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21 July 2010

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Non-dom Lords

TORY DEPUTY chairman Lord Ashcroft became the focus of the non-domiciled 'non-dom' scandal, whereby rich tax exiles influence Britain's legislation.

After more then ten years, he now says he will give up his non-dom status and start paying taxes.

Five rich 'nom-dom' members of the House of Lords have resigned their peerages rather than pay tax. Facing a deadline compelling them to pay UK taxes on earnings abroad if they wish to remain Lords, five of them chose to keep their fabulous wealth intact.

Three are Tories, including Lord Laidlaw who donated £4 million to the Conservatives, ex-treasurer Lord McAlpine, and Lord Bagri, ex-chairman of the London Metal Exchange. But ex-peers can still use their titles! Once a peer, always a peer it seems.

Privatisers' gain

RICHARD MARCHANT, head of local government strategic partnerships at Capita, a FTSE-100 company which works for councils in Harrow, Swindon, Southampton and Sheffield, said recently:

"A major problem for the public sector is, we feel, a significant opportunity for us. Opportunities are at their highest level in two to three years. This year we have probably seen a 100% increase in opportunities [compared with 2009] and I suspect we will see another 50% increase in the following year."

So remember that when politicians tell you cuts are necessary - the net effect is to channel public money into the capacious pockets of privatisers like Capita. Capita profited greatly from the former New Labour government's privatisation agenda. The unions should oppose the privatisation agenda whichever canaille is in power!

Thanks to Derek McMillan

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Finance appeal

The coronavirus crisis has laid bare the class character of society in numerous ways. It is making clear to many that it is the working class that keeps society running, not the CEOs of major corporations.

The results of austerity have been graphically demonstrated as public services strain to cope with the crisis.

The government has now ripped up its 'austerity' mantra and turned to policies that not long ago were denounced as socialist. But after the corona crisis, it will try to make the working class pay for it, by trying to claw back what has been given.

Inevitably, during the crisis we have not been able to sell the Socialist and raise funds in the ways we normally would.

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In The Socialist 21 July 2010:

Warning: NHS under attack


Socialist Party youth and students

Youth and students: organise to fight for a future


Socialist Party Marxist analysis

Class struggles on the rise


Anti-cuts campaign

Stand united, fight the cuts!

Lessons of the cuts

Education workers must teach Tories a lesson

Fast news


Socialist Party workplace news

Union recommends BT pay deal

Stop the courts closures

Wales: No to fire service cuts

Strike action wins at Tube Lines

Swansea Linamar

Cuts blogger!


Socialist Party workplace analysis

PCS: a strategy to stop the cuts

TUC refuses national demo

Unite the struggle to defend pensions


Socialist Party NHS campaign

Con-Dems propose denationalisation of the NHS


Socialist Party

The Socialist Party needs you!

More join the Socialist Party in Yorkshire

Funding the socialist fightback


International socialist news and analysis

Building new workers' parties and the tasks of socialists

Egypt: Thousands protest over brutal police killing


Comment

Harder work, longer hours... All part and parcel?

A testing 'pudding' for councillors

Keep probation services public


 

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Article dated 21 July 2010

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