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An Unlikely Rebel

  • Posted by Martin Bright
  • 23 April 2008

Stand up the first Labour MP to notice the implications of the abolition of 10p rate of tax

So who was the first Labour MP to express his concern about the abolition of the 10p rate of tax for low earners? Stand up Geoffrey Robinson, the former Treasury Minister who just happens to be the proprietor of this magazine.

The Telegraph congratulates itself today on how its headline on 22 March 2007 read that Brown's last budget would "leave millions worse off". But it also points out that Robinson told the Commons as early as 27 March that the changes could hurt "many people whom the government never set out in any of their policies to hurt." Some of us more slavishly loyal Brownites swallowed the government spin, as you can see from my analysis at the time. It even took Frank Field, the leader of the tax rebellion another four months to express his doubts.

So hats off to Geoffrey Robinson, the unlikely rebel.

PS This post should not be connected to recent speculation about my interest in the editor's job at the New Statesman

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3 comments from readers

knave
26 April 2008 at 17:27

I thought you said weren't going for the editors job.

Martin Bright
28 April 2008 at 12:46

I wasn't, but now I am

knave
01 May 2008 at 07:17

So Martin if you get the job.

1. More articles from Tory Nick Cohen and anti immigrant PEU stars like Anthony Browne and Gove.

2. Opposing views like Pilger, Wilby and Howe will get the chop.

3. Chavez will be on a hit list and Aribe adored.

4. In 2010 The NS will be supporting the "progessive Tory Party under Cameron"

I bet the Webbs will be just ready to revolve.

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About the writer

Martin Bright began his journalistic career writing in very simple English for a magazine aimed at French school children. This experience has informed his style ever since. He worked for the BBC World Service, and The Guardian before joining the Observer as Education Correspondent. He went on to become Home Affairs Editor before becoming the New Statesman's political editor in 2005.

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