The Spending Review
Margaret Thatcher is lying sick in a private hospital bed in Belgravia but her political children have just pushed her agenda further and harder and deeper than she ever dreamed of. When was the last time Britain’s public spending was slashed by more than 20 per cent? Not in my mother’s lifetime. Not even in my grandmother’s lifetime. No, it was in 1918, when a Conservative-Liberal coalition said the best response to a global economic crisis was to rapidly pay off this country’s debts. The result? Unemployment soared from 6 per cent to 19 per cent, and the country’s economy collapsed so severely that they lost all ability to pay their bills and the debt actually rose from 114 per cent to 180 per cent. “History doesn’t repeat itself,” Mark Twain said, “but it does rhyme.” George Osborne has just gambled your future on an extreme economic theory that has failed whenever and wherever it has been tried. – The Independent
Butcher George Osborne’s brutal £81billion attack is unfair and avoidable. Yet Conservative MPs celebrated the job losses, cheered the austerity. This is, as Labour’s Alan Johnson neatly put it, an ideological moment. David Cameron’s deficit deceivers are using debt as cover to slash and burn their way across Britain.Cut-crazy Ireland’s reeling from a double-dip recession, France is going up in flames. The backlash here will not be pretty when people feel Osborne’s crude blade. On a national level unemployment will soar, half a million sacked in public services with accountants warning as many again could go in private firms. Economic growth will be choked and could go into reverse. And on a personal level we will all suffer with the most vulnerable paying the highest price. – The Mirror
The Commons was raucous, and Johnson made much of the sight of Tory MPs waving their order papers – apparently with excitement – during Osborne’s announcement. He said: “Members opposite are cheering the deepest cuts in public expenditure that have taken place in living memory. For many of them, this is what they came into politics for.” Johnson made light of the fact that, during the last comprehensive spending review in 2007, Osborne had supported Labour’s spending plans until after the scale of the credit crunch became apparent “well after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in America set off a disastrous chain reaction around the world”. The Liberal Democrats, he said, had changed position on whether cuts would be justified this year between the ballot box closing and the door of the ministerial car opening. – The Guardian
The government’s great triumph so far has been to portray anyone who opposes their plans as moronic. True, there are a few winners of the Nobel Prize for economics and other lowlifes against them, but they’re just foreigners. The British seem to have bought into the whole thing. Hit us. We deserve it. Just as long as you hit our enemies harder: the banks, the bureaucrats, the quangos, the MPs, the workshy. They were all duly sandbagged. We seem to be in one of those brief periods when the sceptical British have suspended disbelief, as they did before the Iraq war and every time England ever play in an international football tournament. The government’s grip on the politics tightened on Wednesday. In contrast to last week, Mr Cameron was in fine, patronising form and wiped the floor with a verbose and hesitant Ed Miliband at the question time session before the cuts statement. – The FT
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