goldfinger
- 09 Jun 2005 12:25
Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).
Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.
cheers GF.
cynic
- 17 Sep 2013 13:01
- 29440 of 81564
ah well fred, i suppose i shouldn't have expected other than "abuse" from you ...... still no suggestion as to what you would now enact as a matter of urgency, but like i said in various formats above .....
mind you, if you weren't so tight-fisted (your own admission), perhaps there would be some more money to go round the economy :-)
Fred1new
- 17 Sep 2013 14:05
- 29441 of 81564
Abuse??????
I was smiling when I wrote the above!
goldfinger
- 17 Sep 2013 14:18
- 29442 of 81564
electionista@electionista7h
UK - YouGov poll on #EU referendum: 39% would vote to remain in the EU, 42% to leave. If terms renegotiated: 50% to stay, 29% to leave............ends
In code this means,..... Tories will become puppets of UKIP before the Europeans and if not massive defections.
As VINCE says coalition will soon be a goner.
Concluding Labour lead will move to double digit figures.
cynic
- 17 Sep 2013 14:18
- 29443 of 81564
that's cos abusing me gives you so much pleasure, especially as a change from abusing yourself :-)
Haystack
- 17 Sep 2013 14:27
- 29444 of 81564
No Vince Cable didn't say that. He replied to a journalist who asked if the coalition might split His just replied that it was possible. Of course, it has been possible all along, but not likely. The coalition will survive until the election.
I hope you noticed the YouGov poll showing the Labour closing to 3. It will soon be level as the economy improves. Inflation was also down today.
Haystack
- 17 Sep 2013 14:31
- 29445 of 81564
The problem with UKIP is that they can offer nothing. It is extremely unlikely that UKIP will get a single MP. The Conservatives are the only party that can offer a referendum on EU membership.
goldfinger
- 17 Sep 2013 14:33
- 29446 of 81564
Some tories missed this yesterday...........
electionista@electionista16 Sep
UK - Populus poll: CON 33%, LAB 40%, LDEM 11%, UKIP 9% https://twitter.com/PopulusPolls/status/379552449889312768 …ends
BUT MORE IMPORTANTLY as Lynton Crosby as acknowledged..........
electionista@electionista
UK: @lordashcroft poll in 40 CON seats w/ smallest maj: CON 29%(30% national) LAB 43%(35%) LDEM 8%(12%) UKIP 11%(13%) ....ends Lib Dems and UKIP migrating to labour. Only just begun aswel.
Im smiling, Im grinning like a Cheshire Cat.
Haystack
- 17 Sep 2013 14:41
- 29447 of 81564
UKIP's support is spread evenly across the UK. The Libs support has always been concentrated in a small number of constituencies. The result will be UKIP gaining no MPs and the Libs retaining most of their seats with a few marginal losses. I have seen the same situation in many UK elections. The Libs do well with a low percentage, but do little better when their percentage increases. UKIP is well below a breakthrough percentage because they have no grassroots heartland as do the other three parties.
MaxK
- 17 Sep 2013 15:11
- 29449 of 81564
The fun would start when/if the tories ditch Cameroon and embrace ukip, or ukip policies.
Nu lab/dims is a vote for more of the same.
goldfinger
- 17 Sep 2013 15:19
- 29450 of 81564
Ditch Camoron and Osbourne and they wouldnt need UKIP imo Max.
goldfinger
- 17 Sep 2013 15:20
- 29451 of 81564
Think Cable has got it right with his proposal to shift tax from income to assets.
cynic
- 17 Sep 2013 15:33
- 29452 of 81564
so is the proposal to hammer shares over and above CGT and perhaps while you still own them?
where would pension funds then be expected to invest?
what about buy-to-let property, which fulfils a social need and on which CGT would in any case also be applicable once sold?
sounds to me like a recipe for taxing the prudent
MaxK
- 17 Sep 2013 15:39
- 29453 of 81564
Will any tax on assets include trust funds?
lol
goldfinger
- 17 Sep 2013 15:40
- 29454 of 81564
Max Leaked Memo went out last night from the Lib/Dems saying that anyone with over £50 grand income annualy was rich and was a tax target.
Cant remember if it was Newsnight or Sky News 'what the papers say'.
skinny
- 17 Sep 2013 15:43
- 29455 of 81564
cynic
- 17 Sep 2013 15:53
- 29456 of 81564
even a bus driver earns £50k!
trust funds
i'm not an accountant or anything similar, but i believe most would warn you off them as the rules tend to change radically every 5/10 years.
however, i believe assets held in pension funds are currently IHT exempt
MaxK
- 17 Sep 2013 15:53
- 29457 of 81564
The dim/libs can propose whatever they want, they are doomed anyway.
Jeremy Clarkson threatens to stand against Nick Clegg
If Ed Miliband was ever worried by Jeremy Clarkson’s threat to stand against him at the next election, he can breathe a sigh of relief.
By Rosa Silverman
8:56AM BST 17 Sep 2013
The Top Gear host has seemingly changed his mind about running for the Labour leader’s Doncaster seat and is instead threatening to take on Nick Clegg.
Mr Clarkson insisted he had “meant Sheffield Hallam” when he said he would stand as an independent candidate in Doncaster, his home town in South Yorkshire.
He told The Sun: "I was a bit drunk when I suggested I would stand as an independent candidate in Doncaster. I meant Sheffield Hallam."
He already has one supporter on side, the London Mayor Boris Johnson, who wrote in the Telegraph this week: “I see that my old chum Jeremy Clarkson is thinking of standing against Ed Miliband in Doncaster.
“Right idea, Jezza – wrong seat. I hope fervently that the great man can be persuaded to stand against Cleggers in Sheffield, where his majority (unlike Ed’s) is very frail indeed.
more:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/motoring/top-gear/10314359/Jeremy-Clarkson-threatens-to-stand-against-Nick-Clegg.html
MaxK
- 17 Sep 2013 16:05
- 29458 of 81564
re the iht thingy.
I read somewhere that Cameroon has a country pile which is in a trust, all the benefits without the tax.
cynic
- 17 Sep 2013 16:20
- 29459 of 81564
perhaps, but if set up many years ago, the rules applying may be different from today ..... anyway, they're hardly "sneaky" or "aggressive" in avoidance terms