
Germany switching off its perfectly fine nuclear power plants, but keeping coal power plants instead to fight climate change in one picture. Enjoy your air quality.
James 🇬🇧 👑
32.4K posts

@TypeForVictory
UK-based investment analyst (ex-macro, now global equities), interested in econ & markets, defence, infra, etc. https://t.co/rF30HPO5f9

Germany switching off its perfectly fine nuclear power plants, but keeping coal power plants instead to fight climate change in one picture. Enjoy your air quality.



21,000 churches have become subject to VAT on repairs overnight, with the end of the Listed Places of Worship Grants Scheme. Visit our website for all the details on what we know so far, and how you can help churches affected by these changes.

Supporters will still flood the private members bill ballot - the only chance the bill has. But it has vastly increased appetite for Lords reform. Many said they were “absolutely radicalised” by it “Once we’ve done the hereditaries we should come for the rest of them” one says


Supporters will still flood the private members bill ballot - the only chance the bill has. But it has vastly increased appetite for Lords reform. Many said they were “absolutely radicalised” by it “Once we’ve done the hereditaries we should come for the rest of them” one says



NEW Blimey - devolution of some proportion of income tax to some city regions - ie to back incentives for growing cities: Chancellor announces “roadmap for future fiscal devolution to be published at this year's budget” to give “regional leaders control of a share of some national taxes which have for too long been allocated by central governments.” “They will look at income tax alongside other taxes with reforms initially targeted at those places have the greatest capacity to deliver them and the greatest potential to benefit. Now this is not about new taxes, and it's not about higher tax rates, I will not ask taxpayers to pay more. Reforms will be fiscally neutral, …these reforms will represent a permanent transfer of power and resources, not another exercise in local ambition frustrated by central government control, with taxpayers able to see what is being delivered with their money and to hold local leaders to account for the results what I am describing is a genuine break with the past, a generational opportunity for Britain's regions to make their own future”.















