Gordon Brown stole my old age
For probably the first time ever the Conservative Party held a fringe event at the Labour Party's conference today, to discuss Brown’s deception over pensions. About two hundred people squeezed into the Belvedere Hotel in Bournemouth to hear Shadow Work & Pensions Secretary Chris Grayling and others highlight the double standards in Brown bailing out Northern Rock (and therefore all banks in the future) for political reasons but not paying people back for their lost pensions. The difference between the two is that customers of Northern Rock knew the risks whilst it was the government's fault that so many people lost their pensions, as the Parliamentary Ombudsman, Public Administration Select Committee, European Court of Justice and High Court Judicial Review have all confirmed.
Grayling talked about the Conservative Party’s efforts to get its lifeboat
proposals through Parliament. Designed to make it as easy as possible
for Brown to accept, they could have been implemented immediately with
the Government merely underwriting the process of bringing everyone up to the levels provided by the Pension Protection Fund, and not paying anything
extra in the long run. Instead of taking the opportunity to approve the well thought through
legislation, Brown used the 1911 Parliament Act to stop going back to the Lords and thereby prolonging the misery of many pensioners.
A member of the audience later asked why on
earth he did this, “intransigence” was the simple conclusion of panelist and former
Government pensions adviser Dr Ros Altmann.
Altmann then explained Brown’s cynical spinning of what was “without doubt, the worst pensions scandal ever seen in the UK”. In May he promised to pay 80% of the pensions back to the 125,000 people affected, costing £8bn. What has actually happened since then is that the government have invented something called a “core pension” that doesn’t account for inflation, tax-free lump sums, many widow’s benefits and other dependent benefits, ill health and early retirement benefits, or pension starting ages. The Government then works out 80% of what’s left and takes 22% tax off it. Brown’s Financial Assistance Scheme - which had been entirely “designed to fool the public” - has only paid out £4m since 2004, partially helping just 2000 people.























Recent Comments