Category Archives: Announcement

Statement on the 2012 budget: making tax fairer

“With Chancellor George Osborne finalising next week’s budget, the Social Liberal Forum reaffirms the Liberal Democrat commitment to fair taxation and urges the government to consider the political implications of cutting taxes on income for the highest earners.
Of course we welcome moves to further raise the income tax threshold, to tax property more fairly and to prevent the wealthiest from exploiting tax loopholes; these are all progressive policies that wouldn’t be in place without Liberal Democrat influence in government. However, as last week’s Spring Conference made clear, so is the retention of the 50p tax rate on the highest incomes at a time of austerity and economic uncertainty:
Conference resolves that the wealthy and those with the very highest incomes should make the greatest proportionate contribution to the tax measures necessary for the reduction of the structural budget deficit and that the Additional Income Tax Rate of 50% on the top 1% of earners is needed to achieve this.
It is not Lib Dem policy to trade the 50p tax rate away in return for other measures on fair taxation; the 50p rate is an integral part of a fair tax system at a time when being seen to cut taxes for the wealthiest would be politically impossible, the amount raised by the rate is unclear and the so-called replacements are not yet in place.
We therefore urge Lib Dems throughout the party to commit to fair taxation at both ends of the spectrum such that those with the greatest means pay the most and are seen to do so.”
Bookmark and Share

Lib Dem Pensions proposals – authored by SLF – are big news in the industry

Janice Turner’s pensions motion, passed at Lib Dem Conference in Newcastle Gateshead last weekend, is causing a stir in the pensions industry.

In an article last Friday, the Profesional Pensions news site posted an article saying:

Liberal Democrat and experienced member-nominated trustee Janice Turner will deliver a policy motion on Saturday – backed by pensions minister Steve Webb – pushing for reform of both defined benefit and defined contribution pensions.

The site also republished the full text of the motion.

Lib Dem pensions minister Steve Webb MP has said he intends to implement the policy in full – and it was backed by a large majority of local representatives on Saturday afternoon.

UPDATE:

Janice and the SLF were back in Professional Pensions this week, reporting the success of the motion:

Liberal Democrats, including pensions minister Steve Webb, have backed a wide-ranging pensions reform package put forward by experienced member-nominated trustee Janice Turner at its Spring Conference.

Delegates overwhelming backed Turner’s policy motion which pushed for Lib Dems in government to act more decisively to protect defined benefit schemes and rethink defined contribution pensions in the private sector.

Bookmark and Share

Social Liberal Forum Update

You can download the Kindle version of Prateek Buch’s pamplet on Plan C. It can be found here

Also registration for our own SLF conference is now open. Please book early – it will help us enormously with the planning.

Date : July 14th
Venue: Kings College Waterloo campus
Main speakers: Nick Clegg, Edward Davey, Paul Burstow
Book now

Bookmark and Share

Liberal Democrat Conference does not support the Health and Social Care Bill

“The Social Liberal Forum welcomes the vote by the Liberal Democrat conference not to support Andrew Lansley’s Health and Social Care Bill. It is a poorly-conceived, muddled mess that exposes patients to increased risk and lands frontline health professionals with greater levels of bureaucracy and uncertainty.

“Liberal Democrat peers have made valiant efforts to improve the Bill in the House of Lords. We applaud them for that. But it is still a bad bill, which rightly has very little support from either health professionals or voters.

The British public has been waiting to hear what ordinary grassroots Liberal Democrats think of Lansley’s Bill. We are proud to be a democratic party and we have considered all arguments in a thoughtful and passionate debate. Now the public have their answer: in deleting the following lines from the so-called “Shirley Williams” motion on healthcare

Conference… calls on Liberal Democrat peers to support the Third Reading of the Bill provided such further amendments are achieved.

Liberal Democrat conference has affirmed that the majority of the membership opposes the Bill.”

Bookmark and Share

Plan C – A distinctively Lib Dem economic strategy

Plan C has been released today on the Amazon store, in electronic form. It sets out the Social Liberal Forum’s proposals for the economy, which we hope to see adopted by the Liberal Democrats as a distinct policy from both Labour and the Tories.

Prof. Will Hutton, in his foreword, says:

I am pleased to be invited to write a few words introducing a policy document that contains so many recommendations and ideas I have concentrated much of my working and intellectual life to advancing. This is the plan…that could begin to make a difference to our country.

And SLF stalwart Dr. Prateek Buch, the architect of Plan C, says in his introduction:

The Social Liberal Forum exists "to promote social justice and actively narrow gaps in power and opportunity between rich and poor," and here we present our proposals for fulfilling that rhetorical demand for a fairer economic framework. In recognising that orthodox economic policy failed to deliver prosperity for all during times of plenty and fairness in times of austerity, we set out the principles upon which a sustainable economy that promotes social justice can be built.

A limited number of hard copies of Plan C will be available at the joint SLF/Liberator conference stall at the spring conference this weekend in Gateshead.

After purchace on Amazon, you can read it on a Kindle device, but if like many of us you don’t have a Kindle you can use the Kindle App for your PC, Mac, or phone.

Bookmark and Share

South Central Social Liberal Forum Event

We are pleased to tell you about another Social Liberal Forum event happening in the South Central region – “The Health and Social Care Bill: is it now good enough?”. The regional Liberal Democrat conference is taking place on Saturday 25th February in High Wycombe (http://southcentrallibdems.org.uk/en/page/regional-conference ) and we have arranged a lunch time fringe event at the conference. Graham Winyard has a long history of working in the NHS (having been Deputy Chief Medical Officer and Medical Director of the NHS in England) and is one of the key names behind a petition launched by the Winchester Liberal Democrats (http://www.winld.org.uk/nhs-petition/ ) to drop the Health and Social Care Bill.                           

A recent online survey by LibDemVoice (http://www.libdemvoice.org/nhs-bill-lib-dem-members-poll-27034.html) highlighted that of those party members who responded, opponents of the bill outnumbered supporters by 2-to-1. Some party members who oppose the bill feel that it could be rescued by abandoning some aspects or by major changes, while others feel it should be dropped altogether. How do we as party members influence our MPs and members of the House of Lords? Please join the debate at our fringe event.

We would particularly like to hear from people who work in the NHS about how you feel towards the bill and what impact it could have – contact us if you feel able to speak at the fringe about your personal experiences.

Bookmark and Share

Unworkable and unnecessary elements of Health bill should be dropped

“The Social Liberal Forum and senior Lib Dems with expert knowledge of the NHS have long believed that the Health and Social Care Bill is seriously flawed and should only be enacted if substantially amended. It has now emerged that senior Conservative Cabinet Ministers and Conservative Home share the widespread concern over the Bill’s impact.

The NHS is already implementing many substantial changes to how frontline services are delivered in response to financial and demographic pressures – this Bill is irrelevant to those changes which can be carried out without new legislation. Where the reforms underway enhance the social liberal aspects of the healthcare system they should be completed with little further disruption, agreement across Parliament and in concert with the medical profession. The rest of the Bill should be abandoned in the interests of preserving a locally accountable, coordinated, comprehensive and cooperative health service.”

Bookmark and Share

SLF welcomes cancellation of ‘Coalition 2.0′

The Social Liberal Forum welcomes confirmation in the Independent on Sunday that there will be no new fixed coalition agreement for the second half of this parliament.

There is a lot more work to do on several bills currently passing through parliament – some of which, such as the Health and Social Care Bill, contain elements that we continue to find worrying. Others, for example implementation of the Vickers recommendations on banking, will require a concerted effort to pass into law. Now is not the time to plan a new raft of legislation. 

The original Coalition Agreement was an impressive document, containing many elements of a Social Liberal agenda for government and demonstrating the benefits of compromise – both for Liberal Democrats and for the country. 

However, it would not be appropriate to agree another full programme at this stage. Rather, we would like to see Conservatives and Liberal Democrats proposing their own ideas separately – as Nick Clegg did last week, with his welcome call for a further and faster rise in the income tax threshold. The two parties can then show how coalition works, positively, by examining each other’s ideas on their merits. We will support progressive social liberal measures, wherever they come from – and continue to oppose all measures that would widen the gap between rich and poor.

We believe that Social Liberal ideas are strong enough to attract consensus across government – and indeed across parliament – and we will continue to argue for them.

Bookmark and Share

Ian Swales MP to be guest speaker at SLF North East meeting

Following a successful first meeting before Christmas, the Social Liberal Forum North East branch are delighted to be welcoming Ian Swales, MP for Redcar, as guest speaker at their next meeting.

The meeting will take place on Friday 10th February from 6.30pm until 7.45pm at Gateshead Civic Centre. All North East Liberal Democrat members are welcome to join us to discuss with Ian how the party can maintain our distinctive identity within the Coalition Government.

Gateshead Civic Centre is easily reached by car or public transport. There’s ample car parking on site, and the civic centre is just five minutes walk from Gateshead Metro Station. Full directions can be downloaded here: http://www.gateshead.gov.uk/DocumentLibrary/howtogettogateshead.pdf

More details from Brian Robson – brianrobson@hotmail.co.uk or 07949 297 030.

Bookmark and Share

Nick Clegg rightly calls for the tax system to be made fairer

Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg told the Resolution Foundation today that Liberal Democrats will seek to aid those on low and middle incomes by raising the personal income tax threshold further and faster than previously assumed.

Already a significant example of Lib Dems securing fairness through tax reform, the Coalition Agreement set out the Government’s intention to make the first £10,000 of income exempt from tax by 2015. Given the continued squeeze on wages that puts family finances on ‘boiling point,’ Nick clearly set out how he would like the Coalition to lift the threshold sooner, asking “do you support a tax system that rewards the hard-working many? Or do you back taxes that favour the wealthy few?”

In a key passage of the speech, Nick linked the raising of the threshold with ensuring that those at the top of the income scale continue to pay their fair share.

With those at the top claiming the reliefs, enjoying the allowances, hiring other people to find the loopholes, while everyone else pays through the nose. So the Coalition is calling time on our unfair and out-of-whack tax system. We’ve put up Capital Gains Tax, ending the scandal of a hedge fund manager paying less on their shares than their cleaner paid on their wages. We’ve reduced tax breaks on pension funds for the very rich. We’ve clamped down on avoidance and taken steps to raise an extra £7bn through closing the tax gap.

These achievements to date may not be sufficient to fund the raising of the income tax threshold to £10,000, so Nick set out further ways in which the Coalition could rebalance the tax system – including the introduction of a General Anti-Avoidance Rule, and wealth taxes to make sure assets are fairly taxed.

The Social Liberal Forum welcomes moves to alleviate the squeeze on living standards that the Resolution Foundation recently highlighted. While the economic recovery remains fragile and the cost of living rises faster than incomes, we need a fairer tax system that reflects peoples’ ability to pay. As part of the radical changes needed to deliver the fairer economic settlement that Liberal Democrats seek to implement in government, we will continue to press for measures that make the tax system simpler, more transparent and fairer.

Bookmark and Share