the markets or caused the sky to fall in.
I don't really know what the explanation is. My guess is that lots of that group really hate the immigration stuff (which well they might) and that's meaning they get stuck into the government across the board.
After a difficult few years in which pubs have been hit by high costs, the pandemic and the impact of younger people going out less, publicans were optimistic this budget might bring some relief – specifically with a long-promised revamp of business rates.
But the chancellor poured cold water on those hopes, choosing instead to reduce headline rates and commit £4.3bn over three years in financial support for the retail and hospitality industries.
It may have seemed a gesture of goodwill, but the value of that support package has been dwarfed by the impact of a three-yearly property revaluation that has caused the taxable value of pubs and restaurants to spike from their Covid-affected lows.
Starting from next April, rates will rise by 115% for the average hotel and 76% for a pub, compared with 4% for large supermarkets and 7% for distribution warehouses. Whitbread, which owns pubs, restaurants and the Premier Inn hotel chain, says it will have to pay between £40m and £50m in tax as a result.
Joe Butler, the landlord at the Tollemache Arms in Northamptonshire, said: “Literally overnight, the click of a finger, the value of our business has doubled. That’s going to be a huge increase for us.”
And pressure on publicans is inevitably reflected in the price of a punter’s pint.
“The price of a pint is now unaffordable. When we first took this pub on 10 years ago, we charged £3.40 a pint. We’re now verging on being £7 a pint,” Butler said.
Labour admits 60% of parents wrongly targeted in HMRC child benefit fraud crackdownhttps://www.theguardian.com/society/202 ... -crackdown
Exclusive: Scale of government’s anti-fraud fiasco is four times higher than previously admitted
Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Sun Dec 21, 2025 12:25 pm There is "headroom", so shouldn't be too much of a problem.It feels like rewarding a victimisation campaign that is targeted against MPs.
A Norfolk landlord has banned Labour MPs from drinking in his pub.
Phil Cutter, owner of the Murderers in Norwich, has taken the measure in response to the last month's budget, which he claimed had "taxed out" publicans. https://www.eveningnews24.co.uk/news/25 ... Hfc4gwOv0A
Youngian wrote: ↑Sun Dec 21, 2025 5:46 pm A sensible business person in retail keeps their gob shut about politics, especially a landlord. What a twat.When he started Murderers in Norwich he got a lot of hassle from the police. So he decided to keep the name but convert it to a pub.A Norfolk landlord has banned Labour MPs from drinking in his pub.
Phil Cutter, owner of the Murderers in Norwich, has taken the measure in response to the last month's budget, which he claimed had "taxed out" publicans. https://www.eveningnews24.co.uk/news/25 ... Hfc4gwOv0A