Family & Relationships1 min ago
Starmer To Clean Up Politics Once Labour Gets In To Power
Starmer recently said ‘We need to clean up politics...no more kickbacks for colleagues, no more revolving doors between government and companies they regulate...a total crackdown on cronyism’.
Starmer’s House of Commons register of interests shows that last year he personally received 18 free tickets to 6 premier league football games, 4 tickets to Capital Radio’s Jingle Bell ball, 4 tickets to a Coldplay concert (plus £937 in hotel stays paid for by Hut Group founder Matthew Mouldings), a private box for 4 at the Derby, and a £4,500 holiday in Wales (same old, same old).
Info. courtesy of Private Eye
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No best answer has yet been selected by Hymie. 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.Retrocop - I appear not to be making my point clear.
The system has been in place for centuries - politicians are given gifts of various types, with the clear and obvious reason being the expectation of repayment in terms of political influence.
No one is under any illusions about how and why this system operates, politicians and givers operate it on a daily basis.
In order to pretend that this is not the sleazy and venal corruption that it clearly is, there is a nominal 'Register Of Members' Interests' where the most obvious and easily traced exchanges are declared, to give the impression that everything is all above board, and we all pretend that it is.
Now I accept that, because it's how things are.
But what I don't accept, is a politician who clearly uses the system, making stupid political capital by expecting the electorate to believe that, not only is he not part of the system, which he is, but he is going to 'cleanse' the system, which is assuming that he electorate are both naive, and congenitaly stupid.
Some are, but most are not.
I work for a FTSE100 company that has strict guidelines on such bribes.
Whilst in some cultures gifts may be given and to refuse the offered gift considered an insult; employees are permitted to accept a gift of up to around £20 – and should be notified to the employee’s boss.
Why not similarly limit the value of MPs gifts; why can Starmer accept a gift valued at £4,500 but not me?
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