MP says he never intended to make people colder and poorer – while doing just that
Check out the complete failure of self-understanding displayed by Conservative MP Craig Mackinlay in this clip from the BBC’s Politics Live:
"I didn't become a Conservative to make my constituents colder and poorer" says MP Craig Mackinlay, questioning the price of a net zero carbon target
Complaining about the cost is a "silly way to frame" climate arguments, says Ash Sarkarhttps://t.co/ko0GJRLAGE #PoliticsLive pic.twitter.com/RTzDRsxh4R
— BBC Politics (@BBCPolitics) November 2, 2021
He said he didn’t become a Conservative – I think he means a Tory MP – to make his constituents colder and poorer.
But he should know perfectly well that being a Conservative MP means doing both of those things.
Consider the decision to end the triple lock on pensions for a year because the Covid-19-related fall and rise in earnings had created an anomalously large percentage wage increase that had not been anticipated when the idea had been enshrined in law.
That single change will mean a massive fall in pensioners’ incomes, that has already been mapped out as far as five years into the future:
DAYLIGHT ROBBERY: UK govt admits that suspension of the triple-lock will rob retirees of £5.4bn of pensions in 2022/23, £5,78bn in 2023/24, £6.1bn in 2024/25, £6.5bn in 2025/26 and £6.7bn in 2026/27, totalling £30.5bn over 5yrs (see page 136 of the link).https://t.co/yoDIiMbSsd
— Prem Sikka (@premnsikka) November 2, 2021
An attempt by Baron Sikka to save the triple lock, during a debate in the House of Lords, was foiled when other peers shouted over his call for a vote:
Lords to debate triple-lock soon. A number of votes possible. I ask for full triple-lock. Govt opposing, Labour abstaining. Chances of successful outcome are miniscule. But I will push on. Put down markers, give visibility to injustice, poverty and neglect of retirees.
— Prem Sikka (@premnsikka) November 2, 2021
So we see that by voting to abandon the pensions triple lock (as you can see by checking Hansard here), Mackinlay did indeed – deliberately and knowingly – make his constituents poorer.
Remember that, even though pensions are still being uprated, inflation is higher than it has been in many years; the cost of things like heating will outstrip pensioners’ ability to pay for them.
And that brings me to Mackinlay’s claim about making his constituents colder. If they can’t afford to heat their homes then they will be colder. It’s as simple as that.
And his government’s refusal to accept Insulate Britain’s call for social housing to be properly insulated (rather than left to be leaky, as they are now) mean any heat generated in these dwellings dissipates into the atmosphere, increasing climate change.
And that brings us back to Mackinlay’s argument – that he doesn’t think the investment in fighting climate change is worthwhile.
Either he has not realised that ensuring that people are warm, by spending on insulation, would help to fight climate change – or he’s disingenuously trying to convince you of that.
That’s just a simple chain of logic involving two sets of people. Feel free to work out ways the Tories are impoverishing and freezing other sections of society.
And if you ever meet Craig Mackinlay, feel free to point out the faults in his logic.
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