Thread (1/28)
Conservative Peer Baroness Michelle Mone and her family received almost £29 million from a firm on whose behalf she had lobbied.
This thread looks at what she did, and whether she is an outlier in such behaviour.
(2/28)
Mone helped PPE Medpro win contracts worth over £200m for providing personal protective equipment (PPE) during the pandemic.
“The largest part of the order, about 25m surgical gowns, was ultimately deemed unfit for purpose.” ft.com/content/147d66…
(3/28)
In short, Mone lobbied for the contract to be awarded to PPE Medpro, rather than to a supplier who might have provided usable PPE.
PPE Medpro gave £65 million to Douglas Barrowman, her husband, who in turn transferred £28.8 million to her off-shore trust.
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Here is a picture of the money trail. It is worth adding that all of the trusts and personal bank accounts shown in the diagram are based in the off-shore tax haven, the Isle of Man.
(5/28)
The Guardian reported,
“Asked ... why Mone did not include PPE Medpro in her HoL register of interests, her lawyer replied: ‘[she] did not declare ... as she did not benefit financially and was not connected to PPE Medpro in any capacity.’” theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/n…
(6/28)
It is for the NCA and the Courts to determine whether there is anything illegal in what Mone did in this case.
This thread asks: was this just a monstrous aberration in the functioning of a generally decent government, or is it a core part of how it functions?
(7/28)
This is no aberration; our government is transforming the UK into a Plunderstate:
•The UK government is dominated by market fundamentalists
•They have created mechanisms to facilitate the kind of transaction
•They are dismantling our democratic safeguards
(8/28)
The UK no longer has a traditional Conservative Government, as many traditional Conservatives have pointed out.
(9/28)
Other prominent Conservatives and ex-Conservatives who have made similar points in public include Peter Aldous, Heidi Allen, Aaron Bell, Karen Bradley, Andrew Bridgen, Ken Clarke, Ruth Davidson, David Davis, Tobias Ellwood, David Gauke, Roger Gale, Nick Gibb, ...
(9b/28)
...Dominic Grieve, Philip Hammond, Mark Harper, Neil Hudson, Tim Loughton, Anthony Mangnall, Nigel Mills, Andrew Mitchell, Caroline Nokes, Douglas Ross, Anna Soubry, Rory Stewart, Gary Streeter, Tom Tugendhat, ...
(9c/28)
...Christian Wakeford, Charles Walker, Craig Whittaker, Lord Wolfson and William Wragg.
(10/28)
These are one-nation Tories, not the market fundamentalists who dominate the cabinet.
MFs have a sense of 'morality' – which includes a belief that taxing the rich is fundamentally unjust, and they must rectify that injustice. 99-percent.org/what-is-the-ma…
(11/28)
Their attitude to tax is:
“tax-funded spending is fine, as long as we can direct it to whom we want and as long as the tax burden does not fall on the wealthiest.” 99-percent.org/malice-in-plun…
(14/28) The parallel with the Mone affair is obvious.
But that affair on its own does not show that the UK is moving towards being a Plunderstate in any systematic way. To see that, it is worth looking a little wider.
(15/28)
During the early months of the pandemic, the Government set up a new system of ‘VIP lanes’ to enable contacts of ministers to obtain contracts during COVID, often crowding-out more capable suppliers. 99-percent.org/money-for-noth…
(16/28)
Even greater was the scale of the procurement issue around Test & Trace: the government ear-marked £37 billion to the Test & Trace programme and put the procurement in the charge of Baroness Dido Harding. 99-percent.org/whats-in-a-nam…
(17/28)
To prevent accusations of corruption, the government also had an anti-corruption Tsar – who at the time was John Penrose, the husband of Baroness Dido Harding.
(18/28)
Did Harding spend the money well? Not according to the National Audit Office, who found:
“As with many other government procurements during the pandemic, 70% of early contracts by value were assigned as direct awards without competition under emergency measures.”
(19/28)
And the results have not been good. The NAO report has strongly-worded criticisms:
“24 The Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE) provided advice on what a testing and tracing system needs to achieve ...; to date NHST&T has not achieved these standards.”
(20/28)
So, the Mone affair is far from being an isolated incident: it reflects a modus operandi which is being deliberately institutionalised – eg by creating new systems like the VIP lanes.
(21/28)
Of course, most UK citizens do not want to see their country turned into a Plunderstate, so the government has been working hard to reduce our ability to resist the change.
(22/28)
The Judicial Review and Courts Act makes it harder for citizens to take the government to court – things which in the past have been overturned by the courts such as the illegal proroguing of Parliament, will be harder to challenge. justice.org.uk/judicial-revie…
(23/28)
The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act means that we in the UK no longer have the right to peaceful protest – if the government believes that a protest might be too noisy or cause disturbance, it can declare it illegal 99-percent.org/what-kind-of-c…
(24/28)
The Elections Act 2022 makes what used to be independent, the Electoral Commission, report to ministers. It makes it harder for young people to vote, and it restricts the ability of opposition parties to co-operate. bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politi…
(25/28)
The Bill of Rights Bill is a threat to our human rights, and it proposes to make it far harder for a UK citizen to rely on internationally agreed Human Rights legislation – the UK courts will no longer be bound to uphold it. 99-percent.org/a-renewed-assa…
(26/28)
Our government is systematically transforming the UK from what used to be a moderately prosperous and moderately democratic country into a Plunderstate in which ordinary citizens will have few rights and fewer opportunities.
(27a/28)
Fortunately, the UK population is beginning to appreciate the hardship which lies in store if there is no change in direction, and the Conservatives are well behind in the polls.
(27b/28)
This means we have the power to force the government to change direction. As the ousting of both Johnson and Truss shows, if we make our MPs aware of the scale of our discontent, they will act – if only out of self-preservation.
(28/28)
If you would like to send a message to your MP, these notes will make it quick and easy for you. 99-percent.org/how-to-stop-th…
PS If you would like to help more widely, please do sign up and join the 99% Organisation. 99-percent.org
And getting this petition to 1 million, will send a powerful signal...
In opposition, Rachel Reeves and Sir Keir Starmer spoke of the need for a decade of national renewal; and since they have taken office, the evidence of the need for that renewal has grown even stronger.
(2/12)
And they have also spoken about a “financial black hole, the £22bn of unfunded spending commitments, concealed from our country by the Tories” and the Chancellor has talked about the need for “iron discipline.”
(3/12)
Rachel Reeves also said,
“Yes, we must deal with the Tory legacy – and that means tough decisions. But I won’t let that dim our ambition for Britain. So, it will be a budget with real ambition. A budget to fix the foundations. A budget to deliver the change that we promised. A budget to rebuild Britain.”
It is critical for the country (and for Labour) that this second viewpoint predominates as the Budget is prepared.
The House of Lords Inquiry into Debt sustainability has just reported.
This thread explains our serious concerns about the methodology and findings of that report.
(2/15)
The Chair of the HoL Economic Affairs Committee launched his Inquiry with the words,
“Our national debt stands at an incredible £2.6 trillion. A recent OBR report stated that the 2020s were turning out to be ‘a very risky era’ for the public finances. Our inquiry will explore if and how the UK can manage this level of indebtedness.”
Words which suggest that he had already decided the answer he was expecting.
(3/15)
The Inquiry invited submissions from concerned individuals and organisations. It also took oral evidence from selected individuals.
Thread (1/21)
The media are making comparisons with 1997.
But 1945 may be a more apt comparison.
When we compare…
(2/21)
… the state of the country now with 1997:
“In 1997, the incoming New Labour government … enjoyed the luxury of rapid economic growth…
Reeves, if she becomes chancellor, will not. Her task would be far harder. It would also be correspondingly more important. New Labour had to avoid messing things up. Today, a new government would have to effect a transformation.”
(3/21)
So perhaps a comparison with 1945 is illuminating.
Materially, things were far worse then than today, but in terms of the national mood and democratically, they were far better…
Thread (1/14)
We will not know the final outcome of the election until the morning of 5 July.
On that morning, I do not want to wake up to more of this…
(2/14)
I do not want to see more of a government which treats environmental issues as a barrier to profit and climate change as a myth peddled by “eco-zealots.” ft.com/content/02ecb9…
(3/14)
I do not want to wake up and see that the government which has brought 4 million children into poverty, will be funding tax cuts for the wealthy by “tackling welfare.” itv.com/news/2024-07-0…
Thread (1/19)
Yes, this election is about our future. And our children's future.
Based on the evidence of the last 14 years, we know what to expect from the Conservatives … and it is nothing like what Sunak says it is. 19.com/RishiSunak/sta…
(2/19)
Based on our personal experience we know that, if the Conservatives retain power, we should expect to be poorer…
Thread (1/21)
This thread looks at why the Conservatives are so keen to focus the debate on the future, not the past.
Despite saying that they wanted to be judged on their record.
So, let’s take a look at that…
(2/21)
After the Global Financial Crisis, the Tories told us that because of what they claimed were unprecedented levels of debt, there was no choice but to implement austerity… 99-percent.org/debt-hysteria/
(3/21)
But we should not worry about that because, once the state was rolled-back, growth would be even stronger.