Since the Council Tax bills went out, a lot of people have been asking me if I feel vindicated by the much higher Council Tax in Stanley, on account of the new Town Council there. Well, yes and no.
I am all in favour of Parish and Town Councils. I am coming up to my tenth anniversary on one. But I have always said that if there were to be a Stanley Town Council, then it should pay for anything in its area provided by a Parish or Town Council elsewhere, with the appropriate reduction in Council Tax for the rest of us. Or else why bother having it? Why want it?
However, the campaigners for it, an alliance of the main-chance-seeking BNP and the supporters of Kevan Jones MP against Alex Watson, did not see it like that. The latter, in particular, were not interested in doing anything with this new Council. They just wanted it to exist at all, in order to make a point of their own. Well, we can see who won. The taking over of spending in Stanley is obviously happening. And why not? Now all we need is the corresponding tax cut for everywhere else.
More broadly, I am profoundly opposed to the Council Tax, an arbitrary levy on the theoretical value of an asset which in any case one might not own, and which one certainly cannot sell unless one is supposed to go and live up a tree or something. The restoration of the rates in all but name was paid for by a two and a half per cent increase in VAT, which was hardly any way to help the poor. And all the old rates exemptions (students, clergy, &c) were brought back; they remain in place to this day.
But the myths prevail, both that the Council Tax is “universal” (in fact, it specifically replaced a universal tax, the universality of which was presented as the problem with it – astonishingly few people, rather than addresses, are liable for Council Tax), and that the Poll Tax was a massively unfair imposition on the poor (who in reality had it paid for them through the benefits system, or paid far less than they do now, or both).
Now, it is not my concern to defend the Poll Tax. It was in many ways misconceived, and in every imaginable way badly implemented. But if the people who had complained most vociferously about it had been the poor, then it would still be in place. No government since 1979 has cared tuppence about the poor. When Thatcher blamed an underclass for rioting against being dragged into any sort of civic participation, and blamed Major and Heseltine for giving in to that underclass, then she was right. Just not in the way that she thought.
That underclass was not economic, but moral. It was not the poor. It was well-heeled students, dossing graduates, and people like that. That was why there was any surrender. There would have been none to the poor. And those are the people who did, and do, object to any sort of civic participation (extremely poor people either ignore such things or never hear about them in the first place, rather than objecting to them). They did so, and they do so, because of the words and deeds of Margaret Thatcher, with her active scorn for the public realm and her instruction to her followers that their good fortune was their moral superiority, so that others less privileged were manifestly less worthy.
The Poll Tax has become a useful way of explaining the fall of Thatcher without mentioning the EU, just as unilateral nuclear disarmament (advocated by the Gaitskellites and many Tories in the Fifties and Sixties, and not Labour Party policy until two years and a General Election after the Limehouse Declaration) has become a useful way of explaining the creation of the SDP without mentioning that it was a direct intervention in the British electoral process by a President of the European Commission acting as such. Be not deceived, in either case.
It is also worth pointing out the very odd mythic status of the Poll Tax in Scotland, where it was introduced a year early by popular demand, where there was never a riot against it, where the Tories experienced a net gain of one seat in 1992, and where a party which bangs on and on about its alleged iniquity is now determined on replacing the Council Tax with something more than suspiciously like it.
Everyone uses lots of local services, and unless they send their children to private schools (as hardly anyone does), then most people make as much such use as each other, regardless of class or income; indeed, things like street lighting are often significantly better in more affluent areas.
But hardly anyone votes in local elections, because local government is emasculated yet expensive, and notoriously unaccountable. It has not always been any of these things.
We need to restore in full the proper powers of local government, with no tendering out of services in Tory areas to the people who fund the local Tory Party (in Labour areas, the Labour-funding unions rightly make sure that things are kept in house), no ultra vires principle, no surcharging, no capping (local government is in fact significantly less profligate than central government), none of the things that would not be tolerated in any other comparable country, not least including the frequent redrawing of boundaries, abolition of whole tiers, and such like.
We need to bring back the old committee system, which gave individual councillors real clout, and so made it worthwhile to buttonhole them in the street, in the pub, or wherever, or indeed to write to, telephone or email them.
We need a system whereby each of us votes for one candidate and the requisite number (never fewer than two) is elected at the end.
And we need a fair, efficient, comprehensible and accountable system of funding. Until anyone presents me with a better alternative, then I continue to propose an annual flat fee, fixed by the council in question, voluntary, entitling the payer to vote and stand in elections to the council, and payable through the benefits system on behalf of the very poor. Central government would continue to meet much or all of the cost of statutory services to statutory standards. With its fees, the council could do pretty much whatever it liked on top, directly accountable to the people paying the bills.
Why do you keep recycling this codswallop about Scotland and the poll tax. There was no demand for it and the tax was abolished before the 1992 election. It was abolished the year before by Heseltine and Lang.
ReplyDeleteIn an interview at the weekend about the poll tax in Scotland, Malcolm Rifkind this past weekend commented about the lack of riots in Scotland:
"I thought it was a pity the English couldn't be as law-abiding as the Scots."
"Why do you keep recycling this codswallop about Scotland and the poll tax"
ReplyDeletePretty much the consensus view outside really very insular circles these days.
"There was no demand for it"
Further comment on that would be superfluous. But here goes. They BEGGED for it. Tommy Sheridan or the fundamentalist wing of the SNP may not have done, but of whom have they ever been representative?
"It was abolished the year before by Heseltine and Lang"
The Tory loses everywhere else are attributed to it. So must be the net Tory gain in Scotland.
"I thought it was a pity the English couldn't be as law-abiding as the Scots."
And why was that?
"It was abolished the year before by Heseltine and Lang"
ReplyDeleteThe Tory loses everywhere else are attributed to it. So must be the net Tory gain in Scotland."
How can you vote for a party that introduced a tax that then abolished it and call that an endorsement?
"I thought it was a pity the English couldn't be as law-abiding as the Scots."
And why was that?"
Maybe because the Scots do not tend to riot. Compare and contrast (with some exceptions such as Manchester last year) Scottish football fan behaviour with English football fan behaviour.
You are increasingly on your own with this one outside the Nationalist nomenklatura in Scotland.
ReplyDeleteOr even inside it, where they are now busily re-introducing the thing, more or less. Even their only problem with it was Margaret Thatcher personally. As we can now see.
Er
ReplyDeleteWhat are you talking about.
a) Local income tax is based on the ability to pay not on a fixed amount system.
b) The SNP abandoned plans to introduce local income tax during this parliament due to lack of parliamentary support two months ago.
So ergo the council tax in all its glory is still going to be in force in Scotland until well into 2011.
And isn't everyone delighted about that...?
ReplyDeleteRound and round Scottish Labour went screeching "It's the Poll Tax, it's the Poll Tax". "Yes", came the reply from the electorate, "and that's what we like about it".
But popular support is not, of course, the same thing as parliamentary support.