From TaxPayers' Alliance <[email protected]>
Subject 📰 Weekly Bulletin
Date November 28, 2021 11:29 AM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
View this email in your browser ([link removed])
Battling the Blob

The TaxPayers’ Alliance was taking on all comers this week, with a whole page broadside on the civil service blob in the Daily Mail.

In a blistering comment piece ([link removed]) , research director Duncan Simpson lambasted the Whitehall groupthink that has been holding Britain back. Duncan called out the old image of the civil service as a Rolls Royce - saying it has instead become self-interested, insular, snobbish and under-skilled, with its mandarins addicted to working from home. He writes:

“In almost every public institution, from the mightiest government department to the smallest quango, you will see the stultifying effects of groupthink.

“Whitehall fosters a kind of spineless officialdom that locks civil servants — however clever, honest, high-minded and dutiful they might be — into a system that positively resists change.”
[link removed]
And Duncan was clear about what that change should be. He reiterated our calls for a points-based system of public appointments ([link removed]) , which he explains:

“Would see potential Whitehall recruits, at all levels, prioritised when they could bring new thinking, experience from the private sector or when they have science and technology backgrounds.

“This would do much to shake up the groupthink that characterises so many of our public employees. The system needs to bring in, cultivate and, crucially, reward such pioneering outsiders — not stop them from even getting their foot through the front door.”

The truth is that Whitehall has become too comfortable in it’s own self-reinforcing and unmanageable bubble. As Duncan recounts:

“Talk to any minister and they will regale you with stories about how civil servants simply refuse to follow up on instructions — and there is nothing the minister can do about it.”

But it may be even worse. As we reveal in today’s Mail on Sunday ([link removed]) , it seems officials have been actively helping campaigners seeking to overturn government policy!

Our freedom of information requests have revealed that radical groups like Migrants Organise, who work to promote 'abolishing borders', have been receiving funding from government departments. We found that grants have been given by the Home Office, the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport and the Greater London Authority, totalling almost ÂŁ90,000 since 2018.

[link removed]
Our chief executive John O’Connell was absolutely scathing, telling journalists:

“Taxpayers should not be subsidising campaigners to preach and protest. Some officials seem determined to prop up pressure groups with taxpayers’ cash, despite them campaigning on extremely divisive issues and even blockading public buildings.”

Ministers must get a grip, face down Whitehall groupthink and stop paying out to these trendy pressure groups.

It’s time to clean up the state! ([link removed])
TaxPayers' Alliance in the news
Calling out the cap

Concerns rose again this week after another round of energy companies have collapsed amid the global gas supply crunch.
[link removed]
Discussing the causes behind the current problems, Duncan told GB News’ Tom Harwood "the longer-term effects of the introduction of [the energy price cap] are now being unfortunately felt by millions of customers across the UK."

In case you missed it, here’s our research on council energy companies. ([link removed])
Cowboy car parking operators

The Daily Mail revealed that some of Britain’s largest car parks have advised the Government to increase parking fines to £120 ([link removed]) . To really rub salt into the wounds of motorists everywhere, they claimed these measures would ‘protect the NHS’ and help reduce CO2 emissions.
[link removed]
Speaking to TalkRadio Political Editor Peter Cardwell, our digital campaign manager Joe Ventre rightly warned "there is this worrying trend now where motorists are simply seen as cash cows."

The TaxPayers’ Alliance will continue to stand up for motorists.
Tories’ tall-tales of tax-cuts

After a disappointing budget and no substantial tax cuts to date, hard-pressed families and businesses are crying out for a break from the Conservatives. But clearly, the message isn’t getting through. The Spectator uncovered an email from Conservative Campaign Headquarters (CCHQ) claiming the party is supposedly 'cutting taxes for hardworking people' ([link removed]) . Rubbish!
[link removed]
Our media campaign manager Danielle Boxall hit back: “CCHQ must be living in a different world if that's what they call tax cuts. By the time of the next election, the sustained tax burden is set to be the highest it's been since the country was recovering from the Second World War.”

This is why the TaxPayers’ Alliance won’t let these political parties off the hook, and will continue fighting for taxpayers.
Officers on overtime

In the Sunday Express, we revealed the extortionate cost of overtime in the police. We found that forces have paid out £735 million of taxpayers’ cash in overtime payments ([link removed]) in just two years.
[link removed]
Our chief executive John O’Connell made it clear that “paying staff to work overtime must be a last resort, not only because these payments cost taxpayers a fortune, but also so that authorities can plan ahead to make the best use of their resources.”

Police chiefs cannot afford to depend on these expensive emergency measures and need to look for savings!
Blog of the week
Time to simplify shopping?

With shoppers flocking to online stores to make their Black Friday purchases, Joe Ventre looked at one proposal for levelling the playing field and boosting the high street ([link removed]) .

Joe looks at an idea from Kevin Hollinrake MP to abolish business rates and online sales taxes altogether, while reforming and raising VAT. As Joe writes:

“Despite some welcome cuts to business rates in the Autumn Budget and the pause during the covid pandemic, they remain a crushing burden on the high street. The business rates multiplier has increased by a staggering 10 per cent over the last ten years - even after a revaluation in 2017, which saw a rate reduction. The short term boost we could give bricks and mortar firms by abolishing them completely would be tremendous.”
[link removed]

But Joe is much less convinced by some of the tax raising parts of the proposal, saying:

“Instead of seeking ways to make the measures revenue neutral, why not take the chance to cut the UK’s 73 year high tax burden and abolish business rates entirely with no shift in VAT.” I’m sure many struggling high street shops would agree!

What do you think about Kevin Hollinrake’s proposals? Let me know. (mailto:[email protected])
War on waste
City of Edinburgh Council has recently come under fire after paying out over ÂŁ3 million to consultants for advice about a tram project.

It’s not the first time the council has relied on costly consultants either, with EdinburghLive reporting that the authority spent nearly £2.5 million ([link removed]) on recommendations for various other transport projects.

Of course consultants can add value to projects, but they shouldn’t be relied on when more cost-effective solutions are available. Edinburgh council must ensure it’s using every penny wisely and keeping costs down for council tax payers!

Please send me your examples of wasteful public sector spending (mailto:[email protected])

Harry Fone
Grassroots Campaign Manager

Make a donation to the TaxPayers' Alliance ([link removed])

============================================================
** Twitter ([link removed])
** [link removed] ([link removed])
** YouTube ([link removed])
** Website ([link removed])
Copyright © 2021 The TaxPayers' Alliance, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in to receiving our updates, or we have a legitimate interest to contact you about our work.



TaxPayers' Alliance is a trading name of The TaxPayers' Alliance Limited, a company incorporated in England & Wales under company registration no. 04873888 and whose registered office is at 55 Tufton Street, London SW1P 3QL.



You can read our privacy notice here: [link removed]
Our mailing address is:
The TaxPayers' Alliance
55 Tufton Street
London, London SW1P 3QL
United Kingdom
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can ** update your preferences ([link removed])
or ** unsubscribe from this list ([link removed])
.
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis