munroburton wrote:From what I've been able to glean, Labour peers declined to join a Liberal "fatal motion" which would have killed the tax credits cut and triggered a constitutional crisis the Tories are ill-equipped to handle.
Instead, they have forced a grandfathering delay of approximately three years. That would mean they'd go into effect in 2018-9, for people who are currently receiving tax credits.
It occurs to me that 2020 is an election year. And in the meantime, the peers get to roll in some good PR for doing it. What were you saying about machine politicians, Mike?
They do say that nature abhors a vacuum. Given the current state of affairs in the Commons (full of minnows, intellectual light weights and non-entities), it's not altogether surprising that the political "big beasts" that have been "retired" to the Lords have used their far greater experience and nous to derail Osborne's plans.
Ironically, the delay may be of some benefit to the Scottish Tories. At least they won't have the effects of unpopular cuts hanging over them during the campaign for Holyrood.
Given opinions I've seen expressed by some English Tories, I think it would be in the best interests for the Scottish branch office (as that is what it is) to split off and become a completely separate party. It does appear that there are some very distinct differences in opinion between the Scottish and English elements in the Tory Party, anyway. They'd possibly stand a better chance than a "semi-detached" SLab as at least they occupy a different enough part of the Scottish political spectrum to make them distinguishable from the SNP.
Given that Scottish politics seems to be "50 Shades of Social Democracy", it would be nice to have something on the centre to centre right part to have balance.
Mike.