:sunglasses: 25.8 % :pray: 14.5 % :laughing: 37.1 % 🧥 1.6 % :cry: 12.9 % :🤗 6.5 % :poo: 1.6 %
User avatar
By Boiler
#48793
Abernathy wrote: Tue Jul 18, 2023 12:02 am Right, so. Apparently, the Tories are considering abolishing inheritance tax as a desperate bribe to try to hold onto power at the election.

What’s the big deal on inheritance tax, then ? Isn’t it just another variety of capital gains tax? It seems to me that this policy is yet another Tory appeal to naked self-interest and greed. Seemingly, it only applies to about 3% of the population, in any case.

Desperate, desperate stuff, though it’s feeding the radio phone-ins.
It certainly would have benefited a friend of mine, who was left a large house in London by a friend. Paying the IHT was, to put it mildly, a nightmare. In the end the house was gutted to the bare walls and divided into three flats, of which they sold two.

Fully explained here, Abers: https://www.gov.uk/inheritance-tax
User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#48823
Andrew Bridgen was the champ at that, but he can't do it any more.

Somerton and Frome won't even be close. The other two might, but each would be awful to lose, because the swing required would be huge in Selby and Uxbridge has a very unusual situation of the government having a local issue to attack on.
User avatar
By Andy McDandy
#48824
Friday morning, I predict Gove doing the circuit, saying it's disappointing but to be expected, voters stayed at home, hardly a ringing endorsement for Labour/LDs, unique situations, message on doorsteps was crack on with the 5 priorities...
By Youngian
#48826
Yug wrote: Tue Jul 18, 2023 11:00 am If the people have gone Left, how come shiterags like the Fail, Torygraph and S*n haven't gone bust?

Or are the people different from the population?
Telegraph has gone bust but will remain a loss making plutocrat’s play toy for influence. Advertisers are deserting GB News and give it time for the Sun and Mail to see the cliff edge.
Why do broadcast channels still allow dailies to set their agenda for the day? There’s going to be a new generation of millennial producers who haven’t had newspapers in their lives. Look forward to it.
Dalem Lake, Bones McCoy liked this
User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#48827
The Telegraph and Spectator are actually profitable in themselves- it's the wider group that has problems. I know, I was amazed. My guess is that they don't spend very much on news gathering. A load of people following up other people's stories and rewriting press releases would be fairly cheap.

I suppose lots of people still read papers online for free, so you can sort of defend the emphasis on them to some extent. But there ought to be a wider array of blogs and podcasts covered. Maybe there is, I don't know. Because there's no phrase that has me heading for the exit more than "coming up next- a look at tmrw's papers".
User avatar
By Andy McDandy
#48845
When breakfast TV was launched in the 1980s, there was considerable kicking off from the press, which claimed having the news on when people were typically munching their cornflakes and reading the freshly delivered paper would undermine their sales. IIRC as part of a deal struck, the TV shows would take their lead from the press and stick to the more trivial areas. How the press dealt with Radio 4 I don't know. But anyway, you need to remember the context of the time - 4 TV channels, no internet, Ceefax/Oracle the closest to 24 hour rolling news. For most people they had their paper and the lunchtime, evening or 10.00 bulletin.

Anyway, onto the present. Stories break online (or on TV/radio), and are put through the papers which give them their particular political slant, which then get examined on news discussion shows (i.e. most daytime TV that isn't antiques or property). Which means that whatever is being discussed is at least a day old, and has less to do with the facts in the case as how the slant of a story supports an agenda.

News discussion programmes are popular because:

1. They're comparatively cheap to produce.
2. Arguments make for 'good telly', which means secondary views, social media mentions, and greater footprint.
3. They're a great way of sneaking in controversial or offensive opinions, either from guests directly or in a "just what other people are saying" way. And people are suckers for this stuff. Lots of "Hang on, they said what?" or "Ooh, it's all kicking off now!" content.

For all of those points, the papers offer an easy lead-in and just enough justification to cover a thing ("It must be newsworthy, it's been written about in a newspaper, duuuuh!"). And yes, paper reviews are a cheap way of filling airtime.
Abernathy liked this
By Youngian
#48848
The Telegraph and Spectator are actually profitable in themselves- it's the wider group that has problems. I know, I was amazed.

Daily Herald went bust in the mid 60s before being snapped up by Rupert and becoming the Sun. Had a large mainly older working class Labour readership who didn’t buy much. Guess elderly Telegraph readers are more well heeled and in the market for new 12 bores and red corduroys.
User avatar
By Malcolm Armsteen
#48849
The Telegraph readership demographic:

https://pressgazette.co.uk/media-audien ... breakdown/#
According to Yougov, more of The Telegraph’s readership is male (69%) compared with other newspapers (49% on average).

More than a fifth (22%) are affluent, with an income above twice the median (compared with 15% of readers of other newspapers).

The Telegraph readers also skew older with 38% of its readership aged 60 and above, compared with 30% for other titles.

The Telegraph has a higher proportion of young readers, with over four in ten (43%) aged between 18–39, compared with 37% on average elsewhere. Fewer readers of The Telegraph are, however, aged between 40–59 (19% versus 32% for other papers).

Readers of The Telegraph are also more likely to say that they use advertising to help them decide on purchases (50% compared to 33% for other newspaper readers). The same proportion said they often pay attention to newspaper adverts, compared to less than a third (32%) of readers of other news brands.
User avatar
By Boiler
#48852
Tubby Isaacs wrote: Tue Jul 18, 2023 10:42 am MIriam Cates, of Cambridge University and Sheffield Hallam University here.

I thought elite universities were good and it was the other sought that needed culling.

Response to that from elsewhere:
Screenshot 2023-07-18 at 15-03-13 The Trials and Tribulations of the Tory Party.png
Screenshot 2023-07-18 at 15-03-13 The Trials and Tribulations of the Tory Party.png (45.76 KiB) Viewed 5926 times
The author of that post was a full-throated supporter of Gove when in the DfE.
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