Yesterday George Osborne treated us to an Autumn Statement in which he performed one of the most remarkable political U-turns in living memory.
The apparent need to cut £12bn from the welfare budget has long been sign-posted by the Tories as a requirement to getting us “back in the black” and on the road to a “higher wage, lower welfare, lower tax” society as part of their oft-cited “long-term economic plan”. (Or what academic economists prefer to call a “risky experiment with the economy in order to score political points“.)
Alert readers will recall David Cameron saying before the general election that child tax credits wouldn’t be cut in pursuit of that goal. But after the election, Osborne decided that they would. The Institute for Fiscal Studies determined that these cuts would have the worst effects on some of the poorest families in Britain.
Despite widespread opposition to the cuts, Labour infamously abstained on the critical vote in the Commons. Then, when the welfare bill reached the Lords, Labour once again abstained on a Lib Dem motion that would have completely killed the bill, in favour of a Labour one which phased in the cuts over three years, but meant Osborne would have to find another £4.5bn in his budget.
So we were somewhat surprised to hear Osborne say yesterday that the best thing to do was “not to phase these changes in, but to avoid them altogether”.
At today’s First Minister’s Questions, the Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale oddly chose to spend her entire allotted time not on any current issues affecting Scotland, but on attacking the SNP’s 2013 White Paper on independence, seemingly unaware that the referendum was held 14 months ago and resulted in a win for the No side.
Happily for Scotland, that decision resulted in a huge £200bn oil bonanza.
Here’s our old pal John McTernan, angrily condemning Labour’s shadow Chancellor John McDonnell quoting Chairman Mao to make a point in the Commons yesterday:
And for once he’s right. What sort of vile cretin would go around quoting Mao?
Obviously, actually including the exact phrases “within 45 minutes” and “weapons of mass destruction” might have been a little bit too near the knuckle, but the message comes across just the same: “Here we go again.”
The Daily Record has this on its front page today.
And that’s fine. The tale of a five-figure sum of money which might (or might not) have gone missing from the accounts of Women For Independence, who’ve promptly called the police to investigate an apparent discrepancy between their donated income and their expenditure, is entirely legitimate news.
We don’t often bring you footage of an Armed Forces Committee session in the US Senate, readers, but this spellbinding six minutes of questioning from a Republican senator on the subject of military action against ISIS doesn’t miss and hit the wall.
(We should note that Sen. Graham is a hawk who wants ISIS bombed back to the Stone Age. But even he can see the insane, irrational nature of the action currently being proposed, which would leave Syria a shattered mess but firmly in the hands of a murderous Russian-backed dictator conducting a ruinous, destabilising civil war.)
For over two years now, this site has been warning that the UK government will take the earliest opportunity it thinks it can possibly get away with to abolish the Barnett Formula, the funding mechanism which the No campaign sold as the biggest benefit of Scotland remaining in the Union.
The Formula is hated almost everywhere else in the UK, by both politicians and the English (especially) public, who see it as an over-generous subsidy to the scrounging Jocks, and with the threat of independence theoretically removed after the referendum there’s very little protecting it.
Neither Labour nor the Tories – with just one Scottish MP each – would have much to lose politically from reducing Scottish funding by billions of pounds they could use to bribe swing voters in England instead. Barnett’s partial survival was the only solid commitment made in The Vow, but it’s set to be slashed by the Scotland Bill, and the smaller it gets the less resistance there will be to its total removal.
This week the House Of Lords made lots of headlines by highlighting the shambolic, half-baked state of the Bill, which hasn’t yet come up with a “fiscal framework” to replace the bulk of Barnett. But make no mistake – the Lords want it gone just as much as everyone else does.
Cynicus on Looking up at the stars: “Northcode says: “…… oor superior Pictish leid…. ======== Would you care to translate the above phrase into Pictish?” Mar 16, 14:54
Hatey McHateface on Looking up at the stars: “I thought CM had embraced his inner tea towel? The idea that his new pals are genuinely interested in progressive…” Mar 16, 14:50
Northcode on Looking up at the stars: “Liberation from oppression is the only game to be played in Scotland; everything else can wait until that is achieved……” Mar 16, 14:46
Hatey McHateface on Looking up at the stars: “Only a matter of time, Northy, until Professor Baird asks you and Geri to join him at one of his…” Mar 16, 14:46
Young Lochinvar on Looking up at the stars: “HMcH Don’t let me hold you back. Mind you isn’t that book just what you call “ancient guff”?” Mar 16, 14:21
Northcode on Looking up at the stars: “That’ll teach ye, Sven… ye got a pat oan yer heid aff an Inglis fir bein a guid wee Scotti…” Mar 16, 14:21
Mark Beggan on Looking up at the stars: “I’m afraid it’s gone beyond that. What Lornical says is what I thought a few years ago and it’s got…” Mar 16, 14:19
Frost on Looking up at the stars: “ACH was also prancing about outside Holyrood in 2016 with that carboard cutout of Clinton along with Dugdale and Ben…” Mar 16, 14:02
Sven on Looking up at the stars: “Which is why it is imperative, Lorncal, that we each, individually, ensure that we’re informed as to the stance of…” Mar 16, 13:56
Chas on Looking up at the stars: “I am afraid you are wrong Sven however, as you do not post the same repetitive shite everyday (see Baird…” Mar 16, 13:39
Lorncal on Looking up at the stars: “Listened to ‘Through a Scottish Prism’ yesterday. We are screwed – well and truly screwed. The Liberate Scotland Alliance swore…” Mar 16, 13:36
Northcode on Looking up at the stars: “Aye, Fearghas. It has bugger aw tae dae with DNA. It’s oor superior Pictish culture, wit and intelligence that separates…” Mar 16, 13:08
Aidan on Looking up at the stars: “That’s probably a bit of drivel and a bit of waffle Northcode” Mar 16, 12:15
Northcode on Looking up at the stars: “Those are English words you’re defining there and bear no relevance to the comment I posted entirely in Scots. I…” Mar 16, 12:06
Aidan on Looking up at the stars: “Thank you Northcode, a few others to add: – Waffle: to talk or write a lot without giving any useful…” Mar 16, 11:56
Northcode on Looking up at the stars: “Guid day aw ye lowelie fowk wandrin knotless aboot this place leukin fir tae escape the warld’s stupeedity. Sadly, ye’ll…” Mar 16, 11:41
Rev. Stuart Campbell on The Future Is Yesterday: “I was just ahead of the game… https://archive.is/nFkfX” Mar 16, 11:04
Fearghas MacFhionnlaigh on Looking up at the stars: “« Pictish and Gaelic areas shows no sign of population replacement. There is no genetic marker that separates Picts from…” Mar 16, 10:54
Alf Baird on Looking up at the stars: “We must be getting ivver closer tae oor naitional leeberation, Hatey, because postcolonial theory reminds us the first thing a…” Mar 16, 10:36
Sven on Looking up at the stars: ““Scribbling’s”, well, it’s grammar Chas, however not as we know it.” Mar 16, 10:24
Aidan on Looking up at the stars: “It has everything to do with you highlighting Egypt as apparently a country doing it right and saying that Scotland…” Mar 16, 09:55
Hatey McHateface on Looking up at the stars: “Stating that London filled with tea towel wearers yesterday, many with Arabic writing on? Stating that FGM is quite extensively…” Mar 16, 09:29
Dan on Looking up at the stars: “@Aidan And yet you saw fit to add shite like air pollution, people getting killed in railway accidents, and quality…” Mar 16, 09:25
Hatey McHateface on Looking up at the stars: “I bet you thought you had written “breathe”.” Mar 16, 09:22
Hatey McHateface on Looking up at the stars: “@Geri Get yersel doon tae Currys. If you’ve been using ink for yer online posts, they may still be able…” Mar 16, 09:18
Hatey McHateface on Looking up at the stars: “Tell ye fit ah’ll dae, YL. Haund oan the Holy Bible, Ah’ll swear a solemn vow tae naiver post oan…” Mar 16, 09:09
Aidan on Looking up at the stars: “The Al-Fayrous fish farm is actually just off the Suez Canal, but the wider point is that it’s very odd…” Mar 16, 09:03
Chas on Looking up at the stars: “Eloquent, factual, knowledgeable and well researched are words that you would NEVER associate with any of your deranged scribbling’s. Very…” Mar 16, 08:26
Dan on Looking up at the stars: “@Aidan The Al-Fayrous fish farm I linked to is on the coast of the Med, so must be some crazy…” Mar 16, 08:23
Mark Beggan on Looking up at the stars: “I find watching paint dry is more fulfilling.” Mar 16, 07:59