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Leicestershire Under The Conservatives


County HallConservative bosses at County Hall are planning huge cuts to local services – despite having £100 million in the bank.

Amongst the cuts planned by the Conservatives includes taking a further £1 million out of street lighting. This is on top of the part-night lighting that has already been imposed in most areas. This means that some areas could face a total blackout in the future. Local people now fear an increase in crime as burglars will be able to roam around unseen.

County Councillor Jeffrey Kaufman says: “While turning off the lights will help to save the planet, if residents install their own lighting, the saving will be negligible. The Liberal Democrats at County Hall have suggested installing low energy lighting, which would pay for itself very quickly.”

The Meals-on-wheels service for vulnerable pensioners also look set to be scrapped.

Also on the Conservatives’ hit-list includes road maintenance and grass verge cutting. People in the past have complained about the poor state of the grass cutting – now it looks set to be even worse as the amount of cuts will be reduced further.

County Councillor Dean Gamble says, “It’s unbelievable that Conservatives are making these swingeing cuts while still having money in the bank. Nobody will forget the £million wasted by the former Conservative Leader on his office costs and chauffeur-driven limo.”

Photo credit: County Hall, Glenfield, Leicester (Colin Hoskins) / CC BY-SA 2.0
 

Nick Clegg drags the Tories “kicking and screaming” in tax talks


HMRC Self AssessmentNick Clegg has lamented the Tories’ inconsistency and hostility towards raising the income tax threshold.

Following his speech at the Royal United Services Institute this morning, Clegg was asked about the progress of talks with the Conservatives about raising the tax threshold in the next Budget.

Nick Clegg has lamented the Tories’ inconsistency and hostility towards raising the income tax threshold.

Following his speech at the Royal United Services Institute this morning, Clegg was asked about the progress of talks with the Conservatives about raising the tax threshold in the next Budget.

Clegg told journalists:

“I’ve been long of the view that if you want to judge a party’s commitment to fairer taxes, then one of the absolute ingredients that you need to look for is consistency over time. I’ve been saying the same thing for well over half a decade now, which is that we need to target all our tax cuts at those on low and middle incomes, by raising the allowance. And it was a Liberal Democrat manifesto promise on the front page of our manifesto which will finally find its way into the pay packets of millions of people next month by raising the allowance to £10,000. I’ve said I want the allowance to go even further up. I want a further worker’s bonus in the next budget so that the allowance is set at £10,500.

“I – how can I – I’ll try and be polite on this. My Coalition partners, by contrast, have been spectacularly inconsistent. Beginning of the Parliament they were first going on about inheritance tax cuts for millionaires. Then they wanted to fiddle around with the upper rate of income tax. Then they wanted to fiddle around with the taxes for married couples. Then they wanted to fiddle around with taxes to give incentives to people to give up their employment rights to take up shares.

“So they’ve got a fair amount of brass neck to now claim that somehow all they ever wanted all along was to see the allowance go up, because that’s not what they said in public, and crucially, it’s not what – actually what they said in private, either. I’ve had to drag the Conservative party, kicking and screaming, in every single budget negotiation. By the way, not least recently when I talked about wanting to see this extra workers’ bonus, there was a very hostile reaction behind closed doors in Whitehall for my Conservative Coalition partners.

“So, look; I’m delighted everybody is now scrambling to – to share authorship of a Liberal Democrat idea, but I would just ask for my coalition partners, indeed, anybody else, just to be consistent in what you say in public and what you say in private, and also consistent in what you say over a long period of time on tax.”

Photo by Images_of_Money’s profile CC-BY-2.0 via Wikimedia Commons
 

Nick v Nigel debates confirmed


PodiumThe Liberal Democrats and UKIP have reached agreement with two national broadcasters, LBC and the BBC, to host hour-long debates between Liberal Democrat Leader and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg and UKIP Leader Nigel Farage.

A radio debate will take place on LBC on Wednesday 26 March from 7-8pm, hosted by Nick Ferrari.

A televised debate will then take place on BBC Two on Wednesday 2 April from 7-8pm, hosted by David Dimbleby.