Kevin Meagher wonders what will happen the next time George Osborne meets the “morally repugnant” tax dodgers James Caan, Lord Ashcroft and Sir Philip Green.
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Does George Osborne think James Caan, Lord Ashcroft and Sir Philip Green are “morally repugnant”?
In his budget speech yesterday, the chancellor was clear what he thought about rich people not paying their fair share of tax:
“I regard tax evasion and – indeed – aggressive tax avoidance – as morally repugnant.”
Yet just hours after the budget the Conservative Party press office tweeted two comments from former Dragons’ Den star James Caan in support of the budget:
“James Caan,BBC: ‘Govt’s support for exporters ‘creates jobs’ and ‘gives businesses a chance to breathe again’ #Budget2012”
“James Caan on BBC: “I think it’s a good budget, I think it’s very encouraging.” #Budget2012”
Is this the same James Caan who benefits from having non-domicile tax status – precisely the same tax avoiding arrangement the chancellor thinks is “morally repugnant?”
The same Caan who fellow Dragon Duncan Bannatyne once decried for putting home grown entrepreneurs at an “unfair advantage” by moving his money offshore?
Is this the same Caan whose London-based private equity business Hamilton Bradshaw is owned by a Cayman Islands company?
The chancellor, it seems, has a selective memory.
Has he also forgotten his party has been bankrolled by nom-dom Lord Ashcroft for the past decade and a half?
Or that the government’s own ‘efficiency adviser’ – Top Shop boss Sir Philip Green – squirrelled his vast wealth offshore in 2005 by paying a £1.2 billion dividend to his wife, who lives in Monaco, thus saving an estimated £285million in taxes?
• Osborne, Mitchell and Hammond accused of tax avoidance 18 Oct 2010
• Another week, another Tory tax exile – only this time the Daily Mail sinks him 20 Aug 2010
• More pressure on Clegg as we reveal real cost of Green’s £285m tax avoidance 19 Aug 2010
• Sign the petition to demand Cameron’s pal Aschroft pays back the £127 million he avoided 2 Mar 2010
• Questions mount for Tories over The Aschcroft Supremacy 2 Mar 2010
• Facebook group on Lord Ashcroft’s tax status piles on the pressure 16 Feb 2010
• Cameron’s MEPs vote against reforms to clamp down on tax dodgers 11 Feb 2010
The chancellor’s soaring rhetoric about tax avoidance is a worthy sentiment but as content-free as a non-dom’s tax return.
43 Responses to “Budget 2012: Does Osborne think Caan, Ashcroft and Green are “morally repugnant”?”
Yrotitna
#Budget2012: Does Osborne think Caan, Ashcroft and Green are “morally repugnant”? http://t.co/ygXEjoT6 by @KevinPMeagher #Budget
Irene Short
#Budget2012: Does Osborne think Caan, Ashcroft and Green are “morally repugnant”? http://t.co/ygXEjoT6 by @KevinPMeagher #Budget
Dànaidh Ratnaike
Budget 2012: Does Osborne think Caan, Ashcroft and Green are “morally repugnant”? http://t.co/0DT7WzaH @leftfootfwd
The Fairy Queen
Budget 2012: Does Osborne think Caan, Ashcroft and Green are “morally repugnant”?: Does George Osbo… http://t.co/FeMMQApn (#cashcroft)
Blarg1987
I agree it should be raised however from a manner of cost effectiveness is it better to target the peanuts in value or the cherries, most people would say the latter then we should target people further down the list.