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The Spectator's Notes

14 February 2009

Charles Moore's reflections on the week

I am not normally a great believer in the competence of the clergy, but is it a coincidence that HSBC is one of the very few big banks to have avoided scandal in the credit crunch and that its chairman, Stephen Green, is an ordained priest (Church of England)? No doubt Mr Green is subject to the normal temptations of Mammon, but his holy orders will have tended to provide a still, small voice of warning if he felt like paying himself £50 million a year, and they may have made his staff feel just that little bit more abashed when demanding money for themselves.

The Sunday Times chose to highlight the finding of its opinion poll that 58 per cent were ‘shocked by the revelation that peers would accept payment for amending legislation’. But the much more striking figure in the survey is that 75 per cent wanted hereditary peers to remain in the House of Lords. If you are worried about ‘sleaze’, this is a wise intuition. Obviously hereditary peers are no better, on average, than any other group of human beings. But since they sit in the Upper House by accident they are less likely to have collusive relationships with ministers and officials. They are also more likely to be able to earn money from sources outside the world of politics. It is not by chance that all the latest crop of bent peers are lifers and Labour (if the Conservatives were in power, they would be lifers and Tory). If you want a House of Lords which is clean and cheap, bring back the hereditaries.

A friend who has become self-employed reminds me of how your attitude to tax changes completely when you actually have to write it out as a cheque. This is why people resent the Council Tax or the TV licence fee, but why, through PAYE, the government deducts sometimes more than 40 per cent of people’s income with remarkably little complaint. PAYE is a massive administrative convenience and, for that reason, should be abolished by anyone wishing to empower the citizen. It occurs to me that there might be a ‘human rights’ angle to this. Is not your salary your property? Although you have a duty to pay tax, do you not have the right to the enjoyment of your lawful property before you part with it? Surely, at the least, your consent should be sought before PAYE is applied. It would be an interesting legal case.

One little-noticed point about the wonderful Big White Horse proposed for Ebbsfleet is that the white horse is the symbol of Ebbsfleet’s county, Kent. This should set a precedent. In Sussex, we want a colossal statue of our martlets. And Lancashire and Yorkshire should erect 200-foot steel red and white roses, glaring at each other across the county boundary.

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Alex G Briggs

February 12th, 2009 12:03pm Report this comment

Attention Charles Moore,
I am a subscriber to Spectator and enjoy it every week.Your two subjects BBC & THE GOLLIWOG SITUATION.I AM ALAS OLD ENOUGH TO HAVE AND CONFESS TO COLLECTING THE FAMOUS BADGE UNDER THE NAME OF GOLLIWOG. SHOULD YOU GO AHEAD WITH YOUR GOLLIWOG BLOG OR WHATEVER RELATED CAMPAIGN I WOULD WISH TO ADD MY SUPPORT.ALSO TO YOUR CAMPAIGN ON THE STATE OF THE BBC.To think Jo Brand claims to have been upset is beyond belief.
Now can you and the Spectator go for this Vaz guy who attacks Boris.We all know it is another of Vaz pushing his ego and attempting to undermine a Tory Mayor.

Thank you
Best Regards
Alex G Briggs

David Short

February 12th, 2009 2:52pm Report this comment

Anything anyone does to annoy Jo Brand adds to the nation's joy.

The Masked Marvel

February 14th, 2009 6:13am Report this comment

Actually, Mr. Moore, I think you'll find that HSBC mostly straightened out their worst asset - the credit card equivalent of sub-prime mortgages - long enough ago to weather the storm better than many. Probably more a combination of luck and something slapping them in the face than any spiritual guidance.

Archie

February 17th, 2009 11:36am Report this comment

Exactly, Mr. Moore! As I have frequently posted elsewhere, one of the more symbolic moves to undo the damage of this appalling administration would be to re-instate the hereditaries. Can we expect a statement from the leader of the so-called opposition? No? I thought not!

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