Quizzes & Puzzles21 mins ago
Will Labour Ever Learn?
60 Answers
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by ToraToraTora. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.What Dodds said:
// to not increase taxes or cut support for low and middle-income people" during the crisis. But she said a "new settlement" is needed to address the injustice of the worst-off paying more tax proportionally than high earners, while the richest derive a significant part of their income from wealth. //
Sounds rather standard Labour mantra and nothing to get too excited about.
// to not increase taxes or cut support for low and middle-income people" during the crisis. But she said a "new settlement" is needed to address the injustice of the worst-off paying more tax proportionally than high earners, while the richest derive a significant part of their income from wealth. //
Sounds rather standard Labour mantra and nothing to get too excited about.
-- answer removed --
Sounds like a great policy to me Tora.
The millions of Brits doing the hard work of actually making and producing things should be taxed as little as possible.
And the Fat Cats, speculators, hedge fund managers, bankers and share dealers who nothing but bet with other peoples money, to make large profits, should be taxed more.
Most British people work hard toiling at work, and resent paying a lot of tax while executives at some of our largest companies are paid more than their companies pay in tax. BP made £5.6 billion in profit in 2018 – yet still received tax credits worth £134million. That meant it was a net receiver of tax money in the UK, rather than contributing to the cost of running the country. That is wrong, and taxes should be used to redress the anomoly.
The millions of Brits doing the hard work of actually making and producing things should be taxed as little as possible.
And the Fat Cats, speculators, hedge fund managers, bankers and share dealers who nothing but bet with other peoples money, to make large profits, should be taxed more.
Most British people work hard toiling at work, and resent paying a lot of tax while executives at some of our largest companies are paid more than their companies pay in tax. BP made £5.6 billion in profit in 2018 – yet still received tax credits worth £134million. That meant it was a net receiver of tax money in the UK, rather than contributing to the cost of running the country. That is wrong, and taxes should be used to redress the anomoly.
-- answer removed --