Difference between revisions of "Taxpayers' Alliance"
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Revision as of 12:31, 5 February 2011
The Taxpayers' Alliance (TPA) is a right-wing single-issue think tank and lobbying group advocating "lower taxes and reformed public services". On 19 September 2007, the Hayek Society, a LSE right-wing group, circulated a job description to its members for internships at TPA.
In a March 2009 presentation TPA Chief Executive Matthew Elliott and Tim Montgomerie described IEA as part of the infrastructure of the conservative movement in Britain.[1]
Susie Squire formerly of the Stockholm Network acted as the TPA campaign manager until 2010 when she left to work as an advisor to Iain Duncan Smith.[2]
Contents
History
The Taxpayers' Alliance was set up in 2003 by Matthew Elliott, a 25-year-old political researcher for Conservative MEP Timothy Kirkhope. According to the Guardian Elliott had been impressed by Republican grassroots campaigns to cut tax and spending he had seen in America – particularly the work of Grover Norquist who campaigned against Hillary Clinton's healthcare plans during Bill Clinton's presidency. He argued:
- 'Up until that point Britain didn't need a taxpayers' group because we had the Conservatives, but then they stopped talking about it and so I saw a niche,'.
Elliott decided to affect public opinion through press campaigns, he was joined in setting up the alliance by his wife Florence Heath and Andrew Allum. The Guardian notes that Heath's father, Alexander, was also appointed despite living in France and not paying any British tax.[3]
First Event
The first event held by the TPA was a joint venture with the Institute of Economic Affairs held on the 3-February-2004. The seminar was entitled Tax Harmonisation Versus Tax Competition: Which Promotes Prosperity?.[4]
Funding and Transparency
An investigation by the Guardian in 2009 found that the TPA is funded by 'wealthy donors, many of whom are prominent supporters of the Conservative party'. The investigation found that:
- 'Sixty per cent of donations come from individuals or groups giving more than £5,000. The Midlands Industrial Council, which has donated £1.5m to the Conservatives since 2003, said it has given around £80,000 on behalf of 32 owners of private companies. Tony Gallagher, owner of Gallagher UK, a property company that gave the Conservatives £250,000 in 2007, is a member of the MIC, as is Christopher Kelly who owns the international haulage firm Keltruck, and Robert Edmiston who owns IM Group, a large car importer'.
TPA Funding rose from £64,457 in 2005 to more than £1 million in 2009.[5] When asked for a list of funders/donors to the TPA the the group issued the following statement:
- The TPA has is entirely funded by private, individual donations from many of the nearly 60,000 supporters we have across the UK. We have never received, nor will receive, funding from the taxpayers' purse. Our latest accounts are available on the Companies House website.[6]
According to campaign group The Other Taxpayers Alliance, the Companies House information held on the TPA is sparse, they claim that:
- It’s simply not true that all political organisations are secretive about their funding. Most declare their income and expenditure, and some give a break-down of income sources, including donors. The TPA does neither. It publishes abbreviated accounts which means income and expenditure are withheld. The last time it published full accounts was in 2006, when it recorded an income of £130,000. But the current organisation has ten full-time staff across two offices, which suggests either its income has jumped substantially or it is loaded with debt.[7]
Independence
In December 2008 Susie Squire from the TPA was asked by Nick Ferrari on his LBC Breakfast Radio Show if the Taxpayers Alliance was 'secretly Conservative?', she responded by saying:
- I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I can’t have that – that’s outrageous! That’s just absolutely outrageous!' adding 'we’re totally independent, we talk to everyone. I mean, God, I was in Wales at the end of last week, giving evidence on MPs’ expenses to a cross-party independent panel in the Welsh Assembly. We talk to everyone who wants to talk to us. We produce research that goes out to many MPs, cross-party, that goes out to journalists. We don’t have a party preference. Yes of course we have advisors and we have a board – any think tank worth its salt does. We’ll talk to anyone.'[8]
Squire left the Taxpayers Alliance in May 2010 to work as an advisor to the Conservative Party's Iain Duncan Smith.[9]
Criticism
Conservative councillor for Ealing and Northfield Phil Taylor described his relationship with the TPA in February 2009:
- I have a bit of a love-hate relationship with the TaxPayers’ Alliance. I was involved with them in their very early days. I helped them with their initial fund raising and organising but I got disillusioned because their first publication, The Bumper Book of Government Waste, mixed up capital and revenue and different years and wasn’t really a serious analysis of waste – at least not one that was any use to anyone.[10]
Media Coverage
Paul Lashmar, an investigative reporter and lecturer in journalism at University College Falmouth, told the Independent that there was 'a direct relation between the rise of the TPA and the pressures on news organisations'. He argued that:
- 'Journalists are often now so overstretched that a lot of work that used to be carried out in the newsroom is carried out by groups like the TPA. You don't see extensive research anymore whereas it used to be commonplace in Sunday papers to have exercises where, for example, you would ring around every MP for their opinions as the TPA has done numerous times'.
Lashmar went on to say that:
- 'What you see now is journalists who are grateful for news which is almost perfectly packaged to go into the paper with a ready top line. In that sense, journalism is becoming very passive. It is a processor of other people's information rather than being engaged in actively seeking out and determining what the truth of a situation is in an energetic and inquisitive way.'[11]
The majority of media coverage given to the alliances research is produced in the tabloid press with the Daily Express producing over 3,000 articles on the TPA since the campaign group was set up. The Independent and The Guardian have practically ignored the group and some of the TPA coverage in these papers has been critical.[12][13]
Newspaper | Taxpayers Alliance Related Articles | |
---|---|---|
The Express and Sunday Express | 3071 | |
Daily Mail and the Mail on Sunday | 1283 | |
The Sun | 978 | |
Daily Star | 701 | |
Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph | 591 | |
The Times and Sunday Times | 489 | |
The Mirror and Sunday Mirror | 463 | |
The Guardian and The Observer | 178 | |
The People | 75 | |
The Independent | 63 | [14] |
2020 Tax Commission
On 28 January 2011 the TPA launched an initiative entitled the 2020 Tax Comission. The commission is a collaboration between the TPA and the Institute of Directors. Commenting on the launch of the commission, TPA director Mark Sinclair argued that:
- "Most people want the Government’s decisions about tax and spending to be fair, but we can’t decide policy on the basis of an overly simplistic understanding of what that means. Even the most progressive taxes can have perverse results, hitting some families much harder than others for no good reason. And there is nothing fair or progressive about trapping people in dependency on benefits and subsidies. It is vital that we start thinking about how to produce a tax system that is genuinely fairer for families and encourages a strong and dynamic economy."[15]
The first research paper released by the Taxpayers Alliance for the 2020 Tax Commission project highlighted unfair tax scenarios by using 'celebrities and familiar characters from soaps like Eastenders and The Archers to draw hypothetical examples based on characters fictional tax circumstances'.[16]
Publications
- Susie Squire, Broke Britannia, The Guardian, 24-April-2009
- Taylor et al., Welfare reform in tough fiscal times, The Taxpayers Alliance, 2010
- Fair Taxes, 2020 Tax Commission, Taxpayers Alliance, 28-January-2011
People
Donors
The Midlands Industrial Council | Tony Gallagher | Christopher Kelly | Robert Edmiston | Anthony Bamford | Malcolm McAlpine | David Alberto | Stuart Wheeler | Rocco Forte | John Craven
Speakers at TPA Events
Eric Pickles | Liam Fox | David Davis
Founders
- Andrew Allum Chairman
- Matthew Elliott Chief Executive
- Florence Heath
Staff
- Tim Aker Grassroots Coordinator
- Blair Gibbs Campaign Director
- Fiona McEvoy West Midlands Campaign Agent
- Matthew Sinclair Policy Analyst
- Corin Taylor Research Director
Academic Advisory Council
- John Blundell – Director General, Institute of Economic Affairs
- Keith Marsden – Economic Consultant, United Nations
- David B. Smith – Chief Economist, Williams de Broe
- Norman Barry – University of Buckingham
- Keith Boyfield – Keith Boyfield Associates
- Eamonn Butler – Adam Smith Institute
- Tim Congdon – Lombard Street Research
- Stephen Davies – Manchester Metropolitan University
- Kevin Dowd – University of Nottingham
- Charles Hanson – Economic Consultant
- Ruth Lea – Centre for Policy Studies
- Patrick Minford – Cardiff Business School
- Kenneth Minogue – London School of Economics
- Michael Mosbacher – Social Affairs Unit
- Dennis O'Keeffe – University of Buckingham
- Madsen Pirie – Adam Smith Institute
- Gabriel Stein – Lombard Street Research
- Elaine Sternberg – University of Leeds
- James Tooley – University of Newcastle
- Alan Walters
Volunteers
- Source[17]
Affiliations
Hayek Society | Bruges Group | Institute of Economic Affairs | Heritage Foundation
External Resources
- Sunder Katwala, Taxpayers alliance outed as conservative partisans (surprise, sensation!), Next Left, 15 March 2009.
- The Independent, How the Taxpayers' Alliance is making headlines, The Independent, 4-August-2008
- Phil Taylor, All Those Fat Cat Teachers, Philtaylor.org.uk, 2-February-2009
- Robert Booth, Who is behind the Taxpayers Alliance, The Guardian, 9-October-2009
References, Resources and Contact
Contact
The TaxPayers' Alliance
55 Tufton Street
London, SW1P 3QL
Website: tpa.typepad.com
References
- ↑ Tim Montgomerie, The growth of Britain's conservative movement, ConservativeHome, 14 March 2009.
- ↑ Guido Fawkes, Susie Squire Slips in to Spinning at the DWP for IDS, Guido Fawkes, 27-May-2010, Accessed 25-June-2010
- ↑ Robert Booth, Who is behind the Taxpayers Alliance, The Guardian, 9-October-2009, Accessed 24-January-2011
- ↑ The Taxpayers Alliance, Tax Harmonisation Versus Tax Competition: Which Promotes Prosperity?, Taxpayers Alliance, Accessed via web archive, version from 5-February-2004, Accessed 09-February-2011
- ↑ Robert Booth, Who is behind the Taxpayers Alliance, The Guardian, 9-October-2009, Accessed 24-January-2011
- ↑ Emma Bennett, RE: Transparency, E-mail to Steven Harkins, 4-February-2011 10:01am
- ↑ The Other Taxpayers Alliance, Transparency: the TaxPayers’ Alliance must practise what it preaches, The Other Taxpayers Alliance, 19-May-2009, Accessed 09-February-2009
- ↑ Newswire, Tax Payers Alliance challenged, Liberal Conspiracy, 17-December-2008, Accessed 25-June-2010
- ↑ Guido Fawkes, Susie Squire Slips in to Spinning at the DWP for IDS, Guido Fawkes, 27-May-2010, Accessed 25-June-2010
- ↑ Phil Taylor, All Those Fat Cat Teachers, Philtaylor.org.uk, 2-February-2009, Accessed 24-January-2011
- ↑ The Independent, How the Taxpayers' Alliance is making headlines, The Independent, 4-August-2008, Accessed 24-January-2010
- ↑ The Independent, How the Taxpayers' Alliance is making headlines, The Independent, 4-August-2008
- ↑ Robert Booth, Who is behind the Taxpayers Alliance, The Guardian, 9-October-2009
- ↑ Nexis UK, Search for all articles mentioning the Taxpayers Alliance carried out on 2-February-2011, Nexis UK, 02-February-2011
- ↑ Matthew Sinclair, Soaps, celebrities and the fair tax debate, The Taxpayers Alliance, Accessed 28-January-2011
- ↑ Taxpayers Alliance, New TPA Research: Soaps, celebrities and the fair tax debate, The Taxpayers Alliance, 28-January-2011, Accessed 09-February-2011
- ↑ Taxpayers' Alliance Who we are, accessed 20 September 2007