Chris Green MP: How should we fund our politics?
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Many want the taxpayer to fund the political parties as they do, to a certain extent, in many European countries.
Whilst some taxpayer money is given to support the political parties represented in Parliament it is a relatively small amount.
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Hide AdThere are many problems with having taxpayers fund politics. On one side of the political fence, many would find it offensive that their money is being used to finance socialism.
On the other side, there would be a logical inconsistency of right-wing political parties – those that want low taxes and small government – using taxes to fund themselves.
In a healthy society, it is up to individuals, businesses, trades unions and other organisations to spend their money how they please.
It is welcome that people do generously donate but it does lend itself to accusations of what people are buying with their cash.
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Hide AdWhilst not perfect, by and large, people support political parties because they are already in alignment rather than to buy a particular policy agenda.
Obviously, there will always be accusations to the contrary but that is often the nature of political discourse.
Sometimes though it does look as though the overlap between the donor, the Party and the policy interest is too strong.
In recent years, vast amounts of your money, whether through fuel bills, taxes or in the general cost of living, have been channelled into subsidising supposed environmentally friendly energy production.
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Hide AdWind turbines and solar panels require huge subsidies and financial guarantees to make them profitable.
Those subsidies are paid by you to the ‘ethical green’ corporations and the owners often become excessively rich.
To re-iterate the point, people are becoming rich not because you want to buy the product they provide but because the law of the land and subsidy structures channel your cash into their pockets.
I am instinctively against government subsidies because I believe that they skew the market and are all too often easy for people to exploit.
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Hide AdThey make their fortune out of a subsidised product whilst claiming virtue for doing so.