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John Redwood's Diary
Incisive and topical campaigns and commentary on today's issues and tomorrow's problems. Promoted by John Redwood 152 Grosvenor Road SW1V 3JL
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Devolution and growth

March 29, 2024 169 Comments

There is no evidence that devolving power to regional governments in the Uk foster more economic growth.Indeed there is evidence the opposite is true. SNO Scotland and Labour Wales have grown less than England. The NHS in Scotland and Wales both cost more per head but perform less well than NHS England.

There is no reason why an additional layer of government with more officials would make somewhere more prosperous. Regional governments want to impose more and different regulations than the national government. Both the Welsh and Scottish governments wanted longer and tougher lockdowns for covid to add to the damage lockdown policies did.

The regional governments become campaign platforms for their First Ministers and ruling parties who use their position to criticise and undermine national policies. They lobby for more money and get more spend per head than England. They then prove more public spending does not lead to faster growth or better economic performance.

Many Councils in England use their positions similarly. Politicians like Kahn use their platforms to try to undermine the national government. They pursue their own vendettas against van and car drivers, damaging local businesses and shopping centres. They claim be short of money yet they spend a fortune on wrecking the roads. Many buy up portfolios of commercial property and renewable power generation , risking  taxpayers money. Some lurch to bankruptcy as a result.

The Opposition parties who want more of all this will level down any more successful place they win, whilst failing to tackle poverty, lack of successful business and run down urban centres elsewhere.

 

The NHS

March 28, 2024 169 Comments

I usually agree with the electorate whose opinions reflected  in issue polls are often more sensible than the views of government and opposition parties.

I agree with current polls that reveal a deep dissatisfaction with the NHS. I do not agree that the answer is more money. If only it were that simple. If more money on its own would fix it we would have fixed it this decade.

Spending on health has shot up from 2019. At £180 bn this year, it is £56 bn or 45% higher than in 2019. It is true prices and wages have gone up. Adjusting for this the NHS is receiving more than 20% extra. That is a much bigger rise than the Brexit savings on the side of the bus. They and tax rises have all been absorbed into the NHS budget.

The NHS will each year need some extra  money.We want nurses and doctors to be well paid and the NHS to be able to afford new medicines as they become available. It would help reduce the strains on the service if there was a large reduction in legal migration, as recent years  have brought in plenty more patients.

It is also true that in recent years there has been a big increase in non medical staff numbers and an expansion of senior grades of management. There has been a big drop in output per person implying the extra management has made the lives of those doing the medical work more difficult and bureaucratic.

More money should only be committed to achieve better outcomes for patients. We need better management, probably with fewer managers.

 

The road to net zero. The $275 trillion bet

March 27, 2024 67 Comments

I am bringing out a short book updating my work on green policy. Titled “The $275 trillion Green Revolution. Will consumers buy it? “it is published by Bite sized books and available on Amazon here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/275-Trillion-Green-Revolution-Consumers/dp/1738558428/ref=sr_1_1?crid=3RC5ABLGBLE5Q&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.MhlzOxY1chcW2WlWoSkhZD5sZpuILHQfDW061MBLpTkaRxrfT2uc_njXk5hxfh8ai4JjHGzAJ_uz66TOSHcJOlUqxMql0zDVfrQpZfOW0RIr3pMYf54GpLnqgwli7y4Jm3Mm4WCOZCk14IANoeqqc3FAixqnCvz5swKzl6H_gBHsCnNzUUGWlJT_Uwaolg2d2iJCjeaLteCcfFtmZjaZsK0dbb3BCHZjEmrrnOE8vXg.JtAVgfOd9pzJKfUEX_Av8HjAV4WOiBbKUkHX4O8kkEc&dib_tag=se&keywords=John+redwood&qid=1712055538&sprefix=john+redwood%2Caps%2C121&sr=8-1

It looks at two main problems  with this top down movement led  by an international Treaty based elite and by most national governments. It asks how will this all be paid for. It sets out how consumers currently do not buy into the products the governments want them to adopt, from battery cars to heat pumps and from smart meters to non meat diets. It takes the Mc Kinsey global forecast of expenditure needed for transition in the period 2021 to 2050.

Government energy policy

March 26, 2024 142 Comments

This site normally sets out government policy and provides proposals to change or improve it. I run just two articles explaining aspects of Labour policy and some of you complain. Yet at the same time some write in to tell me they will not vote Conservative even if that means a Labour government .They should at least be willing to think about and discuss Labour policy as current polls say Labour can win the election. It is also worth thinking about  how the official opposition would like the government to change things as they can try to get rebel Conservatives to help them.

There is now a substantial and I urge growing gap between Labour and Conservative over the road to net zero. Conservatives now recognise the  need for more gas generated electricity for the time being to keep the lights on. Labour wants to close all those stations by 2030 and depend on renewables. How would they keep the lights on when the wind does not blow and the sun does not shine? Conservatives want to get more of our own oil and gas out of the North Sea. Labour want to ban all new oil and gas development at home and import instead. More home energy means more well paid jobs and more tax revenue at home.

The government has said it sees it needs to be realistic about net zero. That means letting people buy petrol cars and gas boilers  for longer. It means waiting until much more nuclear power is available, still a decade away at best.It means taking synthetic fuels and hydrogen more seriously as possible runners. Believing you can get to net zero on power generation by 2030 and rely on more windfarms cannot work.

The government need to amend their lecturing taxing and subsidising in favour of various car and heating systems that are not  as green or as good as some Ministers seem to think.

 

Labour’s expensive fantasy land for 2030

March 26, 2024 139 Comments

Labour’s plans to phase out all gas and coal power stations by 2030 requires the UK to accelerate its build of wind farms, solar panels, nuclear power, and battery storage. It would also require a big expansion of the grid. They propose a nationalised industry to do much of this work as it would require huge subsidies and managed prices for the power. Claire Coutinho is right to highlight the huge cost of some £116 bn of trying to do this and to question the feasibility and wisdom.

It is of course totally unrealistic. Nuclear power will be considerably lower  by 2030 following the closures of existing power stations. It is not possible to decide now to put in extra nuclear power stations and have them producing power by 2030. Putting more and more windfarms in as they plan does not solve the problem of keeping the lights on on a windless day. Saying they can put in sufficient storage is more easily stated than delivered. Relying on big batteries would require a colossal programme of building them. Finding enough pump storage locations would not be likely. There is also the small matter of the grid which would need major enhancement against a background of long and complex planning procedures and many local communities wishing to protect their landscape or divert power lines from settlements and important buildings.

We need more affordable and reliable power. Balancing price and security of supply against environmental objectives is a crucial part of success in energy policy. Labour just goes for the environmental without a thought about keeping the lights on, helping business  be competitive and controlling people’s power bills. Combined cycle gas power still represents some of the cheapest and most reliable power, which is why our system needs what it has and needs some more for the transitional period,whilst nuclear, synthetic fuel, hydrogen and renewables become more affordable and practical propositions for more of our demand.

That Rachel Reeves lecture

March 25, 2024 141 Comments

I will spare you a party political response to the Reeves Mais lecture. Various journalists have described its vacuity, verbosity and timidity. I want to set out the big issues that directly affect UK growth, productivity, jobs and incomes that she ignored or knows nothing about.

1 The big role of the Bank of England in creating the instability in inflation  and output she condemns. A Bank which buys up £845 bn of bonds to keep money too loose is bound to cause inflation. When it then goes on to hike rates and to sell £130 bn of bonds at big losses it is likely to sabotage growth. She supports this wayward conduct.

2. She rightly criticises poor UK productivity. She fails to reveal the collapse of public sector productivity since 2019 or to show UK private sector factories have competitive productivity. Not a single proposal for turning round public sector productivity.

3. The labour market is talked about with no mention of large scale migration. Will she join me in wanting to ban work permits for migrants to fill low wage vacancies? Will she back government plans to cut legal migration by 300,000 and demand they go further?

4. She sees green investment and jobs as central. How much would her accelerated net zero policies cost? How would she avoid creating many new jobs in China that has cornered the market in big batteries, turbines and solar panels? How would she keep the lights on? Is she going to make us all go electric?

 

Who will rid us of these hopeless “independent” bodies?

March 24, 2024 128 Comments

Politicians of all parties have this century been in a hurry to shed responsibilities for anything difficult. There has been a rush to create more arms length bodies from government and to transfer more powers and money to the many quangos we already had. The politicians thought that this would remove them from responsibility for outcomes, and  would improve outcomes. Neither of these ideas came true.

The Bank of England is responsible for monetary policy and inflation. It has a prime aim of keeping inflation to 2%. It let it go to 11% by debauching the currency but most politicians declined to criticise or comment. The government got blamed for the inflation, and the government joined the Bank in  blaming  the Ukraine war.

NHS England with its high paid CEO and large Board and top management team is responsible for running the NHS, for recruiting, grading, rostering  and paying all the many staff. A series of strikes hit the NHS. The executives denied all responsibility for staff relations, pay and grading and said the dispute was a matter between Ministers and the Unions. It is difficult for Ministers to resolve the disputes when they cannot hire, promote, regrade, alter shift patterns or reward anyone in the NHS as all that is controlled by senior executives.Whatever goes wrong in the NHS the senior executives  always blame a lack of money, however much extra  the government provides. The government gives large sums to get the waiting lists down only to see them go up.

The arms length Post Office is regulated and monitored by UK Government Investments. They approved senior management, paid them large salaries and bonuses and just watched as they lost a stunning £1400 million as well as sending many innocent staff to prison for fraud and wrong accounting  they did not carry out. Ministers intervened to try to get criminal charges quashed and compensation paid, only to find the Post Office was still holding back in many cases.

The Rail Regulator, HS 2  and the nationalised Network Rail run by well paid senior executives have presided over a big loss of passenger numbers and revenue, and  have racked up huge losses for taxpayers .Parts of HS 2 have had to be cancelled owing to the absurdly large overruns on cost and timetable. Ministers are blamed for the results.

This could be a very long list. Many cases would reinforce the obvious points of these first three. High pay is a  reward for poor outcomes. No-one makes the senior managers responsible. Opposition parties have no interest in criticising the managers or holding them to account before they go so wrong, but delight in blaming the government when they do. Government is too cautious about intervening, fearing the Opposition would complain if they did. Both sides mouth the doctrine of independence, with the Opposition contradicting it often in the same interview by blaming Ministers for failures.  So overpaid managers get away with disaster after disaster and the taxpayer ends up with a huge bill.

Parliament and Ministers need to go back to accepting responsibility. They need to monitor, influence and if necessary change these top managers before disaster strikes. If someone wants private sector levels of CEO pay to run  the railways or the Post office they should expect private sector levels of surveillance and should expect no bonus or the sack if they make big errors. Ministers need to institute regular review meetings and proper reporting to them as shareholders or leading stakeholders in these bodies, so they see problems as they develop and require fixes before they get out of hand. Those few of us who warned of the likely inflation or sided with the sub post masters were ignored.

Winning elections

March 23, 2024 155 Comments

Conservative briefers are saying the party needs to be united to win the election. I have good news for them. Parties with plenty of internal rows  and disagreements always win, as the two main parties who usually win always  have MPs who disagree with the leadership. Today’s Labour party is badly split over Israel and the Middle East , over a faster move to net zero and over Rachel Reeves OBR austerity  economics but that has not stopped them doing well in opinion polls.

In the  last 50 years there have been two leaders who have won three elections in a row, a remarkable achievement. Margaret Thatcher did so despite facing continuous opposition from a significant group of MPs called the Wets. They regularly briefed disobliging comments about her personally as well as attacking her policies. They rebelled in Parliament on various measures. They put up a stalking horse candidate against her for leadership. They backed Heseltine as a replacement.He resigned from government to promote himself. She kept winning because she set out and enacted a clear vision of UK revival, economic growth and wider ownership.

Tony Blair kept winning despite facing many media stories of  his Chancellor’s disagreements and briefings from pro Brown people that wanted the  Chancellor to take over. He had to deal with a left wing group of MPs who thought he was not nearly  socialist enough. He persevered with the low tax rates the Conservatives left him and avoided recession . Eventually he was persuaded out before his Chancellor’s policies put us into a banking crash and deep recession.

If an election were a contest of who is the more united party Labour would be discovered as very split. The truth is millions of former Conservative voters are  undecided or currently saying they may stay at home or spoil their ballot paper or vote for someone who cannot win. They do not want a Labour government and see that Labour government would double up on those  very policies of this government that they do not like.

To win the Conservative leadership needs to do more things this group likes and voted for. Start with getting migration well down as now promised and cut back the woke state  to free money for more tax cuts. Let people make more of their own choices. Champion the big Conservative success of halving unemployment  and allowing so much job growth.

The Bank gets it wrong again

March 22, 2024 138 Comments

The Bank of England forecast inflation at 2% when it was going on to hit 11%. So clearly it does not understand inflation and has little ability to forecast it accurately as it is required to do. It tells us the inflation was caused by the Ukraine war and energy prices which it could not predict. So how come inflation was already 3 times target before the invasion? That main part of the inflation was not caused by the war. How come Japan and China kept inflation down to around 2% despite having to import much dearer energy as a result of the war?

N ow we are told they cannot risk lower rates because there could be more trouble in  the Red Sea. Freight rates and insurance rates are already well up and much shipping has been diverted to the long route, so markets know all about that pressure on prices. Meanwhile the money supply has been squeezed, credit is dear and scarcer, mortgage demand has fallen and the Bank ignores all these obvious signs that inflation will come down.

 

Worst of all is the gross distortion of its balance sheet. They bought far too many bonds at crazy prices in 2021 only now to want to sell them at huge losses and send the taxpayer the bill. Why? The ECB that made the same inflationary mistake is not doubling the error by selling bonds in the market. The Fed is not getting reimbursement from its Treasury. Only the Bank insists on double austerity with squeezed money and less public spending or tax cuts as the taxpayer picks up the bill of the UK’s uniquely bad bond investor, the Bank of England. Never has the Bank lost so much money so quickly for no good purpose.

We need an urgent change of Bank policy, Stop selling the bonds. Cut the base rate by 25 bp. Switzerland, Poland, Hungary, Brazil, China have started cutting their rates.

We need a new way of forming budgets Conservative Home article

March 21, 2024 97 Comments

The two main parties are locked in a budget battle.They are  dug into OBR  provided  trenches and fighting over the odd couple of billion here or there for a Non Dom tax and a Vat on private school fees tax.

£2 bn is under 0.1% of our economy and around 0.2% of revenues. Even when they  get so far as to argue about a £10 bn tax cut or spending increase they are still only talking about a sum under 0.5% of GDP. More to the point they are arguing over small rounding errors in the error strewn OBR forecasts of the deficit. The OBR regularly has to revise its deficit forecasts down by several tens of billions.

I  understand  the need for  parties to behave in a fiscally responsible way. They have to live down the huge spending rises necessitated by excessive lock downs as the preferred way of tackling covid. Labour was the bigger offender, always demanding the economy produced less  and was  subsidised more,always wanting longer and harder lockdown,  encouraging huge bills taxpayers could not afford. I do not understand why people think following the OBR will give us fiscal prudence, as they cheered on the covid excesses and now favour an economic austerity that will stifle growth and so depress revenues.

However, in resigned acceptance of the cross party and establishment’s wrong approach to necessary prudence I have set out before how there could be substantial cuts to public spending without damaging core services like the NHS and education. Within misleading OBR rules government  could find plenty of headroom to boost growth with tax cuts and or cash for investment for those who prefer that public sector led route.

We start with my old friend the heavily loss making Bank of England. They have lurched  from creating inflation by printing too much money and keeping rates too low, to causing a shallow recession by destroying too much money and by driving bond interest rates too high. They have lost us £50 bn since 2022, all reimbursed by taxpayers. Stop the bond  sales and follow ECB policy over bank reserves to make a big reduction in the losses and taxpayer subsidies.

Abolish the expensive and useless UK Government Investments . Get Ministers to supervise their departmental monitoring  of the nationalised industries and state owned shareholdings that report to them. They already duplicate the UK Government Investments work.  Put in management that can stop the huge losses at the Post Office and Network Rail. Dispose of holdings as with Nat West to bring in cash and cut risks. Sell other assets. Mutualise the Post Office. Achieve  a substantial  reduction in the £33 bn cash injection this year into a heavily loss making railway.

Get an accurate figure out of the Treasury/ OBR on early year capital  costs of providing a low wage migrant with a new social home, NHS capacity, school places for children and the rest. Identify the  top up benefits , tax credits and public service running costs to support a low paid new arrival. .Increase current targets to cut legal migration by 300,000 and reduce future spending accordingly.

Remove the £20 bn carbon capture spend from future budgets. There is no need for this transitional spend which just makes existing electricity dearer. Press on with cheaper functioning low carbon alternatives. The UK may have good carbon storage facilities so make these available for neighbouring countries producing too much CO 2 financed as a future profit making private sector opportunity.

Speed up policies to get more of the millions of working age not in work back into the workforce. The DWS has some good ideas to reduce the numbers of working age people not in jobs by suitable support, more home  working and realistic pay.


Build on the announcement in the budget of a major public sector productivity drive. The 6% collapse in public service productivity since covid can be recaptured before embarking on an ambitious spend to save AI led programme of work. The immediate task should be to impose a recruitment ban on civil service and public sector admin posts to recover 2019 numbers and levels of productivity.

These measures offer scope for up to £100 bn of savings through recaptured productivity, lower losses by state concerns, more private green investment and fewer low wage migrants. These things warrant more debate. The odd £2 bn is an OBR fiction that will be washed away in their forecasting errors.

 

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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwood8h
@renewablesmiffy The collapse in production is the forecast impact of net zero policy. It is government policy to ban all the successful cars we were making when we left the EU!
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwood9h
When will the government tell us the 2026-29 annual targets for battery car sales in line with plans to cut to 50% by 2030? Given the huge damage to the UK car industry of this policy they need to decide now. Better still drop all these self harming targets.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwood9h
Will the UK sell the oil from the seized tanker? Will it sell the tanker and use the proceeds to help a stretched defence budget? What is the government‘s view of how to punish the owners and managers of tankers breaking maritime law?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwood9h
Why let 200 shadow fleet ships pass then seize one? Will there be more seizures? What forces and budget have been assigned to stopping a lot of tankers breaking sanctions and maritime law? Or was this just a one off photo op to divert from the defence budget melt down?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 14
The new Defence Secretary says he will get the armed forces what they need and praises John Healey. Now Downing Street say they want the low budget, but cannot yet publish it! Clearly it is not agreed. Who backs down?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 14
59% are against EU re set and giving powers away to the EU, with only 27% in favour in a recent poll. The public realises re set means paying the EU for a bad deal.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 14
So the new Defence Secretary will be given a bigger budget than the one who resigned over too little money. What a stupid way to treat Ministers and to settle a budget.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 14
UK production sector output fell over the last three months and did not grow over the last year. Why doesn’t the government act to reverse the big damage its tax and net zero policies are doing?
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Keith Bays
↻Keith Bays@keith_baysJun 13
Happy Birthday @GBNews! 🎉 The People’s Channel is 5 today. I’ve been here for 4 years and 2 months, and it’s been a privilege to be part of this incredible journey. We’ve come a long way thanks to the hard work, commitment and passion of everyone at GB News. Most importantly,
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Claire Coutinho
↻Claire Coutinho@ClaireCoutinhoJun 13
Two years ago I said: Either we continue to let Net Zero dictate products and prices or we embrace choice. Now Ed Miliband is putting costs up on: Underfloor heating Boilers Electricity Cars Food Tumble Dryers Fertilizer Towel Rails Shipping The consumer is being shafted. ...
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 13
The government is going to ban some cheaper and popular home heating systems and wants to cut use of heaters. Welcome to cold over regulated Britain where EU alignment will put up the cost of living. Net zero policy closes factories, costs us jobs and now wants colder homes.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 13
The Channel tunnel has been hit by a 200% increase in UK rates, so it is cancelling plans to invest in better freight services. I thought the government wanted us to be closer to the EU and do more trade with them. Once again its self harming tax policies get in the way.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 13
The government that cannot find more money for defence announces more cash for bike lanes, for the rip off Erasmus student scheme, subsidies to employ workers from abroad and for France to fail to stop the boats. Why?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 12
@_antstevens The infrastructure has been nationalised for many years!
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 12
The costs of social security are out of control so the government short changes national security.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 12
The PM’s cost of living champion thinks the answer to the pressures on budgets is to cut future pension increases. It just shows how far from the realities of living on a low pension they are. People pay in for all their working lives only to find everything is dear.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 12
Why has the government not published the Defence Investment Plan, as the outgoing Defence Secretary has revealed its key numbers? The new Defence Secretary must have signed up to the Plan as otherwise the PM would have offered more money to prevent the resignation.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 12
Why do Northern trains with fully nationalised services have such poor punctuality performances, well below many privatised train operators?
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Brexit Facts4EU.Org
↻Brexit Facts4EU.Org@Facts4euOrgJun 11
Essential reading from @GBNEWS based on our report overnight. Please read and please re-post! ...
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 11
The Defence Secretary was right to ask for more money. The Chancellor was right to challenge that. The PM should have got them to agree a sufficient increase to defend us which both could accept.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 11
What a shambles. We were right to press to see the budget for defence so our industries could get on with making and supplying the equipment they need. Instead we saw a Defence Secretary decommissioning ships and running down our forces against his wishes.
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Brexit Facts4EU.Org
↻Brexit Facts4EU.Org@Facts4euOrgJun 11
‘Diversity, Equality, EX-clusion’ The shocking facts of how Whitehall’s plans will kill off a living national treasure, with us for 3,500 years, IRREVERSIBLY. Plus, what readers can do to prevent this tragedy. Summary: ... Pls re-post! ...
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 11
As it dithers over how to pay for the new defence programmes needed the government also needs to answer why it gets so little for the £62 bn it is spending this year. Why have Ministers decommissioned so many ships? Why did they withdraw the navy from the Middle East?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 11
Net zero zealotry wants to be rid of many of our grazing animals. See my comments on @facts4eu and @GBNews on this attack on our farms and wild ponies.
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 11
Yesterday in the Lords I forecast the government will not hit its target of 1.5 million new homes. No government supporter or Minister disagreed. When will there be actions to help people buy a home and get a job to afford the mortgage?
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwoodJun 10
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@johnredwoodJun 10
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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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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