NHS vacancies in England at ‘staggering’ new high as almost 10% of posts empty

The number of posts lying vacant across the NHS in England has reached a “staggering” record high of 132,139 – almost 10% of its planned workforce.

Denis Campbell www.theguardian.com 

The number at the end of June was up sharply from three months earlier when there were 105,855 vacancies, quarterly personnel figures show.

NHS leaders said the huge number of empty posts showed why the health service is in a state of deepening crisis, with patients facing long waits for almost every type of care.

The previous highest number of vacancies for full-time-equivalent staff was 111,864, recorded at the end of June 2019.

The new number represents 9.7% of the NHS’s planned staffing levels – a new high. As recently as March 2021 there were 76,082 vacancies.

“Today’s vacancy figures are staggering and further proof that the NHS simply doesn’t have enough staff to deliver everything being asked of it”, said Saffron Cordery, the interim chief executive of NHS Providers, which represents all health service trusts in England. “With nearly one in 10 posts in trusts in England now vacant, and tens of thousands more right across the health and care system, many staff face unsustainable workloads and burnout.”

Danny Mortimer, the chief executive of NHS Employers, said: “These figures paint a bleak picture. A jump in nearly 30,000 staff vacancies – equivalent to the entire staffing of a large NHS hospital – show an alarming trend across the NHS of rising levels of vacancies.”

The headline total of 132,139 included vacancies for 46,828 nurses – the highest number on record, and a big increase on the 38,972 empty posts at the end of March. It represents a vacancy rate of 11.8%, the highest since the 12.1% seen in September 2019.

Pat Cullen, the acting general secretary of the Royal College of Nursing, said: “Two weeks before we open our strike ballot, these stark figures reveal what is happening in England’s NHS – record numbers of unfilled nurse jobs, and rising fast too. Ten of thousands of experienced nurses left last year at the very moment we cannot afford to lose a single professional, and patients pay a heavy price.”

There were also 10,582 vacancies for doctors at the end of June – a 7.3% vacancy rate.

London had 30,506 vacancies across the acute, ambulance, community, mental health and specialist care sectors – another record. That equates to 12.5% of the capital’s planned NHS workforce.

The capital had more vacancies in acute hospitals than any other region – more than 20,000. There were 7,745 vacancies in mental health services in the city, meaning almost one in six posts (16%) were unfilled.

Cordery and Cullen identified pay levels as a key reason the NHS was being confronted with such a rapidly escalating number of vacant positions.

“The government’s failure to fully fund this year’s below-inflation pay awards, alongside ongoing concerns over punitive pension taxation for senior staff, will make it even harder to recruit and keep the health workers we so desperately need, which in turn will hugely impact on patients,” Cordery said.

A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Social Care said: “We are boosting NHS recruitment with almost 4,100 more doctors and over 9,600 more nurses working across the NHS compared to last year. However, the overall number of posts is increasing as we expand services to bust the Covid backlogs and provide the best possible care to patients.

“Since September 2019 we have recruited an additional 29,000 nurses and are on track to meet our target of recruiting 50,000 more nurses by 2024. We have also commissioned NHS England to develop a long-term workforce plan to recruit and retain more NHS staff and have launched a taskforce to drive up the recruitment of international staff into critical roles across the system this winter.”

Plans submitted for demolition of timeshare resort to make way for new hotel and residential apartments – Exmouth

A landmark Exmouth timeshare resort could be demolished to make way for new residential apartments and a new hotel, if planning approval is granted. 

Dan Wilkins www.exmouthjournal.co.uk

Plans have been lodged with East Devon District Council for the demolition of the Devoncourt Resort and the construction of 77 new residential apartments – of which 25 per cent would be affordable – and a 62-bed hotel. 

Devoncourt, in Douglas Avenue, has been a family-owned building and for 30 years has functioned as a timeshare, offering large apartments on a timeshare basis. 

In the planning documents, the architects ARA Architecture said the proposals are in response to the decline in the timeshare business and follows a process of trying to offer its timeshare and holiday apartments on the open market without success. 

The design and access statement said: “The timeshare business within the UK, which was booming in the late 80’s and 90’s, has now ceased to exist.  

“The Devoncourt was set up as a profitable timeshare complex, with leases of 25 years on each of the apartments.  

“The existing leaseholders have been offered new contracts for the continuation of the timeshare; however, not one of the current residents has taken this up.  

“The units have been actively advertised…again over a long period of time, not one enquiry has led to the resigning of agreements to renew the timeshare facilities.” 

At the end of 2014, the existing timeshare leases had expired and leaseholders were informed in March 2011 but no expressions of interest were received about renewing the leases. 

The design and access statement said: “Since the end of 2014, all timeshare contracts ceased and since then the clients have let the apartments as nightly accommodation. The above factors combined mean that the Devoncourt cannot survive as a viable business in the current form.” 

The existing resort is a four-storey structure which has been added to in a ‘piecemeal fashion’ over the years.  

According to the architects the existing building is not suited to be renovated economically. 

The deadline for comments on the application is September 30. East Devon District Council will make the final decision. 

To view the proposals, go to https://planning.eastdevon.gov.uk/online-applications/applicationDetails.do?activeTab=dates&keyVal=RH8CKNGHHWY00

 

Town council resists ‘absurd’ plan for new housing developments

Proposals to build nearly 250 new homes in Ottery St Mary are being opposed by the town council. 

Philippa Davies www.sidmouthherald.co.uk

Councillors argue that Ottery cannot possibly absorb such a large population increase without the necessary infrastructure – schools, doctors’ surgeries and public amenities. 

East Devon District Council (EDDC) has identified five sites in Ottery as suitable for a total of 248 homes, as part of its proposals to meet Government housing provision targets across the district. They are Barrack Farm, Thorne Farm, land north and south of Salston Barton, land at Bylands, Slade Road and land at Strawberry Lane. Potential development sites in Exmouth, Honiton, Axminster, Seaton and Sidmouth have also been identified. 

But at an extraordinary meeting of the town council on Tuesday, August 30, councillors rejected all five, and questioned why Ottery was being earmarked for a disproportionately large number of new homes, compared to the other towns. 

Cllr Roger Giles said: “Honiton, which is two and a half times larger than Ottery, and has a railway station from which it is possible to reach the heart of Exeter in less than half an hour, is scheduled to receive a smaller number of dwellings – 182 compared to 248.” 

He pointed out that the plans would see Exmouth, almost 10 times the size of Ottery, having only 302 homes built. 

He said it is also ‘distinctly odd’ that greenfield sites in Ottery have been chosen, when brownfield sites in Honiton are available. 

Speaking to the Herald after the meeting, he described the proposals as ‘absurd’ and ‘of very great concern’.

Ottery Town Council has already written to the leader of EDDC, Cllr Paul Arnott, pointing out that both the local primary school and The King’s School are already at capacity and the Coleridge Medical Centre is struggling. The council says Ottery is not against new housing, but wants a modest amount of it, and time for the necessary infrastructure to be put in place. 

The letter was read out at Monday’s meeting, which was attended by several members of the public who said they supported the council’s position. 

The housing proposals are part of EDDC’s Local Plan for the period 2020 to 2040. Ottery councillors want EDDC to amend the housing proposals for their town before the plan goes out for public consultation in mid-October. 

 

Boris Johnson steps in to solve energy crisis

At last the Conservatives have a concrete energy policy without having to wait until next Tuesday.

The PM, who read Classics at Oxford, demonstrates his grasp of the scale of the economic crisis facing hard-working Britons with this simple solution. – Owl

Boris Johnson tells public to buy £20 kettle to save £10 a year on energy bills.

estonianfreepress.com

Boris Johnson has been mocked for suggesting that Britons could ease their energy bill woes by buying a new £20 kettle to save £10 a year on their electricity.

The prime minister suggested the efficiency measure amid growing pressure for more cash support for families facing energy bills of more than £3,500 when the price cap rises in October.

Speaking in Suffolk, Mr Johnson said: “If you have an old kettle which takes ages to boil, it may cost you £20 to replace it – but if you get a new one, you’ll save £10 a year every year on your electricity bill.”

Among those ridiculing the PM’s suggestion in face of an overwhelming crisis, Labour’s shadow business minister Bill Esterson said: “Is he seriously out of touch, or is it that he just doesn’t care, or both?”

Mr Johnson said further help was up to his successor. But he said he was confident the next PM – whether Tory leadership favourite Liz Truss or underdog Rishi Sunak – would offer more “cash” support.

“Of course there will be more cash to come, whoever takes over from me, in the months ahead – substantial sums, that’s absolutely clear,” he said.

Tory leadership frontrunner Liz Truss – strong favourite to be take power at No 10 on Tuesday – has yet to commit to any further direct payments on the cost of living crisis.

Asked whether he had spoken to either Ms Truss or Mr Sunak about plans, the caretaker PM avoided a direct answer – but said it was “clear that come the new administration, there is going to be a further package”.

Mr Sunak has repeatedly promised to extend his earlier support package with an additional £5bn in support for pensioners and the poorest households through the benefits system.

While Ms Truss has spoken out against “handouts”, she today told The Sun she would be “robust” in offering immediate help with unaffordable bills, and is believed at looking at further direct payments for the most vulnerable.

Earlier on Thursday, chancellor Nadhim Zahawi said he is “deeply concerned” some Britons could freeze this winter if they are cannot afford to pay their bills. He said he hoped “nobody should be cut off this winter”.

Mr Zahawi admitted the current support package to help people cope was “not enough” – but claimed “more help is coming” when the PM’s successor is in place at No 10.

‘No one should be cut off’ if they can’t afford energy bills, says chancellor

It comes former minister Michael Gove – a Sunak backer – has urged Ms Truss to consider rationing of energy for businesses this winter.

Ms Truss ruled out any form of rationing at last night’s final Tory hustings event. But Mr Gove said the UK may have follow some European countries in limiting use by major users.

“It may be the case that in certain non-domestic settings, that there needs to be some form of restraint in the way that energy is used,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme – though he said he did not think household rationing would be necessary.

Mr Sunak told Tory members “we shouldn’t rule anything out” when asked about energy rationing this winter. “Many European countries are looking at how we can all optimise our energy usage, that is a sensible thing for us to be doing as a country.”

Asked by host Nick Ferrari whether she could rule out energy rationing, Ms Truss replied: “I do rule that out. Yes.”

Dozens of charities on the front line dealing with a “tsunami of need” caused by the cost-of-living crisis have called on the government to provide more urgent financial support to vulnerable households.

An open letter signed by 48 bosses across the voluntary sector said an “economic crisis of a magnitude not experienced for decades” will push many who have managed to make ends meet into poverty.

Mr Johnson, meanwhile, said he is ready to “get on with life” after stepping down at No 10. He insisted he will give his “full and unqualified” support to his successor after handing over the keys, but did not give any more details about his future plans.

Defeated Tory candidate in Tiverton by-election eyes future return

So apparently is “Tractorn Porn” Neil Parish, the Claas candidate.

Split votes very welcome! – Owl

Lewis Clarke www.devonlive.com

The Conservative candidate who saw a majority of 24,239 swing 30 per cent to a Lib Dem win has said she would stand again to become an MP. Helen Hurford was chosen as the Conservative candidate for the Tiverton & Honiton by election to replace porn watching Neil Parish. The election on June 23 saw a historic victory for the Lib Dem’s Richard Foord, where there was a swing of 38.1 per cent to his party, with the Tories seeing a swing of 21.7 per cent in the opposite direction.

This result was the sixth-largest swing against the governing party since 1945; in addition, the Conservative Party’s 24,239-vote majority from the 2019 general election is the largest ever overturned in a by-election.

Before the announcement of the result, it was reported that Helen and her team had locked herself in a dance studio where the vote was taking place at Lord’s Meadow Leisure Centre in Crediton. LBC journalist Theo Usherwood announced on Twitter: “The Tory candidate Helen Hurford in the Tiverton by election has just locked herself in the dance studio at Crediton sports centre.” After the announcement she did not make a speech, and exited the building swiftly.

In one of her first public appearances since the election, she spoke to Ewan Murrie at BBC Radio Devon, where she was asked whether she would stand again. She said: “Absolutely. Of course, I will. I’m not a one-trick pony. Politics is a dirty game and if you truly believe in your community and you want to represent your community, you’re going to rough ride. I truly believe in my community, and I would stand again.”

She added that while she would support whoever was Prime Minister come September 5, she would prefer Liz Truss: “Whoever is voted, I will support 100 per cent, that’s what we all need to do in the Conservative Party. Moving forward, having been defeated in the by election here in Tiverton and Honiton, the message that I receive repeatedly is trust and somebody that we can trust and get behind and I think Liz represents that.

“The repeated message that I received on the doorsteps was that people were really unhappy about partygate and that that was the main protest that happened during that byelection. Liz is squeaky clean when it comes to partygate, so I think that she will go well with constituents here. They will know we’ve listened to them during the by election and acted upon it.”

On why Liz stuck by Prime Minister Boris Johnson in his cabinet, Mrs Hurford added: “Liz is loyal. She’s a loyal person to the Conservative Party and stayed loyal to Boris Johnson when he was the leader. She did her job, and she did it really well. She had a very tricky job. What she also represents is somebody who is determined to do what’s right for the people of this country.”

She said it was ‘tricky’ to explain what went wrong during the by-election: “Boris has a huge amount of support here. You knock on one door and are told ‘if you’re not supporting Boris, I’m not going to support you’. You knock on another door where they say, ‘if you’re supporting Boris, I’m not going to support you’. It really is that diverse.

“I’ve listened to the people of Tiverton and Honiton and heard them loud and clear when they repeatedly said they did not want a Prime Minister who has broken the Covid regulations. We would be ignoring what they’ve warned us in the by election. They spoke loud and clear with that protest vote. We cannot afford to keep ignoring the electorate.”

Top 10 most expensive areas for gas and electricity bills in UK

Guess which area is one of the most expensive three for both!

Levelling up looks to be a forgotten dream. – Owl 

Matt Mathers www.independent.co.uk 

Millions of people across the UK were hit with the news last week that the average household energy bill will rise to a staggering £3,549 from 1 October.

The increasing cost of gas and electricity is being driven by the rise in wholesale gas prices, worsened by Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Households were already reeling from an increase in their bills after the price cap rose in August.

And the worst is yet to come: the price cap will rise again in January and some analysts predict it could peak at more than £6,000 by April.

The government has already announced financial assistance for the cost of living crisis and the two candidates to replace Boris Johnson have pledged to provide more help.

While energy regulator Ofgem sets the price cap, gas and electricity customers across the UK pay varying amounts for their bills depending on where they live.

In England, those living in London pay the most for their gas, shelling out £0.0427 per kWh, resulting in an average bill of £581 per year, according to analysis by price comparison website money.co.uk.

Southern England is the second-most expensive area for gas and the South West is third, with customers there paying £575 and £574 per year respectively.

The North East, Yorkshire and East Midlands were the least expensive.

The amount people pay for their electricity also varies across the UK.

Top 10 most expensive areas for gas and electricity

(The Independent, source: money.co.uk)

People in Merseyside and North Wales are charged the most for keeping the lights on, according to the analysis by money.co.uk, whose findings were based on data from 2021.

Residents living in those two areas pay, on average, £0.2241 per kWh – an average yearly bill of £807.

The South West and North Scotland were the second most expensive areas for electricity on £796 and £793 respectively.

The least expensive areas were Northern Ireland, the East Midlands and the North West, according to the data.

Experts say that the amount people pay for their gas and electricity depends on a variety of factors – the main one being geography.

According to United Gas & Power, which supplies business, “this is usually because costs to providers also vary according to the area they are operating in.”

“Things like the charges your supplier has to pay to use local electricity wires and gas pipes have a knock on influence on your bill,” the supplier adds.

Vandals cause £2,000 worth of damage to seafront toilets

Serious vandalism at Sidmouth’s public loos at the Arches has left the town council with a £2,000 bill and concerns over the toilets’ future. 

Philippa Davies www.sidmouthherald.co.uk

Last week, in the run-up to the Sidmouth Airshow and Regatta weekend, the toilets on the seafront were deliberately wrecked. 

Waste pipes were kicked off, toilet seats smashed and hand driers broken. Toilet rolls and cardboard coffee cups were pushed into the pans, completely blocking the pipes. 

The toilets are the only ones in Sidmouth that are operated by the town council, which faced a race against time to get them repaired and working again before the weekend’s events. 

A council spokesman said: “You can imagine, ahead of the Airshow and the Regatta weekend, we did not want to have to close those toilets. 

“Our contractors worked industriously on Thursday and managed to fix all these problems and we got them up and working for the Regatta weekend. 

“But the bill was nearly two thousand pounds for just one spate of vandalism. It took the jetting company two hours to clear the pipes.” 

He said councillors will now be reviewing the way the toilets are managed and looking into ways of preventing vandalism – possibly by charging for their use. The town council takes pride in providing the facilities in such a prime position near the beach, but has limited funds for maintaining them. 

“We spend a lot on those toilets – and that bill is getting ever bigger. 

“Throughout this summer, there have not been many weeks that go by without something being broken in those toilets, be it a loo seat or a waste pipe, but this was the worst vandalism we’d seen for a long, long time. 

“We know the vast majority of people use the toilets correctly, we know the toilets are needed there. But they are all affected by this kind of vandalism, as soon as the waste pipes are broken or in this case completely blocked, we have to shut the whole lot while we get them cleaned. 

“It’s very disappointing that when you provide such a much-needed facility, a few people can ruin it for everyone else.” 

 

Conservationists seek judicial review of UK sewage discharge plan

The UK government’s plan to cut millions of hours of raw sewage discharges by water companies each year is facing a judicial review on the grounds that it is unlawful.

Sandra Laville www.theguardian.com

The conservationist charity WildFish is calling for the storm overflow reduction strategy, published on Friday, to be withdrawn immediately.

It argues the plan will allow storm overflows to continue dumping raw sewage for the next 28 years. In high-priority areas, the strategy will allow discharges to cause adverse ecological impacts for the next 13 years.

“WildFish lawyers have concluded that Defra’s [Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs] much-vaunted storm overflow discharge reduction plan is unlawful on many counts,” said Nick Measham, the chief executive of the charity.

“The plan allows or otherwise encourages the continuation of breaches of existing environmental laws by the water companies, by Ofwat and by the secretary of state himself, for many years to come, in some cases until 2050.”

Measham said the plan showed the government had no real appetite to deal robustly with the appalling sewage pollution of English rivers caused by water companies.

The government strategy was criticised by a number of organisations and members of the public, when it went out to consultation for being too weak with targets too far in the future.

The Rivers Trust said it was appalled that the government had not taken into account the thousands of responses to the draft consultation which were calling for much more ambitious targets.

Christine Colvin, an advocacy and engagement director of the Rivers Trust, said: “The requirement for this plan in the Environment Act gave government a great opportunity to right the wrongs on weak regulation and get on the front foot. It should have presented an open goal for a fresh start to stop sewage pollution in my lifetime. Instead they have scored an own goal.”

She said the government had stopped engaging with the storm overflow reduction taskforce, which was not given the results of the consultation nor invited to advise further on how the plan could have been strengthened.

Under government plans, by 2035 water companies will have to improve all storm overflows discharging into or near every designated bathing water, and improve 75% of overflows discharging to high-priority nature sites. By 2050, this will apply to all waterways.

WildFish has begun proceedings against the plan by issuing a letter before action asking for the strategy to be withdrawn.

The storm reduction plan was published after a summer in which raw sewage discharges by water companies have resulted in beaches being closed and warnings issued about the quality of bathing water across the country. Last week a sewage leak by Thames Water killed fish stocks along a three-mile stretch of the River Ray. Thames Water said a sewage pipe had burst near Swindon.

Beaches in Sussex were shut after untreated sewage was pumped into the sea with the overflow captured on video.

Breaking: Martin Lewis challenges new prime minister to hour-long interview on cost of living

The new prime minister will be announced on September 5 and they will immediately inherit a crisis over the cost of living, with energy bills set to skyrocket.

Jen Mills metro.co.uk 

Many are awaiting a response from the government, but have been told to wait until either Rishi Sunak or Liz Truss is named as the winner of the Tory leadership race.

Now, Martin Lewis is seeking to move the process along of finding out how they intend to help households weather the storm of a huge increase in their electricity and gas bills.

He has challenged whoever wins the contest to an hour-long interview on ITV about the cost of living.

The journalist, who became famous through his Money Saving Expert website offering explanations and tips on finance, has become one of the loudest voices on the crisis.

He has warned that ‘people will die’ this winter if help is not provided, from struggling to heat their homes in the cold and having to cut their income so much many will have to decided whether to heat or eat.

He wrote on Twitter this morning: ‘Dear @trussliz / @RishiSunak, The cost of living crisis has left millions worried how they’ll make ends meet.

‘I’d like to formally invite you, as the new PM, to join me asap once you take office for a special hour’s @itvMLshow discussion/Q&A to answer/ease people’s concerns.

‘ITV is happy to support this, so together will also extend the invite through official channels to both of you now for speed.

‘The preference is live in the evening, but we understand the time pressures and are happy to work on scheduling with you to make this work.’

He urged people to share the tweet inviting the winning politician to appear on the Martin Lewis Money Show Live, to get traction for the challenge.

When someone responded to say that he would only get ‘waffle, piffle and half promises’, he said: ‘I politely disagree. If this happens I will get straight answers.

‘There’s no point agreeing to do it unless you’ve something to say for an hour. And they know I’m focused on just cost of living so it’s details needed :)’

He also stressed that this would not be a ‘debate’ on the cost of living, as he is a consumer finance journalist and not an opposition politician.

Instead, ‘this is about an interview and Q&A for them to explain and answer questions on their plans.’

‘I’d happily give broad subject area notice but not vetted questions,’ he added.

Mr Lewis has previously called for more clarity on what government action will be taken on the cost of living.

Ofgem’s price cap for average household fuel and electricity bills – currently set to the equivalent of £1,971 a year – is already set to jump by more than 80% to £3,549 in October.

But this figure is likely to double to £7,263 when the cap is reviewed again in April, according to consultants Auxilione.

Liz Truss has said she will announce an emergency budget if she becomes prime minister, thought to include tax cuts and a reversal of the planned 1.25% increase in National Insurance.

However, how much this would help the very poorest has been questioned, with the FT stating that it would ‘offer only £59 to someone on the national minimum wage.’

Rishi Sunak said he would be prepared to find £10bn to soften the impact of this October’s price rise, with support going to the most vulnerable.

Writing in The Times at the start of August, he said that this would be paid for by limiting or pausing some programmes within the government, with some temporary borrowing as a last resort.

Expecting the new PM to show up and defend their policies to Mr Lewis may be a long shot, however.

Liz Truss pulled out of a planned face-to-face interview with BBC journalist Nick Robinson two days ago, saying she could ‘no longer spare the time’.

 

‘Setting up warm spaces as PM suns himself…’

“So as is so often the case in the last 12 years, it is left to us, the people, to try and help ourselves. At East Devon District Council we are doing all we can to help the extraordinary volunteers who work to share food through food banks or other sharing means. A beneficial side effect is that this also helps stop good food going to waste.”

We are also trying to find more funds to help the Citizens Advice Bureau and – and I can’t believe I am writing this – our officers have been working all summer seeing how we can collaborate with other agencies to provide “Warm Spaces” for those who simply cannot afford to turn on the heating.

What is Simon Jupp doing? – Owl

Paul Arnott, Leader EDDC www.midweekherald.co.uk 

September remains my favourite month, full of promise and fresh starts. The summer breeze still blows, blackberries are ready, and the TV schedules pop with new programmes as the days grow shorter.

This September, however, many of us are fearful of what is to come, especially with soaring energy costs. In our home we usually make it to mid-October before I catch my wife trying to reset the heating control panel in the boiler cupboard to “ON”. Perhaps that may buy us all some time, but not much.

In this universally predicated situation, what is most needed is clarity, which is now about three months overdue. Instead we have a disgraced prime minister, who should have long ago left the role, and a Hobson’s Choice between a pair of nakedly ambitious competitors to succeed him.

Our next national leader – a role with inordinate power exerted through the little understood Cabinet Office – will be chosen by at most two hundred thousand members of the Conservative party. That is to say, about one three-hundredth of the country.

To bring the point home, in our lovely East Devon, where roughly 180,000 people live, only 600 of us would have a vote on that fraction. I got more votes than that in 2019 for Colyton Parish Council.

This shames our country, with the increasingly empty boasts from the likes of Jacob Rees-Mogg that ours is the Mother of Parliaments. Any honourable new Prime Minister elected with this feeble mandate would immediately seek validation in a general election. For some reason, Liz Truss doesn’t seem to fancy her chances.

So as is so often the case in the last 12 years, it is left to us, the people, to try and help ourselves. At East Devon District Council we are doing all we can to help the extraordinary volunteers who work to share food through food banks or other sharing means. A beneficial side effect is that this also helps stop good food going to waste.

We are also trying to find more funds to help the Citizens Advice Bureau and – and I can’t believe I am writing this – our officers have been working all summer seeing how we can collaborate with other agencies to provide “Warm Spaces” for those who simply cannot afford to turn on the heating. In 2022! There is a whole generation now who do not remember the news stories about death by hyperthermia. That’s on its way back if we do not act.

This is why – and sorry if I sound unusually cross – the site of the pink and shirtless Boris Johnson holidaying around the Med, using his contact books to set up book deals and public speaking engagements likely to gross him at least £5 million in the next year is so sickening. Just look at him; he hasn’t a care in the world. I do hope the penny has dropped. That’s because he never has cared for anything but his own progress.

During Covid we are proud that as a district council we were a key agency. While making democratic choices we distributed everything from business rate relief to emergency business funding, energy rebate payments through our council tax system, to discretionary payments for those in extreme hardship.

All we have ever asked of Simon Jupp and Neil Parish (until he resigned) was to signal to government that we needed more than a week’s notice before putting these massive operations into action. We are a mere district council and only about 7% of your council tax bill comes to us. It’s tough.

But yet again it’s all going to be kick, b****ck and scramble. We’ll cope, at the price of stressed council employees switching roles and putting in extra hours. But for heaven’s sake – please – can we not inflict these slapdash Tories on us again? They are neither the natural party of government or of the economy.

 

Planning applications validated by EDDC for week beginning 15 August

Lib Dems get ready for possible byelection if Michael Gove quits

The Liberal Democrats are rushing through plans to confirm a candidate for Michael Gove’s Surrey seat amid speculation that the former levelling up secretary is considering quitting parliament, which would spark a byelection.

Peter Walker www.theguardian.com 

The party’s application window for selection for the seat, held by Gove since 2005, closes on Wednesday evening and the selection process is expected to take two weeks. Lib Dem officials are planning for a possibly imminent campaign in which the party would fight on issues including the state of local hospitals and plans to drill for gas locally.

A Conservative source said, however, it was not true Gove planned to quit as an MP. Speculation that he might has intensified since Gove publicly backed Rishi Sunak to replace Boris Johnson as prime minister, and said he did not expect to be in government again.

Before becoming an MP, Gove was a prominent journalist for the Times, and there have been reports he is considering a return to the profession.

Surrey Heath has been held by the Tories since the constituency was created in 1997, and Gove had a majority of more 18,000 at the 2019 general election, albeit reduced from almost 25,000 in 2017.

A Lib Dem source said the party had heard from several local sources that Gove could be about to depart, and that it would hope to emulate a trio of recent byelection successes over the Conservatives, in two of which it overturned bigger majorities.

“We are selecting a candidate and we are on high alert, but that doesn’t necessarily mean the byelection will happen.” the source said. “We are also preparing in other seats, for example in Mid Bedfordshire, if Nadine Dorries is given a peerage.”

The Conservative source said: “Sadly this is yet another example of Lib Dem dirty tricks. They are more interested in playing politics than delivering for voters. Michael remains absolutely committed to his Surrey Heath constituents and has no plans to stand down.”

Lib Dem hopes in the seat would be boosted by the party’s recent good performances in so-called blue wall commuter belt constituencies, notably the first of the recent byelection wins, in which the party overturned a Conservative majority of more than 16,000 to take Chesham and Amersham, just north-west of London, in June 2021.

Since then the party took two previously safe Tory seats: North Shropshire in December 2021, overturning a near-23,000 majority; and Tiverton and Honiton in Devon this June, where the Conservative margin had been more than 24,000.

The party can also point to good local election results in May in nearby Woking – there were no polls for councils inside the constituency – in which it took control from the Tories.

“We never take anything for granted,” a Lib Dem source said. “It would be a very hard fight and always we come in as the underdog. We don’t underestimate how hard we have to graft at every byelection”.

A Lib Dem campaign would focus in part on cost of living issues, but also local factors such as the local hospital, Frimley Park, one of 34 in England with a concrete roof at risk of collapse, and the government’s decision to allow drilling for gas in the Surrey Hills.

Gove has held a string of cabinet posts, including education, the environment, and communities and levelling up. Johnson sacked him from the last job in July after Gove told the prime minister he should leave No 10.

Earlier this month, Gove belatedly said he was supporting Sunak as the next Tory leader and PM, warning that the economic plans of Sunak’s rival, Liz Truss, amounted to a “holiday from reality”.

With Truss seen as almost certain to win, that makes Gove’s chances of returning to the frontbenches very slim. Announcing his decision to back Sunak, Gove wrote in the Times: “I do not expect to be in government again.”

Energy bills soaring because of government failure not Ukraine, says ex-Tory adviser

Both Ofgem and Ofwat, the watchdogs for energy and water respectively, should be axed and replaced with new stronger regulators for each entire system, according to Sir Dieter Helm, Professor of Energy Policy at the University of Oxford, Fellow in Economics at New College, Oxford and former Government adviser.

The sectors are undermined by “revolving doors and pork-barrel politics, heavily influenced by vested interests, with an interest in complexity, which is a lobbyist’s dream”.

This had led to the “inevitable consequences of poor regulation and bad outcomes for customers”

So much for privatisation of monopoly services beloved by Tories – Owl

Rob Merrick www.independent.co.uk 

Government failure not the war in Ukraine is to blame for rocketing UK energy bills, a former Conservative adviser says.

Dieter Helm, who wrote a 2017 Cost of Energy review, questioned ministers trying to shift responsibility to Russia’s invasion as he attacked the “broken” privatisation model for energy and water.

On a visit to Kyiv last week, Boris Johnson claimed Britons are suffering soaring bills as a price the West must pay for standing up to Moscow’s aggression.

The departing prime minister said: “We know that if we’re paying in our energy bills for the evils of Vladimir Putin, the people of Ukraine are paying in their blood.”

But Sir Dieter pointed to a market system that is not “fit for purpose”, arguing it wrongly fixes prices to the cost of gas – also handing “supernormal profits” to renewable producers.

Average bills will soar to £3,549 in October – and are predicted to top £5,300 from January – despite the UK importing barely any gas directly from Russia.

“Customers faced with high bills are paying too much because the government failed to reform the market,” he told the Financial Times.

The former adviser, now an economics professor at Oxford University, argued both energy and water are “too essential to be treated like any other commodity”, as privatisation had allowed.

The sectors were undermined by “revolving doors and pork-barrel politics, heavily influenced by vested interests, with an interest in complexity, which is a lobbyist’s dream”.

This had led to the “inevitable consequences of poor regulation and bad outcomes for customers”, Sir Dieter added.

He called for both Ofgem and Ofwat, the watchdogs for energy and water respectively, to be axed and replaced with new stronger regulators for each entire system.

It follows anger over water companies pouring sewage into England’s rivers and seas and implementing hosepipe bans while failing to plug leaks that waste supplies – and paying their bosses eye-watering sums.

The Independent revealed how Liz Truss failed to hold any meetings with water bosses over the dumping of raw sewage in two years as environment secretary, despite the practice having been ruled illegal.

The likely next prime minister is in the firing line over the sewage scandal after records revealed her only talks were to discuss a bug linked to severe stomach upsets.

“It is not accidental that both the water and the energy privatisation models have run into serious trouble. After more than 30 years, neither is fit for purpose. Nor are their regulators,” Sir Dieter told the Financial Times.

On energy, he added: “Ofgem is not the right vehicle. Energy needs system regulation, not an institutional muddle with Ofgem in overall charge.”

But Ofgem said: “We are confident Ofgem regulation is robust, tackling any unfair practices by suppliers and putting consumer protection at the heart of what we do.” Ofwat declined to comment to the paper.

A decade of Tory energy failures will cost us well in excess of £18bn a year

Do Conservatives really get the big calls right?

A decade of under-investment and “light touch” regulation will cost us dear.

Salient points drawn from a recent Times article – Owl

As households and businesses face crippling energy bill increases and fears grow of potential blackouts this winter, recriminations are flying over how Britain got to this point. “Twelve years of failed Conservative energy policy has left bills too high and our energy security too weak,” Ed Miliband, the shadow climate change secretary, said. Andy Prendergast, of the GMB Union, said: “Successive governments have been asleep at the wheel for years over the UK’s energy strategy.” Emily Gosden www.thetimes.co.uk

CAMERON CUTS “THE GREEN CRAP”: 2013

Rob Gross, director of the UK Energy Research Centre (UKERC), said. “Better insulated houses would without doubt have eased some of the pain this winter.” Even if prices were just as high, better insulation could have helped households to use less, mitigating the increase in their overall bills.

“The No 1 thing that the government could have done differently would have been to have a serious energy efficiency policy over the last decade,” said Simon Evans, deputy editor of the specialist energy and climate website Carbon Brief. “There’s been just a succession of policy failures on energy efficiency.”

Insulation rates plummeted by about 90 per cent in 2013 as the coalition government changed to a new energy efficiency scheme that it then scaled back after David Cameron reportedly ordered officials to “cut the green crap”.

ZERO-CARBON ABANDONED: Cameron 2015- cost over coming year £2.1 bn

In 2015 the Cameron administration also abandoned the planned zero-carbon homes standard that would have ensured that new-builds were well insulated. “We’re still building houses that are not brilliant from an energy efficiency point of view and we should have stopped doing that years and years ago,” Keith Anderson, chief executive of Scottish Power, said.

Carbon Brief estimates that these two decisions alone will cost households an extra £2.1 billion over the coming year. Other failed energy-efficiency efforts include the Green Deal, a coalition era scheme to encourage households to take out loans to pay for home improvements, and the Green Homes Grant voucher scheme in 2020.

Analysis by the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit finds that homes with the worst energy efficiency ratings, rated “G”, will pay almost £2,000 more for their energy this winter than those rated “C”, the government’s target.

GAS RESILIENCE: Failing to develop gas storage [cost consumers last year £230 million]

Britain imports just over half of its needs. Despite this the government over the past decade rejected repeated calls to bolster Britain’s gas storage capacity, which was already one of the lowest in Europe.

In 2013 Michael Fallon, the energy minister, ruled out subsidising new storage sites, arguing that supplies were resilient and the market would deliver security of supply more cheaply. This led to Centrica scrapping two proposed projects.

In 2017 the situation worsened as Centrica announced that it was closing Rough, Britain’s biggest gas storage site, as it was not economical to repair without subsidy. The business and energy department, then led by Greg Clark, did not intervene and Richard Harrington, one of his ministers, said: “The closure of Rough will not cause a problem with security.”

The government still did not heed calls for a rethink the following year when the Beast from the East led to a rise in gas prices, even as analysts at Wood Mackenzie warned that Britain’s lack of storage left it “precarious” and could lead to blackouts in a winter supply crunch.

Less than a year ago Kwasi Kwarteng, the business and energy secretary, was still insisting that gas storage was “a red herring”, but he now appears to have had a change of heart and is in talks with Centrica over reopening Rough. Centrica claims that the site would have “saved consumers about £100 each last winter had it been operational”. [There are around 23 million domestic gas meter points in UK so £100X23,000,000 = £230 million

GAS IMPORTS: Failing to secure long-term supplies [cost unknown but significant]

“Because the UK took a view that state-backed long term contracts (for LNG in particular) weren’t necessary or desirable, we now have to pay high prices to ensure that gas is delivered here, rather than into Asia, where long-term contracts remain more common,” Gross, of the UKERC, said.

Kathryn Porter, of the Watt-Logic consultancy, agreed that gas policies had been complacent. “Successive governments essentially took a bet that the global market would remain well supplied and neglected to hedge against rising prices,” she said. “An appropriate hedge would have been to buy some of these volumes on firm, fixed price contracts.” One energy chief executive argued that households would be better off if the government had stepped in even a year ago to procure gas supplies for the nation.

GAS DEPENDENCE: Failing to develop more wind, solar and nuclear [Cost this year £10.5 bn]

The coalition government decided in 2014 to restrict subsidies that supported the deployment of solar farms, and in 2015 David Cameron’s Conservative government scrapped onshore wind subsidies and tightened planning rules.

Carbon Brief estimates that if solar deployment had continued at its previous pace then it could have reduced annual energy bills by almost £3 billion from October and continued onshore wind development could have saved £4.5 billion. 

Tom Greatrex, chief executive of the Nuclear Industry Association, said: “For more than a decade, experts have been warning that a failure to replace our retiring nuclear fleet, which will be all but gone by 2028, would result in increased supply volatility and higher prices. Had decisions been made sooner on projects like Hinkley Point C, which would have saved consumers £3 billion had it been online this winter, the industry wouldn’t have to be playing catch up now.”

POWER IMPORTS: Failing to secure adequate back-up for wind power [unknown but significant]

High gas prices are not the only thing pushing up power prices: there have also been increasing periods when electricity supplies have simply been scarce, especially at times when wind speeds are low and wind farms are producing less than expected. 

“As Britain and other countries progressed their wind-led energy transitions, gradually intermittent renewables displaced ageing thermal and nuclear generation to the point where security of supply is at risk when wind output is low,” Kathryn Porter, consultant at Watt-Logic, said. “In the past there was a view that it would always be windy somewhere and so better interconnection would allow those surpluses to be carried to the markets that need them. Unfortunately we have discovered that this is not always true in practice.”

Tom Edwards, of Cornwall Insight, said that allowing interconnectors to take part in this scheme was a mistake as it “allowed replacement of UK generation capacity with cables”. Lisa Waters, of Waters-Wye Associates, added: “The market has long argued that interconnectors are not generators, just wires, so they are being paid for capacity that in reality they may not be able to deliver.”

ENERGY SUPPLIERS: Failing to ensure robust companies [cost £5.7 bn]

Since summer last year 29 energy suppliers have gone bust after being unable to withstand soaring energy prices. This has resulted in multibillion-pound costs to consumers that are now being recouped via energy bills. Of the failed suppliers, 28 have been dealt with through an Ofgem process that is estimated to have cost £2.7 billion, or £94 for every household; the costs of the 29th, Bulb, remain unclear but could be as high as £3 billion.

Ofgem, the energy regulator, has taken most of the blame for these failings, accused by MPs on the business select committee of being negligent and incompetent by failing to check if suppliers were set up and financed properly. The MPs found, however, that the situation also reflected a political drive to encourage competition and low prices as the top priority.

The Sturminster Marshall Horror Show

Boris Johnson refuses to rule out return during Dorset visit with Nadine Dorries

Boris Johnson has refused to rule out a political comeback during a farewell trip to Dorset. The outgoing Prime Minster declined to be drawn on what he will do when he is replaced as prime minister by either Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak.

Mike Taylor www.dorset.live

Could this be one of Neil Parish’s Tractors? – Owl

The outgoing Prime Minister in Sturminster Marshall instead put his focus on the expansion of gigabit-speed broadband, as he sought to emphasise his Government’s achievements. He visited Henbury Farm with Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries where Wessex Internet are laying fibre optics in the field.

Asked if he would rule out a comeback, Mr Johnson told reporters: “I think on the whole people in this country are more interested in their gigabit broadband than they are in the fate of this or that politician.”

Mr Johnson’s demise was ultimately triggered by the row after former deputy chief whip Chris Pincher was accused of inappropriate behaviour. Asked if he had regrets about the way allegations of misconduct had been dealt with, Mr Johnson said: “All those things have to be handled carefully and sensitively and we have processes for dealing with them, and people who have complaints should raise them in the normal way.”

Mr Johnson declined to give himself a rating out of 10 for his term in office. Asked about his plans after next Tuesday, when he is set to be replaced, Mr Johnson said: “I am concentrating on today.”

Rory Stewart, a former Conservative leadership rival of the Prime Minister, warned on Monday that Mr Johnson could try and make a comeback. “I fear we’re going to end up with a second Berlusconi or a second Trump trying to rock back in again,” the former Tory Cabinet minister said.

Mr Johnson highlighted the announcements already made which will see £1,200 going to the eight million most vulnerable households. But he added: “Whichever of the two candidates gets in next week, what the Government is also going to do is provide a further package of support for helping people with the cost of energy.

“What we’ve got to do is get through the tough months – and I’m not going to shrink from this, it is going to be tough in the months to come, it’s going to be tough through to next year.”

The price increase in gas is being driven by Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, he said during a visit to Dorset. “We’re going to get through it,” Mr Johnson said. “We’re taking 26% more of our own gas from the North Sea than we did last year, we’re much less dependent on Putin’s supplies.”

He added “I just want to give people a sense of hope and perspective” because the UK was in a “strong economic position” which meant the Government had been able to provide support and it also had a “long-term British energy security strategy”.

Boris Johnson sets out to defend record on farewell tour

Dorset maybe as far West as he comes, no obvious successes to celebrate in Devon – Owl

George Grylls www.thetimes.co.uk

Boris Johnson will kick off a farewell tour of Britain today as he spends his last week as prime minister highlighting his achievements in 10 Downing Street.

Johnson will travel to Dorset to trumpet his government’s record expanding broadband to rural communities.

When Johnson took over as prime minister, only 7 per cent of households had gigabit broadband. That number has risen to 70 per cent today.

“From Sherborne to Stirling, lightning-fast broadband is levelling up towns and villages across the country,” Johnson will say in a speech today. In just three years we have increased the coverage of gigabit broadband from 7 per cent of households to 70 per cent.

“I am proud that today more than 20 million households, businesses and organisations are able to tap into rapid and reliable internet, unleashing their potential, creating opportunities and driving growth across the country.”

The target date in the Conservatives’ 2019 manifesto to supply gigabit broadband to every home and business across the UK was 2025. This date will be missed, and some households will instead have to wait until 2030 before they are hooked up with fast internet.

Johnson’s visit to Dorset will celebrate work beginning on the first major contract awarded under the government’s £5 billion Project Gigabit.

After his visit to the southwest, Johnson will embark on a tour of other parts of Britain this week.

He boasts about the progress the government has made in recruiting police officers, another manifesto pledge. The culmination of the week will be a speech on energy in which Johnson intends to highlight his achievements in nuclear power and wind energy.

“There is a lot of stuff that he can feel rightly proud of,” a No 10 source said. One of Johnson’s most outspoken critics, however, predicted that despite the messages appearing to signal his departure from frontline politics, the prime minister would attempt to make a comeback.

Rory Stewart, the former international aid secretary, likened Johnson to Silvio Berlusconi and Donald Trump, both of whom are trying to force their way back into politics having been ousted from office.

“I’m afraid he has an extraordinary ego and he believes that he was badly treated,” Stewart told BBC Radio 4.

“He doesn’t see the reality, which is that he was a terrible prime minister and that he lost his job because of deep flaws of character. I fear we’re going to end up with a second Berlusconi or a second Trump trying to rock back in again.”

As Johnson tours the UK, Nadhim Zahawi will be in the US to take part in meetings on global energy security in what is likely to be his last week as chancellor.

He will visit New York to discuss the international competitiveness of the City of London following post-Brexit deregulation, and will then travel to Washington DC for meetings with US Treasury officials.

“I’m determined, here in the US, to work closely with my allies on the common challenges we face to create a fairer and more resilient economy at home and abroad,” he said.

Brewers warn of mass closures – send for Simon Jupp!

[Tough, “no hand-outs” Liz drinks fizz – Owl]

From Today’s Western Morning News

Cornish brewery giant St Austell Brewery has joined fellow industry leaders in warning of widespread closures of pubs and brewers as prices soar.

Bosses of six of the UK’s biggest pub and brewing companies have signed an open letter to the Government urging it to act in order to avoid “real and serious irreversible” damage to the sector.

St Austell Brewery are joining Greene King, JW Lees, Carlsberg Marston’s, Admiral Taverns and Drake & Morgan in sounding the alarm today, with fears of price hikes upwards of 300%.

Soaring energy bills have added to inflationary pressures on the sector, which like other industries is not protected by the regulated price cap that applies to domestic gas and electricity bills.

The bosses, who sit on the board of the British Beer and Pub Association (BBPA), have demanded the Government implement an urgent support package that effectively caps the price of energy for businesses.

Brewers also face supply concerns over CO2, used in the production of some beer, after CF Fertilisers, one of the UK’s biggest CO2 producers, revealed it will halt production at its remaining UK ammonia site due to rocketing costs.

Emma McClarkin, chief executive of the BBPA, said the rise in energy costs “will cause more damage to our industry than the pandemic did”.

She added: “Consumers will now be thinking even more carefully about where they spend their money. There are pubs that weathered the storm of the past two years that now face closure because of rocketing energy bills.”

She’s Frit!

Liz Truss accused of ‘running scared’ after pulling out of BBC interview

Liz Truss has been accused of “running scared” of scrutiny after pulling out of a BBC interview scheduled for Tuesday, meaning she is likely to become prime minister without undergoing a single set-piece broadcast quizzing.

Peter Walker www.theguardian.com 

Earlier this month the foreign secretary agreed to a primetime interview with the veteran political journalist Nick Robinson on BBC One, something already done by Rishi Sunak, her rival to succeed Boris Johnson as Conservative party leader.

But a BBC spokesperson said Truss had now cancelled the interview. “Ms Truss’s team say she can no longer spare the time to appear on Our Next Prime Minister,” they said. “We regret that it has not been possible to do an in-depth interview with both candidates despite having reached agreement to do so.”

In a tweet, Robinson said he had been pleased that Truss had agreed to the interview and he was “disappointed and frustrated it’s been cancelled”.

A source in Sunak’s campaign said their tally showed Truss had done just two broadcast interviews of any form during the campaign, whereas Sunak had undertaken nine, also including three spots on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme and an appearance on ITV’s This Morning.

The source said: “It’s important that candidates face proper scrutiny so that members and the public know what they are offering. Avoiding that scrutiny suggests either Truss doesn’t have a plan at all or the plan she has falls far short of the challenges we face this winter.”

Wendy Chamberlain, the Liberal Democrats’ chief whip, said: “Liz Truss is running scared of the media and proper public scrutiny. How can she lead our country through an economic crisis when she can’t even cope with a basic media interview?

“She wants to follow in Margaret Thatcher’s footsteps but she’s fallen at the first hurdle. She’s fighting for the highest office by answering the lowest number of difficult questions.”

Labour also criticised Truss for backing out. Conor McGinn, the shadow minister without portfolio, said: “The British public don’t get a say in choosing the next Tory prime minister and now it seems Liz Truss wants to avoid any public scrutiny whatsoever.

“People will rightly conclude that she doesn’t want to answer questions about her plans for the country because she simply hasn’t got any serious answers to the big challenges facing our country.”

Truss’s tactic of avoiding scrutiny mirrors that of Boris Johnson, who before the Conservative victory in the December 2019 general election declined a BBC interview with Andrew Neil, something faced by rivals including the then Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn.

Truss has appeared at a series of Conservative hustings events around the UK in recent weeks and faced some difficult questions from the various hosts, although less so from the audiences made up of party members.

But longer-form interviews, in which a candidate can be pushed repeatedly on their answers, are viewed as considerably more difficult.

During some hustings events, Truss has been critical of the media, and of the BBC specifically, accusing some outlets of trying to “talk our country down” and having a leftwing bias.

Truss’s campaign was contacted for comment.

Just when you think it couldn’t get any worse… the return of “Vulcan”

(aka John Redwood)

A Ms Truss campaign insider told the Telegraph that the leadership hopeful thinks that the country’s current economic strategy has “failed” and said she won’t be captured by “Treasury groupthink”. 

The European Research Group (ERG), who are key backers of Ms Truss’ campaign, has tipped Mr Redwood for a role in the Treasury, with one senior member telling The Express that he would be a “superb choice” as Chancellor of the Exchequer. www.bracknellnews.co.uk

No comfort from voices of reason and experience

Liz Truss would “completely crash the public finances” if she pushed ahead with tens of billions of pounds of tax cuts, a senior economist has warned.

Liz Truss’s plan to cut VAT would crash economy, warns expert

Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, accused Truss of adopting a “simplistic mantra” of cutting taxes to solve the cost of living crisis. He said the policies being discussed by her team were “quite worrying”.

He told The Times that a proposal to cut VAT was “inappropriate” and risked exacerbating inflation, not taming it. Johnson also said the Bank of England would raise interest rates more quickly if Truss pressed ahead with the cuts….

…Johnson said the economic picture was different from when Gordon Brown announced an emergency VAT cut of 2.5 percentage points in 2009, and questioned the economic reasoning for such a measure.

“It made sense to have a temporary cut in VAT in the financial crisis because there was a huge drop in demand and a big recession without much in the way of inflation,” he said.

“It might reduce inflation temporarily, but it clearly increases it at the point at which the VAT cut is undone.”

He said there was a greater case to raise income tax thresholds, given that the Treasury had expected to generate £8 billion from the “stealth tax” when it was announced this year. As a result of inflation, the freeze in income tax thresholds is set to raise £20 billion.

Johnson said that no matter the tax cuts, support for energy bills would need to be given to people on low and modest incomes and he questioned the need for an immediate slashing of income tax on top of other measures.

“You clearly can’t do all of this without completely crashing the public finances,” he said. “This simplistic mantra that you cut taxes and the economy grows more, that you cut taxes when you have a big deficit and high inflation, and you don’t do it with any other part of the plan, is quite worrying.”

He added that a large deficit could push up borrowing costs. “The markets for a decade have been willing to fund very high deficits. The risk comes if we start on a very different route to other countries and we look riskier than they are,” he said.

George Grylls www.thetimes.co.uk (Extract)

Bold action needed now on energy bills, says Alistair Darling

“You need something significant and substantial and you need it now, because people’s bills are going to start coming in in a few weeks’ time.”

Darling, who served as chancellor under Gordon Brown, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

“If you don’t do that then you have the risks that I’ve been describing, that the economy will slip into recession, with all that entails. And when you’ve got that on top of the fact you’ve got inflation already at very, very high levels we haven’t seen since the 1970s, this is a lethal cocktail, which is why it needs bold action taken by the government now, not fiddling around with small measures that frankly won’t make any difference at all.”

While the government has already offered some support to households, Darling said this was now far from sufficient to meet the scale of the crisis.

He said: “Frankly, the stuff that’s been announced so far might have passed muster earlier this year. It simply won’t do now. You need something far more substantial than that unless you are willing to see substantial damage being done to our economy.”

A lesson from 2008 was that “you’ve got to do more than people expect and you’ve got to do it more quickly than people expect if it’s going to work”, Darling said.

“It’s going to cost money. When I announced the package in 2008 when it was the banking crisis, it amounted in total to about £500bn, but actually we got all of that money back over the following years. So what I think we need to see today from the government, from the new prime minister, is measures that will be big enough to deal with this.”

Peter Walker www.theguardian.com (Extract)