Shocked!: All British Government Agenices To Have Budgets Cut By 40%, Thousands Threatened With Lay-Offs

July 3rd, 2010 (2) Posted By Pat Dollard.

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The Independent:

Thousands more jobs in key public services are now under threat after the Chancellor, George Osborne, last night issued a shock edict demanding spending cuts of up to 40 per cent across Whitehall – 15 percentage points more than threatened in his emergency Budget last month.

The Chancellor has ordered cabinet ministers to plan for even deeper cuts to jobs and services over the next four years as part of his crisis plan to tackle the UK’s £155bn budget deficit.

In a letter to David Cameron this weekend, the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Danny Alexander, will confirm that departments already struggling to produce a blueprint for cutting spending by a quarter will now have to submit additional plans that could reduce their departmental budgets by two-fifths. The alternative packages will be weighed up in advance of a crucial Whitehall spending review in the autumn.

The Guardian:

Cabinet ministers have been ordered by the Treasury to plan for unprecedented cuts of 40% in their departmental budgets as the coalition widens the scope of its four-year austerity drive.

The eye-watering demand from the chief secretary to the Treasury, Danny Alexander, was sent this weekend to cabinet colleagues ahead of a week in which ministers will step up emergency cost-cutting across the public sector.

The only departments not included in the Treasury trawl will be health and international development, which have been “ringfenced” for the current parliament. Education and defence will also escape lightly. Alexander has told the education secretary, Michael Gove, and the defence secretary, Liam Fox, to plan for two scenarios – cuts to budgets of 10% at best and 20% at worst over four years. All other departments – including the Home Office, the Department for Work and Pensions and the Department for Transport – have been ordered to produce plans showing the impact of cuts of 25%, and at worst 40%.

It is estimated that a 25% cut in the Home Office budget could mean a reduction in the number of police officers of almost 20,000.

In addition, all departments have been asked to show how they would slash day-to-day administration costs, excluding salaries, by 33% at the lower end and 50% at the higher end. A Treasury source said: “We are determined to tackle the record budget deficit in order to keep interest rates lower for longer, protect jobs and maintain the quality of essential public services. These planning assumptions are not final settlements, and do not commit the Treasury or departments to final settlements.”

In the budget last month the chancellor, George Osborne, said that, with the exception of health and international development, departments faced average cuts of 25%. But it was expected the pain would be spread fairly evenly.

Alexander and Osborne briefed the full cabinet at a meeting last Tuesday. They stressed that asking ministers to look at the impact of 40% cuts did not mean they would be hit by such harsh settlements when final details were announced in the comprehensive spending review (CSR) on 20 October. Sources were at pains to point out that Labour had been planning cuts of 20% and that as a result the coalition’s settlement would mean more for education, defence and health.

The announcement of a 40% outer limit could be seen as tactical – to prepare the public for the worst in the hope that when final details are announced they will come as less of a shock.

In a sign of how determined ministers are to act fast, the government is expected this week to halt the rebuilding of around 700 schools in order to save a further £1bn a year. And in a move that will cause bitterness among the Whitehall mandarins drawing up the cuts, ministers intend to announce plans soon to slash payoff terms for hundreds of thousands of civil servants, many of whom fear redundancy as a result of the austerity measures. Last week it emerged that at least 600,000 public service jobs could be lost.

The Observer understands that the Cabinet Office minister, Francis Maude, wants to pass legislation to change the long-standing Civil Service Compensation Scheme, which he sees as too generous. In some cases civil servants can leave with a payoff of six times their salary, though insiders say these are rare exceptions. An attempt by the previous government to change the compensation scheme failed following a successful union challenge in the high court.

Sources told the Observer that an announcement – which could lead to union threats of strike action – had been pencilled in for last Thursday and is now expected this week or next. Representatives of the main civil service unions have been called to a meeting at the Cabinet Office tomorrow.

Mark Serwotka, general secretary of the Public and Commercial Services Union, reacted angrily when told that moves were imminent. “This would be an outrageous abuse by the government, simply because it failed to get the result it wanted in the high court. We are determined to resist any attempt by the government to ride roughshod over our members’ rights.”

Ministers were also warned last night that the number of people classed as homeless in Britain could more than double because of “unfair” benefit cuts. The National Housing Federation, the body representing England’s 1,200 not-for-profit housing associations, predicts that impending cuts to housing benefit will put a further 200,000 people at grave risk of homelessness and lead to a concentration of social problems in the most deprived areas of the country. Currently 140,000 people are classified as homeless in Britain.

The new government has unveiled plans to cut housing benefit by 10% for people claiming jobseeker’s allowance for 12 months or more from April 2013. The cuts would hit Britain’s 200,000 single, childless claimants hardest. Someone in London with a weekly rent of £350 would see their benefit cut by £35. The NHF said tenants would be forced to make up the shortfall from their £65.45 weekly allowance, leaving just £30.45 for food, clothing and energy.

“Cutting housing benefit could have a catastrophic impact on the lives of thousands of people who – despite their best efforts – have failed to find work after 12 months,” said the federation’s chief executive, David Orr. “These changes mean that up to 200,000 people could end up homeless. Quite frankly, the proposals are disturbing and unfair.”

Critics also say plans to cap payments to private tenants and to reduce the level at which housing benefit is paid from 50% of local rent levels to 30% could force hundreds of thousands of families out of their homes.

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  • mike3481

    Was it wrong for me to laugh out loud when I read the headline?

    American Conservative’s beliefs are being validated on a global scale.

    And yes, I’m fully aware of what Pat said on the June, 29 JKH show and he’s absolutely correct, Obama and his crew aren’t going to stop no matter what.

    They know 60% to 80% of American voters are against what they’re doing on any given issue and they know they’re gonna have a really bad November, so they’ve got nothing to lose, which is why they’re sprinting forward to get as much of their evil shit as possible installed in the Federal Government before the November election.

    Right now we’ve got a blowtorch aimed at the Democrats and if, if, we take back the House of Representatives we will also have to keep a blowtorch turned towards the Republicans in Congress in order to stop any bipartisanship, because that path is completely out of the question.

    Obama Inc has to be stopped in their tracks, meaning we’ll apply Alinsky’s rule for radicals # 11- “Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, polarize it. Don’t try to attack abstract corporations or bureaucracies. Identify a responsible individual. Ignore attempts to shift or spread the blame”.

    Think about it, we’re already applying some of Alinsy’s rules against Obama & Co..

    Forget about the Government Agencies, IE, Coast Guard, Mineral Management Agency, hell, even BP.

    Hammer Obama and all the other names at the top of all the messes that America faces and be as, if not more, relentless than they have been, which allowed them to rise to the positions of power that they now, temporally hold.

    Now, given the fact that after the election, it’s highly unlikely, in the extreme, that Republicans will be able to override a POTUS veto, every scenario grounded in reality that I’ve played-out, well, it’s really difficult to see how there is not going to be some extreme events taking place.

    What those extreme events would be and what would trigger them would be a guess, but to we Conservatives, all the signs pointing to them will be as clear as day.

    Anyways, Happy 4th of July. :beer:

  • Ohnooo

    Unfortunately only when and if Conservatives take back this country, we’re going to have to follow along Britain’s track…there’s no other way..this lil dance with Oboingo and comrades version of Marxist/Socialism plus changing or reinterpreting the Constitution is about to come to an abrupt end…there’s gonna be hell to pay one way or the other..