We need to ensure a permanently higher rate of corporation tax on the banks and the utilities, with the money spent on reimbursing employers’ National Insurance contributions for workers aged 25 or under and 55 or over, and with strict regulation to ensure that no cost is passed on to workers, consumers, communities or the environment.
We need to mutualise the banks and to return the utilities to public ownership, while safeguarding the United Kingdom by opposing any relinquishment, either of central government’s preference share in any corporation that included the Bank of Scotland, or of central government’s controlling interest in the Royal Bank of Scotland.
We need to make the supermarkets fund investment in agriculture and small business, determined in close consultation with the National Farmers’ Union and the Federation of Small Businesses, by means of a windfall tax, to be followed if necessary by a permanently higher flat rate of corporation tax, and in either case accompanied by strict regulation to ensure that the costs were not passed on to suppliers, workers, consumers, communities or the environment.
We need to ban any company from paying any employee more than 10 times what it pays any other employee, with the whole public sector (including MPs and Ministers) functioning as one for this purpose, with its contracted out blue-collar work brought back in-house, with its median wage then pegged permanently and by statute at the median wage in the private sector, and with an absolute statutory ban, across the entire economy, on paying anyone more than the Prime Minister.
We need to require every public limited company to have one non-executive director appointed by the Secretary of State for a fixed term equivalent to that of other directors, and responsible for protecting the interests of workers, small shareholders, consumers, communities and the environment, with the voting rights of a shareholder made legally dependent on having held the shares in question for at least 12 months.
We need a unified system of personal tax allowances, benefits, pensions, student funding and minimum wage legislation, so that no one’s tax-free income falls below half national median earnings.
We need to give every household a base of real property from which to resist both over-mighty commercial interests and an over-mighty State.
And we need to abolish non-domicile tax status.
That would be a start, anyway.
Vince Cable, over to you.
If anyone in the Cabinet is also in touch with Blue Labour, Vince is your man. You never know. But what you undoubtedly do know is that the people close to Ed Miliband are avid readers of yours. One in particular, and probably the only one who really matters.
ReplyDeleteI do wish that you would rejoin the party. Is it just that local thing about the buses? You must realise that what we have in mind for you is a long, long way from all of that. Come back. Your party needs you, through which your country needs you. I suspect you would not be surprised to learn who else also thinks that.
A lot of sense talked here, stick to domestic policy rather than the middle east.
ReplyDeletePerish the thought. I have a lot of readers in the Middle East.
ReplyDeleteIndeed you have, Mr Lindsay. You are the only British commentator with any knowledge or understanding of Arab and Iranian Christianity. Your voice is absolutely vital.
ReplyDeleteSorry to go off topic, but cannot allow Anon @22:05 to get away with that one in the interest of the Neocon-Islamist Axis that you are also pre-eminent in exposing.
@22:05, we should be so lucky. Lindsay is truly a "glittering ornament" of Camel Corps Central, the Arabs' and Iranians' academic base in Britain, awash with their cash, controlling preferment through involvement in a "Palestinian Education Trust" with a list of patrons to make any Durham eyes water, and just invented a Chair for the man forced to leave the LSE because he had "supervised" Saif al-Islam Gaddafi's "PhD".
ReplyDeletePlus embittered by being forced out of the Telegraph for calling Conservative Friends of Israel "treasonable". An organisation that 80% of Tory MPs including the Prime Minister are members of. But accusing them all of treason for wanting friendship with Israel is acceptable behaviour at a Durham high table. Unremarkable and more or less compulsory, in fact.
On topic, please. Thank you, Beit Maroun. But on topic, please.
ReplyDelete