Reblogged
from Vox Political:
It seems this blog’s prediction that the Liberal Democrat leader
would ignore the wishes of his party in favour of cosying up to the Tories has
been proved accurate.
The
Northern Echo has reported that Clegg is refusing to do anything
about the so-called ‘under-occupation charge’, even though it is now his
party’s policy to oppose it and demand its repeal.
Instead he has blamed local authorities for any problems suffered by the
tax’s victims. He told the Echo that councils were failing to spend –
or even returning – Discretionary Housing Payment cash which the government has
handed out to them as aid for people falling into rent arrears.
He was lying, of course. It seems unlikely that a falsehood
of this magnitude can be ascribed to poor advice.
The example used by the newspaper was that of Durham County Council, which
received £883,000 from the government to hand out as DHPs – a sum which the
council’s resources director, Don McLure, said would last just eight
weeks.
In total, councils have been given £150 million to hand out, which may seem a
large amount – but is in fact dwarfed by the demand.
Clegg’s rationale for his claim was that several councils had returned some
of their DHP allocation at the end of the last financial year – but this was
before the bedroom tax had been imposed and so the claim means nothing –
and he must know this.
Excuses for the bedroom tax are flying thick and fast, after research by the
Independent and the campaign group False Economy proved that 50,000
families are in danger of eviction because of it.
On the BBC’s Question Time, Shirley Williams claimed that the tax
had created problems because suitable smaller accommodation had not been built
in readiness for the demand it caused. This is nonsense. If there was already
demand for accommodation – and we must assume so, because this is the reason the
Conservatives have spent so long bleating about families on waiting lists who
need accommodation that the tax’s victims are, allegedly, blocking – then
why didn’t the government just get on and build it?
The tax was really brought in for several reasons: It is partly a reaction
against the increase in the Housing Benefit bill to accommodate people with jobs
whose wages are below their cost of living – this is due to
greed on the part of employers; it is partly intended to clear housing – not for
people on any waiting list but as a form of social cleansing,
getting the riff-raff out of attractive parts of our towns and cities; and it is
also another attempt to spite people on sickness, incapacity or
disability benefits, who must either face the extra cost and
inconvenience of removing special adaptations to their houses and reinstalling
them elsewhere if they are able to move, or must lose the company of carers who
use spare bedrooms when they have to stay over, or must pay the tax and live
without food or heat, thereby risking their health.
According to Facebook friend Shirley Nott, the government’s spokespeople are
extremely relaxed about this eventuality: “Apparently, there’s no need for
alarm. Under no circumstances should anyone assume anything untoward is
occurring.
“The reports of 50,000 potential – imminent (initial) evictions are not
(“necessarily”) going to be “representative” of a potential situation in the
more medium/long term. The ‘rationale’ for this cheery response is (obviously)
that the ‘Not a Bedroom Tax’ is only just starting to make its presence felt and
so, (of course) people have only just begun “adjusting” to it.”
So their imminent eviction followed, no doubt, by a nice quiet death
in a side street is merely “adjusting” to the new system.
Shirley continues: “Government spokespeople… have been at pains to explain –
in words of one syllable – that no-one else should worry. It seems possible that
some – even most – of those 50,000 mentioned in today’s news might find such an
artfully-delivered response to imminent eviction a little difficult to come to
terms with – but interested members of the government are very likely to have
reasoned that they’ll probably be far too preoccupied with practicalities to
make much of it.”
Maybe not – but they can still rely on blogs such as this one to make the
point for them.
Please – everyone – feel free to splash this article around wherever you see
fit. Use excerpts in letters to your local newspapers, share it with friends who
don’t realise the seriousness of the situation – we’ve already had suicides
because of this tax, don’t forget…
Make sure it doesn’t go away.