Author Archives: Jack Carter

Why Liberals must extinguish the so-called ‘Culture Wars’ 

On Tuesday afternoon, I found myself scrolling Twitter – as one does (even if it invokes a sense of despair) – and could not help but feel disgusted by how so many speak of their peers. Social media has always brought out antisocial tendencies in some people, and it’s a well-studied psychological phenomenon. Except I’m not sure it’s just a phenomenon anymore. While most people in the real world are relatively nice and prosocial, over the last few years we have seen grievance politics bleed into the real world – with dangerous consequences

In the wake of the Southport murders, in which three poor little girls had their lives stolen from them, we saw how communities clashed with one another. People were whipped up by opportunists and hate merchants, many took to the streets and looted shops, attacked police officers, Mosques were vandalised – and people tried to set fire to a hotel housing asylum seekers. Every society faces moments where people are angry, where social cohesion is fracturing, and where people weaponize discontent for their own benefit. But this is growing out of control.

Just before I started writing this I saw a tweet from Nick Timothy, the Tory MP for West Suffolk and Shadow Justice Secretary. He attached to this tweet a video of Muslims praying in Trafalgar Square, including Sadiq Khan, and unapologetically called it an “act of domination and division”. This rhetoric isn’t just confined to the darkest corners where the far-right mingle, but it is being espoused by Members of Parliament, and being fuelled by bots, trolls, and agitators. While this may seem hyperbolic to some, I fear that this poses a grave threat to all of us, and it’s worth taking seriously.

I don’t care about whether a badger is put on a bank note, and nor should our party’s leader. We should not give oxygen to petty, transient squabbles published in tabloids, but we seriously need to consider how we address this breakdown in social cohesion. It is simply not enough to abstractly call out Reform’s divisive politics, and it does not stand up for those being affected by the culture war politics of today. We should have no fear in holding people like Nick Timothy MP to account, nor should we sit by and let outrage merchants tarnish social cohesion for profit.

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Scarcity and the Social Contract

Scarcity on the surface

When I sat down for lunch with a local council leader one afternoon, in a café adjacent to a YMCA, one of the first things we discussed was capacity. The ability of the state to serve its people, to foster a society where they can access social mobility, and to give them support when they need it. As I sat down and talked with them, drinking my “woke” chai latte, I understood some of the problems we faced in Somerset and it was upsetting. Children unable to access SEND schooling, or falling out of education. People waiting many months for affordable housing, forced to rent privately. Elderly people living in precarity to afford social care.

Often we think about this country and the state that it is in, and all we can feel is despair; which is completely understandable. The canyon between earnings and living costs is ever-growing. Services keep being cut year-on-year, and there’s no money to restore them in real terms. Councils being forced to tackle potholes, graffiti, and overgrown vegetation like a game of whack-a-mole – I blame Eric Pickles in particular.

In 2010, when we came into government, the economic outlook was not good. We had just faced a global crisis of horrifying proportions, and as such policy programmes were devised. The Conservatives wanted to reduce a “structural deficit” through austerity, so that we could “live within our means”. They believed if they could cut debt as a proportion of GDP, through cutting expenditure, they could close a gap – but look at how much wider it has become.

One evening I was speaking to my Local Party chair, and she informed me it would cost four billion pounds to restore SEND provision funding in real terms. To put that into perspective, that is 18% of Rachel Reeves’ fiscal headroom (£22bn) from the Autumn Budget. Now extrapolate that to the rest of the state. Capacity wasn’t just “cut” in the immediacy of austerity, but it was left to wither. And the British people have paid the price; through fiscal drag, anaemic wage growth, a quicksand poverty line, and the persistent anxiety of precarity.

So what does that have to do with my latte in a YMCA-adjacent café? Well, this wasn’t any café; it supports our community, residents in the YMCA, and even helps people out of precarity. The Purple Spoon provides freezer meals, free to anyone who needs them; no questions asked. It is doing something that is emblematic of social liberal philosophy.

Many decades ago, in a different world, liberals envisioned a state that would support people to live. Not through paternalism, but through liberty through security. Despite what some say, welfare isn’t about paying people to “do nothing”, but two things: investing in people and supporting them. Yet Britain has stopped doing the former, and does the latter quite poorly.

Things can get better

But as I sat there, talking to this council leader and drinking that coffee, despair suddenly turned into hope. Not a naive, euphoric lightbulb moment, but a way forward. We can’t go back to where we were before 2008, but we can choose a better trajectory than managed decline. I understand our problems aren’t simple, but pragmatism and pessimism aren’t the same.

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Labour’s economic programme: hoodwinking, self-limiting, and failing

If you had asked me in July last year whether I had much hope for Labour’s plans for fixing our stagnating economy, our underfunded public services, and chronically weak social investment, I might have (cautiously) said “maybe”. But a year and four months later, I think I’d like to change my answer to “absolutely not”.

You would think that after fourteen years of being stuck in opposition, whether that be due to bacon sarnies or the Brexit bonanza, they would have had time to think. I, personally, at that time went to school, college, got a job, and fell in and out of love (much like the Parliamentary Labour Party does with their leadership), went to university (and somehow ended up as a Liberal Democrat), but I always thought about what I wanted to do.

However, much like a university student who procrastinates right up until deadline day (pre-ADHD meds me), they’ve put forward something that would barely get a “pass”. They came into government, telling us they would fix the dire state of our economy, but if anything they’ve done the opposite. They spent months handwringing about the importance of work, and intimidating vulnerable people with loss of benefits if they didn’t, but now unemployment is rising – due to their own policy. They promised there would be “no new taxes on working people”, and just as Keir Starmer hoodwinked Labour members in 2021, he’s hoodwinked the public with more stealth taxes.

Rachel Reeves has put in place her “fiscal rules”, and while she may claim to be pro-investment, her very own rules discourage borrowing to invest. She talked about Labour being the “Party of Work”, but by failing to borrow to invest in infrastructure projects, she’s left working people far worse off, with less opportunities, and worse social mobility. Labour are just incoherent, self-contradictory, and seem utterly unable to deliver for Britain right now.

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The Triple Lock: Well-intended, now unsustainable

Let us travel all the way back to 2010, a year in which a jubilant “Cleggmania” contrasted with a dire backdrop. The economy was in bad shape following the 2008 financial crash. We had just failed to reach an agreement with Gordon Brown’s Labour Party (the maths wasn’t ‘mathing’), and as a result went into a coalition with the Conservatives. Austerity was the word on everyone’s lips, and for many of us, it was an inevitable devastation for our families and communities.

However, there was a Liberal Democrat Minister – who is often forgotten in the re-litigation and discourse about that fateful coalition – Sir Steve Webb.

Webb sought to correct a major structural inequity; the shambolic state of the country’s state pension. Margaret Thatcher, who many gleefully refer to as “Milk Snatcher”, had decided to break the earnings link of the state pension in 1980. For decades, the pensions had only ever been uprated by inflation – which meant pensioner incomes fell steadily behind wages. 

So what was his solution? The Triple Lock – and despite my blatant misgivings of it, I think it was a good idea at the time. It helped restore financial security to millions of pensioners who had been neglected.

But policy solutions are rarely permanent – especially economic ones. The problems they fix evolve and mutate, the numbers change, and even good ideas can outlive their purpose. Not even Beveridge’s reforms were meant to last forever.

Since 2010, when Webb introduced the policy, Britain has faced a saga of crises: Brexit, COVID-19, the Ukraine War, and Liz Truss.

Our population is ageing, productivity is stagnant, employment is fragile (not helped by Labour’s Employer NICs policy), and wages grow at a snail’s pace. These factors have led to crowding out of other welfare expenditure, the support ratio (the number of people supporting each pensioner) falling, and a squeeze on the working-age population.

The ground beneath the Triple Lock has become incredibly unstable. The Office for Budget Responsibility’s own findings tell us it will cost an additional £15.5 billion a year by 2029/30, while welfare expenditure elsewhere is likely to be slashed further by Rachel Reeves.

Make no mistake, the Triple Lock remains a liberal achievement. But it is also a policy mechanism – and like all mechanisms, it can outlive its purpose. What was once an act of fairness is now a major fiscal liability. We are transferring wealth from younger and working-age citizens to retirees faster than any major economy, according to the Resolution Foundation.

As liberals, we believe in fairness, dignity, and liberty through economic security. Therefore, we cannot – in good faith – continue to justify the existence of a policy that now undermines all three. There is a way to correct this course and protect the State Pension, and it eliminates the liability without hurting the poorest pensioners: means-testing.

Universality, in theory, is a nice idea – it avoids the bureaucratic stress of thresholds, tapering, cliff-edges and tribunals – but it is highly inequitable. People say that it works because of recapture, but does it really? When you give money to the wealthiest, richest demographics, those with the lowest Marginal Propensity to Consume, you do not get nearly as much – if anything – back.

That’s why we must consider a means-tested approach that protects those in genuine need while restoring balance, such as:

  • We should make the Double Lock the default (higher of CPI or earnings). This removes the problematic 2.5% ratchet for most people, and in turn potentially still saves around £12 billion based on OBR figures.
  • But that does not mean getting rid of the Triple Lock entirely, if we let the poorest pensioners (bottom 20-25% based on current income) retain the Triple Lock, they are not losing support from the State Pension. Moreover, the savings we make from equitable reforms means we can support them better, too.
  • For those in the higher-rate tax band of 40%, or equivalent in terms of pensionable income, they do not get either the Triple Lock or Double Lock; they get the Single Lock (CPI only). Their pension grows with prices, but it does not grow faster than the working-age tax base. This could save around £1.3 billion at steady-state.
  • Finally, those with the highest pensionable income – say £70k-£90k+ – do not need the state pension and therefore shouldn’t receive it. We shouldn’t be subsidising avarice when children are going to bed hungry and people are freezing to death on the streets in Winter. This could save around £5.75 billion per year, after admin costs.
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New New Labour: a choice of poverty or work

A philosophy of cynicism and cruelty

As a country, we have a very long and complex history when it comes to how we treat our most vulnerable. In recent years, it is abundantly clear that our country has failed to treat these people with dignity. From the Elizabethan Poor Laws to the introduction of austerity, we have a pattern of taking one step forward, followed by two steps back — and this Labour government is no exception to the rule.

We have a government that solely values its citizens based on how much income tax they pay, disregarding the many other ways they may contribute to our society — whether through intellectual, creative work, or contributions to their communities. To believe that the value of a person is derived from economic output alone is simply cynical and callous, although the Treasury does not share that worldview.

Ideology above basic economic sense

Upon hearing the recent announcements regarding the incoming welfare cuts, I took it upon myself to research the harms that will be inflicted, beyond increased food insecurity and squalor. On the surface, one might think that if welfare spending is likely to spiral out of control, it would make sense to make cuts to rein it in. However, once you consider the harms of doing so, you will arrive at a very different conclusion.

Rachel Reeves and Liz Kendall would have you believe that welfare cuts will encourage people to enter the workforce and that our benefits are too ‘generous’ — even though the Resolution Foundation disproved this. Making our most vulnerable poorer will only make them sicker, not more inclined towards employment.

However, it doesn’t stop there — as we all know, bad policy leads to a domino effect of even worse outcomes. Whether you agree that current welfare spending is unsustainable or not, you cannot fail to recognize that making people poorer and sicker often comes with self-compounding economic harms:

  • Cutting benefits will inevitably lead to deeper poverty, increased NHS spending, and a reduction in employment figures — you won’t make people find a job by making them sicker.
  • Many claimants rely upon these benefits to afford care, whether that be social care or even from the private healthcare sector due to waiting lists. However, cuts to benefits such as PIP would distort both supply and demand in health and social care, due to reduced affordability, increased costs for local authorities, and unmet care needs — leading to inflationary pressure.
  • Health and social care won’t be the only sectors affected — it will reduce demand in retail and local business, as lower-income households tend to spend most of their income on essentials. Additionally, this could risk cost-push inflation.
  • We will see increased reliance on credit, as claimants will be left out of pocket by these cuts, leading to rising interest rates — a contributing factor to inflationary pressure.

Benefits such as Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment have a stimulus effect, because recipients have a high marginal propensity to consume, which leads to higher spending in local economies, a fiscal multiplier effect, and increased employment and productivity. Cancelling that effect with cuts will affect everyone.

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Are we still the party of Beveridge?

The Liberal Democrats, ran on a manifesto focusing on health and social care. However upon reading it on the day of its release I was disappointed – because it actually said very little about reforming welfare. To put this in blunt terms, approximately 24 percent of the United Kingdom’s population is disabled – we had, in our manifesto, three insubstantial commitments on welfare reform for disabled people. That is not nearly good enough.

As Rachel Reeves’ first budget approaches, with new announcements on welfare “reforms” being made – including £3 billion in welfare cuts, it is a scary time to be a disabled person reliant upon the welfare state. With “workfare” being put before healthcare, it is estimated up to 500,000 people suffering from long-term sickness will be forced back into work, just so HMRC can drum up some more tax revenue. We must stand firmly against this cacophony of harmful policies, one of which includes putting job coaches on mental health wards, where vulnerable patients are receiving care for often severe mental health conditions. The Labour Party also wants to cut benefits for mentally ill people, which would imply they do not view mental health conditions to be valid as disabilities – an ableist notion.

So, I put to you, the reader, the first of two simple yet blunt questions; where is our opposition to these harmful policies which will disproportionately hurt the most vulnerable in our society? I have looked at our party’s social media pages, I have looked at the social media pages of our Members of Parliament, and I must say I am bitterly disappointed. Make no mistake, our party has not done nearly enough to regain the trust of disabled people, and I say that as someone who disabled. We have not been a voice for the disabled community, we have not stood with them nor have we acknowledged our responsibility for the policies which harmed them, during the 2010-2015 coalition government.

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