James Renwick

1.1K posts

James Renwick

James Renwick

@renwij

Katılım Şubat 2009
58 Takip Edilen11 Takipçiler
Bridget Phillipson
Bridget Phillipson@bphillipsonMP·
I took @ObserverUK out on a walk with Maisie to talk about: ▪️ Why I prioritise the early years ▪️ Childhood and parenting in an online world ▪️ My ambitions for families ▪️ Class, accents and being an outsider Have a read below 🚶‍♀️ observer.co.uk/news/national/…
Bridget Phillipson tweet media
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Nick Harrison
Nick Harrison@NickHarrison73·
Most teachers don't think there is enough provision in school to support kids with SEND. Latest polling from @NEUnion @DanielKebedeNEU This will need to change significantly if schools white paper aims of more mainstream provision for SEND is to work. @suttontrust
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James Renwick
James Renwick@renwij·
@Heccles94 Labour instead taxed it. Good luck with getting them to invest in it.
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James Renwick
James Renwick@renwij·
@StarlightMcKenz Here’s and idea for parents that don’t want to use the state system or have been let down, and therefore provision SEND support themselves. Don’t add VAT.
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StarlightMcKenzie
StarlightMcKenzie@StarlightMcKenz·
I see schools are waking up now to the disaster that is SEND Reforms. I hope they will be supporting the demonstrations and marches being currently organised.
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James Renwick
James Renwick@renwij·
@cierzo1 What crisis isn’t the tax on education and SEND going to fix this?
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James Renwick
James Renwick@renwij·
@MrTeece_ I thought the VAT on SEND and education was supposed to solve this?
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Luis Garicano 🇪🇺🇺🇦
The UK triple lock is the singlest stupidest policy in the entire Western world, and the most damaging to the future of a country. Of course, it is also untouchable and almost undiscussed in the UK press. @mattyglesias does a big favour to the UK public here.
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James Renwick
James Renwick@renwij·
@edlonguk @LOUISES52199231 You disagree with the percentage or the basic concept that when a child moves from private to state education the tax payer picks up the cost?
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Ed Long
Ed Long@edlonguk·
@LOUISES52199231 If you choose to believe a survey conducted by a wealth management firm, who's previous hits include initiating the fake bankers story in the Telegraph that IPSO ruled on last week. Personally, I prefer my sources to be a little more robust than that.
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Lou_more_ideas_than_time
Lou_more_ideas_than_time@LOUISES52199231·
So that’s 1 in 10 children who have now taken a place in state school , whose education is now funded by the hardworking tax payer … pre school VAT , cost to uk taxpayer £0 … whoever signed off this policy needs to lose their job #clueless #reckless #squanderingyourmoney
Victoria@vickygrayson_

“Almost one in ten parents desert private schools after VAT fee rise. 22% said they were planning to remove their child from their school, either by switching to a cheaper independent school at home or abroad, or by going to the state education system.” thetimes.com/uk/education/a…

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James Renwick
James Renwick@renwij·
@DanNeidle @riversorare And lowering it would stop businesses starting in the first place add, costs to consumers and be inflationary.
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Dan Neidle
Dan Neidle@DanNeidle·
@riversorare The VAT threshold currently drops small businesses from growing. That’s damaging. Tripling it would stop larger businesses from growing. Much more damaging. Not a rational policy.
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riversorare
riversorare@riversorare·
Absolutely love this tbh. This is how to ‘solve’ that VAT Threshold ‘problem’. Double it. (Plus then let’s Triple Lock the threshold #WorkersTripleLock). If need be I’ll buy @DanNeidle a drink to help calm him down 🥃 😉.
Rupert Lowe MP@RupertLowe10

Sole traders. Micro businesses with one or two employees. Freelancers. Plumbers. Electricians. Hairdressers. Mechanics. Accountants. Gardeners. Whatever it is, whoever they are. These are the workers that keep the economy going. Not the big global corporates. Politicians, and those devising the rules, simply do not understand how these people live. Nobody ever even talks about the one or two people operations in Westminster. Saturday morning in the bureaucrat’s world? Friday working from home, so nice easy day to finish off the week. Laptop closed by 15.00. Phone off for the weekend, not a care in the world. Life is sweet. Holiday coming up, mortgage comfortable, pension growing nicely. The sole trader? Getting invoices and paperwork sorted at 6am before the children wake up. Chasing up late payments. Weighing up whether to do that last minute emergency call out, or spend time with the kids on a Saturday. Getting the diary sorted for next week. Phone goes and goes all weekend. It is never-ending. It does not stop. It’s two different worlds honestly. The issue is that the latter entirely funds the former, and the former is hellbent on making life as difficult as possible for productive Britain. I want to be really clear about what Restore Britain would do. Two things. Crush parasitic Britain. Unleash productive Britain. First. Scrap IR35. It has created years of confusion, fear and chaos for contractors and small operators. It has pushed countless self-employed people into pointless paperwork and rigid inflexibility. Doesn’t work. It’s a right pain in the arse for millions. Scrap it. Second, we will double the VAT threshold. The current threshold traps thousands of small businesses just as they begin to grow. Many deliberately stop expanding to avoid the enormous administrative burden of VAT and the brutal cost hikes which drive demand away. The evidence of is obvious. Thousands hover just below the threshold, refusing to grow, hire or pay more tax. It is ABSURD. Restore Britain would double the VAT threshold so small businesses can grow without being punished for success. This is absolutely necessary. An important one - we would dramatically simplify the tax system for sole traders and micro-businesses (and everyone else, but that's separate). Instead of forcing small operators through pages of complicated accounting rules designed for large corporations, we will introduce a far simplified tax regime for businesses below a certain size. Less paperwork, fewer forms, clearer rules. More money for them, less for the accountants and parasitic professional class. Sounds like a good deal, doesn’t it? Next. We will end the endless culture of inspections and bureaucratic interference from the bureaucrats. Too many small businesses now live in fear of accidental breaches - whether it’s health and safety nonsense, employment law complexity, ridiculous data laws or constantly changing compliance requirements. The stress is immense. If you are a sole trader or micro-business acting in good faith, the system should support you, not threaten you. Restore Britain will free them from endless regulatory suffocation. The mental health release on that is worth it alone. Means a lot to me, this one. Restore Britain will make it easier for tradespeople to hire apprentices. This is important. One of the biggest problems small businesses face is bringing in the next generation. The current system is too complicated, too expensive and too rigid for small firms. Restore Britain will introduce simple, flexible apprenticeship schemes designed specifically for small businesses and trades. Up next, we will simplify planning and licensing rules. For small builders, tradespeople and contractors - planning restrictions and local bureaucracy can delay work for months and add unnecessary costs. I detest planning departments more than I can describe in language appropriate for a Saturday morning. These jumped-up empire-building little runts running councils across Britain will have their power stripped away from them. We will let people do business, we will let business owners run their businesses without the sneering council worker’s constant box ticking. Not complicated. We will restore respect for the self-employed. Look at how they were treated during lockdown. Like dirt. Entirely abandoned whilst others were paid to do nothing. That must be addressed, and they must be compensated. The excluded must finally be recognised. That wrong must be rectified. Under a Restore Britain Government, their efforts will be appreciated, celebrated and most importantly? Rewarded. This is the key point. Let’s not pretend otherwise. The five golden rules of business. What’s in it for me? We will radically slash tax and raise thresholds. Tax on dividends would be hacked down so that success pays. More work, pays. Effort, pays. If the electrician does that last minute job on a Saturday, it will be worth their time. They will be rewarded, not HMRC. Restore Britain will slash the bureaucracy, simplify the rules, cut the taxes. We will give small businesses the freedom they need to thrive, to support their families and to succeed. Parasitic Britain will end. Sole traders and micro businesses finally have a political party that will fight for them. Restore Britain.

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Victoria
Victoria@vickygrayson_·
@renwij @EmInYorkshire @SianGriffiths6 It’s always “Team SEND” until the SEND child is in a private school then Emma will happily tax gouge the parents of disabled kids and force them into unsuitable schools. Emma really should be campaigning against taxing education yet here she is shrugging about it all.
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Steve Lawrence
Steve Lawrence@SteveLawrence_·
One in ten parents have removed children from independent schools as a consequence of @RachelReevesMP education tax gouge. 22% intend to remove their children. That will be 120,000 children migrating. I’ll bet you didn’t expect this @10DowningStreet You’ll have to raise taxes to pay for this almighty cock-up and at a time when education in England is in utter chaos with falling standards, failing mental health amongst teachers and an addiction to EdTech in children. You couldn’t have made a bigger mess if you’d tried.
Steve Lawrence tweet media
Sian Griffiths@SianGriffiths6

Almost one in ten parents desert private schools after VAT fee rise thetimes.com/article/5a129f…

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Sam Strickland
Sam Strickland@Samstricko181·
A huge issue with clumping children with SEND together under one broad brushstroke banner, i.e. SEND, is that it’s really quite clumsy and risks creating self fulfilling prophecies. Labels risk doing more harm than good. So many SEND children are highly capable & not helpless.
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Yah Boomy
Yah Boomy@yahboomy·
@blaiklockBP Someone on 99k is 3 times better off than the average working person
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Catherine Blaiklock
Catherine Blaiklock@blaiklockBP·
Someone on 99k is better off than someone on 110k How can that be right ?
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Dr Neil Shastri-Hurst MP
Dr Neil Shastri-Hurst MP@DrNShastriHurst·
The writing is on the wall for cathedral schools - yet another consequence of the Government’s VAT raid on independent schools. Labour’s levy threatens to silence choirs and unravel a centuries-old cultural legacy, as @XanderArmstrong has rightly observed.
Dr Neil Shastri-Hurst MP tweet media
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Kevin Maguire
Kevin Maguire@Kevin_Maguire·
Plastic patriot tax exiles who fled to Gulf states to avoid paying their fair share back home should be charged the full whack if repatriated by the UK Government.
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