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Politika u UK


BraveMargot

  

99 members have voted

  1. 1. da sam podanik krune, glasao bih za:

    • jednookog skotskog idiota (broon)
      17
    • aristokratskog humanoida (cameron)
      17
    • dosadnog liberala (clegg)
      34
    • patriotski blok (ukip ili bnp)
      31

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Javlja mi se da će Millibandu trebati Her Scottish Eminence da mu da pokojeg ministra, a bogami i većinu.

Mogla bi ga fino istrolati sa Salmondom :D

 

 

 

Laconica Telefonica

Edited by Roger Sanchez
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Pa, ako bude hung parliament, što se lako može desiti, ništa nije isključeno. Čak nije isključena ni velika koalicija.

 

Meni je takođe zanimljivo kako će se dalje razvijati u Škotskoj, evo hrabro predviđam taktičko grupisanje vestminsterskih partija u nekakav unionistički blok. Vrlo lako se može desiti da politička scena u Škotskoj veoma zaliči na onu u Severnoj Irskoj (minus nasilje).

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Videh polove, SNP od 47 do 53%

 

Sa Dzimom Marfijem ce da se usrece, a opet, ako izaberu onu zenu, iako ne znam nista o njoj, pretpostavljam da ce je Her Scottish Eminence samleti.

 

Uz UKIP, i zelene ispred LibDems-a po pulovima, bice zanimljiva izborna trka.

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Au, koja blamaza Osborna. Ovo oko "prepolovljenog placanja" je spin na nivou Psiholabuda.

 

 

George Osborne's claim to have halved the UK's £1.7bn EU budget surcharge has been challenged by his EU counterparts.

The UK will pay two interest-free sums next year totalling £850m, instead of a larger lump sum by 1 December, after a rebate from Brussels due in 2016 appeared to have been brought forward.

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U partiji neko vreme postoji nezadovoljstvo i velik broj članova i funkcionera smatra da se partijsko vođstvo previše udaljilo od glasačke baze. Ovo sa Džonsonom miriše na lagano prestrojavanje u levo, odnosno želju jednog dela članstva da se partija tako pozicionira pred izbore.

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Dzonson i levo?  :lolol:

 

Miliband mladji je barem 20% levlje od Dzonsona.

Nema tu ideologije, nego je u pitanju izborna panika, sasvim sigurno izazvana i alarmantnim stanjem u Skotskoj. Daj "narodskog" Dzonsona umesto pamperovanog Islington Milibanda.

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Labour received £600,000 of advice from PwC to help form tax policy

Transparency International director says the findings present a ‘serious issue about exerting influence at the heart of politics’

James Ball and Harry Davies

The Labour front bench has accepted over £600,000 of research help from the multinational accountancy company PricewaterhouseCoopers to help form policy on tax, business and welfare, analysis by the Guardian reveals.

The support to shadow ministers including Ed Balls, Chuka Umunna and Tristram Hunt comes after the Guardian revealed PwC’s role in establishing potentially favourable tax structures for hundreds of companies around the world – including many British businesses – in Luxembourg.

Such arrangements, though entirely legal, have been criticised by politicians from all three major parties as depriving the exchequer of billions in much-needed revenue. Just last year, Ed Miliband vowed to tackle such schemes, warning businesses that “politicians – not companies – set the rules”.

However, during that same period, shadow chancellor Ed Balls received almost £200,000 of secondments from PwC, while the rest of the shadow treasury received over £170,000 worth of support. According to declarations to parliament, PwC analysts provided support “during the passage of the Finance Bill” – legislation which included key anti-tax avoidance measures.

PwC analysts provided specific support to the shadow treasury team for finance legislation passed last year. The Finance Act 2013 included new general anti-tax avoidance rules and a reduction in corporation tax. Both changes impact the accounting firm’s clients and, in a news alert published by the firm the day the act was enacted, it warned US multinational companies to consider the consequences of the new regulations.

It has been a longstanding, if not greatly publicised, practice in Westminster for opposition parties to receive support from the major accountancy companies in formulating their policies, particularly ahead of general elections.

Last year the influential public accounts committee highlighted examples where employees from big four accountancy firms that are advising government “go back to their firms and advise their clients on how they can use those laws to reduce the amount of tax they pay”.

When asked about the relationship between the opposition frontbench and these firms, Margaret Hodge, the Labour chair of the committee said: “The issues the Guardian raises are very important. Any politician who accepts support in kind or financial support must consider thoroughly all conflicts.”

Since 2010 PwC staff have held positions in the offices of shadow ministers of international development, business and education. A senior associate at the firm, Thomas Graham, is currently on a six month posting worth £75,000 to shadow education secretary Tristram Hunt.

Shadow business secretary Chuka Umunna had research support from PwC between September 2013 and January 2014, and again between June and September this year, with a total value in excess of £60,000.

A spokesperson for the Labour party defended what they characterised as “long standing support to all three major political parties on a non-party basis” from accountancy firms and said seconded staff “do not influence opposition policy decisions.”

“Given the complexity of government decisions in areas such as tax policy – and that opposition parties do not have significant access to civil servants – the support provided by organisations such as these helps ensure that there is better scrutiny of government policy.”

The party did not respond to questions regarding PwC’s role in setting up Luxembourg structures, or any specific measures taken to prevent PwC or its clients benefiting from their staff’s position advising frontbenchers.

Analysis of the Electoral Commission’s register of donations shows Labour has also received over £250,000 worth of staff costs from KPMG, another of the so called “big four” accountancy firms, which between them conduct most of the audit work for the world’s largest corporations.

Unlike the PwC secondments to the front bench, KPMG staff are not included in parliamentary registers, as the support was not provided directly to MPs’ offices, but to party headquarters.

Robert Barrington, the executive director of Transparency International, said the Guardian’s findings highlight “the huge gap between regulations on the revolving door, lobbying and political donations and what actually happens in practice.”

“There is a serious issue about the ability of professional firms to exert influence at the heart of politics, with the danger that policy-making by government and opposition parties is contracted out to well-resourced entities with a significant vested interest.”

Professor Sikka, a professor of accounting at the University of Essex, challenged the dominance of accountancy companies in giving advice.

“Labour argues these firms are providing valuable technical advice,” he said, “but there are plenty of non-commercial others who can provide technical expertise and isn’t it about time they got some expertise of their own?”

The Guardian analysis shows that since the last election – when support was going to the Conservatives, rather than Labour – PwC has come to dominate shadow ministerial offices to a far greater extent than any of its major rivals.

Since entering government, the Liberal Democrats have received over £500,000 worth of staff costs from PwC and KPMG combined. Between 2005 and 2010, the Conservatives received secondments worth £1.5m from the big four accountancy firms as well as large US firms, Boston Consulting and Bain & Company.

The Guardian’s revelations in the Luxembourg Files raise further questions as to Luxembourg’s role in facilitating legal tax avoidance, for which it has already come under criticism from other EU leaders, as well as the role of firms such as PwC in facilitating these favourable deals.

PricewaterhouseCoopers said it had a “clearly stated” policy on political engagement, saying it had “no political affiliation” but rather sought to maintain “constructive relations” with parties “in the interests of the firm and its clients”.

“Our people provide limited and fully disclosed technical support to the main political parties in areas where our expertise and knowledge of the business environment can help them better understand technical matters and the consequences of their policy proposals,” PwC said in a statement. “We do not develop policy on their behalf.”

PwC said last week, in response to the ICIJ/Guardian revelations from Luxembourg, that questions were based on “outdated” and “stolen” information, “the theft of which is in the hands of the relevant authorities”.

KPMG said its secondments to political parties were a “longstanding policy”.

“When staff are seconded, they operate entirely under the direction and management of the relevant party and the secondments are underpinned by strict confidentiality agreements,” the company said. “As such, KPMG receives no benefits or favourable treatment.”

 

http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/nov/12/pricewaterhousecoopers-tax-structures-politics-influence

 

To nije mito, to su besplatni ali vredni saveti. -_-

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  • 2 weeks later...

Koji je problem sa engleskim politicarima i uopste elitom?

 

 

Media ‘gagged over bid to report MP child sex cases’

Security services accused of aiding Westminster paedophilia cover-up

...

 


The security services are facing questions over the cover-up of a Westminster paedophile ring as it emerged that files relating to official requests for media blackouts in the early 1980s were destroyed.

 

Two newspaper executives have told the Observer that their publications were issued with D-notices – warnings not to publish intelligence that might damage national security – when they sought to report on allegations of a powerful group of men engaging in child sex abuse in 1984. One executive said he had been accosted in his office by 15 uniformed and two non-uniformed police over a dossier on Westminster paedophiles passed to him by the former Labour cabinet minister Barbara Castle.

...

 


The other said that his newspaper had received a D-notice when a reporter sought to write about a police investigation into Elm Guest House, in southwest London, where a group of high-profile paedophiles was said to have operated and may have killed a child. Now it has emerged that these claims are impossible to verify or discount because the D-notice archives for that period “are not complete”.

 

“It feels like just another example of key documents from that period going missing. We need to know more about what has happened. The journalists who have said that D-notices were issued are respected people with no reason to lie.”

 

The two journalists, Don Hale, the former editor of the Bury Messenger, and Hilton Tims, news editor of the Surrey Comet between 1980 and 1988, both recall their publications being issued with D-notices around 1984. Tims, a veteran of the Daily Mail and BBC, where he was head of publicity for the launch of colour TV, said that his chief reporter had informed him that a D-notice had been issued to him after he tried to report on a police investigation into events at Elm Guest House, where Smith is said to have been a regular visitor.

 

“The reporter was told that there were a number of high-profile people involved and they were getting boys from a care home in the Richmond area. So I put someone on to it, the chief reporter I think, to make inquiries. It was the following day that we had a D-notice slapped on us; the reporter came over and told me. It was the only time in my career.”

 

Hale, who was awarded an OBE for his successful campaign to overturn the murder conviction of Stephen Downing, a victim of one of the longest-known miscarriages of justice, said he was issued with a D-notice when editor of the Bury Messenger. He had been given a file by Castle, by then an MEP, which had details of a Home Office investigation into allegations made by the Tory MP Geoffrey Dickens of the existence of a Westminster paedophile ring. The files contained the name of 16 MPs said to be involved and another 40 who were supportive of the goals of the Paedophile Information Exchange, which sought to reduce the age of consent.

 

Ovo nije prvi put:

England: Land of Royals, Tea and Horrific Pedophilia Coverups

Edited by Zaz_pi
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  • 2 weeks later...

prema anketama

 

Party                 Lo  Seats  Hi  Swing

Conservatives  235  280  322  -26

Labour             240  281  326   23

Lib Dems           17     27    38  -30

SNP                   25     36    48   30

Plaid Cymru         1      3       5     0

Greens                0      1       2     0

UKIP                    1       3       7    3

Other                   1      1       1     0

 

Plaid Cymru već na 10% u Velsu. :fantom:

Edited by Dr Arslanagić
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  • 4 weeks later...

Fare rises show why British railways should be renationalised

 

Moreover, private rail companies still remain dependent on public subsidies to run their services. But these same companies can then turn over up to an estimated 90% of their operating profits to shareholders. This blatant transfer of public money means that the public purse is effectively propping up a failing rail system for private gain.

 

potpuno neocekivano.  :fantom:

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