Friday 4 April 2008

Eppur si muove

Mr Sutcliffe : “We, and I speak as a champion of the pub trade, want the Chancellor to change his mind. We’ve had examples like the fuel levy where the impact on a sector has been massive – and the decision has been deferred. I’m not saying that will happen, but that’s where the trade needs to focus the basis of its argument. The next opportunity will be the preBudget report in November. But the industry has seriously got to get its act together in working out what its priorities are.”

After being shown the instruments of torture in Downing Street and the Treasury, who now believe there is no need to take the matter further, Mr Sutcliffe added:

“I fully support the tax measures in the Budget, and the Chancellor’s decisions on tax. Alcohol duty increases will go towards helping some of the poorest members of our society.”

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Perhaps we could all have a whip round to buy him a pint or two of Dutch courage. Or perhaps somebody from the other side of the House could pick this up and run with it; it would clearly find great favour with the landlords and their customers.

hatfield girl said...

Odd of them to take on the brewers Nomad; I understood they were like the road transport lobby, and farmers, and the defence industry. Cocking a snook at all of us saying 'you shan't have an election, oh no' is one thing; snook cocking at powerful economic groups who won't wait on any kind of election to make their preferences known, is mysterious.

Is it just me or are 'the poorest in our society' getting wheeled out to the point of causing giggles?

Anonymous said...

From what I read elsewhere, it seems to me that the "poorest members of society" spend half their time in pubs drinking anyway! That being the case, they will always vote for tax cuts to help fund their habit - and as the recipients of their largesse the landlords and brewers can only be grateful; and in consequence the tax take will also increase.

Trebles all round?

lilith said...

This link (which is not a link and needs cutting and pasting because I am useless at geekery) shows a graph of the use of the phrase "poorest members of society" in news items. We have been getting it a lot more lately, hence the giggles..."global fiscal turbulence" does it for me...

http://tinyurl.com/5qbcjn