Common-SensePolicies

5.1K posts

Common-SensePolicies

Common-SensePolicies

@CSPolicies

Common-Sense Policy Suggestions.

Katılım Ekim 2011
365 Takip Edilen228 Takipçiler
Common-SensePolicies
Common-SensePolicies@CSPolicies·
@GLNatashaxo Apart from making the richest richer, the poorest poorer, and foreign people feel unwelcome, what are Restore policies?
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addy nuff x
addy nuff x@GLNatashaxo·
RUPERT LOWE. The man who’s going to fix this country. No doubt in my mind. He’s the only one with a real backbone in Westminster. Honest, direct, and unafraid to say what everyone else is thinking. The day he walks into Number 10 will be the best day this country has had in decades. @restorebritain_
addy nuff x tweet media
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Alan Smith
Alan Smith@AlanJLSmith·
From next year, if your kids inherit your pension fund, they could pay 74% tax on the amount received through double tax (inheritance tax and income tax on the same fund). In, fact it could be as high as 84%. Madness!
Alan Smith tweet media
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Common-SensePolicies
Common-SensePolicies@CSPolicies·
@Nigel_Farage There are women and children risking their lives too. Small boat crossings have fallen by more than 38% in the first four months of 2026 compared to the same period in 2025.
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Nigel Farage MP
Nigel Farage MP@Nigel_Farage·
BREAKING NEWS After 315 illegals arrived yesterday, even more are on their way today. Our country will pay a terrible price for this invasion of young, undocumented men.
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Jack Prandelli
Jack Prandelli@jackprandelli·
The UK is the only Atlantic basin producer actively shrinking its own oil and gas sector by choice. Norway: investing. US: record exports. Brazil and Guyana: production booming. UK: licence ban + Energy Profits Levy + Jackdaw and Rosebank in limbo. Same basin. Opposite policy. Capital, jobs, and tax revenue follow the rules. They're leaving....
Jack Prandelli tweet media
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Common-SensePolicies
Common-SensePolicies@CSPolicies·
@DrNickA A multi-millionaire business owner paying coffee shop workers wages that are too low for them to buy a coffee...
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Nick Almond
Nick Almond@DrNickA·
This tweet is a fascinating insight into the dire state of the U.K. Mostly it’s people who find it morally abhorrent for people to be on minimum wage serving coffee. If you can’t use the minimum wage for entry level unskilled work. What can you use it for? Many seem to think Peter should divert his savings to subsidise higher wages effectively operating at a loss. An economically irrational thing to do. Why would you pay (and work) to lose money? Many seem to think he should shut the coffee shop down completely, removing those jobs from the market all together. Presumably no jobs is a better outcome than minimum wage jobs. The minimum wage is now roughly £26k a year. About what I started on as a mathematics lecturer in 2010 after I completed by PhD. I worked 60-80 hours a week. Your take home pay on the national average wage is only £170 a week more than someone on a minimum wage job. Which in order to get you’d need to have a profession and about a decades worth of experience in that profession. That’s like one family meal and maybe a trip to the cinema. Hardly worth a decades hard work is it? And if you’re trying to save for a property, you won’t be able to have that. It also means that the median UK worker is a family meal and some mild entertainment away from morally objectionable abject poverty. What a mess
Peter McCormack 🏴‍☠️🇬🇧🇮🇪@PeterMcCormack

A minimum wage of £15 would end my coffee shop, it would have to close, as would many other businesses. I’ll explain for the economically illiterate. Staff costs are currently half our costs, a £15 minimum wage is actually more than £15 an hour for the company, because you have to add: - 12.07% holiday - Sick pay - Maternity pay if and when required - National insurance - Pension contributions These costs would mean the shop loses money because remember, energy costs are up, rates are up, regulations are up. Now you can pass these costs onto the consumer - that would mean charging a lot more for coffee, people won’t pay it. The likes of Starbucks and Costa can, because they have economies of scale. The independent doesn’t. Now the little socialist will say well this is your fault, if you can’t run a business that can afford to pay its staff properly, but the little socialist has never run a business and does not understand the dynamics. Now I could pay some staff off and fill those hours myself or reduce us to one staff member during certain periods - but this proves the point that a minimum wage costs jobs. There was a time when these jobs were done by kids, perhaps on the weekend, paid a lower wage, no holiday and no silly employment rights. Perhaps they were even paid cash. The dynamic worked and small businesses like this could operate. It was also a great first job. Sadly now it isn’t worth employing entitlement youngsters at this level of pay. So alas, I don’t need the stress, the business would close, a number of jobs would be lost. Economics is about understanding these dynamics, no vibes. The cost of living is not solved through passing on inflation to the business, it is solved by ending high inflation and creating prosperity. This is what socialists don’t understand, they can’t create prosperity, they can only destroy it.

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Lee Nallalingham
Lee Nallalingham@LNallalingham·
🚨 Unions have donated over £28m to Labour since Keir Starmer became leader. Labour have also handed out over £9bn in public sector pay rises to union-led workers, since taking power. That sounds like a bigger story to me, Pippa…
Pippa Crerar@PippaCrerar

EXCL: Reform UK’s leading figures have repeatedly promoted a new pothole-fixing machine by the construction company JCB, while the party received £200,000 from the British digger maker, @rowenamason reveals theguardian.com/politics/2026/…

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Bella Wallersteiner 🇺🇦
Bella Wallersteiner 🇺🇦@BellaWallerstei·
By 2031 the average UK household will be paying £12,266 a year to fund the welfare state (@thetimes). Why bother working at all…
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Tom Bond
Tom Bond@_tbond·
@BellaWallerstei @thetimes It has to stop. And we also have to tackle pensions. I think the fairest way is simply to stop the state pension, but only for people currently young enough not to have worked. And we educate them and enhance their planning carefully so they get a better pension privately.
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Common-SensePolicies
Common-SensePolicies@CSPolicies·
@RobertJenrick Why does your party want the lowest paid hard-working people to have their minimum wage reduced? Why do you want working rights reduced? Why do you want the UK to have lower minimum food standards than in the EU?
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Robert Jenrick
Robert Jenrick@RobertJenrick·
Across the West Midlands (and most of Britain), polls show it’s Reform vs Labour & the Greens. If you vote Conservative, you risk mad left wing councillors running your council.
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Alan Sked
Alan Sked@profsked·
There is a stampede by landlords to sell up before Labour’s Renters Act becomes law. Fewer houses mean higher rents and more homeless families. Another Labour triumph.
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Common-SensePolicies
Common-SensePolicies@CSPolicies·
@MontgomeryToms @RestoreBritain_ Great Yarmouth is reliant upon tourism and off-shore renewables. Restore's policies of making foreign people feel unwelcome and anti-expansion of renewables would wreck the local economy. The crime rate in Great Yarmouth is high. What are your policies to address that?
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Montgomery Toms
Montgomery Toms@MontgomeryToms·
What an amazing day of canvasing for @RestoreBritain_ Spent all day with Rupert, and I can't tell you the level of reception we received from great Yarmouth residents absolutely loving, Restore Britain and Rupert. This is history in the making.
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Common-SensePolicies
Common-SensePolicies@CSPolicies·
@SuellaBraverman The changes will impact dodgy landlords. The changes will help improve stability for children so that they don't have to keep changing school at short notice. If some landlords sell, it means greater opertunities for home ownership.
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Suella Braverman
Suella Braverman@SuellaBraverman·
This Act will hurt renters the most. Landlords are selling up or choosing not to let because of punitive terms. Many of them have decided that it’s better to leave their properties empty than to take on a tenant knowing they will have few options to evict for non-payment and the 12 month minimum lease. Better to take the loss than to take the risk. Result? Fewer rental properties, pushing rent prices up. Renters and landlords lose out. Labour farce. 🤡
Angela Rayner@AngelaRayner

From TODAY, renters like @molly_hartill will benefit from the Renters Rights Act. ✅ Right to request a pet ✅ Ban on Section 21 No Fault Evictions ✅ End to rental bidding wars The difference Labour makes 🌹

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Andrew Neil
Andrew Neil@afneil·
I have never claimed that Brexit has increased our GDP. I do not rule out that it might well have been a drag. I have never argued one way or the other. But this is really the economics of the kindergarten.
Gerry Samuels@GerrySamuels12

@afneil Talking of being anti-wealth creation, you must be really mad at the people who promoted Brexit

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Common-SensePolicies
Common-SensePolicies@CSPolicies·
@BasilTheGreat Why do you want to wreck the Great Yarmouth economy by making foreign people feel unwelcome, and to stop the expansion of off-shore renewables?
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Basil the Great
Basil the Great@BasilTheGreat·
🚨PATRIOTS TURN OUT IN NUMBERS FOR RESTORE BRITAIN IN GREAT YARMOUTH Absolutely amazing turnout Well done to everyone 👏 WE CANNOT BE STOPPED
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Common-SensePolicies
Common-SensePolicies@CSPolicies·
@R_J_Shaw @RestoreBritain_ @X Given that Great Yarmouth is dependant upon off-shore renewables and tourism, do you accept that Restore's policies of anti-renewables and making foreign people feel unwelcome, would wreck the local economy?
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