Sunny George

We haven't properly reported George Osborne's speech of yesterday in which he called for encouragement of recycling (FT report).  This is a key extract from his speech to the Green Alliance:

"Right now, the UK has one of the lowest recycling rates in Europe.  In 2005, the most recent year for which comparable figures are available across the EU, UK households sent 22.6 million tonnes of rubbish to landfill.  The Government’s approach is an old fashioned one: use the threat of fines and punitive taxation to force people to recycle.  We’ve all seen how unpopular this heavy handed approach has been with the public.  What’s more, it is extremely expensive to administer and it encourages irresponsible behaviour like fly-tipping or back yard burning.  But if we look at what is happening in over 500 cities and communities in America, we can see that another way is possible.  There, instead of being fined for not recycling, households are actually being paid for their recycling.  Instead of using sticks, we can use carrots instead.  Instead of punitive taxes, we can use financial incentives.  This completely turns on its head the tired way that the government thinks about recycling."

Windandsun It's very welcome that there has been a switch in emphasis in Tory green policy.  For some reason we think of Aesop's 'Wind and Sun' fable:

"The Wind and the Sun were disputing which was the stronger. Suddenly they saw a traveller coming down the road, and the Sun said: "I see a way to decide our dispute. Whichever of us can cause that traveller to take off his cloak shall be regarded as the stronger. You begin." So the Sun retired behind a cloud, and the Wind began to blow as hard as it could upon the traveller. But the harder he blew the more closely did the traveller wrap his cloak round him, till at last the Wind had to give up in despair. Then the Sun came out and shone in all his glory upon the traveller, who soon found it too hot to walk with his cloak on.  Kindness effects more than severity."

It finishes a good week for the Shadow Chancellor:

Anatole Kaletsky tops it all off with his column in this morning's Times.  Kaletsky was long-time very warm towards Gordon Brown but he's written today that the Tories are coming up with thoughtful policies.  He writes this of Mr Osborne:

"If the Government automatically increased fuel duty whenever the oil price fell below a certain threshold, such as the $84 a barrel used in the Tory Green Paper, it would send a powerful signal to energy users that the era of cheap fuel is permanently over and efforts to conserve energy will never again be undercut, as they were in the 1980s and 1990s, by a collapse in the price of oil."

Next week we'll be publishing a series of thoughts on next steps for Tory economic policy.

Greg Barker sets out proposals for educating children about climate change

Barker_root_to_branch_2

Last night Greg Barker, Shadow Minister for Climate Change and the Environment, launched his Root to Branch pamphlet on embedding an understanding of the environment into education. Click here to download the pdf.

Cameron_root_to_branch David Cameron was there and praised Barker's work. He joked about how he was involved in his leadership campaign at a stage when they could have had team meetings in a taxi, or even in the front of Barker's sports car. He went on to speak about using Conservative means to tackle climate change, and how centre-right political leaders around the world had been asking him how he'd managed to get a conservative party so focused on the environment as an issue.

In introducing his pamphlet Barker added that man made climate change remained the "greatest long-term threat" to Britain and was therefore too big a problem to leave with just one generation. The main problems Barker identifies are:

  • School trips to the countryside hindered by health and safety worries and cost to parents
  • Lack of relevant teaching skills and insufficient coverage of climate change in textbooks
  • Schools themselves aren't being built and run with enough efficiency
  • Too many parents don't let their children cycle to school

And his recommendations include:

  • Schools should appoint 'Climate Change Champions'
  • More support for farm schools and school/farm twinning programmes
  • More freedom for school caterers to buy local seasonal food
  • Create a new body responsible for spreading best practice in schools

Realistic environmentalism

David_cameron_environment David Cameron was at the Royal Horticultural Halls today speaking to environmentalists, academics and press about his triangulation between "green" and "growth" - the Blue Green Charter. Read the speech in full here.

Cameron apologised that the timings had changed for the speech because he was going to have his second meeting with President Bush straight afterwards. They first met in Washington last November. He added that it mightn't be the best excuse to give passionate environmentalists!

Gordon Brown and others have tried to capitalise on the fact that the Party's focus had shifted somewhat from the environment as it became less of a priority to the public, so the main message was that environmentalism was still important despite the rising cost of living: "The era of cheap oil is well and truly over... for the sake of our future prosperity and our current cost of living, we must wean ourselves off our dependence on fossil fuels and go green".  "We can't afford not to go green", we must say no to the argument that "protecting the environment is a luxury rather than a necessity". "The choice isn't between the economy and the environment, it's between progress and the past".

Ainsworth_duncan Cameron was flanked by Alan Duncan, Greg Barker and Peter Ainsworth and he paid tribute to the legwork done by the latter two on environmental issues (although he did tell Ainsworth to "get out more" when he mentioned that he'd just read Newt Gingrich's Contract with the Earth). He also thanked the assembled environmentalists for their continued and valued engagement with the Conservatives.

The speech was structured around the five-point charter for tackling climate change (the bullet-points are virtually verbatim)...

Continue reading "Realistic environmentalism" »

Has Ruth Kelly just handed the Conservatives a winning issue in Greater Manchester?

BBC is reporting that Ruth Kelly has told the Commons that she backs congestion charging for Greater Manchester.  There will be a charge of up to £5 from 2013 combined with £2.8bn to create a "world-class public transport system".

Villiers_theresa Theresa Villiers, Shadow Transport Secretary, has wasted no time in seeing the political danger for Labour and the political opportunity for the Conservatives:

"Ruth Kelly is so desperate to push Greater Manchester into being a guinea pig for national road pricing that she is willing to stake her own parliamentary seat on it. At a time when fuel prices are at record high, and the Government is punishing drivers with sky high VED increases, Mrs Kelly is now going to hit low income earners in Greater Manchester with a 8 per cent tax on getting into work. Bullying Manchester into congestion charging is a high risk strategy for Ruth Kelly and she may find her Bolton West voters punish her at the general election for the plans she is announcing today. She needs to decide if she is going to stand up for her constituents or for her failing Government’s road pricing agenda."

Altrincham and Sale West MP Graham Brady attacked the whole scheme as "absurdly complex".  There will be two charging boundaries, rather than London's one.  Cars will be charged every time that they cross the boundary.  And rather than copying London's simple discount for residents there may be a means-tested discount for low income people.

Other 'local' issues playing to Labour's disadvantage: Post office closures, Polyclinics, A&E wards, Heathrow expansion, Ecotowns.

Furious MP in cow snub

Cow3_2 Hoping to raise awareness of the bovine TB crisis Daniel Kawczynski, MP for Shrewsbury and Chairman of the APPG for Dairy Farmers, was hoping to bring a cow to the green outside Parliament as part of a demonstration with hundreds of farmers. The authorities blocked the idea however (download letter):

"I am furious that they are preventing me from highlighting the appalling situation of bovine TB in this country. Thousands of Dairy farmers around England are going bust as a result of this appalling disease and the government is not lifting a finger to deal with the crisis."

It is a serious issue. We've already noted one aspect of the Government's ambivalence towards rural Britain today. According to this DEFRA document almost 10000 animals were slaughtered between January and March this year on account of bovine tuberculosis. Farmers really feel that the DEFRA Minister - a vegetarian and MP for the rugged constituency of Leeds Central - understands their livelihoods.

(On CentreRight recently Alex Deane wrote in favour of culling badgers as a means of controlling bovine TB, and Graeme Archer against.)

Peter Ainsworth: Conservation is MORE important in tough economic times

Yesterday, in our five-point tax and spend manifesto, we called on the Conservatives to abandon 'replacement taxes' - higher green taxes to pay for lower family taxation.  There is simply no case for higher green taxes at the moment when motorists, hauliers and air travellers are facing rocketing costs.  Noone would fault George Osborne if he got up and said that they're off the agenda for at least as long as oil prices remain so high.

David Cameron hasn't been talking much about green issues recently and the FT has noticed, writing "when [the Conservative leader] set out the priorities for a Tory government this month, he made no mention of green issues."  The shift in emphasis has also reached the Westminster insiders polled by PoliticsHome.com.  Just 13% expect the Conservative party to be the party most focused on green issues at the next election.  73% think it'll be the LibDems.

Peter Ainsworth, Tory Environment spokesman, has responded to all this chatter with a letter to the FT...

Ainsworthletter His letter insists that the party is still committed to green taxes (sigh) and that combating climate change "remains one of the top policy priorities of our party".  The most sensible thing is said at the start of the letter:

"The idea that green issues evaporate at the first touch of economic hardship betrays a misunderstanding of the environmental agenda. The necessity to build a sustainable economy is not just a “green issue”. It is just as much an economic one; business as usual is clearly unsustainable in the long term. Current economic stresses should underline that point rather than diminish it.  Any public policy that makes our vehicles, homes and businesses more fuel-efficient and encourages the use of cheaper, more reliable sources of energy is not peripheral, but central. Green policies therefore become more important in times of economic stress, not less. The issues of increased energy costs and the need for emissions reductions must be addressed by policies to develop low-carbon technologies."

We can sign up to the thrust of the argument but the price mechanism - rather than government intervention - should be the main driver of any conservation.

Five ideas for Conservative tax and spend policy

Companies leaving Britain because of our nation's high and complex tax burden.  Anger over the 10p tax increase produces the biggest crisis of Gordon Brown's leadership.  Tax and the cost of living dominate the successful Tory campaign in Crewe and Nantwich.  The front page of The Mirror and thirty Labour MPs demand a tax break for motorists.  Labour MP Denis MacShane tells Telegraph readers that it's time to cut taxes and spending.  Nick Clegg claims that only his party is committed to reduce taxation for lower and middle income workers.  Professor John Curtice notes that support for higher taxes hasn't been this low for more than two decades.  PoliticsHome.com's 5000 panel finds that tax overtakes law and order in voters' list of concerns.  And, just today, The Independent's Associate Editor, Hamish McRae asks: "When times are tough, you spend less. Why should it be any different for a government?"

Osborne_cameron How should the Conservative Party respond to this changed environment?  The easy answer to that question is to stay doing exactly what the leadership has been doing.  A large opinion poll lead would appear to vindicate the current strategy but David Cameron has rightly warned against complacency.  Two years is a long time until the likeliest date for the General Election.  We can't take victory for granted and we can't assume that Team Brown will keep shooting themselves in the feet.  Most of all we need to think beyond politics and to the good of UK plc.

So here are five recommendations - some familiar, some new:

One: Don't renew the pledge to match Labour's spending.
Two: Promise we'll do for Britain what Boris is doing for London.
Three:
Embrace deeper welfare reform and Iain Duncan Smith's social justice agenda.
Four: Promise to target tax cuts on the lowest income Britons.
Five: Abandon all schemes for 'replacement taxes'.

Continue reading "Five ideas for Conservative tax and spend policy" »

David Cameron will reject Tim Yeo's ideas on personal carbon accounts

It's not just the general public that is becoming less concerned with green issues.  The Guardian's Jon Harris told Adam Boulton yesterday that even the chattering classes assembled at the Hay arts festival have stopped chattering about climate change.  Mr Harris was even paying tribute to budget airlines.  It's amazing how an economic turndown changes priorities.

Yeo_tim_2 Some aren't giving up, however.  The main news on this morning's Today programme was  a report by a committee of MPs - chaired by Tim Yeo - that individual carbon accounts should be introduced for every single UK citizen.

John Redwood is at his best this morning, pointing out the impossibility of one nation introducing accounts unilaterally and he also warns against the enormous complexity of the idea:

"The initial response to the idea has concentrated on the enormous amount of computing and form filling there would need to be to capture everyone’s travel, heating, lighting and other uses of energy. It would make the ID computer look modest, cheap and not so intrusive. Government inspectors would need to watch over everyone’s habits and try to find a way of recording just about everything we do."

Complexity would only get worse if governments, for equity reasons, chose to adjust people's carbon limits for their age (older people spend more on heating), location (rural people spend more on transport) and health (very disabled people spend more time at home).

Fortunately the Conservative Party is almost certain to reject Mr Yeo's ideas.  On all the big green issues - green taxation, nuclear power and airport expansion - the party's initial green fervour is fortunately giving way to a more traditional approach.

GreenimageConservativeHome placed an environment design in our pre-Cameron masthead of shields because we believe in the importance of protecting the environment but it should be a sensible, practical environmentalism of the kind practised by local Conservative councils: recycling, protection of natural habitats, planting of trees, action against litter, better home insulation, pedestrian-friendly transport policies in town centres.  We don't deny that global warming may be real but sign up to the Copenhagen Consensus' analysis that there are more urgent things that can be done to improve human welfare than spend billions on green policies.  Meeting again this month to take another look at global warming and other great issues, the CC has previously put action against malaria and support for free trade as better priorities for today's public policymakers.

Forget climate change, voters want more loose change

Picture_7The economy has overtaken immigration as voters' top concern.

Tax has overtaken law and order.

Inflation has overtaken the environment.

The findings come from the new opinion tracker of 5,000 voters hosted by PoliticsHome.com and powered by YouGov.

Anthony Wells writes:

"As the economy heads for trouble, there has been a remarkable shift in the public priorities. Issues like the environment have moved down the agenda and people have started worrying about tax and inflation. Less regular trackers from other companies have shown immigration as the big issues for a couple of years now - so to see it knocked off the top spot indicates a major change in public opinion."

More here.  The Tory leadership has recognised the change of mood.  Talk of green taxes hasn't just been dumped; Conservatives are now campaigning against at least one of Labour's planned taxes.

Abraham Maslow predicted all of this in 1943.

Will Boris be green?

Greenboris Leading green campaigner Jonathan Porritt was worried before Boris' victory:

"The prospect of Boris as Mayor of London is just so scary. The prospect of Boris taking over London’s Climate Change Action Plan is even scarier. He may have learnt not to reveal his full contrarian bigotry on climate change, but he really doesn’t get it, and would rapidly scale back or completely get rid off the ambitious targets in the Action Plan. And that would be a massive set back. I just hope all the environmental NGOs can rally the troops in London in a pro-Ken campaign, even if they can’t come out and explicitly endorse him."

The Independent on Sunday is worried today:

"Although his father, Stanley (who would like to replace him as MP for Henley), was a pioneer of environmentalism, Boris has been until recently a climate-change sceptic. Seven years ago, he called George Bush's rejection of the Kyoto protocol "right not just for America but for the world".  After Mr Cameron went green, Boris said he was "terrified to dissent from the growing world creed of global warming", but that his mind was still "bubbling with blasphemous thoughts". So when he said in his manifesto for London that "City Hall should... strongly support efforts to tackle climate change", we are entitled to doubt the sincerity of his conversion. Especially as one of his pledges is to ditch Mr Livingstone's planned £25 congestion charge on larger vehicles."

Boris Johnson will be a 'green mayor'.  He presented an environmental manifesto that opposed expansion of Heathrow, promised 10,000 more trees on London's streets, opposed garden grabbing, promised more recycling and home insulation and supported a ban on carrier bags.  But this is a sensible environmentalism.  Boris Johnson does not have Ken Livingstone's green zeal.  The zeal that made London's outgoing mayor declare that this would be "the first election in British history to be decided largely on environmental issues".

Continue reading "Will Boris be green?" »

Unthinking environmentalism costs taxpayers, costs jobs and costs lives

Greeningtelegraph Great work by Tory Treasury spokesman Justine Greening has exposed the uselessness of Alistair Darling's 'green tax hike' on cars.  Her work has produced the main story in this morning's Telegraph:

"The "green levy" on motorists announced in Alistair Darling's first Budget will double car tax revenue to £4 billion but reduce vehicle emissions by less than one per cent, Treasury figures have showed... Justine Greening, a shadow Treasury minister who obtained the figures, said last night: "This is a massive tax hike which will have virtually no impact on the environment. Despite their claims, the Government don't expect this move to change behaviour at all - it is just another eco-stealth tax of the worst kind.""

The TaxPayer's Alliance's Matt Sinclair has already shown that we pay more than enough taxes to pay for our carbon footprint.  We need to be on high alert for more and more 'green action' that ends up costing taxpayers, costing jobs and - worst of all - costing lives.

Environmentalists have a history of putting their views before the interests of people in the developing world.  Attempts to ban DDT, for example, have only caused malaria infection problems to worsen.  Only this week the founder of Greenpeace explained why he left the organisation because of its anti-science biases.

The biggest side-effect of today's environmentalism has been the impact on food prices (again see Matt Sinclair).  Although far from the whole explanation for food price hikes Mary Riddell in The Telegraph notes how the current craze for biofuels is raising serious ethical questions:

"Filling a 4x4 fuel tank with ethanol uses enough maize to feed a human for a year. The EU quotas are a death sentence, and Brown should say so."

This week's Economist notes how higher food prices are hurting the world's poorest people:

"Famine traditionally means mass starvation. The measures of today's crisis are misery and malnutrition. The middle classes in poor countries are giving up health care and cutting out meat so they can eat three meals a day. The middling poor, those on $2 a day, are pulling children from school and cutting back on vegetables so they can still afford rice. Those on $1 a day are cutting back on meat, vegetables and one or two meals, so they can afford one bowl. The desperate—those on 50 cents a day—face disaster."

For those interested in these issues we recommend Nigel Lawson's new book - An Appeal to Reason - and also Iain Murray's new blog; The Really Inconvenient blogHis new book exposes how liberal enthusiasms have hurt the environment and the poor.

David Cameron congratulates Australian Prime Minister on signing Kyoto

Cameronandrudd David Cameron met with Labor PM Kevin Rudd in London this morning:

"Prime Minister Rudd and I had an excellent meeting this morning during his visit to London. Our talk focused on Britain’s and Australia’s shared commitments in Afghanistan, and the latest developments following the NATO Summit in Bucharest, which Mr Rudd attended.

We also discussed the global economic situation, the prospects for the Doha round, and the Australian Government’s commitment to tackling climate change. I congratulated the Prime Minister on his Government’s decision to sign the Kyoto Treaty immediately upon taking office."

Rudd also met with Brown yesterday, and said that he would not let the Chinese have their own guards surrounding the Olympics torch when it comes to Australia.

David Cameron is increasingly seen by global power-brokers as somebody worth getting to know, and not just those on the right. Under Rudd Australia has joined Spain as the second prominent nation to withdraw from Iraq, his party is dominated by trade unionists, he hasn't been shy about his republicanism during this visit, and his signing of Kyoto was something that his Conservative predecessor John Howard had strongly held out against.

With there being a good chance Cameron will be Prime Minister in 2010 it's worth thinking about who the major world leaders he has to deal with will be. Rudd will very likely still be in power. Stephen Harper is looking solid in Canada despite still being in minority government. Obama or McCain in the US. Sarkozy in France...

Tory MP Ian Taylor attacks Greenpeace's "hypocrisy" in opposing nuclear energy

Tory MP Ian Taylor, Chairman of the Conservative Party's Science and Technology taskforce, has issued a statement today urging Britain to embrace nuclear power:

"Unless the Government moves quickly to boost the nuclear power station rebuilding programme, there is no hope in meeting the non-fossil fuel targets. Wind and wave power alone will not suffice.  Greenpeace shows sheer hypocrisy in pressing its objections. Members should resign in protest if they are seriously 'green'."

In the video below Mr Taylor describes the belief that a little more wind and wave power will deliver energy security as "emotionally confused".  Only nuclear power, he says, will help Britain to substantially reduce its dependence on oil from the Middle East and gas from Russia.

      

The initial Cameron position on nuclear power was to regard it as a "last resort" but that language is no longer being used.  The Tories now believe that as long as there is a fair and equitable financial regime, nuclear power should be an important part of Britain's future energy mix.  The Liberal Democrats remain firmly opposed to any more nuclear power plants.  12% of Tory members agreed with the LibDems' opposition to nuclear power.  85% disagreed with it.

Early last month David Cameron gave a speech to Greenpeace, promising a decentralised energy revolution where people are paid for the energy they produce.

Related link: Of kettles and car engines - why nuclear power is not the solution to energy security by Peter Franklin

Peter Ainsworth publishes the environmental heroes and zeroes of 2007

Following last year's heroes and zeroes, Peter Ainsworth has made a new list for 2007.  We publish them below with - in green italics - a few of our own observations.

Continue reading "Peter Ainsworth publishes the environmental heroes and zeroes of 2007" »

Zac Goldsmith attacks Government for pandering to the whims of the aviation industry

Londondoesnotneed Writing in today's Evening Standard, Richmond Park candidate Zac Goldsmith criticises the "misguided" principle behind the proposed new runway at Heathrow:

  • "Why is the Government pushing ahead with a policy that is deeply unpopular with a large section of the capital and which conflicts with its own climate-change commitments? The answer must be that it has simply failed to do the calculations; that, or it has been bullied by vested interests."
  • "The Government's ostensible fear is that if we don't expand Heathrow, we will jeopardise the competitiveness of our aviation industry. But Heathrow is already the world's busiest international airport, serving 17 per cent more passengers than its closest rival, Paris' Charles de Gaulle, and 45% more than Amsterdam's Schipol."
  • "The truth is Heathrow does not need to expand. It would do far better to focus on improving its existing capacity. For instance, does it need to encourage so many transfer flights? One in three people using Heathrow never even leave the airport and therefore add very little value to the UK economy."
  • "The principle underlying airport expansion - that we should predict growth and then simply provide enough  capacity to meet it - has been discredited for road building, and ultimately it will not survive for aviation. It is the politics of the magic porridge pot; a policy with no clear end, a non-solution."

Thoughts on next steps for modernisation...

Later this afternoon I'll post on 'next steps for the core vote issues' but here are a few thoughts on what, not particularly accurately, could be described as 'moderniser or change issues'.

Although I'm very glad to see the party 'rebalancing' it is important that the party does not retreat into the core vote territory that was insufficient at recent General Elections.  I have no doubt that David Cameron will remain committed to his change agenda but it's important that the change agenda is also fully consistent with conservative principles...

Continuing to emphasise the public services. Our polices on schools and hospitals are a bit timid but they're much superior to the command and control policies of Gordon Brown.

The environment.  Earlier this month I promoted the idea of 'achievable environmentalism'.  I mentioned planting trees, recycling, cutting waste, investing in renewables, protecting natural habitats.  John Redwood has written today about "practical environmentalism" and highlighted more fuel efficient vehicles, better energy conservation and more intelligent traffic management.  Conservatives should be a party of conservation but not a party of higher green taxes or heavy restrictions on development (eg airport expansion).

Social justice.
  At Tuesday's Carlton Club dinner David Cameron noted that there were 600,000 more people living in extreme poverty.  The very poorest have got poorer under Labour.  Britain needs a Conservative approach to poverty.  Stronger families.  A freer, more dynamic voluntary sector.  Zero tolerance of crime and drugs.  School choice.  I have no doubt that the leadership is 100% committed to these core themes of a 'progressive conservatism'.

International development.  It was overshadowed by the fuss over the Rwanda trip, but Peter Lilley produced an excellent report on fighting global poverty.  I hope Andrew Mitchell, Alan Duncan and George Osborne will be able to embrace many of Peter's recommendations this week.  I'd also like the party to take more action against the trade of arms to despotic regimes.  I also wish we'd spoken out against the cancellation of the BAe-Saudi bribery investigation.

Respect for gay people.  Many people oppose David Cameron's belief that gay couples should be recognised in a similar way to married couples.  I don't.  I support the freedom of religious adoption agencies to be able to refuse to place children with gay couples but it's right that a modern Conservative Party is a defender of the rights of adult gay people.

Candidate diversity.  I never supported the A-list but there are many advantages in having more diverse candidates.  More people with roots in the north and in the public and voluntary sectors, for example.  Candidate diversity shouldn't just be about more women and more ethnic minorities.  We should be actively recruiting candidates with real knowledge of poverty-fighting and environmental protection.

Changes of tone.  Another change for the party to maintain is the change of tone.  Sometimes our party's rhetoric has been too harsh.  In the last campaign our posters accusing Tony Blair of being a liar reflected more on us than on him.  Our campaigning can still be negative but it shouldn't be personal.

Zac Goldsmith offers rebuttal of criticisms of his QofL report

Zac Goldsmith has just emailed me a Q&A that attempts to rebut the "amazingly misleading" press coverage of recent days. He writes: "The report is not about bans, punishments or telling people what to do. It's about making green decisions possible for everyone - not just the wealthy. It's about pushing business to be less wasteful and more efficient."

This is his Q&A briefing:

"More Bans?

The report actually puts very little emphasis on Bans. We propose banning landfill of waste that can be composted or recycled. But that’s about it. The emphasis is on raising standards as far as possible, but never more than existing technology allows. There are huge savings to be made through greater appliance efficiency.

Reports that we want to ban Plasma screens are wrong. We want to encourage plasmas that are less wasteful. Nor are we proposing to ban the standby. We want to have an automatic switch-off mechanism fitted so that appliances switch off after a set period of time.

More Regulations?

We don’t want more regulation. We have some of the most difficult regulations in Europe, and some of the lowest standards. We want to replace prescriptive – process-oriented regulations – with outcome-specific standards. So - we would abolish the Building Regulations. In farming – the most regulated of all activities – we would move to a process of self-certification based on trust. On Planning, we would decentralise the process to avoid situations where the Central Government is able to rule on genuinely local issues, against the wishes of local people and Local Authorities.

Continue reading "Zac Goldsmith offers rebuttal of criticisms of his QofL report" »

All so predictable

Conservativehomeeditorial The Gummer-Goldsmith report has, as ConservativeHome feared, done the party a lot of damage.  It risks making us look like a high-tax party out of touch with ordinary families.  And for what benefit?  Nothing Britain does on its own will make a difference to climate change.  As the Copenhagen Consensus powerfully argues: there are many more sensible priorities for forward-thinking nations.

This is what George Pascoe-Watson, the Political Editor of The Sun, writes about yesterday's 'Blueprint for a Green Economy':

"The Tories are meant to be targeting Britain’s hard-working families with tax CUTS, not tax RISES.  But Goldsmith’s wish list of green policies would make life hell for most Sun readers."

Thesun_2 The Sun Says column warns Mr Cameron that he is like an endangered polar bear; walking on thin ice.  He could "disappear without trace" at the next General election and asks:

"Why should we wear hair shirts when China builds two new coal-fired power stations a week and Russian rivers are so polluted they catch fire?"

The best line comes from the Express' leader column (not online): "Zac Goldsmith and John Gummer make Marie Antoinette appear positively in touch with common people."  It continues:

"Millions of hard-pressed British people know that a higher income would improve their lives.  Any party that claims the opposite, let alone one dominated by those born into wealth, is doomed to perpetual opposition."

Mail The Mail does not repeat its 'Does Cameron understand ordinary people?' attack of yesterday but focuses on the Gummer-Goldsmith plans to make home improvement harder:

"Families would be forced to turn their houses green before being given permission to carry out loft conversions or conservatory extensions under plans published by the Tories yesterday.  Householders would have to follow in the footsteps of David Cameron by fitting energy-saving light bulbs, solar panels and possibly even a wind turbine on the roof if they wanted to make home improvements."

Hardly a vote winner.

Telegraph The Telegraph is equally unimpressed.  This is what its leader-writers say:

"The report's authors have embraced the profoundly un-Conservative notion that people can be taxed into living their lives differently.  It is one thing to try to incentivise people to become "greener", quite another to try to bully them into submission through new taxes.  While we recognise that it would be the ambition of a Tory government, over the course of an economic cycle, to reduce taxation, the report recommends swingeing environmental taxes on new cars, higher vehicle excise duties and VAT on domestic flights.  Mr Cameron promised yesterday that all environmental tax revenues will be ring-fenced in a Family Fund that will be used "to reduce family taxes". It may be the fault of Labour that promises made by political leaders have come to be regarded as less than iron cast, but we doubt this assurance will reassure voters.  These aggressive tax proposals are unachievable in a literal sense, for any party espousing them would have little hope of winning power (a truth already grasped by Gordon Brown)."

The Independent welcomes the report, of course, and warns him that his credibility will be finished if he does not back its recommendations.  The Guardian is also positive but in remarks certain to alarm Conservatives it concludes that it is "far more radical on environmental policy than anything produced by Labour's high command".

Anyway, it's time to move on.  I don't always agree with Iain Dale's Telegraph columns.  They're very panglossian about the weaknesses of Conservative strategy but he's on the money today.  Brown doesn't just want to beat the Conservative Party.  He wants to destroy the Conservative Party.  That's more obvious today than it was yesterday.  The Thatcher-Brown meeting - strongly attacked by Rob Wilson MP in a controversial Platform piece - proved that conclusively.  ConservativeHome (belatedly) launches its 'wrongman' website on Monday.  It's not going to have much content on day one but - with your help - we can build it up into a creative centre for holding Brown accountable for his record and weaknesses.

Zac Goldsmith is off message about how green taxation will be used

Goldsmithzaconsundayam Earlier today David Cameron gave a warm welcome to the Quality of Life policy group's recommendations:

"This report is probably the most thoughtful and comprehensive and fullest report that any party in Britain has produced on the environment.  I think it is a very good report and there is much of it that we will include in our manifesto."

In an attempt to increase the credibility of his promise that every £1 increase in green taxation will pay for a £1 reduction in family taxation he has also announced the creation of a ring-fenced 'Family Fund'.  All revenues from green taxation will go into the Fund and will be allocated to cuts in family tax.  Although ConservativeHome opposes higher green taxes, we warmly approve of Mr Cameron's choice of tax cutting priorities.  David Cameron said:

“We are prepared to make tough choices. We have said very clearly that taxes on pollution will go up. Those increases will be offset pound for pound by reductions in family taxes to help people meet the rising cost of living.  We will establish a family fund into which all of the new taxes on pollution will go. That money will be ring fenced – no civil servants will be able to get there hands on it – and  it will be independently audited so we can guarantee that increased taxes on pollution will be offset by a reduction on family taxes.”

This message was immediately undermined by Zac Goldsmith, however.  Justifying higher taxation of domestic flights he told BBC News 24 that the revenues raised would be used to improve rail services.  Although Mr Goldsmith does not speak for the frontbench he is a parliamentary candidate and it is unhelpful for the public to be receiving such mixed messages.

Taxpayers_alliance The TaxPayers' Alliance has produced a strongly-worded response to the Gummer-Goldsmith report:

  • "The Quality of Life report is based on suspect analysis and its recommendations will be harmful.  Increased taxes, more regulation, more quangos, a curb of vital infrastructure development and an attack on free trade would hurt British families and businesses and damage our economic competitiveness.
  • The report will not command public support.  A recent TaxPayers’ Alliance/YouGov poll showed strong public scepticism about the efficacy of green taxes and the motives of politicians in recommending them.
  • Further green taxes are unnecessary and would be economically damaging.  A recent study by the TaxPayers’ Alliance showed that green taxes are already £10 billion higher than the level need to cover the cost of Britain’s carbon footprint - £400 for every household.  The report also showed that there are serious flaws in all the major green taxes."

Read the whole TPA response here.

Zac's perspective

Highlights from today's Telegraph article:

Zac_goldsmith "The most credible science now tells us that human behaviour, through activities such as the burning of fossil fuels and the destruction of the rainforests, is accelerating climate change at a rate that threatens devastating consequences for our security, prosperity and wellbeing."

"In a world whose population and hunger for resources is growing at an unprecedented rate, the depletion of natural capital and growing instability of our climate are factors bringing profound economic, social and security implications for every country. Britain imports oil and gas in an era of dwindling reserves concentrated in very few hands, not all of which we can rely on."

"As a country we have failed to get to grips with these vital issues. I think there are two principle reasons. First, the green agenda has concentrated on the wrong solutions - sticks, punishments, and doom-and-gloom messages that alienate people. Second, Gordon Brown has cynically exploited the growing concern about these issues to enrich the Treasury."

Continue reading "Zac's perspective" »

Easyjet slams Tory tax plans

Easyjet EasyJet boss Andy Harrison said the following to Radio 4's Today programme this morning:

"Domestic air travel is already very highly taxed... EasyJet's average domestic fare is £27, of which £10 is already air passenger duty (APD), which represents a tax of well over 50%.

If you widen the debate out to the regions, to Northern Ireland, to Scotland, to the North East, rail is simply a slow, expensive, and often non-existent alternative...

The critical thing is to get people flying in new aircraft.  The Tories are talking about taxing gas-guzzling cars, but the way APD works at the moment is that people pay the same whether they are flying in an old aircraft, a new aircraft, a half-empty aircraft or a full aircraft.  We think the green agenda is important but we need to have intelligent, effective taxation not some of this tax which is quite simply the result of sloppy thinking."

He noted that easyJet was already paying £150 million in APD - four times its carbon cost according to Government statistics.

Noon: More below from Easyjet:

Continue reading "Easyjet slams Tory tax plans" »

Too much materialism?

ToomuchThe above quotation from the Gummer-Goldsmith Quality of Life report (read it here) was shown to viewers of Newsnight.

I think it's true that material possessions don't bring happiness.  Sometimes the Conservative Party has been caricatured as too interested in money and insufficiently interested in the nation's culture, the strength of its families and the beauty of the countryside.  The best thing about the party's policy review process is that it has communicated breadth of political interest.   We haven't just had a focus on competitiveness and security.  We've also shown to be interested in social justice, international poverty, the public services and, today, the environment.  What I don't like in the tone of the Gummer-Goldsmith report is an apparent embrace of the belief at the heart of the green movement that growth, material acquisition and sometimes even humanity itself are enemies of the planet.

Heathlong This seems a good time to use my favourite Edward Heath quote.  Mr Heath made the quote in the early 1970s - when the green movement first came to political prominence:

"The alternative to expansion is not, as some occasionally seem to suppose, an England of quiet market towns linked only by steam trains puffing slowly and peacefully through green meadows. The alternative is slums, dangerous roads, old factories, cramped schools, stunted lives.”

Let's have a debate about 'the good life' but Conservative politicians - particularly those frontbenchers with their 115 paid outside interests - shouldn't be lecturing low income families that there's too much materalism in Britain.

The Quality of Life report

Blueprintforagreenecono Advance copy of the report: ConservativeHome has a copy of the Quality of Life report due to be launched tomorrow at 10.30am.  Interestingly it doesn't have an executive summary.  Reports without executive summaries nearly always - in my experience - don't want to be fully open about what they contain.

Download a PDF of the Gummer-Goldsmith report

Discouragement of home improvements: There are a number of taxes on cars and aeroplanes as expected.  So far I have discovered one very controversial new policy that hasn't been flagged yet: Page 72 recommends that any householder wanting to improve their homes via, for example, a loft conversion or adding a conservatory will be required to make "cost-effective energy efficient improvements to the existing structure".  This proposal could have major implications for homeowners' ability to afford home improvements.  While "cost-effective energy efficient improvements" may pay for themselves in the long-run the requirement for whole-house energy-efficient measures will discourage many people on tighter incomes from improving their homes.

Airport expansion: I have just been interviewed for Radio 4's World Tonight.  Before I spoke David Wilshire was interviewed.  His constituency includes Heathrow and he encouraged David Cameron to disown the report's recommendations on airport expansion and discouragement of domestic flights.  Mr Wilshire warned that restrictions on the expansion of UK airports will simply see airline business migrate to Amsterdam, Paris and Frankfurt.  He complained that Zac Goldsmith didn't understand the aviation industry and had not met him to discuss his concerns despite requests for him to do so:

"Zac doesn't understand aviation - it's a global business. British aviation produces 1.6% of global emissions. If we fiddle about on an entirely unilateral basis, we will damage the British economy, cost my constituents jobs and then we can watch the Chinese open up another 49 airports.  You can't fiddle about with aviation and make gestures, price people out of flying and make it an elitist activity for the wealthy."

MPs from the North West and East Midlands have also been in touch with me over recent days to talk about the importance of airports to regional economies.  My understanding is that David Cameron has rejected the report's blanket restrictions on airport expansion.

Achievable environmentalism: David Cameron should, in my opinion, not unilaterally attempt to save the planet.  Any marginal gains that can be achieved in Britain will be quickly overwhelmed by economic growth in India and China. Instead Conservatives should focus on 'achievable environmentalism'.  This should include planting trees, recycling, cutting waste, investing in renewables, protecting natural habitats and so on.

News reports already online: BBC | Times

David Cameron moves fast to kill charges-for-supermarket-parking row

Interviewed earlier by Telegraph readers, David Cameron has appeared to rule out charges for supermarket parking.  He said:

"I understand as a parent of three children that when you are going to the shops, you are trying to manage everything, car parking charges may not be the most helpful way forward."

This is the second time he has quickly disowned a Gummer-Goldsmith idea.  He has already said that he won't accept the moratorium on airport expansion.  Earlier today the balance of ConservativeHome opinion was strongly against the idea of having to pay to park your car at Tesco or Sainsbury.

Mr Cameron also "pledged that within weeks of Parliament's return on Oct 9 he would force a Commons vote demanding a referendum on the successor treaty to the abandoned European Constitution."

Camerond On the right is the picture the Telegraph has on its website of Mr Cameron answering readers' questions.  I'm not sure that the size of those energy-guzzling screens will impress Mr Gummer!  Al Gore wouldn't mind, though.

Gummer-Goldsmith ideas to protect smaller shops upset traditional Tory commentators

Calamitycam This morning's newspapers have a number of reports on 'Tory plans' to tax supermarket shopping.  The plans are, in fact, only proposals from the Gummer-Goldsmith Quality of Life policy group but they have produced upset at The Sun (see clipping on the right).

Richard Littlejohn, in the Daily Mail, also rails against the Conservative plans in his column:

"People are aware of their responsibilities to the planet, and most try to conserve energy and recycle as much as possible.  But they resent lectures about individual behaviour from Old Etonian politicians. An extra two grand on a Mondeo may not matter to a multi-millionaire like Goldsmith, but it's a huge chunk of change from the average family budget.  And whatever CMD [Call Me Dave] may think, regardless of what people tell pollsters, no one will vote for higher taxes and higher prices. They also resent being expected to pay more, on top of their council tax, for less frequent rubbish collections.  The Government already raises the thick end of £30 billion a year through "green" taxes - virtually none of which gets spent improving the environment."

Expect much, much more of the same if Gummer-Goldsmith recommends significant increases in taxation of air travel and cars later this week.  In order to offset the likely political damage the Tory leadership needs to move quickly.  It will be helpful if George Osborne immediately announces which tax cuts will be enacted by a Conservative government - afforded by the extra green taxation that David Cameron promised yesterday.

The Guardian notes that John Gummer's policy group believes that local authorities should have the power to levy fees on supermarket car parks that bring them into line with town centre rates of charging.  The revenues raised, suggests Mr Gummer, would fund improvements in public transport.  Mr Cameron has already ruled this out - saying that all new environment taxes will pay for cuts in family and business taxation.  The Guardian also says that  the group will recommend a confidential hotline through which farmers will be able to 'shop' supermarkets that treat them unfairly.  It quotes a recent poll showed that found that 71% of consumers worried that supermarkets were too powerful.

Zac Goldsmith has fought a campaign against the building of a new Sainsbury's supermarket in Barnes - the centre of the Richmond Park constituency which he hopes to represent after the next General Election.

Related link: The six political dangers of Gummer-Goldsmith

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