The world's most-read Scottish politics website

Wings Over Scotland


Straw dogs

Posted on November 13, 2012 by

A press release on the always-positive Scottish Labour website this morning blares a wake-up call to the reckless and irresponsible Scottish Government. “IPPR Report Shows SNP Economic Policy Is Financially Illiterate”, it rages, going on to quote the party’s finance spokesman Ken Macintosh:

“This report shows that the SNP’s economic policy is financially illiterate. Not only do we get more spending than we raise as a result of being in the Union, but the SNP’s commitment to turn Scotland into a low-tax corner of Europe would see revenues plummet and public spending slashed to the bone. Scotland would be crippled by what could only be described as economic suicide.”

Oof. Strong words for sure. Hang on, though – which SNP economic policy are we actually talking about here? The preamble to Macintosh’s furious blast references “the SNP’s plans to cut Corporation Tax to 12.5%”. But the only problem with that is that the SNP doesn’t appear to have any such plans.

We scoured Google for evidence, but haven’t been able to find a single story, report or quote where the SNP has ever proposed a 12.5% rate of CT. What there are are lots of stories where journalists on Unionist newspapers note that the Nats have suggested the possibility of cutting Corporation Tax were it to be devolved to the Scottish Parliament, and in which said journalists have also claimed that Northern Ireland – where the tax is likely to be devolved to Stormont – intends to cut it to 12.5%.

We can’t, we should point out, actually find any solid evidence to support this claim either – it seems to be based purely on the fact that the tax is 12.5% in the Republic Of Ireland, and that the logical thing would therefore be for NI to set the same rate in order to compete better with its southern neighbour.

The journalists have nevertheless then put two and two together and assumed that because the SNP wants control of the tax devolved like it is in NI, and because the level there might be 12.5%, that the SNP’s plan must be to cut it to the same level in Scotland. The SNP itself, on the other hand, has never said any such thing. Examine this piece by former Labour spin doctor Lorraine Davidson in The Times all the way back in August 2011, for example:

“Alex Salmond yesterday set out his long-awaited plans for cutting the overall rate of corporation tax in Scotland — but backed away from a commitment to reduce it to 12.5 per cent, as had been widely predicted.”

Observe the use of the word “predicted”, which is a sneaky journalistic way of not-quite-admitting that you’ve got something completely wrong and that the entity you’re talking about didn’t say the thing you thought they would. And interestingly, if you dig out the IPPR report cited (but not linked to) in Labour’s press release, it only attributes the notion of a 12.5% rate to “some leading Scottish business figures”, with no mention of the SNP having put forward or even endorsed the idea.

[EDIT: an alert reader in the comments below reveals that the SNP’s actual suggested rate of Corporation Tax for Scotland is 20%, not 12.5%.]

The straw man is a key weapon in Scottish Labour’s armoury. Bereft of any policies of their own, they can’t attack the SNP by putting forward alternative proposals, so the only route left is to pretend the Nats’ policies are something other than what they really are, and then rubbish the fake policies which exist only in Labour’s own propaganda. It’s an ugly, negative tactic which conspicuously failed to work between 2007 and 2011, but the party seems too paralysed by deep-rooted tribal oppositionism to try anything else.

In the interests of fairness, we contacted both Scottish Labour and Ken Macintosh and politely asked them if they could provide a single source for the SNP actually advocating a cut in Corporation Tax to 12.5%. If they come up with one, we will of course let you know immediately.

19 to “Straw dogs”

  1. Doug Daniel says:

    “we get more spending than we raise as a result of being in the Union”

    Wow, I had no idea the UK was unique in the world in being able to borrow money!

    Unless Ken is trying to suggest that the UK does not have to borrow money and the extra spending we get (in absolute terms – we all know we get LESS in relation to the rest of the UK) is a subsidy from England, then I’m not quite sure what his point is. And if that IS what he’s suggesting, then it’s demonstrably untrue.

    Lies. It’s all they have. 

    Reply
  2. Morag says:

    As far as that point goes, Doug, I only recently realised it myself.  I think it needs wider dissemination, which to be fair I see people trying to achieve.

    Reply
  3. Angus McLellan says:

    Evidence that the SNP had different plans might be helpful. After all, if John Swinney had talked openly about this then we might know what the SNP had in mind. If he’d done that, then we’d be able to link to his comments. Something like this maybe: link to scotland.gov.uk
    Well, 12.5% and 20% are close enough that confusing the two is perfectly natural. An honest mistake then, nothing sinister about it at all.
     

    Reply
  4. Rev. Stuart Campbell says:

    Nice work, added as an edit.

    Reply
  5. Macart says:

    @Angus McLellan

    Nice link, makes a difference when you actually have what the government says in front of you.

    I’d be fascinated to find out the source of their information, since Angus had a wildly different yet very official source to hand in the Scotgov web site. I’d be even more fascinated to see the results of the SG calling Mcintosh and the report’s authors out on that source.

    Reply
  6. Doug says:

     FMQs 4/10/12 –  another example of transference from Lamont/Labour?

    Johann Lamont: The First Minister loves having straw men to cut down.”

    http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/parliamentarybusiness/28862.aspx?r=7401&i=67520&c=1368943

    (other examples being the accusations of negativity, of lack of detail, of inconsistency, of “Tartan Tories” etc etc…)

    Reply
  7. ronald alexander mcdonald says:

    “We get” means we are given our share of the debt. Nothing more. That debt relates to the annual defecit.

    It would be easier for an Independent Scotland to cut  our annual defecit, without effecting ordinary people. In arears such as defence etc.    

    Reply
  8. CyBOS says:

    This is a cynical strawman atttack to divert attention away from the disaster of a speech given by Alistair Darling, the Abominable No Man, last Friday at the John P MacKintosh Memorial Lecture in Prestonpans.

    Even The Scottish Sun tore Mr Darling a new one over the ludicrous substance of the speech
    link to thescottishsun.co.uk      

    Reply
  9. Arbroath 1320 says:

    Oh dear, nothing good is happening on the Bitter front so out they come with more of their lies, deceit and misinformation. Never mind there are always these stories to help balance the books a wee bit.
     
    link to heraldscotland.com
     
    Looks like A.s. is a popular speaker, can’t exactly say the same about Darling. Apparently there are still loads of tickets available for his interview with John Snow. Now I wonder why that is……..
     
    Talking of the big featie, it would appear that he might be trying to push his influence, does he actually have any influence, over onto the Electoral Commission. Now in my mind this is more than a bit naughty of him,, but then again when has he ever cared about the rights and wrongs of what he does.
     
    link to scottishtimes.com
     
    Finally here’s a piece by Joan McAlpine in the D.R.  She deals a bit with the McCrone report. Joan also quotes from a Price Waterhouse report from last year.

    Northern Lights, a Pricewaterhouse Coopers report published last year, reported that there was £376billion of value left in the North Sea over the next 40 years.”
     
    link to dailyrecord.co.uk
     
    I think this is about the third article in the D.R. this week that pours scorn over the unionists. I wonder, just the slightest of wonderings you understand, but all the same I wonder if there are one or two individuals at the D.R. who might, just might, be beginning to see the error of their ways. Only time will tell for sure but it does make for an interesting week ahead methinks.

    Reply
  10. Angus McLellan says:

    Corporation tax is complicated. Isn’t everything?
    If you read the media reporting on the Commons’ Public Accounts Committee fun with Google, Starbucks and Amazon yesterday you might be left with the impression that the Netherlands, Switzerland and Luxemburg have low rates of corporation tax. The situation in Luxemburg is complicated as there are 3 different regimes for corporate tax, but the basic one has a 28% rate. The rates in the Netherlands and Switzerland are 25%. And in the UK? That’ll be a “predatory” 23%.
    Of the three companies, only Google make use of truly low-corporation tax havens. Amazon and Starbucks have much more complex setups which don’t rely on low headline rates of tax to reduce their liabilities.

    Reply
  11. Keith B says:

    ..more spending than we raise as a result of being in the Union……”


    The No’s have a graphic to back this up……at this point I was going to link to a graphic from the Better Together website’s “photojournal”, but it appears to have disappeared. It showed that Scotland receives 20% more spending than it contributes. Pretty damning stuff, especially as the figures were taken from GERS.
     
    The only problem was that they had appeared to have missed the full implication of their figures, as this graphic shows (the top part being the original Better Together graphic);
     
    link to pbs.twimg.com
     
    No wonder the original graphic appears to have been removed, but no surprise that Ken MacIntosh and Labour seem to be a bit slow on the uptake.
     
    The good news is that they appear to be happy to use GERS as an authoritative source.
     

    Reply
  12. Doug says:

    Keith B

    I had some fun pointing this out to the Better Together lot, but the graphic did boil down to these explicit points, omitting the implicit (in square brackets)

    “Stay in the union because you have a SCARY deficit/debt [, although the deficit would be 17% less in an independent Scotland]”

    “Things are bad in Scotland, [but if you stay in the UK, you’ll have the opportunity to have it a lot worse]”

    Of course, this assumes that all spending/tax etc would be identical in an independent Scotland (which is, again, manifestly unlikely to be the case).

    Reply
  13. Rev. Stuart Campbell says:

    I see loyal Labour blog Left Foot Forward has now run a remarkably similar story:

    link to leftfootforward.org

    Reply
  14. John Lyons says:

    12.5% or 20% it doesn’t actually matter.

    Having recently read your articles on PFI, Labour have some gall to call anyone financially illiterate!

    I wouldn’t trust them to correctly manage the whip round for the bus driver that took them to conference!

    Reply
  15. Arbroath 1320 says:

    Twelve and a half per cent.
     
    Twenty per cent.
     
    Hmm, I can see how it is an easy mistake to make.
     
    Both claims start “twe” and both claims end “per cent”
     
    The only problem is the middle bit, so I can see how Labour can make such a fundamental mistake. Perhaps next time they should read the WHOLE thing and not just the start and finish bits. 😀

    Reply
  16. Clachangowk says:

    The main message that I take from Mackintosh’s statement is that he ( and labour) expect the SNP to be the future Government in an independent (and perhaps not independent) Scotland.

    Labour have obviously already given up any thoughts of future Government and can only make up porkies about what the SNP will do.

    I am waiting for Labour to come out and join the Tories in running down the SNP Government’s ambition to have highspeed rail between Edinburgh and Glasgow.

    For me, the attack by the Tories on this ambition/vision by a Scottish Government is symptomatic of Tories’ visceral antipathy to anything Scotland does outside the parameters of Westminster. I knew the Tories were bad for Scotland  but just how bad is probably just coming home to me. They really do expect us to lie down, be quiet and wait until Westminster tells us what to do.

    Reply
  17. Angus McLellan says:

    @Arbroath1320: Right. So the moral of the story could be “donut use predicate tea”. Or even “don’t use predictive text”.

    Reply
  18. Dubbieside says:

    Rev Stu

    To be fair to Leftfootforward they have pointed out in the article Labour are wrong about the twelve and a half tax rate.

    The appropriate line is,

    The only problem is that the SNP’s policy is to cut corporation tax to 20%, a position the IPPR states is “achievable”.

    Their starting line is also worth looking at,

    “Financially illiterate”? Scottish Labour must do better

    Maybe Denis Canavan is starting to get his message across?

    Reply
  19. dadsarmy says:

    Ken Macintosh does have quite a compelling line of logic though. It seems that the rUK contributes £500 billion of UK taxation, but receive £622 billion of UK spending.

    So I guess that means Scotland is subsidising England, Wales and Northern Ireland to the tune of £122 billion a year!

    Amazing what you can do with inverse figures.

    Reply


Comment - please read this page for comment rules. HTML tags like <i> and <b> are permitted. Use paragraph breaks in long comments. DO NOT SIGN YOUR COMMENTS, either with a name or a slogan. If your comment does not appear immediately, DO NOT REPOST IT. Ignore these rules and I WILL KILL YOU WITH HAMMERS.


  • About

    Wings Over Scotland is a thing that exists.

    Stats: 6,894 Posts, 1,239,375 Comments

  • Recent Posts

  • Archives

  • Categories

  • Tags

  • Recent Comments

    • Young Lochinvar on Not So Octopus: “*Special* Captain Caveman Interview – undertaken without an internet connected device. Interviewer; Wilma Flintstone, welcome. Captain Caveman; Mate, where’s moi…Apr 11, 19:28
    • Mark Beggan on Do You Believe In The Westwood?: “Free drugs and empty prisons. Homosexual drag artists at the mosque. What could possibly go wrong.Apr 11, 19:22
    • TURABDIN on Do You Believe In The Westwood?: “Has he facemorphed on a TikTok app?Apr 11, 18:54
    • George Ferguson on Do You Believe In The Westwood?: “Well the Masters is on so this is par for the course for the Scottish Government. Well done Stu another…Apr 11, 18:32
    • BroughtyBoy on Do You Believe In The Westwood?: “I see the ‘Our People’s page has been taken down Stu… you’re on to something here!Apr 11, 17:28
    • Young Lochinvar on Not So Octopus: “AE @ 9.03 Yippee Kate-ae faggat! You done gotten yourself all written up like a Jack rabbit n spring thar…Apr 11, 15:25
    • Jamie on Do You Believe In The Westwood?: “This might be the first AI convenor.Apr 11, 14:13
    • Geri on Do You Believe In The Westwood?: “He who does the counting, does the manipulation.Apr 11, 13:46
    • Kevin Cargill on Do You Believe In The Westwood?: “You might need to build an interoceter to communicate with Metaluna where I’m sure Mr Westwood lives. He certainly seems…Apr 11, 13:44
    • Geri on Not So Octopus: ““Being offered an opportunity but exercising discretion to turn it down does not make you a “failure”.” It does show…Apr 11, 13:44
    • Alf Baird on Not So Octopus: ““the vast majority of “ordinary” Scots” If all else fails the colonizer seeks to make the indigenous native a minority…Apr 11, 13:41
    • Knuckle Heid on Do You Believe In The Westwood?: “I agree Iain – who are these polling companies talking to?!Apr 11, 13:13
    • Geri on Not So Octopus: “Arsey, I don’t need to. A well respected KC has already given his expert, legal opinion. Go look it up.…Apr 11, 12:42
    • Northcode on Not So Octopus: ““…no constructive engagement of any sort, just the blanket unreasoning assertion that anyone who disagrees with you is… a unionist.”…Apr 11, 12:23
    • Lorncal on Do You Believe In The Westwood?: “They’ve posted a photo now, have they? It still looks doctored and seems to be an image that has been…Apr 11, 12:22
    • Geri on Not So Octopus: “Alf, I know. Whit a dunce! Maybe we should all club together & buy him a dictionary? Oh hang on,…Apr 11, 12:19
    • James on Not So Octopus: “We see you, Yoon.Apr 11, 12:09
    • Aidan on Not So Octopus: “@Geri – if you believe that your absurd and paranoid ramblings are shared by a majourity of people, or even…Apr 11, 12:06
    • Captain Caveman on Not So Octopus: ““Why are the Unionists here so intolerably kiss-ass to the site host?” Well, I daresay it’s all relative. Basic courtesies…Apr 11, 12:01
    • Captain Caveman on Not So Octopus: “Good grief… Well, I very much doubt that an articulate, intelligent and interesting poster like Lorncal will take this, ahem,…Apr 11, 11:57
    • agentx on Do You Believe In The Westwood?: “It sounds like a clear breach of his disability rights in that they have failed to make reasonable adjustments to…Apr 11, 11:41
    • Alf Baird on Not So Octopus: “The colonialist tells the natives they’re not colonized. LoL.Apr 11, 11:20
    • Geri on Not So Octopus: “You don’t speak for the majority of Scots, thank fck, so why don’t you pack up yer wee violin. Only…Apr 11, 11:00
    • willie on Do You Believe In The Westwood?: “As we move towards an election voters might do well to reflect on how this Scottish Government have made provision…Apr 11, 10:39
    • Fearghas MacFhionnlaigh on Not So Octopus: “Salmond bequeathed us a sparkling oasis. Sturgeon left us a foetid swamp. Swinney is key-holder of the toxic taphouse.Apr 11, 10:27
    • James Che on Do You Believe In The Westwood?: “AI generated or father and son?Apr 11, 10:17
    • James Che on Do You Believe In The Westwood?: “These English registered politicians encouraging perversion sitting in Scotland would be outed if Scots recognised that they are not in…Apr 11, 10:14
    • James Che on Do You Believe In The Westwood?: “The pedo nest preying like vultures on innocent humans are like an alien species, In day past politicians would have…Apr 11, 10:00
    • Alf Baird on Not So Octopus: ““Why is the name in English and not Scots?” Alliance tae Leeberate Scotland Pairty. Thair, sortit!Apr 11, 09:20
    • Andy Ellis on Not So Octopus: “@YL 2.04am Same old same old from you and the usual suspects then YL? No no actual ideas, no constructive…Apr 11, 09:03
  • A tall tale



↑ Top