FACT I’m not politically motivated, they're all a bunch of bandits.
But IMO £710 million, as far as running Scotland over a year is concerned, is neither here nor there. I’m not 100% sure but I think previous Scottish Governments (Administrations) have nearly always had a surplus so this could just be taking it closer to the wire.
£710 million in a budget of £30bn isn't really that big.
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Thread: Fit to govern?
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13-03-2008 08:58 AM #1
Fit to govern?
Arguably a mockery of the process of government

Does the SNP now have any credibility left in terms of managing the nation's finances?
There's only one thing better than a Hibs calendar and that's two Hibs calendars 
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13-03-2008 10:39 AM #2
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13-03-2008 10:41 AM #3This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
how many schools hospitals or police officers can you employ with that amount
thats a lot of money what ever way you look at itDictionary is the only place that success comes before work. Hard work is the price we must pay for success. I think you can accomplish anything if you're willing to pay the price. -Vince Lombardi

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13-03-2008 10:55 AM #4
For me, the REAL story here is the question of the CT Benefit money that Scotland gets from the UK Government. The SNP have done their sums on the assumption that they will still get that money, but that assumption seems to be in a lot of doubt.
The reform of the CT system, IMO, hinges on whether we get that cash or not. I foresee a lot of propagandising about the ownership of the money, jurisdiction, and downright clashing between both Governments in the months to come. Without being too down on the SNP, it wouldn't surprise me if this is an ideological battle that they have been planning.
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13-03-2008 10:57 AM #5This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
CT?Dictionary is the only place that success comes before work. Hard work is the price we must pay for success. I think you can accomplish anything if you're willing to pay the price. -Vince Lombardi

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13-03-2008 11:01 AM #6
Sorry, Council Tax.
At present, we get a block of money from the UK Government to help pay for Council Tax Benefit, which is a UK measure. However, since we are proposing to move away from CT to a local Income Tax, it has been suggested that we will no longer be entitled to that block of money. The SNP's calculations for the local Income Tax are based on the assumption that we will still get that money, "because it's Scotland's".
Let the debate begin.......
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13-03-2008 11:03 AM #7This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
its a very good and valid point
Dictionary is the only place that success comes before work. Hard work is the price we must pay for success. I think you can accomplish anything if you're willing to pay the price. -Vince Lombardi

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13-03-2008 11:04 AM #8... and, like me, you're sitting on the fence for now....This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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13-03-2008 11:06 AM #9This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote

i just want to have a look at the figures before i make a decisionDictionary is the only place that success comes before work. Hard work is the price we must pay for success. I think you can accomplish anything if you're willing to pay the price. -Vince Lombardi

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13-03-2008 12:52 PM #10You think?This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
£710 million is around 40% of the total collected in council tax each year.
Or to put it another way it would be a £20 million reduction for every local authority in Scotland.
What gets cut to pay for it? The SNP aren't saying.
There's only one thing better than a Hibs calendar and that's two Hibs calendars 
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13-03-2008 01:04 PM #11
An example:
Scotland requires say x amount of money to operate services from Council Tax - lets say 1BN
Scotland has council tax payers who pay 750M
Therefore, a deficit of 250M exists as there are punters out there, who canny afford "their share"
Nevertheless, 250M is needed to balance the books
As all taxes are collected and distributed via the UK Government in the main and their appointed bodies, THEY pay Scotland the 250M to "make up the difference"
...this is complex how?
Therefore, if we raise the 750M by ANOTHER means i.e. a local income tax, the defficit will still exist, will still have the same skint punters and thus the 250M should STILL be paid.
If the local income tax does NOT generate the 750M, thats OUR problem but we are surely still entitled to the defficit we've ALWAYS had...
There are alternatives and these are WAY better;
1. Give Scotland FARK ALL except...
2. The ability to set up, maintain and collect its OWN taxes as IT sees fit
3. Keep its OWN oil
4. Whilst they are at it, we'll take full control of everything else to make it nice and fair...
5. That's it.
They give us fark all. We'll give them fark all. We'll see who would be in favour.
Ask yourself why the "UK Government" are NOT in favour of this.
ENDOF, IMHO
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13-03-2008 02:03 PM #12
Your arguments are quite sound, BM, but of course way too simplistic for our elected reps, both here and down south.
This is not taking sides, BTW (see above... me plus fence)... but the justification for THEM not giving US the CT Benefit is that it has been ring-fenced for CT only. Not for IT, or for local spending in general, but specifically for CT. No CT? No benefit. No budging.
However, IMO, it goes deeper... UK Government doesn't like the idea of a local IT, and will do whatever it can to discourage it, even in areas where, legally, it has no jurisdiction.
This one is going to run.
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13-03-2008 05:00 PM #13Anything written by Hamish McDonnell - the author of this piece _ is not to be taken seriously . He makes no attempt to take a balanced view of what is happening as he still cant accept that labour lost. For that matter neither can the Hootsman.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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13-03-2008 08:44 PM #14Not familiar with his work so I'll go with what you're saying. But the Herald and the BBC are reporting along the same lines.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The numbers don't add up, they know it but they won't say how they will deal with that.
There's only one thing better than a Hibs calendar and that's two Hibs calendars 
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13-03-2008 09:57 PM #15Left by mutual consent!
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If your band D and earn over 35k you end up paying more? This is outrageous. The fact is most people in a band D home prob have an income of around this or at least jointly. CT is far too much at the moment never mind paying more!!!
Finally starting to see what life under the SNP will be like.
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13-03-2008 10:01 PM #16Playing devil's advocate here.... what would be your alternative way of funding local government?This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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13-03-2008 10:12 PM #17Left by mutual consent!
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I have no idea. But if its gonna cost anyone earning 35k, in a band d or less house more, then it is certainly no improvement on the current system.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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13-03-2008 10:16 PM #18According to the Government, most people will end up paying less, or stay the same. Only a few will pay more.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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13-03-2008 10:18 PM #19Left by mutual consent!
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Aye, accoriding to them. But it looks like they'll shaft all the single people or families on a decent wage!
However, independent research by the accountancy firm PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) for The Scotsman revealed last night that there would be many more losers under LIT than the Scottish Government has predicted, and that hundreds of thousands of middle-income earners in all parts of Scotland would be worse off.
PwC broke down the wage levels by individual council tax bands – something Scottish Government projections failed to do – to give a more detailed picture of the winners and losers.
It found that single people in average Band D homes earning more than £35,000 would have to pay more, and that those in more expensive Band G homes would pay more if they earned above £53,000.
It also worked out that couples in Band D homes would start to pay more once their combined income hit £49,000, while couples in the more expensive Band G homes would pay more if their combined income totalled £75,000 or more.
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13-03-2008 10:25 PM #20Numbers, eh? So.... hundreds of thousands of middle-income earners in all parts of Scotland would be worse off. That's out of a taxpaying population of, what, 3 million? How many is hundreds of thousands? 300,000? 900,000? Even 900k out of 3 m is a minority; it still means the majority will be better off, or no worse off.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I am not disagreeing with your stance, BTW. Just making the point that the debate thats about to kick off will be throwing numbers about all over the place. Numbers can be made to say anything....
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13-03-2008 11:15 PM #21The UK argument is:- if you're scrapping Council tax you can't have a £400M Council Tax subsidy, however it's not really as simple as that.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
When Westminster scrapped the rates, it didn't abolish rates reliefs; when the poll tax was scrapped, local government subsidies were transferred intact to underwrite its successor, the council tax.
It is not for UK ministers acting like colonial masters, to make rulings about how Scottish taxpayers' money should be used in Scotland . The £400m that currently goes in council tax benefits is part of the overall structure of local government finance - which already mostly comes from recycled income tax, since council tax raises only a small proportion of what council's actually spend.
This is a well directed spanner, thrown into the works by a shaky labour regime in an attempt to block an SNP manifesto pledge to abolish the unpopular Council tax. I feel it will ultimately backfire on them.
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13-03-2008 11:21 PM #22My interpretation, as well.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
However, I think the SNP will welcome the fight. It wouldnt surprise me if this becomes less about the CT/LIT debate, and more about sovereignty and the essence of devolution. The SNP love these kind of fights.... viz the Trident thing, and the Lewis chessmen.
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13-03-2008 11:32 PM #23Indeed.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The more the champagne socialists dig their heels in, the better for the SNP.
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14-03-2008 09:50 AM #24First Team Breakthrough
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Hate to play Devil's advocate, but technically speaking, the UK parliament still has jurisdiction all over the UK. The Scotland act only created another parliament to rule in Scotland, however the sovereignty of the UK parliament remains unchanged so technically, anything the Scottish parliament do could just be undone by the UK parliament. It would break a constitutional convention (and piss off a lot of people) but unfortunately, they still could.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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14-03-2008 01:00 PM #25
This is a well directed spanner, thrown into the works by a shaky labour regime in an attempt to block an SNP manifesto pledge to abolish the unpopular Council tax. I feel it will ultimately backfire on them.[/quote]
Agree to a point, although there is the possibility / probability that the SNP included pledges in their manifesto that they would have known they couldn't honour and / or which would have drawn the UK government into conflict. Ultimately I think this is just another example of why there are no policiticians of any shade that can be trusted."There's class, there's first class, and there's Hibs Class" - Eddie Turnbull
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14-03-2008 01:40 PM #26... and it is this part that the SNP will relish challenging. It wouldnt surprise me if they have planned the whole confrontation.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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15-03-2008 09:52 AM #27
The Scottish labour have been running scared of the SNP since the election, loosing most battles. Their big brothers down south are now trying to shaft the SNP and the Scottish people any chance they get.
In the long term I don’t think this is about CL or LIT but the start of the debate about sovereignty of the nation. Alex Salmond is a good speaker and knows what he’s doing; this will unfold over the next year watch
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16-03-2008 01:10 AM #28This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
my rents went up £3/week because of the C/T freeze (well, the council have to try claw it back from somewhere eh, and why not claw it back from the easiest targets first ) i'm raging that they are getting away with this and would suggest that salmond MUST have known the councils would have to get it back from somewhere and where else could they start by clawing some of it back than rent payers
but guess what, after seeing people earning a paltry £700 p/week starting tae panic..........the rent increase is worth it 

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16-03-2008 01:33 PM #29This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
If you're sure the SNP are so bad at simple arithmetic that they're disqualified from government, 'mibbes' you'd like to comment on the story in today's Sunday Herald regarding Trish Godman MSP (Scottish Labour) who (to quote) "has pocketed £30,000 of public money to cover her 'hotel' costs despite the fact she did not stay in any...."
She was Deputy Presisding Officer at the time. Instead of staying in the hotels whose bills she was claiming in her Parliamentary expenses, she was staying in her son-in-law's flat on Holyrood Road. Her son-in-law is one Gary Mulgrew, who just recently pled guilty to corporate fraud - he's one of the so-called NatWest Three. He copped a plea and is now serving a three-year sentence in the States for wire fraud.
Isn't it grand when you have politicians of the honesty and probity of Trish Godman and Wendy Alexander around, knocking on the doors of government?
Stones, glass houses, living in and throwing, anyone?
Last edited by Doddie; 16-03-2008 at 01:36 PM.
"Social awkwardness is often the curse of genius." (Raylan)
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16-03-2008 04:34 PM #30What makes you think I would want to stick up for a Labour politician allegedly misappropriating funds?This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
More to the point I would distinguish between individuals abusing their position (which is one issue) and my OP.
My point is that the minister responsible for finance announces a policy is to be implemented (this isn't a policy commitment in Opposition, this is the real deal).
Said minister can't explain how the shortfall caused by the policy will be dealt with.
Said minister reveals that the agency he wants to collect the tax have said they have no intention of doing so.
To talk about implementing a change of such magnitude but to have no grip on the financial implications and not to have even established the processes necessary for the change?
It's amateurish and incompetent at best and that's being kind.
There's only one thing better than a Hibs calendar and that's two Hibs calendars 
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with such a paltry sum per week i can see them ending up feeling like pensioners who struggle to put food on a table, and having to watch how much electricity/gas they use on a daily basis 
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