Nothing for you if you’re sick, disabled, at school or in care: reaction to the Tory budget
Rishi Sunak’s budget has shown he is a diehard Tory, with concessions for businesses while those of us in need can go whistle.
He has claimed his hands are tied by huge Covid-19-related debts – but we all know that he has already paid them off, by the simple means of creating the money needed to do so.
And his big plans for the future were pathetic: new ‘free ports’ that have always been a bad idea, and an investment bank to replace the one a previous Tory government sold off a few years ago.
We are ruled by intellectual pygmies – and that is being harsh on the pygmies.
I watched the budget speech and commentated on it on Twitter, so I can provide a first-hand account of the announcements – but first, I’d like to go straight to what wasn’t announced, with comments from people who were reading at the time:
They want it privatised… nothing has changed.
— WorkerBee™ ★ (@WorkerbeeXI) March 3, 2021
https://twitter.com/SocialistCider/status/1367113447889059847
The Tories don't want our children educated. They need a poorly educated population to not rock the Tory boat & for the third world economy they're building
— Sue Barnish. Save Our NHS 💙 (@SueBarnish) March 3, 2021
https://twitter.com/kissmibadeye/status/1367111573798608897
Where was the wealth tax on pandemic profiteers? #BudgetSpeech2021 #UKPolitics #PoliticsLive #VoxPolitical
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
So the people who did all the hard work during the Covid-19 crisis will receive no reward for their sacrifices at all – even though many of them sacrificed their lives, contracting the virus and dying because Matt Hancock couldn’t be bothered to supply proper personal protective equipment (PPE) at the right time.
However:
Here's an oddity: funding for people affected by the decades-old thalidomide scandal is being extended to be lifelong. This is very good, too. Isn't it? #BudgetSpeech2021 #UKPolitics #PoliticsLive #VoxPolitical
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
People with disabilities who did not receive the £20 benefit uplift because they are on so-called “legacy” benefits will still receive nothing more, even though the uplift will remain in place until September. After then, it seems people who lost their jobs because of Covid-19 will fall over a so-called “cliff edge”, with the uplift cancelled, forcing them to live on much less.
The Tories have made a major issue of education in the crisis, demanding that our children must go back to school as soon as possible in order to catch up on what they have missed – but Rishi Sunak has provided no extra facilities for this in his budget. It seems it was all talk and – in fact – the plan is to reopen a major vector for transmission of Covid and hope that the increase in infections – and deaths – won’t be noticed amid the falling numbers triggered by the vaccination programme.
And after years of promising to fix problems in the social care system – that became hugely pronounced when 30,000 people died in care homes because of Tory stupidity – Sunak is breaking that promise by offering nothing.
Meanwhile, those who profited hugely from the pandemic – either by being perfectly situated to continue selling goods to people in lockdown or by receiving government Covid-related contracts to provide services at hugely-inflated costs (many of which were not actually provided because the contractors were not qualified to do so) are to get off scot-free because Sunak has backed away from calls to impose a wealth tax.
So, what has he done?
Well, he carped on a lot about borrowing a huge amount of money to pay for Covid-19. That was a stream of lies from start to finish, as I pointed out:
"We have borrowed a record amount." This is a lie. The government CREATED that money – without fear that it would cause inflation as there wasn't any other money going through the economy worth mentioning. #BudgetSpeech2021 #UKPolitics #PoliticsLive #VoxPolitical
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
Total fiscal support: £407 billion. He's emphasising this, which means he's going to pretend we need to pay it back. #BudgetSpeech2021 #UKPolitics #PoliticsLive #VoxPolitical
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
"It's going to be the work of many decades to pay it back," (the amount he borrowed). But he hasn't borrowed anything. Sunak is saddling the UK with heavy repayments of a debt that doesn't exist. #BudgetSpeech2021 #UKPolitics #PoliticsLive #VoxPolitical
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
So we were led to expect tax hikes a-go-go. But this didn’t happen:
No rises in the main taxes. Doesn't that tell you something? #BudgetSpeech2021 #UKPolitics #PoliticsLive #VoxPolitical
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
Tax thresholds are being frozen. To be honest, that might be a good thing after the BBC started flying kites suggesting that people who don't pay Income Tax shouldn't be allowed to vote! #BudgetSpeech2021 #UKPolitics #PoliticsLive #VoxPolitical
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
The refers to income tax, National Insurance and VAT. However – and this is indeed a ‘however’:
Tax thresholds are being frozen. To be honest, that might be a good thing after the BBC started flying kites suggesting that people who don't pay Income Tax shouldn't be allowed to vote! #BudgetSpeech2021 #UKPolitics #PoliticsLive #VoxPolitical
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
This is the amount you earn before you start paying tax, or before you start paying it at a higher rate. Because these thresholds are frozen, it seems more people will pay at a higher rate due to wage inflation, so there will be a de facto increase in taxes. But this depends on people receiving pay rises to cover their costs and Tory policy over the last 11 years has been to discourage that – it’s the reason real take-home pay has fallen by thousands of pounds per year since 2010.
Corporation tax to go up to 25 per cent – but in 2023. He's giving time for businesses to recover before making them pay. And it's still the lowest of the big world economies (for no good reason). No incentives for them to invest in employment though. #BudgetSpeech2021
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
This was the only increase in taxation, and it is only on a tax on profits. So firms that pay corporation tax can avoid it by ensuring that they make no profit from 2023. The best way to do that is to invest in infrastructure and wages (by employing more people, perhaps).
It would be wrong to say that Sunak’s budget does nothing for ordinary people – but it’s all based around existing Covid-related schemes:
Furlough scheme extended to end of September at 80 per cent of normal pay. That's a good start. #BudgetSpeech2021 #UKPolitics #PoliticsLive #VoxPolitical
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
Support for the self-employed to continue. I've never sought this because the system seemed flawed from the start and people were likely to fall victim to those flaws. #BudgetSpeech2021 #UKPolitics #PoliticsLive #VoxPolitical
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
I very much doubt it Mike
— Sue Barnish. Save Our NHS 💙 (@SueBarnish) March 3, 2021
Incentive payments for businesses to take on apprentices is doubling. That's good. Are businesses monitored on this? #BudgetSpeech2021 #UKPolitics #PoliticsLive #VoxPolitical
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
Looking at all these holidays from taxes, support schemes etc – I think either the government is using more of the money it created to pay for Covid, or it will create some more. Otherwise there won't be much flowing through the economy. #BudgetSpeech2021 #PoliticsLive
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
Sunak went on to announce plans for government investment. The main points were:
New £12bn infrastructure bank – there's a big argument between Johnson and Starmer over whether this is a Tory or Labour idea. Tories are in power and get to make it happen. But who will benefit? Covid shows investment goes to Tory cronies over experts. #BudgetSpeech2021
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
Oh hey! It seems this infrastructure bank isn't a new idea. We had one already – but the Tories sold it a few years ago! So this is a U-TURN. #BudgetSpeech2021 #UKPolitics #PoliticsLive #VoxPolitical
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
Oh for crying out loud. Now Sunak is banging on about 'free ports' – which we had already and didn't bring much money in. This may very well be an utter disaster. #BudgetSpeech2021 #UKPolitics #PoliticsLive #VoxPolitical
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
But “free ports” are not new, nor are they likely to help:
Freeports are coming. #Sleazeports is a better description. What we really needed were a host of new tax havens within this country, with a massive risk of new regulatory abuse as well as new customs borders right across the country #Budget2021
— Richard Murphy (@RichardJMurphy) March 3, 2021
With Freeports the centrepiece (!) of the Budget, you'll all want to read our excellent @UKandEU report:https://t.co/Rz8vWJyzj5 pic.twitter.com/IRDbhbpkHZ
— Jonathan Portes (@jdportes) March 3, 2021
Here’s an interesting point:
I wonder how @johnmcdonnellMP feels about the way @RishiSunak has cherry-picked his ideas? It seems @UKLabour of 2015-19 won the political arguments, even though it lost the election. Why else would the Tories be stealing its policies? #BudgetSpeech2021 #UKPolitics #PoliticsLive
— Mike Sivier (@MidWalesMike) March 3, 2021
Policies Rishi Sunak has borrowed from John McDonnell:
– Increasing corporation tax.
– National Infrastructure Bank.
– Treasury HQ in the North.
– Rewriting investment rules to end London bias. https://t.co/CwGYqbiBAs— George Eaton (@georgeeaton) March 3, 2021
Mr McDonnell himself promptly answered it:
Sunak steals my rhetoric but no substance. Working people hit by income tax rise as thresholds frozen, council tax rise, pay freeze for public sector workers, cliff edge cut in Universal Credit in months, nothing for disabled on legacy benefits and over 2 million still excluded.
— John McDonnell MP (@johnmcdonnellMP) March 3, 2021
There was also some muttering about policies that give a nod to the environment but if you blinked, you missed them – and This Writer blinked. They certainly don’t constitute a “Green Industrial Revolution”!
As Tory budgets go, this is not the disaster for working-class people that it could have been – although the main hits have been offset, so it may be a few months or years until we can know the effects for sure.
The lack of any hard taxes or austerity measures suggests a tacit admission that Covid-19 really is bought and paid-for, and there won’t be any real need to pay for it again.
So This Writer is left with a huge sense of anticlimax. I was expecting to be fearful after today; instead I feel let down.
Have YOU donated to my crowdfunding appeal, raising funds to fight false libel claims by TV celebrities who should know better? These court cases cost a lot of money so every penny will help ensure that wealth doesn’t beat justice.
Vox Political needs your help!
If you want to support this site
(but don’t want to give your money to advertisers)
you can make a one-off donation here:
Here are four ways to be sure you’re among the first to know what’s going on.
1) Register with us by clicking on ‘Subscribe’ (in the left margin). You can then receive notifications of every new article that is posted here.
2) Follow VP on Twitter @VoxPolitical
3) Like the Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/VoxPolitical/
Join the Vox Political Facebook page.
4) You could even make Vox Political your homepage at http://voxpoliticalonline.com
And do share with your family and friends – so they don’t miss out!
If you have appreciated this article, don’t forget to share it using the buttons at the bottom of this page. Politics is about everybody – so let’s try to get everybody involved!
Buy Vox Political books so we can continue
fighting for the facts.
The Livingstone Presumption is now available
in either print or eBook format here:
Health Warning: Government! is now available
in either print or eBook format here:
The first collection, Strong Words and Hard Times,
is still available in either print or eBook format here:
There is alwase NOTHING for the sick and disabled in this damn country. We talk about how were 2nd class citizens I honestly don’t think the Tory scum see us as even human. That’s how they justify like this BS with universal credit getting the extra £20 and everyone else on legacy benefits get nothing.
But they squeal you can apply and get universal credit what a sick name BTW! Yes, we could if were prepared to then wait at least 5-6 weeks for any cash and as most of us live with zero savings as they got wiped out years ago just trying to keep some standards of life.
It’s not like we’re talking overseas holidays every couple of months because we’re so well off now is it? FFS it’s heat or eat in reality but there is alwase a excuse for our treatment but alwase boils down to well you want more money you have to work.
Error were disabled….?