PICKLES PLAYS POLITICS WITH CONDEM COUNCIL CUTS

Pickles laid bare care of Christopher Sharrock: http://sharrock.wordpress.com/

Surprise surprise, it turns out that it’s Labour run councils in the north that will bear the brunt of Pickles’ swinging cuts to local government. Some 20 of the 30 hardest-hit councils are run by Labour, and two more by Labour in coalition. By contrast, 28 of the 30 councils that will see the smallest cuts are Conservative-led – and some of those will actually be better off.

What really stinks is that you can sense The Pickled Egg relishing every moment.

http://menmedia.co.uk/manchestereveningnews/news/politics/s/1391848_mapped_out_how_coalition_council_cuts_will_hit_hardest_in_the_north

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Hulture Secretary to rule on Murdoch’s UK media empire

Following The Torygraph’s bizarre outing of Vince Cables intent to oppose Murdoch’s bid for Sky, the final ruling on the takeover has now fallen to the pro-Murdoch Hulture Secretary Jeremy Cunt.

You only have to read Mr Cunt’s comments below to see why on hearing the news Murdoch promptly cancelled his planned 2011 advertising campaign designed to win support for the takeover. As far he’s concerned it’s effectively a done deal.

Murdoch may have to wait a while though as Ofcom is this week expected to recommend a further six-month long inquiry…

No bias there then - Clearly the ideal candidate to rule on Murdoch's media ambitions

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1340994/Culture-Secretary-Jeremy-Hunt-allowed-rule-Murdochs-Sky-bid-despite-claims-bias-Labour.html#ixzz19atZ3R

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Charity chief says cuts could destroy David Cameron’s ‘big society’


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Charity chief says cuts could destroy David Cameron’s ‘big society'” was written by Patrick Butler and Nicholas Watt, for The Guardian on Thursday 30th December 2010 00.24 UTC

A leading charity figure and key supporter of David Cameron’s “big society” project warns that massive public spending cuts could doom the prime minister’s main social policy initiative to failure and become a Hurricane Katrina moment for the government.

As Ed Miliband accuses the government of adopting a “forbidding and unheeding” approach to reducing Britain’s fiscal deficit, David Robinson declares that a barrage of unsustainable cuts will damage Britain’s poorest neighbourhoods.

In an open letter to Cameron, the co-founder of the Community Links charity warns that vital local voluntary organisations will be wiped out.

Robinson, whose charity has been described by Cameron as “one of Britain’s most inspiring community organisations”, writes: “Forcing an unsustainable pace on a barrage of uncoordinated cuts that hit the poorest hardest is not an act of God. Why let it be your Katrina?”

The attack on the PM comes as Miliband launches one of his strongest attacks on the coalition’s plans to eliminate the structural deficit over the course of this parliament, in contrast to the Labour proposal to halve it over four years. In his new year message, the Labour leader says: “Here at home, 2011 will be a year of consequences for Britain. Consequences that will be felt by hardworking families across the country. Consequences of the decision taken to reduce the deficit at what I believe to be an irresponsible pace and scale.

“Many people feel powerless in the face of these decisions that will affect their lives, families and communities. The political forces in Whitehall which have made these choices appear forbidding and unheeding.”

There were also warnings from trade unionists of possible strike action. Mark Serwotka, the leader of the Public and Commercial Services Union, told the Times: “Strikes are inevitable. We are looking at the spring. The more of us that stand together against the cuts, the more problems we can create.

“Unless you look like you want a fight, they won’t negotiate. The government has to see we are serious.”

Robinson gives a practical example of the impact of the cuts when he warns that deprived areas face a “double whammy” of increasing unemployment and cuts to services. He says that Community Links, based in east London, faces an uncertain future because of the government’s changes to legal aid and welfare-to-work funding. “Charities like us are surely the bedrock of the big society, and we are wobbling.”

Robinson, who regards himself as a “critical friend” of Cameron, praises his “big-hearted vision” and commitment to big society principles, but warns that without a big injection of cash, Cameron is in danger of losing any credibility he has a compassionate politician.

His comments reflect widespread nervousness and anger in UK charities at the speed and unco-ordinated nature of the cuts. As councils, NHS primary care trusts and Whitehall departments attempt to deliver the massive budget cuts from next March, recent surveys suggest huge numbers of charities face potentially calamitous losses of grants, contracts and infrastructure support. Examples in the last fortnight include:

• About 2,500 charities that provide welfare services in Greater Manchester – around a quarter of all voluntary groups in the area – could go bust because of the cuts, according to estimates by the Greater Manchester Centre for Voluntary Organisation.

• A quarter of charities in the north-east of England which depend at least partially on public funding will go bust in the next 12 months, according to research by Voluntary Organisations Network North East. It says that while demand for services has rocketed, 64% of charities surveyed say they will be forced to close services.

• A third of charities nationally that receive state cash say they will have to reduce the level of services they provide, while over a quarter expect to make staff redundant, a survey by the Charity Finance Directors Group, consultants PWC and the Institute of Fundraising found.

The charity thinktank New Philanthropy Capital recently estimated that the voluntary sector’s income from state sources could shrink by between £3bn and £5bn as a result of the cuts.

Nearly a quarter of all charities get cash from the government, and 13% rely on state funding for more than half of their income.

Robinson calls for an urgent assessment of the cuts. He tells Cameron: “I’m not asking you to renege on policy pledges, but give us more time … Allow us to draw breath or you will kill off the agencies you need to build the society you seek.”

Although the government is preparing to launch a big society bank to lend to charities and social enterprises next spring, Robinson argues it is undercapitalised, and will not solve the immediate funding crisis. “Our most desperate need now is to maintain those services for the most vulnerable which will never be self-sustaining.

“It is these that are least likely to survive and it is the public funding of this provision that marks out our economy as that of a civilised and compassionate society.”

He says the rapid withdrawal of resources as a result of cuts will cause a build-up of unmet social need among the most disadvantaged citizens that will in turn create an expensive long-term problem for the state.

Community Links, which was set up in a back room in East Ham by Robinson, Kevin Jenkins and a group of volunteers, has grown into the UK’s biggest and most admired community organisation, providing a range of welfare services, from housing and debt advice to employment support and children’s centres and youth clubs to more than 30,000 East End residents. Its latest accounts show it has an income of £9m, of which the lion’s share comes from central or local government sources.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

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2011: THE WRITING’S ON THE WALL

Georgie Porgie takes a well earned break from robbing the poor

One week into our first full year of austerity and you can see 2011 unravelling before your eyes…

No sooner had Osborne returned from his ‘we’re all in this together’ £11,000 family skiing jaunt in Klosters – the winter playground of the super-rich – and VAT hits 20%, its highest ever level. Osborne desperately made the case that it’s a progressive tax, based on the simple economics of expenditure: if you earn more money, you buy more expensive shit, so you pay more in tax. Brilliant.
Of course, everyone except Osborne looks at the tax burden in terms of household income not expenditure and in this respect the poorest are hit hardest by the rise in VAT…

No surprise then that VAT is widely regarded as one of the more regressive tools available to the Treasury Tool. Indeed Cameron admitted as much while on a factory visit this week: “If you look at the effect [of VAT] as compared with people’s income then, yes, it is regressive.” So, that’s cleared that one up.

And as prices rise on the high street (and petrol reaches record levels at the pump), so the average wage packet is now set to fall in real terms. With public sector workers facing pay freezes and many in the private sector chasing pay rises that can’t keep up with inflation, so the cost of living will become increasingly prohibitive for all. All, that is, except for the Bankers and the Company Directors . A study by the Incomes Data Services this week showed that for the year to October the total earnings of FTSE 100 directors rose by 55%. We’re all in this together.

Throw in the fact that the fallout from last year’s Emergency Budget and Spending Review is poised to take effect, in terms of job losses and cuts to front line services, and it’s not hard to see 2011 shaping up as a year of socio-economic upheaval and civil unrest. Indeed, there are demonstrations already planned: March 26th will see the TUC join forces with Students for a demonstration against the spending cuts. March for the Alternative: Jobs, Growth, Justice will see both groups marching to a rally in Hyde Park calling for a Robin Hood tax on the banks, the closing of tax loopholes and policies for jobs and green growth.

Happy New Year x

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OSBORNE AND CAMERON COME GOOD TO LET BANKERS OFF THE HOOK AND BACK INTO THE TROUGH

Billions in bonuses for the bankers? Off with their heads...

Unbelievably, if not at all surprisingly, Osborne and Cameron today signalled that they had no intention of limiting the bonuses paid by state-owned banks to state-employed bankers. So, having bailed out the banks to the tune of a mighty £1 trillion (for which we’re now paying the price in the shape of VAT hikes, slashed public services, pay freezes, job losses, library closures etc etc) the banks get to award themselves bonuses as they see fit into the billions of pounds. Sick but true.

As if that wasn’t enough all this has come to pass despite months of rhetoric (read bullshit) to the contrary:

‘It is wholly untenable to have millions of people making sacrifices in their living standards only to see the banks getting away scot-free – the banks should not be under any illusion: this Government cannot stand idly by.’ – NICK CLEGG, 17 NOVEMBER 2010

‘I make no apology for attacking spivs and gamblers who did more harm to the British economy than Bob Crow [the RMT union leader] could achieve in his wildest Trotskyite fantasies, while paying themselves outrageous bonuses underwritten by the taxpayer.’ – VINCE CABLE, 22 SEPTEMBER 2010

‘Every decision the banks make like that [paying large bonuses] makes it more difficult to keep a tax regime that they might favour.’ DAVID CAMERON, 17 DECEMBER 2010

‘We will not allow money to flow unimpeded out of those banks into huge bonuses, if that means money is not flowing out in credit to the small businesses who did nothing to cause this crash and suffered most in it.’ – GEORGE OSBORNE, 4 OCTOBER 2010

Nothing short of pathetic.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/tough-talk-on-bank-bonuses-comes-to-nought-2181107.html

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COULSON QUITS

Job Center Plus?

Andy Coulson, Cameron’s Director of Comunications, has finally resigned in the wake of the News of the Screw’s telephone hacking scandal.

Word is that one of his former reporters was about to dish the dirt on Coulson by showing that he had known all along that members of his newsroom were hacking into phones. That he’s hung on this long shows the arrogance of the man and the Government in general.

Good riddance to bad rubbish.

www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jan/21/andy-coulson-resigns

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NINE SOMERSET LIBRARIES MAY GET REPREIVE. BUT BRUTON STILL ON THE BLACKLIST…

Nine of the twenty Somerset libraries earmarked for closure by In-The-Red-Ken’s True Blue county council could be saved. By reducing opening hours across all libraries in the county it’s hoped that resources can be reallocated to keep some libraries from closure. Not exactly rocket science eh?

It’s still far from pretty though, as six more are still set for closure in the next year including our very own Bruton library. Come on Bruton people – let’s make some noise…

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-somerset-12273163

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DOUBLE DIP RECESSION BACK ON THE CARDS

Double-dip-dip-dip-'em

The UK economy contracted by a shock 0.5% in the last quarter of 2010. This on the back of the beginnings of a recovery delivered in the dying days of the Labour government, but of course claimed as its own by the ConDem coalition. (The UK economy achieved 1.1% growth in Q2, followed by 0.7% in Q3).

Given the time-lag between policy implementation and real-world economic response, it can easily be argued that today’s figures are the first to truly have Osborne’s name written all over them.

And what’s really laughable is that like British Rail, the British Government’s response is to blame the British Weather.

In a statement Georgie Porgie said: “There is no question of changing a fiscal plan that has established international credibility on the back of one very cold month.”

Genius.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-12272717

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SAVE OUR FORESTS

An English forest. Our English forest.

ConDem plans to sell off 280,000 hectares of English forests are still set to go ahead, but the political will is increasingly in the balance. Polls show that 84% of the public are opposed to the sell off and it turns out that nearly all Forestry Commission land in England is located in ConDem constituencies. Even Cameron this week declared that he is open to ideas. So, here’s an idea: join the 450,000 people that have already signed the petition to stop this pointless sell off.
http://www.38degrees.org.uk/page/s/save-our-forests#petition

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PEOPLE’S PETITION FORCES U-TURN ON FORESTRY SELL OFF

Spring comes early for English woodland

Over half a million signed the online petition to save our forests from falling into private hands. So like Major before him, Cameron has now shelved the sell-off.

Environment Secretary, Caroline Spelman said: “I would first like to say that I take full responsibility for the situation that brings me before the House today … I am sorry, we got this one wrong, but we have listened to people’s concerns.”

Happy days.

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