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My Intervention on the Safety of Rwanda Bill amendments – Court challenges

April 21, 2024 25 Comments

John Redwood (Wokingham) (Con):

Many people share the Government’s ambition to stop the boats. Would these Lords amendments not muddle the legislation in a way that, once again, would leave us open to an unnecessary court challenge? Can he reassure us that, unamended, the Bill will do the job?

Michael Tomlinson:
I know my right hon. Friend has taken a close interest in the Bill since the outset, and he is right. The amendments fall into two categories: those that are simply unnecessary and those that are worse than unnecessary. The second group are wrecking amendments deliberately designed to prevent the very things that the Bill was designed to do—namely, stopping the boats and getting the planes off the ground.

My hon. Friend the Member for Stone (Sir William Cash) has previously accused me of repeating myself from time to time—heaven forfend—but he is right, because our approach is justified as a matter of parliamentary sovereignty and constitutional propriety. Indeed, my right hon. and learned Friend the Member for South Swindon (Sir Robert Buckland) has even said that it is not unprecedented, and he is right. It also meets our international obligations.

The Bank of England should cut the losses

April 21, 2024 68 Comments

I am trying to get more  to put this case to the Treasury and Bank to stop the outrageous losses. Please use this text.

The Bank of England has received £49.4 bn in payments from taxpayers and the Treasury so far to cover its losses on holding and selling bonds.. OBR forecasts point to further substantial losses to come. They estimated these at £179 bn in the March budget papers. This year could see the need to pay the Bank of England a further large sum.

       These payments increase the public sector deficit excluding the Bank of England, which is the figure used to assess how much headroom the government has to increase public spending and or reduce taxes. It is in everyone’s interest to minimise these losses and to protect the taxpayer from the possible outcome forecast  by the OBR.

        There are three main sources of loss. Some of the  bonds were bought at prices above the repayment value of the bond. These losses are unavoidable if the bonds are held to repayment. It is true  if at  some future date interest rates had tumbled and the price of the bonds have again risen above the repayment value you could then sell at a profit. We cannot assume that is going to happen anytime soon. Meanwhile there will be some losses as bonds mature.

         The Bank is actively selling £100bn of bonds a  year into the market, taking larger losses than if they held them to maturity, and taking the losses sooner than they need to. The Bank could stop selling these bonds, allowing them to be repaid in due course on maturity. Some mature quite soon, Others are long dated and can stay on the balance sheet. Stopping selling the bonds would stop a large amount of the total  losses.

         The European Central Bank and the Federal reserve Board also bought lots of bonds at high prices and have considered what to do with them. The ECB has decided not to sell any prematurely into markets that are now so much lower than when they bought the bonds. They will allow them all to run off as they mature with lower losses. The Fed has been selling some Treasury  bonds but has recently stated it plans to halve the rate of sale, and to place more emphasis on selling shorter dated  bonds where the losses are considerably lower than the losses on long dated. When interest rates are pushed up as they have been losses on longer dated bonds are much larger than on short dated, because you have to wait so much longer to get your money back.

        The third source of loss is the Bank receives a lower rate of interest on the bonds it has bought than the rate of interest it pays the commercial banks for the money they deposit with it. All the time the Bank keeps the base rate as high as today there will be losses on simply holding the bonds. The ECB has decided it will no longer pay interest on minimum reserves commercial banks have to hold with the Central Bank to cut these losses. The Bank of England and the Fed did not pay interest on reserves prior to 2006. The Bank of England could align its policy with the ECB.

        These actions would lead to a substantial improvement in the UK public sector finances excluding the Bank of England. The Bank would not suffer as a result, as it admits these sales are not crucial to its monetary policy. These proposals do not interfere with Bank of England independence. The Banks independence is over settling the Base rate and assessing inflation , which this does not change. The Bank says it acts as an agent for the Treasury over  bonds. It needed the approval of successive Chancellors for  all the purchases, and insisted on a Treasury guarantee against loss. As the Treasury is the guarantor it can also influence when these bonds are sold.

My Conservative Home article (unedited version)

April 20, 2024 69 Comments
This century has seen a great growth in the powers and reach of so called independent public sector  bodies. The four main parties in Parliament usually cheered on and engineered these moves. There was a general buy in to the  proposition that experts were better than political generalists, and that you needed to take the party politics out of large chunks of the public sector.
            The  new settlement was always flawed and never adhered to. Whilst the Opposition parties were usually hot to expose any Ministerial interference in these bodies, they were also keen to blame the Ministers when there was a bad miscarriage by them. They clung to the idea that experts are always right, as the evidence mounted that there can  also be wrong or bad experts that can do  damage if unchecked by commonsense and democratic accountability.
            We have seen a long list of these bodies let people down, with hapless Ministers then held to account for the failings. The Bank responsible for the single main task of keeping inflation to 2% presided over 11% and blamed external forces and someone else. The nationalised Post Office imprisoned many of its honest and decent staff and plunged into heavy losses which taxpayers had to pay. Its independent supervisor UK Government Investments looked the other way and left Ministers to explain and rectify. The Water Regulator watched as water companies failed to invest in more pipes and capacity, leaving Ministers to explain how we could clean up our rivers whilst keeping water  bills to realistic levels. The Environment Agency allowed the Somerset levels to flood, damaging farms, before Ministers stepped in to tell them to man the pumps and keep the ditches and rivers  free flowing.
             All of these regulators and nationalised industries have a so called sponsor department which is meant to monitor and guide them. The department needs to know how much they will cost taxpayers, negotiate over money, charges and performance going forward and be a critical friend of the body in government. When I did this job as a sponsor Minister I usually held an annual budget meeting with each of the important bodies to go through their need for public funds, their charging policy, their service quality and their general efficiency. I would often hold a meeting before the publication of the annual report  to  go over what they had achieved and to hear what their report would say. Their leadership was responsible for how they managed the operation, for the outcomes, and for recommending the way to achieve the stated objectives laid down by government and Parliament. I was responsible for reporting to Parliament on their successes and failures, so I needed to know how they were doing.
             Today in the case of a nationalised industry like the Post Office or Network Rail there are three supervisors in the mix. There is Uk Government Investments, there is a sponsor department and there is the Cabinet Office/Treasury complex. It would be good to establish a single lead in each case. It is difficult to see what value UK Government Investments adds, so why not wind it up.
It is strange when we see the disasters at nationalised HS 2 or the failures of the water and environmental regulators that the cry goes up we need more nationalisation and more independent regulation. There is  no evidence that our main nationalised industries have done well and are a model to follow. I will continue to make the case for more choice and private capital in state activities where people already pay for the product or service they use.
             If we take the Uk media sector the large presence of the BBC and the allied presence of Channel 4 as public sector broadcasters has marginalised the UK in the vastly expanding and fast changing media world beyond the UK dominated by the US majors Comcast, Disney, Charter, Netflix and Paramount.  The combined turnover of these big five US media conglomerates is $285 bn compared to just $7bn for the BBC. The largest has a turnover 17 times the BBC.  It is true some of them offer  broadband services as well as entertainment and news, but this is now an integral part of broadcasting.  Non UK BBC, where we ought to compete commercially, has a turnover of just $1.4 bn.  The BBC has a world  non UK commercial company which is tiny in comparison to the US success stories, held  back by public sector financing and regulatory constraints.  We could keep the licence fee and national programmes people like domestically  whilst freeing BBC World to raise its own money and expand its service to compete more effectively with the modern media giants.
              Whilst some people vote for more nationalisation, they express growing preferences for free enterprise US solutions to many features of their lives. They buy more and more US entertainment, shop at Amazon. use Microsoft software, search with Google, talk to friends with Meta  and use Apple devices . The UK and the rest of Europe is falling behind in ways nationalisation and beefed up regulators cannot remedy.

The IMF were wrong. It’s wasteful spending that needs to go

April 19, 2024 110 Comments

The IMF like the left wing parties says there must be no unfunded tax cuts. Like them it does not complain about unaffordable wasteful  spending. Indeed it argues spending needs to go up. Why?

There is so much to be done by getting  a proper grip on spending. There is no need to let the Bank of England lose another £40 bn this week on top of the £49 bn they have already billed taxpayers. It is a needless disgrace.

There is the identified £20 bn of lost public sector productivity the Treasury put in their last plans. Why is it taking so long to get it back? Why do they need to spend to save when the task is to get back to 2019 efficiency levels?

There is the announced sale of Nat West. Why are we waiting? Why are the proceeds spread over three years in the forecasts? That’s another £8 bn. The OBR puts £3.2 bn of the proceeds into 2025-26

The large losses and cash absorption by the railways needs controlling better, with a proper plan to increase fare revenues.£33 bn of subsidy and investment spending is too high.

Introducing a ban on external recruitment to the civil service and public sector admin would help. Getting rid of bad quangos like UK Government Investments and selling off the British Investment Bank would be a good idea. Making a big reduction in legal migration would cut demand for more social housing and public service capacity .

 

 

A football regulator?

April 18, 2024 68 Comments

It is fashionable amongst the political parties and some football fans to demand a Statutory “independent” football regulator. Some fans support such a change as they are critical of some club owners or managements   and think a Regulator  might be able to sort things out for them .

I fear the prospect of an all wise Regulator who would just happen to bring about change in each club that fans would like  is a good dream, but difficult for any appointed Regulator to achieve.A Regulator faces very difficult pressures when Team A claims rival Team B has broken rules and then Team B responds with a counter claim. The more rules there are, the more disputes. Where two or more teams are in dispute any verdict will upset a lot of fans.

Football is a popular sport. It is entertainment. It attracts a large number of rich individuals and some companies that like the game and want to spend their money on trying to build a winning team. Some do make more money out of it by succeeding in getting their team promoted and so generating more revenues. Some make money out of associated property development and retail opportunities using the club assets and brand. Many just spend their money on the costly hunt to transfer talent and then pay mega salaries to retain good people which can  end in financial losses.

The FA is the regulator. They believe there needs to be rules over how much money a club can spend and borrow and rules over how clubs attract and retain talent. There obviously have to be game rules all accept, and rules over how you win or lose in league and cup competitions. It is difficult to see how an independent regulator could usefully change FA rules over most of these matters. The FA itself is discovering that its efforts to regulate club finances using penalties that include reducing a teams points in the league can upset fans and make rivalries more bitter. What is best settled on the pitch ends up being settled by lawyers.

If we do set up an independent Regulator under Statute law there will then be a wish to drag Ministers into decisions. When too many fans become critical of the Regulator the cry will go up for Ministerial interference or for some change of the law.

There is a good case for an element of fan ownership or for clubs  to be established as trusts owned by fans. This would need to be arrived at with agreement or from buy out of the existing owners.  All the time the football model is based on bidding ever higher sums for a small pool of well known players and managers clubs will turn instead to billionaires to help fund their expensive habits.Fans will not have sufficient collective money to pay the sky high prices of the famous.  They then have to live with  that relationship.The   rich shareholder  is well advised to keep on the right side of the fans. The fans offer the team support, pay  high prices for tickets and buy the merchandise.   I do not think politicians should tell football clubs and the FA how to finance themselves. There must be no question of taxpayers bailing out clubs.

 

My Interview with GB News on the Bank of England

April 17, 2024 44 Comments

Please find below my interview with GB News on the Bank of England’s losses:

 

 

Too much money – inflation Too little- recession

April 16, 2024 76 Comments

Yesterday I criticised 3 big boom/ bust cycles that came from Bank action and establishment thinking. In each case they ignored money and credit.

The 1975 inflation high peak followed a doubling of broad money 1970-4 as a result of a badly supervised switch to competition and credit control policy by the Bank.

The 1992 inflation followed a 36% surge in broad  money 1989-92, brought on by the dangerous  European Exchange rate mechanism. IMF figures clocked broad money growth peaking  at 86% when the Bank and Treasury were creating billions of pounds  to try to keep the value  of the pound down to the permitted target. They then saw it plunge to a low of minus 28% when the Bank was busily buying in pounds trying to get the value back up to the target after the inflation sank the currency.

The 2008-9 banking boom followed and created a 66% surge in broad money Q1 2009 compared to Q 12005. Over the Labour years 1997 to 2010 money growth trebled.

The more recent inflation followed 30% money growth 2020 to 2023.

I set out the case against the European Exchange Rate Mechanism before we entered. I urged the government to turn down the Bank and Treasury advice. I explained it could lead  to  excessive money or too little. It led to both. I took the quoted company I led  out of the CBI because the CBI refused to accept ERM membership would be damaging.

In the run up to the crash of 2009 I supported the Opposition in Parliament who regularly  warned of excessive credit expansion and government overborrowing.

This time round I warned against the continuation of QE during 2021-2 as inflationary. More recently I switched to warning against excessive bond sales as recessionary.

Why do the Bank and Treasury persist with boom/ bust policies?

 

 

 

 

 

Service to constituents and journalists

April 15, 2024 36 Comments

A journalist has  asked questions about my service levels as an MP, so I am sharing the answers in case others are interested.

Service to journalists
          I provide a daily commentary on the main issues I am dealing with and matter to my constituents on www.johnredwood.com. I provide a regular update on local Council matters under local issues. These articles can be reproduced, or used as a source of quotes. They cover the most topical matters that are in the news, they offer new news stories not in the national press, and can of course be commented on. I am providing thousands of words a week which I write myself to ensure they are my views. I find it surprising that others, for example, have not taken up the blogs revealing the large losses the Bank of England has already made, the colossal planned losses and how these could be slashed.
           Where I raise these matters in Parliament I often also reproduce the Hansard text of my speech or question. You can assume that where I am raising a big issue on the blog I am talking to Ministers about it, as I do regularly. I do not normally report on individual meetings with Ministers as these are usually best left as private meetings.
         Service to my constituents as Wokingham’s MP
         I am the only MP to provide a daily commentary on my views and actions 364 days a year on my website. I do not just write up the issue but am also taking action to get the view across and to seek improved government response and policy.
         With the help of my two office staff we seek to answer every incoming email and query by the next working day. My staff handle most of the emails and cases  Monday to Friday. I read them and discuss with them ones that pose new issues or problems. We have daily contact with each other on queries and progress.  I answer new queries on Saturdays and Sundays myself where appropriate, reading all incoming.
         I do not undertake international travel and attend Parliament when in session, being on call seven days a week all year round. I live in the Borough, and make weekly visits to places in the constituency to keep in touch with local problems and views.
Knowledge of the parts of the Borough I do not currently represent
         I did represent the northern villages of Wokingham Borough prior to the creation of the separate Maidenhead constituency, so I know Wargrave, Remenham, Hurst, Twyford, and Charvil well as a former MP. I used to live in Sonning, and used to go shopping in Twyford as well as in Wokingham and Woodley. I attend the  rowing at Remenham for the Henley regatta each year. I live in the south of the Borough.
Taking up issues for constituents
          The website shows the wide range of matters I do take up. The crucial ones of public services,  jobs and  taxes  which dominate the website arise from emails, conversations and understandings of my constituents concerns. Sometimes I lead the campaigns, as with the campaign for small business to get an increase in the VAT threshold, the campaign to slash the unacceptable losses by the Bank or England to free more money for the NHS and other purposes, and the campaign to reduce  taxation  for the self employed.  Sometimes I support campaigns led by other MPs. I supported James Arbuthnot for many years over the sub postmasters. I have supported the successful MP campaign to get the government to abandon top down targets to build more homes, leaving more to local decision.

The threats from Iran

April 15, 2024 141 Comments

President Biden changed US policy towards the Middle East in 2020. He pulled out of Afghanistan too suddenly, losing a crucial air base and undermining  his allies. It led directly  to the Taliban taking the country over, after 20 years of the west losing lives and spending huge sums to stop them. He then tried to get a negotiated settlement with Iran. President Trump had negotiated successfully with the Gulf states to achieve their peace with Israel and to try to do the same with Saudi. All agreed Iran was a threat.

President Biden has ended up with worse relations with Saudi and the Gulf states, with OPEC pushing up oil prices by witholding production and now with US forces shooting down Iranian drones and missiles. Iran was always constructing a ring of hostile forces to the west with the Houttis in Yemen now firing on civilian cargo ships, with Hezbollah in Lebanon , Iraq and Syria and Hamas in Gaza.

The UK needs to be super vigilant to stop terrorists gaining access, to continue to work closely with allies to ensure good intelligence

Why do no other MPs want to stop the Bank of England mistakes?

April 14, 2024 132 Comments

The political classes seem incapable of understanding why we have so many boom bust inflationary cycles. I want more MPs to be demanding a change of policy by the Bank so we can have a growth policy with lower tax rates and better funded core public services.

It is no accident or external force which gave us an inflation in 1975. It was the  Bank conducting a policy called competition and credit control badly leading to fast money growth and a secondary banking crisis. In 1977 it was an overspending over borrowing Labour government which ended with a humiliating trip to the IMF to bail us out.

In 1990-92 it was Bank and Treasury policy to put us into the European Exchange rate mechanism which ballooned the money supply backed by PM Major and gave us more inflation.

In 2007-9 it was Bank and Labour government policy to allow commercial banks to lend much more which led to inflation, egged on by high public spending and borrowing.

In 2023-4 the inflation came from Bank Quantitative easing and a big boost to the money supply.

In each case the Bank over corrected  for its errors pushing us into recession.

Why doesn’t the Bank learn from  this string of errors and give better advice?

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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwood14h
The high taxes imposed by this government have slashed new jobs and closed farms and factories.Then they offer some subsidies to try to ease the problems. This is destructive, imposing double costs on taxpayers to collect the money in then to give some back.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwood14h
The government’s delay with its defence budget is alarming. Talk of more cuts in the new ships and planes needed. No talk of cutting welfare spending by getting people back to work to pay for national security.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 9
... is running their interview with me on populism and conservatism.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 9
Given the continuing inability of Iran and the US to re open sea lanes for commerce, what plans does the UK government have to help secure reliable supplies of fertiliser and oil products? Why no plans to produce more at home?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 9
When will the PM contact President Putin to get Ukraine talks started? Or was the meeting at Downing Street just for show with no follow up?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 9
Why did the PM U turn from wanting Ukraine to fight on to expel Russia, to wanting Ukraine to make concessions to negotiate a peace? What is the PM going to do to help get a peace deal?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 8
@Joe_Valachi777 I do not express support for candidates in foreign elections. I offer advice on how the UK can respond to the leaders other countries choose.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 8
The Archbishop wants to regulate AI more without saying how. All our laws against harms like fraud, theft, libel, hate speech, incitement to violence, and sexual abuse already apply to doing these things by computer.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 8
What is the UK getting from EU re set for the damaging sacrifice of money and lawmaking to Brussels? Making it easier to import more will close more of our factories and farms, adding to the huge costly goods trade deficit we already run with them.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 8
The PM should ring President Trump and tell him the Chagos islands are not for sale. The UK is keeping them.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 7
@peacey2010 Not so. Foreign companies were prepared to invest in our oil and gas where the state and UK companies did not.They paid us huge taxes to do so.
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Brexit Facts4EU.Org
↻Brexit Facts4EU.Org@Facts4euOrgJun 7
Do you ever get frustrated with the BBC and Sky News? Well here’s a livestream and some news that might cheer you up! Brexit Facts4EU and our partners get the messages out, despite them… Here’s how. ... Pls re-post! ...
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 7
The latest poll showing more than twice as many people oppose giving more powers and money to the EU than support it should lead the government to drop their ill conceived and potentially damaging re set. They offer too many concessions for no wins.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 7
The government says our energy prices are dictated by a world market oil and gas price. So why is our energy around 4 times the price of US and 3 times China?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 7
Rumours that the government will concede a deep discounted fee for EU students attending UK universities. How would universities make up for the big loss of revenue?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 6
Good to see the public decisively rejects surrendering powers to make laws and taxes to EU, with 59% against and just 27% in favour. See @BritainUnbound and @Telegraph .The EU re set is a very bad deal which will not promote growth.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 6
If the government is now keen for farmers to grow and sell more food they should start with the home market, where there is plenty of scope to sell more. That cuts the food miles with all those transport emissions. Change policy and subsidies to support home food growing.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 6
The farming industry says signing up to EU food rules could cost £800 m just for the transition, along with restrictions on innovation and research. More government damage to our farms.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 5
The government is watering down its promise of more state teachers. It is discovering its VAT move has landed it with a big bill as pupils transfer to state schools.Some private schools have to close, sacking their staff.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 5
In the Lords debate we told the government high UK energy prices are helping destroy industry with many closures and job losses.High taxes, emissions trading and the need to pay for back up to unreliable renewables are all damaging policies the government can change.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 5
The government complains that dear gas gives us dear electricity. They can stop that by removing their huge carbon taxes on gas. They also make gas power dearer and less fuel efficient by switching it on and off as and when the wind changes.
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Brexit Facts4EU.Org
↻Brexit Facts4EU.Org@Facts4euOrgJun 4
Excellent comments from @johnredwood in this report. You can read these here: ... or in the @GBNEWS version here: ... We recommend both versions! And pls re-post! ...
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 4
Every time something goes wrong with public services the government tries to avoid blame, announcing a review. It says it cannot say anything before seeing the review. They are running these services so they should know what went wrong and should respond faster to disaster.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 4
So the government’s answer to water shortages is a new Water Regulator. Getting on with building new reservoirs would be a better idea. Why not get the present Regulator to do their job? Why do we keep adding to the population without adding more water resource?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 4
Why does the government stop the flow of tax that would come from more UK oil and gas production, so we have to pay huge taxes instead to foreign countries for imports? @Facts4euOrg today sets out this huge self harm. There’s more than £200 bn awaiting a sensible government.
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Brexit Facts4EU.Org
↻Brexit Facts4EU.Org@Facts4euOrgJun 4
Our Brexit Facts4EU Net Zero madness report is the top politics story on GB News! Please click and re-tweet it! ...
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 3
I asked the government yesterday how many jobs will be lost in steel using industries in the UK as a result of the high steel tariffs being imposed. No answer. Did they not think about that, or is it too worrying to say?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 3
Yesterday in the Lords I pointed out the Impact statement for the government’s civil aviation bill says no financial benefits from it over the next three years. Another missed opportunity to boost growth of an important industry.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 3
Why did the government publish so many nearly blank and uninformative pages in its response on Mandelson? Waste of much of the money and paper when we need to see the key exchanges with the PM over the appointment and checks.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 2
Labour’s Housing Bill sets out to stop people buying their social rented home, or to make it dearer to do so. Why this attack on people’s security and wish to reach retirement without rent bills?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 2
Why did the government publish so many nearly blank pages in its Mandelson papers? Why so many messages or exchanges with most of the content removed?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 2
Glad to see some people in government are critical of just looking for more ways to tax people in order to pay more benefits. Pity that remains government policy.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 1
My new book “Who’s right? “ sets out conservative values and policies for today and looks at populist parties on both sides of Atlantic. ( Bite-sized Books, available on Amazon)
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 1
@Kemi Badenoch’s reply to Tony Blair is brilliant. The government needs to radically change its hostile treatment of the job and wealth creators who pay the bills. It needs to cut its damaging interventions especially on energy and reduce its bloated benefits bill.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 1
Nationalising the railways will not end delays and cancellations. A majority of these were caused by nationalised Network Rail pre full nationalisation. There will be huge costs and losses sent to taxpayers.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodMay 31
The nationalised railway is cutting some services this summer in a desperate attempt to stem its big losses. Still plenty of cancellations and late running trains. A new name and a new livery for some coaches does not deliver service improvements.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodMay 31
Two years into government and still no signs of the new reservoirs, new back up gas fired power stations, extra grid and better roads we need to boost growth and encourage private sector investment.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodMay 31
The government is so busy trying to replace gas fired power with windfarms, it has forgotten we will need lots more electricity to power their net zero world and to allow growth. Bad news they cannot offer enough electricity to expand Heathrow and all the datacentres we need.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodMay 30
@steam_simon Not so. There was no drop of 4% in GDP from Brexit. UK economy continued to perform like other major EU economies and still runs a big trade deficit with EU as we did as members.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodMay 30
See my blog saying the government has changed so much for the worse ...
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodMay 30
Mr Miliband saying there are no wins from getting out our own oil and gas misses the obvious. World CO 2 is reduced. We get more well paid jobs here. The UK pockets the huge tax revenues on the oil and gas instead of paying taxes to Qatar and USA.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodMay 30
The government’s planned SPS food agreement with the EU means lower standards of food safety and animal welfare. The UK has not had Foot and Mouth disease or Swine fever with our controls. The EU has too many outbreaks.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodMay 30
The OBR forecast as Conservatives left office was for 2026 2% UK GDP growth, unemployment 4.2% and inflation 1.9% . After Labour’s tax rises they now forecast just 1.1% UK growth, unemployment up at 5.3% and inflation up at 2.3% for 2026.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodMay 29
Labour two years on keep blaming the last government. In office they have put up unemployment, put up inflation, increased energy prices, banned new oil,gas and making petrol cars after 2030. They inherited 2% inflation and the fastest growing G7 economy. Why change that?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodMay 29
Conservatives in office in May 2024 16-24 year old unemployment was 13.8%. Has now shot up to 16.2% as a result of Labour’s job destruction policies. Conservatives got it down to 9.2% before the Ukraine war hiked energy prices and interest rates.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodMay 29
Helen Whately yesterday was telling Radio 4 listeners how to get more young people off sickness benefit and into jobs. She was not trying to duck questions. The BBC kept interrupting, shifting the question before the answer to the last one. Why?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodMay 29
Government should reverse its anti job measures to bring down youth unemployment. See ...
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Kemi Badenoch
↻Kemi Badenoch@KemiBadenochMay 28
Labour entered government and ⬇️hiked employers National Insurance ⬇️hiked the minimum wage ⬇️loaded new regulations on businesses The result? Employers stopped hiring young people. @Conservatives will listen to business, back more apprenticeships and reduce tax and red tape. ...
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Brexit Facts4EU.Org
↻Brexit Facts4EU.Org@Facts4euOrgMay 28
“To Join, but not to Rejoin, that is the question” With this Government heading ever faster into the EU’s arms, we ask what it really knows. Important news for current (and possibly future?) members of the UK Government. Report: ... Pls re-post ! ...
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodMay 28
@realninawysocka Margaret Thatcher
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About John Redwood

John Redwood won a free place at Kent College, Canterbury, and graduated from Magdalen College Oxford. He is a Distinguished fellow of All Souls, Oxford.
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