Windfall Tax Scottish Oil

Windfall Tax Scottish Oil

Mr Osborne announced a £2 billion windfall tax, to be levied against oil & gas companies operating in the North Sea, (an increase of about 12%). The policy, which placed at risk thousands of jobs and billions of pounds of investment in the North of Scotland, was first brought forward, in committee by Scottish MP and Chief Treasury Secretary Danny Alexander. Many of Mr Alexander’s, Scottish Liberal Democratic MPs broke with protocol and voiced opposition to it. Ignoring protestation’s, at a formal business dinner, at which he was the invited speaker, attended by a large number of eminent London based business leaders, Mr Alexander triuphantly claimed ownership of the levy stating: “It was my idea, which I first proposed a few months ago.”

Comments Subsequently Attributed to a Number of Mr Alexander’s Scottish Colleagues;

1. Liberal Democrat MP, (Gordon) Malcom Bruce; This extra tax is breaking pledges made to the industry by Mr Osborne and the Liberal Democratic leader, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg. Additionally, “Mr Alexander is economically illiterate for coming up with a clearly populist move which could kill off investment in the North Sea”.

2. Liberal Democrat MP, (West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine) Sir Robert Smith; This tax raid will be “economically disastrous”.

3. Liberal Democrat MP, (Caithness and Sutherland) John Thurso raised concerns at an energy Select Committee, claiming; “Investment in new oilfields to the West of Shetland is now at risk”.

The populace of Aberdeen and the North of Scotland would be well advised to note the views of Mr Alexander’s colleagues who think his grasp of economics borders on the illiterate. The only way to protect the Scottish oil & gas industry is to vote, “yes” to independence.

Northern Rock The Building Society Gone Bad

Northern Rock The Building Society Gone Bad

A belated intervention, (authorised by the Chancellor of the Exchequer)by the Bank of England in support of Northern Rock failed to prevent a run on the bank. This has led to an embarrassing U-turn in policy by the Governor.

The handling of the liquidity crisis at Northern Rock by the UK authorities became a major embarrassment for the government and Gordon Brown in particular. The new Prime Minister had always stressed his achievements as Chancellor of the Exchequer during the period 1997 to 2007, while he was waiting in the wings for Tony Blair to retire. Yet within several days, his reputation for prudent economic management was undermined.

The problems at Northern Rock, and other financial institutions, did not appear overnight. The crisis in the USA sub-prime loans market was well documented, as was the fact that this dodgy debt had been repackaged and sold on to UK and EU banks. Major banks in Germany as well as Barclays Bank in the UK are rumoured to have had significant exposure to these dubious assets.

A Month after Northern Rock made shocking headlines around the world, the full story of Britain’s first bank run in 140 years was yet to be told. People were little the wiser, after Adam Applegarth, the mortgage bank’s chief executive, and Matt Ridley, its chairman, tried to convince a sceptical parliamentary committee investigating the fiasco that they had been struck down by a bolt from the blue. The business model of Britain’s fastest-growing mortgage bank — which funded its loan book mainly from the wholesale markets, rather than from retail deposits — had been prudence itself, they explained, derailed only by sloppy lending in America that caused those markets to seize up in August.

But their Northern Rock is now a busted flush. None of the three groups who talk of buying it at a knock-down price — a consortium led by Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Group and two private – equity outfits, Cerberus and J.C. Flowers — wants to keep its name. The bank, kept afloat at present by £13 billion ($26 billion) of public money, does not rule out going back to the Bank of England for more. And just as Northern Rock’s bosses deny imprudence, so the central bank’s governor, the head of the Financial Services Authority and the Chancellor of the Exchequer stoutly maintain that they were not responsible for the mess either.

Yet the story needs to be pieced together, for the debacle has had three important and unpleasant consequences. A financial institution that underpinned for years the economy and self-image of one of England’s poorest regions, the north-east, has been destroyed. The reputation of a broadly good central-bank governor has been tarnished. And an admired regulatory system that helped to make London the world’s biggest international financial centre has fallen into disrepute. What went wrong? What signals were missed? And what lessons should bankers and regulators both learn?

The year that Northern Rock fell from grace could hardly have started more promisingly. In January the bank announced record pre-tax profits of £627m for 2006, 27% higher than the previous year’s. This marked a decade of success since its conversion in 1997 from a building society — a residential mortgage lender owned by its savers and borrowers — into a bank quoted on the stockmarket. Year after year its assets had grown by a fifth, even though it had few branches — 128 when it converted and 76 this year. A small local lender had become Britain’s fifth-biggest mortgage provider, ambitious to become its third-biggest before long.

The trick Northern Rock pulled off was to rely on wholesale markets rather than on retail deposits to finance most of its lending. More than any other big British lender, it relied on “securitising” its mortgages. The bank bundled its loans together and packaged them into bonds that it sold to investors around the world. In January 2007 it raised £6.1 billion that way; a second securitisation in May brought the first-half total to £10.7 billion and made Northern Rock the top securitiser among British banks (see chart 1). With money swirling around the world’s capital markets, securitisation worked a treat. By tapping global wholesale markets, Northern Rock was able to raise money more cheaply than its home-bound rivals, price its mortgage offers more keenly and carry on its hectic expansion.

More securitisations were planned for later in the year. Northern Rock needed the money because it was growing even faster than before. In the first six months of 2007 its lending was 31% up on the same period in 2006; net of redemptions, lending soared by 47%. As HBOS, Britain’s biggest mortgage lender, put on the brakes, Northern Rock’s share of the net new-lending market jumped to 19%, an extraordinarily high share for a bank that had had just 7% of outstanding loans at the end of 2006.

Yet the bank’s share price had been sliding. As the Bank of England pushed interest rates up sharply, the City was starting to worry about the prospects for mortgage lenders. Northern Rock appeared to have a good loan book: at the end of June, repayment arrears were just half the industry average (though mortgages seldom curdle immediately, and a third of fast-growing Northern Rock’s were less than two years old). The bank suffered along with other mortgage lenders as financial folk pondered how far the fallout from America’s excessive sub-prime (ie, high-risk) lending might spread.

Worries intensified in June when Northern Rock trimmed the year’s expected profits growth from 17% to 15%. At a time when monetary policy was tightening faster than expected, the bank had agreed to issue a tranche of mortgages at interest rates that were lower than those it eventually had to pay in the markets to finance them. The episode highlighted the fact that its reliance on wholesale funding made it vulnerable.

Northern Rock’s profit warning led to a further slip in its share price. But banks do not answer to their shareholders alone. They are subject to special supervision, because a problem at one bank can undermine confidence in the whole system and do immense economic damage. The Bank of England had long been in charge of overseeing banks, and its record, though not flawless, was widely reckoned a good one. In 1997, however, when Gordon Brown, then chancellor of the exchequer, freed the central bank to set interest rates, he decided to hand bank supervision to a new Financial Services Authority. The FSA was to look after individual banks while the Bank of England remained responsible for the stability of the financial system.

A falling share price, an explosive increase in market share and a profit warning: three reasons, one might think, for a newish banking supervisor to start sweating about one of its charges. Yet the FSA remained cool. Indeed, it chilled out even more on June 29th, giving Northern Rock a stamp of approval that let the mortgage lender, under new international banking rules, set aside less capital against its loans. Northern Rock promptly announced an increased dividend (even though it expected profits to fall). At around the same time, bizarrely, the FSA was urging the lender to toughen its “stress tests”.

The FSA’s apparent insouciance was even stranger given Northern Rock’s specific history. In 2004, after short-term interest rates shot up, the bank was caught off-guard, and profits suffered. It promised investors that half its loans would be matched by retail deposits—a pledge it promptly ignored once rates moderated. By the time it hit trouble this year, just under a quarter of Northern Rock’s funding came from retail customers.

But there were good reasons to doubt the wisdom of relying so heavily on the capital markets. Though retail deposits cost a lot to acquire, many banks still prefer them, for they are generally a more steadfast source of finance than wholesale funding. A former chief risk officer at one of Britain’s biggest banks says that Northern Rock’s operating model was very risky: “To say that nobody could have envisaged what happened doesn’t wash at all.”

Yet both Northern Rock and the FSA assert that the event that felled the bank — the complete failure of the various market-based funding sources upon which it had become reliant — could not have been foreseen. Mr Applegarth has stressed the speed, duration and global nature of the liquidity freeze that started on August 9th. “I didn’t see this coming, I have yet to find someone who did,” he said. The FSA has played a similar card: in parliamentary testimony on October 9th, Sir Callum McCarthy, the regulator’s chairman, insisted that the seizing-up of the money markets was unprecedented.

So neither the bank nor the FSA had incorporated such a scenario into stress tests of the bank’s resilience. Indeed, the simulations carried out jointly by the FSA, the Bank of England and the Treasury to gauge the financial system’s ability to withstand potential upsets (one of which, ironically, posited problems at Northern Rock) failed to involve banks themselves as players, and thus were unable to predict their likely behaviour in a crisis of this sort.

The timing of the liquidity freeze was, it is true, disastrous for Northern Rock, which was low on cash because its last securitisation had been in May and it was planning another in September. But even if the timing had been better, its strategy for dealing with a liquidity crisis proved to be little more than wishful thinking.

The bank had sought to diversify its funding sources around the world; but markets dried up globally. It had hoped for a flight to a quality loan book such as its own if investors became alarmed about sub-prime mortgages; instead, investors shunned anything to do with mortgages. Unlike Countrywide, an American mortgage lender that also got into trouble, Northern Rock had nailed down little money — only $3 billion, it emerged this week—in committed credit lines from banks that it could call upon in an emergency. And it had failed to take steps to increase its access to central-bank liquidity in a crunch. About 150 banks, some of them British, were able to tap the ECB through their branches in the euro zone. Northern Rock could perhaps have put mechanisms in place to use its outlet in Ireland. But the paperwork would have taken a few months; and by the time the bank thought of it, the moment had gone.

If Northern Rock’s excuses fail to pass muster, so do those of the FSA. Hector Sants, who took over the job of chief executive in July, admitted on October 9th that the regulator should have been more forceful in its dealings with the bank, and accepted that stress tests had not been “extreme” enough. But both he and Sir Callum continued to depict the event as an “unknown unknown”.

How not to handle a crisis. On Monday August 13th, two working days after the markets dried up, Northern Rock told the FSA it was in trouble. The message was passed on to the Bank of England and the Treasury the next day. All three institutions were supposed to deal with crises under a “memorandum of understanding” setting out their respective roles. The Treasury, which chaired the committee, was involved in these “tripartite” arrangements because helping a bank often requires a bail-out from the taxpayer.

By August 16th the possibility that the Bank of England would have to act as a “lender of last resort” to Northern Rock had already been raised. All three agreed, however, that it would be better for a stronger bank to take over the mortgage lender. Northern Rock put itself up for sale and feelers were put out in all directions. Lloyds TSB, a British bank, emerged as a serious contender, but the deal foundered on September 10th. Lloyds was prepared to step into the breach only if it was given a loan of up to £30 billion by the Bank of England; but the tripartite authorities agreed it would be “inappropriate to help finance a bid by one bank for another”.

Of the three, the Bank of England had taken the hardest line since the crisis began. Whereas the world’s two main central banks — America’s Fed and the ECB— sought at once to relieve the liquidity drought by injecting extra cash into the money markets and accepting a wider range of collateral than usual, the Bank of England did neither until September. It wanted to send a message that if bankers took excessive risks they could not look to the central bank to rescue them from the consequences. So the central bank resisted pleas — not just from private banks but also from the FSA—to copy its American and European counterparts.

A telling indication of Mr King’s priorities emerged last year, when a new version of the memorandum of understanding came out. In the original agreement, dating from October 1997, the bank was “responsible for the overall stability of the financial system”. In the new version, however, it merely “contributes to the maintenance of the stability of the financial system as a whole”.

This anemic wording contrasts with the Fed’s “key role in the prevention and mitigation of financial crises”, which Ben Bernanke, its chairman, emphasised in a speech in January. Some charge Mr King with neglecting the subject since becoming governor in 2003. An executive director for financial stability respected for his close City contacts was replaced in that role by one without them. The bank’s widely followed, half – yearly Financial Stability Report was halved in size and published erratically. Others with City connections have left the bank, reducing its “eyes and ears” in the market.

Once the deal with Lloyds TSB fell through, only the Bank of England could rescue the beleaguered mortgage lender. Mr King wanted to do this behind the scenes, as happened as recently as the early 1990s. His desire for a covert operation was, he said, thwarted by a European – inspired law, the Market Abuse Directive, which came into force in Britain in 2005.

Charlie McCreevy, the Brussels commissioner responsible for the directive, denied at once that it prevented a secret intervention in an emergency. But even if the gold – plated British version of it did make things harder, the bank should not have taken so long to figure that out. “You don’t wait for the cinema to catch fire before you check out whether the fire precautions are going to work,” says Richard Lambert, head of the Confederation of British Industry and a former member of the MPC.

On September 13th Alistair Darling, the chancellor of the exchequer, had little choice but to agree that the central bank should provide emergency funding to Northern Rock. News of the impending rescue leaked out prematurely, and the government scrabbled to put out a public statement on September 14th.

To financial aficionados, the fact that Britain’s central bank now stood squarely behind Northern Rock should have brought relief. But to ordinary people it sounded alarming, especially in its leaked version. Britain’s flawed deposit – insurance scheme guaranteed fully only the first £2,000 of deposits, and then 90% of only the next £33,000 (though it has since been made more generous). Alerted to trouble, depositors raced to get their cash out before everyone else did. The bank run was stopped only on September 17th, when Mr Darling issued an unprecedented guarantee for all existing deposits at Northern Rock. Bafflingly, he extended this on October 9th to all new retail deposits as well.

No one emerges well from this tale. Northern Rock pushed an aggressive business model to the limit, crossing its fingers and hoping that liquidity would always be there. The FSA failed to spot the danger. The Bank of England worried too much about forgiving over-risky behaviour and too little about shoring up a stressed financial system. Mr Darling failed to reassure depositors when he eventually got round to it, then arguably reassured them too much when it no longer mattered.

But the biggest failure was the “tripartite” system, and its unreadiness in a crisis. Undoing the reform of 1997 that divested the central bank of supervision would be hugely disruptive; and other countries have divided central banks from banking supervision without seeing financial institutions go to the wall. But if Britain is to learn one lesson from the Northern Rock saga, it may be that a single outfit needs to be in overall charge of financial stability, the bedrock on which economies are built. Only a central bank can provide the liquidity needed in times of crisis. So whatever its failings this time, it is the Bank of England that should take responsibility and call the shots.

The Labour Party 1997-2010

The Labour Party 1997-2010

Witnessing Labour Party infighting over the direction to take, (left or right) it is opportune to look back to 1997 and Tony Blair. Tony was a considerable admirer of Margaret Thatcher. He certainly admired her absolute authority in the control of her Cabinet. That was a great pity, because what was needed in dealing with problems was a wealth of discussion and argument, whereas, on the contrary, cabinet meetings lasted around 30 minutes, having been convened to rubber stamp policies which had been decided beforehand.

This was unhealthy government since it was simply not possible for one person, even with the assistance of a few, “Nodding Dogs”, to solve all the problems single – handedly. It needed a collective effort. Under Tony Blair & then Gordon Brown, “competition” became the mantra. Their belief being that this would ensure excellence in performance by entrepreneurs and by result the Nation would benefit. In the beginning unquestioned perception was that the approach was a success, but in time, “the crows came home to roost” companies simply did not continue, “competing”. instead they instigated mergers, consolidating competing processes. Unfettered by effective Bank of England monitoring & control, Banks increased in size, ” in time taking the shape of giant squids with tentacles in many countries worldwide becoming fully international, by result, moving their activities beyond the control of the UK government.

Cash availability within these uncontrolled, “Global” markets was finite and increasing scarcity, brought about an increase in the use of credit, slowing down growth. The resultant sluggish market performance and ever increasing acquisition, by British Banks, of freshly packaged USA, “dodgy” sub-prime loans should have alerted the Bank of England that there were problems in the banking sector. It didn’t. So. There it is. It is appropriate to place fault firmly with Mr Blair & Mr Brown and of course Ally Darling, who started the run on the banks in the first place by dithering over support for, “Northern Rock” instead of allowing the Bank of England to get on with it’s remit.

1997: Gordon Brown Sets Bank of England free From Control

The Chancellor, Gordon Brown, released the Bank of England independence from political control. His surprise announcement – coming only four days after Labour’s landslide election win – is being described as the most radical shake-up in the bank’s 300-year history. Mr Brown has also announced a loan rate rise of a quarter-point to 6.25%. The increase was decided after Mr Brown’s first and last meeting with the Governor of the Bank of England, Eddie George.
The chancellor went straight from that meeting to a news conference at which he unveiled his plans to give the bank freedom to control monetary policy. He said: “I want to set in place a long term framework for economic prosperity… I want to break from the boom bust economics of previous years.”

Labour MPs applauded the chancellor’s announcement – but the Conservatives were divided, with former chancellor Norman Lamont congratulating Mr Brown while former home secretary Michael Howard deplored it. Business chiefs broadly welcomed Labour’s decision to give the bank its independence. Under the new regime, a monetary policy committee was set up to decide interest rates with a view to achieving an initial inflation target of 2.5% or less. The committee was made up of the Governor, his deputy, a new second deputy, two bank executive directors and four experts, appointed from outside the bank. It met monthly and each member had one vote. Previously, the Chancellor held a monthly meeting with the governor at which interest rates were agreed. It means the bank was now free to decide monetary policy without taking the short-term wishes of politicians into account.

Equally guilty was the new system put in place by Mr Brown. Fragmented among three institutions, and manned by people who were either unaware of what was going on or unable to communicate what they knew to one another, it failed its first big test. Sir John Gieve, the Bank of England’s deputy governor in charge of financial stability and also a non-executive director of the FSA, gave evidence to the parliamentary committee on September 20th along with Mervyn King, his boss at the central bank. “I was concerned in a general way about the growth of wholesale lending,” he said. “Did I know the details of Northern Rock’s position before this blew up? No, I did not.” This institutional deafness was to become an increasing problem as the government sought solutions to the bank’s worsening plight.

The problems at Northern Rock, and other financial institutions, did not appear overnight. The crisis in the USA sub-prime loans market was well documented, as was the fact that this dodgy debt had been repackaged and sold on to UK and EU banks. Major banks in Germany as well as Barclays Bank in the UK are rumoured to have significant exposure to these dubious assets.

Northern Rock’s profit warning led to a further slip in its share price. But banks do not answer to their shareholders alone. They are subject to special supervision, because a problem at one bank can undermine confidence in the whole system and do immense economic damage. The Bank of England had long been in charge of overseeing banks, and its record, though not flawless, was widely reckoned a good one. In 1997, however, when Gordon Brown, then chancellor of the exchequer, freed the central bank to set interest rates, he decided to hand bank supervision to a new Financial Services Authority. The FSA was to look after individual banks while the Bank of England remained responsible for the stability of the financial system.

It would seem that the Bank of England is independent of the UK government when it is pursuing government policy. However, if it pursues policies which it deems in the interests of the UK economy, yet are contrary to short term political expediency, then this independence is an illusion. In October 1997, the bank was “responsible for the overall stability of the financial system”. In the new version, however, it merely “contributes to the maintenance of the stability of the financial system as a whole”.

Mr King’s critics say that in his fixation on future crises he failed to deal with the one at hand. Mr Santes pointed out that logically the only replacement for private-sector liquidity, once it dries up, is central-bank liquidity. According to DeAnne Julius, a former member of the Bank of England’s monetary-policy committee, “The first duty of a central bank is to retain confidence in the banking system, especially at a time of illiquidity, and our central bank didn’t do that.”

As long as five years ago Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa, now Italy’s finance minister but then on the board of the European Central Bank (ECB), pointed out that the liquidity of financial markets had grown in importance. He gave a prescient warning: “The deepening of the markets has improved the ability of banks to access funds in normal times, but liquidity may be more prone to dry up when it is most needed.” In 2006 Moody’s, a rating agency, cautioned that some British banks were exposed to the risk of disruption in wholesale markets because they were increasing their loans faster than they could gather the deposits to back them. More recently, the Bank of England itself highlighted in April the danger of liquidity risk in its Financial Stability Report.

He is Back Again – Alistair Darling – The Bearded Trot Complicit in the Bankruptcy of Scotland Seeks to Lord it Over Scotland Yet Again

 

 

Marxist Luvvie

 

Darling: A Political Unprincipled Opportunist

Twenty-five years ago, the man they knew as a bushy-bearded ringleader of a loony left council, was a supporter of the International Marxist Group, whose key objectives included the nationalisation of the British banking system as a first step towards full-blown Communism.

 

Back to the Eighties: Alistair Darling (centre) with supporters after the 1982 Edinburgh regional elections
Loony left – Edinburgh District Council

 

 

Ah ! those days of youthful folly so embarrassing to senior politicians and, usually, best left undisturbed.

After all, surely a politician, no less than anyone else, is entitled to grow out of their immature ravings?

True enough, but at the peak of his madcap Leftie days, Darling was hardly a youth  –  he was a qualified solicitor approaching his mid-30s and was just being admitted to the Scottish bar.

 

Where's the beard gone: Alistair Darling as he is today

 

Darling was a classic family rebel, a product of Scotland’s oldest boarding school, Loretto (other old boys include the broadcaster Andrew Marr and former Tory Chancellor Norman Lamont), whose family were staunch Conservatives.

His Tory-voting father was a civil engineer and his great-uncle Sir William Darling was the MP for Edinburgh South for 12 years after World War II.

In 1982, Alistair, aged 29, was elected as a Labour councillor to Lothian Regional Council in Edinburgh, and escalated a war against capitalism that had begun with his feverish distribution of far-Left literature while reading law at Aberdeen University.

It was when the politically ambitious Darling became a councillor that Bob Thompson, another former chairman of the Scottish Labour Party, met him.

“He was a Trotskyist and played the part with his backside sticking out of his jeans and sandals on bare feet, long hair and a beard,” says Thompson, a lifelong trades unionist.

Thus dressed for battle, Darling and his Labour colleagues dug in to take on the biggest capitalist of all  –  Margaret Thatcher.

These were the Loony Leftism years of ‘Red Ken’ Livingstone in London and Derek Hatton, of Militant Tendency fame, in Liverpool.

According to party figures of the time, left-wing councils across the country ‘liaised’ on a range of issues.

In Edinburgh, Darling was a ringleader of the revolt against the Thatcher government’s spending cuts.

Then, as now, he was no firebrand.

He had little charisma and was no orator. But he was a clever fixer, a plotter, a manipulator rather than a motivator.

He was in the thick of it and certainly caught the eye of Labour’s then leader Neil Kinnock, who visited the council when it was threatening to defy the Tory government’s spending cuts by refusing to set a local rate.

Kinnock’s visit helped ‘calm down’ the loonies.

But as he was leaving Scotland he remarked about Darling:

“That bearded trot must never become an MP.”

 

No longer a Trotskyist: Alistair Darling during Prime Minister's Questions in the House of Commons

reformed Trotskyist Darling at Prime Minister’s Questions in Westminster
The irony is that Darling’s public school upbringing was anything but an advantage among his Labour colleagues.
Bob Thompson, former chairman of the labour party in Scotland assessed Darling:
“His posh background came out in his voice and mannerisms, but it was also apparent in his naivete about working people.”
“He lived in cloud cuckoo land, always talking about the kind of industrial action people should be taking.”
“He didn’t seem to realise that people had to pay their rent and buy food, and that a week without a wage would put them in Queer Street.”
‘He saw himself as the working class’s champion and simply didn’t understand that for trades unions, negotiation is the art of compromise.”
“He was always looking for revolution rather than compromise, always wanting us to push harder and be much more radical.”
“He didn’t really understand the issues facing working people nor the fact that they weren’t always ready to man the barricades.”

According to George Galloway, another contemporary who became a Labour MP Glasgow before founding the Left-wing party Respect, it was Darling who came up with the idea of opposing the government’s spending cuts by refusing to set a rate or even agree a budget, thus plunging the local authority into illegality.

It was left to him and Bill Speirs to “talk Alistair Darling down from the ledge of this kamikaze strategy.”

But Darling’s ideology was far deeper than merely battling with Margaret Thatcher.

It covered a range of other areas of life.  A contemporary recalls he also had an ideological hatred of cars that cost Edinburgh millions of pounds’ (an ideology not apparent as he steps into his ministerial limousine).

As convener of his council’s transport committee, Darling is said to have blocked plans to create car-parking spaces in Edinburgh, as he wanted people to leave their vehicles at home.

In the event, all that happened was more traffic congestion.

Dogmatic in his beliefs, his most controversial act as Edinburgh City Council Transport Convener was to scrap a four-lane western approach road to the Scottish capital after contracts had been signed by the previous Tory administration.

A decision  that cost ratepayers £2 million in cancellation fees.

 

Labour conference: Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling, right, gestures to the audience to stop applauding him as Gordon Brown looks on
soaking up the applause of the Labour Party conference in England

 

 

Darling was aware that among many of his colleagues there was irritation and even contempt for his “posh” public school background.

Some thought he was a “public schoolboy just playing at it”.

But others believe it was his privileged background that drove him to be so politically extreme.

He was so eager to be seen as a hard socialist that the joke was that he would carry a blank banner around with him so he could fill in the cause as required.

Naturally, he was in favour of scrapping missiles.

This deep sensitivity about his image did not diminish over the years during his political rise in which he was one of only three ministers to serve for the entire period since New Labour swept to power in 1997  –  the others being Gordon Brown and Jack Straw.

 

 

he never entered the year’s he boarded at Loretto in his Who’s Who entry.

So was Darling a genuine member of the Loony Left or was he merely playing a role in order to gain Left- wing support and political lift-off?

Former Scottish Labour Party boss Bob Thompson again:

“He actually believed in what he was doing. Having come from public school and university, he saw this as the proper way to help the working man. He was just too naive to realise it was the wrong way.”

 

 

So, what happened to Alistair the sandal-wearing, car-hating Loony Leftie, just when did he undergo his political metamorphosis emerging as the bland, smooth, fastidiously attired government minister, a man who could easily be mistaken for a bank manager?

Contemporaries are agreed it was in 1985 when he was 32 and, while still serving on the council, was making his move for a parliamentary seat.

That year, a quietly dressed Darling, beard neatly trimmed, so impressed the selection committee at Edinburgh Central, that he was chosen from 48 applicants.

Two years later, he defeated the sitting Tory MP.

Bob Thompson again:

“He is an opportunist who, when he got into Parliament, refrained from saying anything particularly radical and went along with the party agenda.”

 

 

 

Some time later, at a Burns Night supper in his constituency, Darling introduced the gathering to a rising star of the party  –  Tony Blair, the Shadow Employment Secretary.  Bob Thompson again:

“They were obviously close. What I remember most is that Blair stood and spoke for 20 minutes without mentioning Burns once.”

“So far as I was concerned, Alistair Darling had gone from Trotskyist to New Labour overnight.”

 

 

After the 1997 New Labour triumph, Darling shaved off his beard and presented himself, in accordance with party instructions, as a clean-shaven man of the people. Bob Thompson again:

“Alistair’s problem is that he takes his opinion from whoever’s his boss.”

“In the early Eighties, it was John Mulvey (his Lothian council boss), then it was Tony Blair and then it was Gordon Brown. He’s a man with no opinion of his own.”

 

 

 

 

Other reading:

https://caltonjock.com/2015/05/05/blair-brown-balls-miliband-darling-the-real-story-of-the-new-labour-finance-team-that-brought-the-uk-to-its-knees/

https://caltonjock.com/2015/03/08/blair-brown-darling-were-warned-in-2004-that-the-british-economy-was-about-to-go-bust-they-did-nothing-to-avert-the-crisis-then-had-the-audacity-to-blame-the-royal-bank-of-scotland/

https://caltonjock.com/2014/09/10/gordon-brown-and-alistair-darling-architects-of-the-uk-financial-crisis-of-2007/

https://caltonjock.com/2014/08/31/flipper-darling-a-disaster/

https://caltonjock.com/2014/08/31/darling-private-lectures/

https://caltonjock.com/2014/08/31/the-salmond-darling-debate/

https://caltonjock.com/2014/08/30/mervyn-king-farting-against-the-sound-of-thunder-brown-darling-and-balls-had-cloth-ears-in-the-face-of-adversity/

https://caltonjock.com/2014/08/30/the-basket-case-economy-the-uk-or-panama-darling-hopelessly-wrong-again/

 

 

 

 

The Queen elevated Darling to the House of Lords in 2014 awarding him a life peerage in recognition for his long service and good conduct in the service of her Unionist governments of every political persuasion.

The man who sold out his nation then gained another reward for his incompetance.

A job with Morgan Stanley attracting a salary of around £230,000 plus bonuses.

A pointer, the chairman was paid £11.8million in 2013. (Daily Mail)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Great War 1914-18

At the beginning of 1914 Westminster politicians decided that England, (sorry, the nation) would need to assert it’s stature as the leading power in the world and put the expansionist Germans in their place.

Aging Westminster politicians, reminiscent of defeating Russia in the Crimea orchestrated propaganda calling upon the youth of Britain to volunteer, the slogan and poster, “Your Country needs You” was one of the primary teasers.

So Britain went to war in 1914, (Westminster warmongers had stolen the Hearts & minds of the Country). An army of 500,000 comprised of regular & reservists were speedily mobilized and deployed to the continent.

It became evident early on that British forces were heavily outnumbered & outgunned by the Germans so the, “War Department” went into propaganda overdrive. Soon a further 250,000 young volunteers had signed up and provided with basic training were pushed into the, most horrific conflict the World had, (still has) ever witnessed. By the end of the war British & Commonwealth countries deployed about 5,500.000 Army, Navy & Air-forces personnel.

In a brutal war, fought on an unparalleled scale, casualties were horrendous. Acting on instructions, issued by London based leaders, British Generals, based many miles away from the scenes of battle, “ordered implementation of their ill considered strategic plans” regardless of the suffering imposed on their own troops in frontline trenches.

In time the, “fog of war” with it’s , “accompanying, death, injury, noise and fruitless suicidal attacks on well defended German positions” shattered the nerves of a number, (about 450) of the more inexperienced British & Commonwealth soldiers. Approximately 350 of the total number were British. They were courts marshaled, (often being denied any defence of their actions) for cowardice. Found, “guilty” and were publicly executed at the, “break of dawn” the day after sentencing.

It is fact that Commonwealth forces charged and convicted of similar offenses were simply taken away from the frontline, for hospitalization, assessment and remedial care. None were shot.

Recently delivered, speeches and subsequent performances, (to compliant audiences) by George Robertson and his erstwhile buddy John Smith should give cause for concern since both these aging politicians are well experienced in the planning and execution of policies resulting in a disastrous abuse & misuse of British forces, (Baltics, Iraq and Afghanistan) and reactivation of the so called Labour party, “enforcers” in support of the, “better together” people would be of concern, but only if anyone heeded their rhetoric.

MP’s To Get Pay Rise

The, “Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority” (Ipsa) given responsibility for Westminster pay and perks in the wake of the expenses scandal is pressing ahead with plans to, (after the 2015 general election) boost salaries by £7,600 to £74,000, but a fifth of the total number of MP’s are still lobbying for the salary to be increased to £95,000.

Former Commons speaker Baroness Boothroyd appearing on BBC Radio 4’s, “The Westminster Hour” commented, “The taxpaying public aren’t going to like it, but I think they’re just going to have to take it on the chin”.

Naval Forces Overstretched – The First Sea Lord Speaks Out

Naval Forces Overstretched – The First Sea Lord Speaks Out

First Sea Lord Admiral Sir George Zambellas, (recently parachuted in) replacing, (the publicly humiliated Sir Mark Stanhope) has been trotted out, (on the orders of David Cameron & the Westminster Mafia) to publicly add negative comment that Scots independence would leave the Royal Navy less efficient and weaken defence.

But the measure is of course a nonsense. We need to be mindful of the views of vastly experienced and therefore more credible military figures speaking out against the future size and shape of British forces, to be implemented regardless of the outcome of the referendum:

America’s former Defence Secretary, (Robert Gates) recently warned that naval cuts, (forming part of a significant reduction in the size of British armed forces) would mean the UK would no longer be a full military partner to the United States. He went on to say that, for the first time since the First World War Britain does not have an operational aircraft carrier and the carrier being built, (due to be introduced into service in 2020) will not be fully operational for some time after since it will not be capable of launching any of the aircraft presently in service. A new carrier launched airplane is being developed by the USA but it will not be operational for some time. He concluded: ‘With substantial reductions in defence spending in Great Britain, what we’re finding is that it won’t have full spectrum capabilities and the ability to be a full partner as they have been in the past.

His concerns echoed those of senior military staff in the UK. General Sir Nicholas Houghton, “Chief of the Defence Staff” told the Royal United Services Institute military think-tank that the Royal Navy was ‘perilously close’ to its ‘critical mass’ in terms of manpower.

Cameron humiliates First Sea Lord over Libya, in Commons;

Britain’s chief naval officer, “First Sea Lord Sir Mark Stanhope” has been left humiliated after David Cameron said he had summoned him to Downing Street to challenge his claims that the fleet could not continue the Libya campaign indefinitely without affecting other naval operations. The meeting was the culmination of a turbulent 24 hours for Stanhope, who infuriated No 10 by talking about the strains on the navy, which is heavily involved in the Afghanistan mission as well as in Libya. In a briefing on Monday, Stanhope said ministers would have to “make challenging decisions” once the Libya campaign ended. “Beyond that we might have to request the government make some challenging decisions about priorities,” he said. “a ship might need to be diverted away from British home waters”, “It’s not simply about giving up standing commitments. We will have to re-balance.” His remarks provoked the displeasure of Downing Street but serving and former officers provided public support, saying Stanhope was only stating the obvious, especially now the navy has axed ships and thousands of personnel as part of the government’s strategic defence and security review (SDSR).

Secretary of Defence Statement;

“The Ministry of Defence has issued an order to stop officers briefing the press to try to prevent the government being embarrassed further, but a Whitehall insider said: “The first sea lord is a senior official and he deserves to be treated with respect. He shouldn’t be dragged into politics in this way.” The truth has many faces eh!!

Barney (Rubble) Crockett – Labour Leader – Aberdeen City Council – I do It My Way – If You Don’t Like It Tough – Live With It

 

Barney

 

 

Aberdeen City Council leader Barney Crockett

There is a perspective that Aberdeen should forward plan to cope with a declining oil industry but that isn’t what we face immediately or I feel in the medium term. Not only do we have short-term growth, in the medium term, there are major opportunities in the oil and gas and energy industries and that is going to continue and it is how we best manage this and magnify it to the benefit of everyone in Aberdeen. I think Aberdeen is an exceptionally attractive place for people to live.

 

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Responding to accusations that the Labour led Aberdeen Council,(led by himself) had ridden rough shod over a democratic process, (the outcome of a properly conducted local referendum, which had voted in favour of the proposal) in rejecting plans for a redevelopment of the city centre gardens, about 40% of which would have been financed by a very generous £50 million gift from a local businessman he said:

“I think wise city governance shouldn’t take forward things which are based on a bitterly divided population. It is the responsibility of Councillors to find ways of knitting people together and certainly in Aberdeen’s case, knitting together a very dynamic business community with the wider social sphere”.

He further  summarized:

“Aberdeen Council business is restricted to local policy issues and these are not subject to referenda. I think, and always have believed, that referendums should be kept for constitutional issues.”

Comment: Was his decree made known to the Aberdeen citizens that voted in the referendum? Is this his policy?

 

 

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Contrast the foregoing with a follow up a few weeks later.

Aberdeen City Council has been accused of “promoting a No vote” in September’s independence referendum by endorsing Scotland’s membership of the UK in a letter circulated to council tax payers.

In a message outlining the council’s budget plans, leader Barney Crockett wrote: “The Council’s position is clear, as we agreed at our meeting in December last year we recognize that Aberdeen is stronger now and will be stronger in the future – economically, politically and socially – as a partner within the United Kingdom.”

The opposition demanded to know who authorized the approach and that the Chief Executive needed to intervene to ensure that the misuse of council financial resources should cease.

They further added, “The simple truth is that this was a grotesque misuse of council resources by the council leader, attempting to influence the voting behavior of the citizens of Aberdeen and inappropriately using local authority money to pay for it.”

 

 

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Summary.

The outcome of a local referendum was set aside, (to the detriment of the citizens of Aberdeen) by a Labour/Tory coalition, Led by Mr Barney Crockett acting on his belief and guidance that they were not bound by the results. In any event the business of the Council being restricted by statute to the formulation and implementation of local policy decisions. Outcome, an unhappy electorate.

Also noteworthy is the narrow minded view of Barney Crockett who, in his letter to Aberdeen householders said, “Aberdeen is stronger now and will be stronger in the future – as a partner within the United Kingdom.” No matter Aberdeen’s safety, (from the impact of the policies of Westminster politicians) is guaranteed by oil and energy.

The rest of Scotland however is getting weaker and  will continue to suffer the ravages of increasingly right wing governments, based in the city/state of London who have no interest in the affairs of Scotland, except taxation income.

Comment:

Barney Crockett epitomizes everything that is wrong with both the Labour and Tory Party’s in Aberdeen.  The public votes but the Con/Lab council decides. It is their way or the  highway.  What a sad city led by a bunch of self serving opportunists.

 

 

 

 

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Scotland’s Old Age Pensioners – Driven to Poverty – Sacrificed on the Alter of Bankers Greed and an Uncaring Government

 

 

 

 

 

Mortality Rates & Pensions

Up to the early 1950’s, Scottish mortality rates were broadly comparable with the rest of the UK. But from that time, (attributed to increased levels of deprivation) life expectancy, in Scotland has hardly increased over a period of 60+ years. In England, (over the same period) rates steadily increased year on year and there is now a very significant gap in life expectancy between England & Scotland.

 

 

 

 

England Home Counties & London

Male pensioners, (approximately 1 million) of affluent areas of London & the South East of England enjoy a life expectancy of approximately 80 years. Female life expectancy,(similar in total)is approximately 84 years.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Scotland

In Scotland, male life expectancy is approximately 72 years. Female life expectancy is approximately 78 years.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Scottish Pensioners Ripped Off – Subsidising Pensioners in the South of England

Allow individual pension contribution payments, (through taxation) approximately £60,000, (assume 40 years @ £1500 per annum) are the same for all taxpayers.

Maximum pension payments to male Scots. £6k x 7 years = £42K

Maximum pension payments to male English. £6K x years = £90K

Maximum pension payments to female Scots. £4k x 13 years = £52K

Maximum pension payments to male English. £6K x 19 years = £76K

Summary.

Scottish pensioners are heavily subsidizing pension payments of English pensioners. In his article the, “Artful Dodger”, (Gordon Brown) proves once more that, “liars can figure but, “figures don’t lie”. Ignore the negative hype of the, “No” campaigners we should not be subsidizing pension payments for the rest of the UK. Vote, “Yes” to independence.

 

 

 

 

 

Worrying Statistics

The Office of National Statistics provides, age expectancy for 2010-2012, the years most favourable to England;

London & SE England: Males 80y Females 84y.

Glasgow & West of Scotland; Males 73y Females 78y.

Babies born in Glasgow & West of Scotland that reach age 65y; Males 73% Females 79%, (attrition rates much higher than those enjoyed by males and females in London & S/East England)

27% of males and 22% of females in Glasgow & West of Scotland will contribute to a pension all of their working lives and get NOTHING in return by way of pension, (Nice saving Mr Osborne). Scotland is poorly served by the United Kingdom. We would be much better off running our own affairs.

So as to be fair, I selected one, (similar in population density) conurbation in each country, namely,”Glasgow & West of Scotland & London & S/East England”.

Statistics extracted reflect an accurate snapshot of age expectancy in both countries.

Scotland is much worse off in the UK. Our people are dying much earlier than those in England and life expectancy for 25%+ of our children indicates they may not survive beyond age 65y. 

A damming indictment of the so called fair and equal distribution of resources in the UK. Time we were out of it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pensions have been severely eroded from the time Gordon Brown changed the rules and tied old age pensions increases to the rate of inflation.

Brown, armed with his insider  knowledge well knew that all was not well with the UK economy and the adverse effects of his change would be to hit pensioners very hard. Indeed the old age pension was increased, in the first year by a miserable 14pence.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Banking Crisis – Old Age Pensioners – driven to poverty meeting the heavy cost of the Bankers bail out

The financial crisis has had and will continue to have a negative impact on pensions and pensioner poverty will continue to increase. This due to the Westminster governments, (Labour then Tory) fiscal policies.

The Uk taxpayer (including pensioners) owe the world bankers nearly £1.8trillion.  Interest payments are horrendous and it is doubtful the prime sum  of loans will ever be repaid.

David Cameron, George Osborne and the rest of the Tory Party introduced the phrase “austerity, we are all in it together” to the nation.  Many of the electorate in England and Wales believed the mantra and returned the Party to office in 2015,  for another 5 years.

But bankers in the UK who plunged the nation into financial crisis have escaped unpunished. Indeed there are many former bankers and associated politicians appointed to high office as peers of the realm who now sit in judgement over the many millions of citizens they ripped off.

Bankers who remained in the “bailed out by the taxpayer banking system”  have been and are continuing to attract bonus payment measured in the hundreds of £million simply for doing their job. The rich have got much richer and old age pensioners and many other member of society are increasingly dependent on charity (faced with a lack of support from an uncaring welfare state) to remain alive.

Apart from severe cuts in welfare the major weapon deployed by the government was and still is maintaining interest rates at or near zero. The policy, has in effect reduced the value of pensions by around 30% in the past 10 years resulting in ever increasing numbers of pensioners needing welfare assistance which cannot be guaranteed. Other changes in the pipeline will result in many more cases of pension poverty.