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Fuel duty increase - 23% - Maxime.

Did anyone notice this?

Snuck away in the @OBR_UK #autumnstatement2022 report is a bombshell. Needless to say, I'm loading both barrels to fight this tooth & nail

A sneaky 23% rise in Fuel Duty is planned from March 2023@pritipatel @cmackinlay @johnredwood @TheABD @jkyleofficial @Iromg @TiceRichard pic.twitter.com/ND0F4tk4fG

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Terry W

Twitter feeds from the right wing loon end of the Tory party are hardly convincing reading.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - RT

Auto Express has reported it as well www.autoexpress.co.uk/news/359216/fuel-duty-could-...r

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Engineer Andy

Twitter feeds from the right wing loon end of the Tory party are hardly convincing reading.

Here we go again. As I showed in the other thread, it's all true.

Edited by Engineer Andy on 17/11/2022 at 19:17

Fuel duty increase - 23% - alan1302

Twitter feeds from the right wing loon end of the Tory party are hardly convincing reading.

Here we go again. As I showed in the other thread, it's all true.

It's true that it could, but not that it is happening. It's clickbait.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Engineer Andy

Twitter feeds from the right wing loon end of the Tory party are hardly convincing reading.

Here we go again. As I showed in the other thread, it's all true.

It's true that it could, but not that it is happening. It's clickbait.

It'll happen (in March, as they normally do) - that's why they deliberately hid it away in the report and not in the statement.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Brit_in_Germany

Howard Cox?

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Sofa Spud

Raising fuel duty will encourage a move towards smaller, more economical cars, which are also less polluting. Given that we can't all buy electric cars tomorrow, reducing the number of large cars on our roads is to be welcomed.

Edited by Sofa Spud on 18/11/2022 at 11:30

Fuel duty increase - 23% - bazza

It won't necessarily happen, although it is in the OBR report, he has the option of whether to introduce it or not in the next budget, I guess it will depend on which way the political winds are blowing and the price of crude then.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - madf

Raising fuel duty will encourage a move towards smaller, more economical cars, which are also less polluting. Given that we can't all buy electric cars tomorrow, reducing the number of large cars on our roads is to be welcomed.

I doubt someone buying a 2,5Tonnes £100k Range Rover will notice the small change.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Andrew-T

Raising fuel duty will encourage a move towards smaller, more economical cars, which are also less polluting. Given that we can't all buy electric cars tomorrow, reducing the number of large cars on our roads is to be welcomed.

That can't happen much, unless people can find a smaller car to buy, or happen to have one put away somewhere ready to use. Most drivers will be stuck with the car they have.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Terry W

The price of fuel certainly influences decisions made by most folk make when the car is due for replacement. That those few with £100k to spend on a big motor may be fairly unconcerned does not make the policy pointless.

That higher prices do not immediately change emissions is unsurprising. With ~30m cars on the road it will take ~12-15 years for the entire fleet to be replaced (save for a few kept past ~15 years old).

If very simplistically all replacements were one size down from existing - luxobarge down to large, large down to mid size, mid-size down to supermini and mini down to city car - the reduction in energy (EV or ICE) consumption would be ~ 15-30%.

Add in improvements to technology (both performance and driving experience) and the benefit could be 30%++.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - pd

The default budget position has been for years that fuel duty goes up by inflation. However, the last few years the Chancellor has chosen to cancel that just before budget. The temporary 5p discount also ends in March 2023 which was introduced in last budget.

Therefore OBR are just following the position of plugging in the default numbers into forecasts which is 5p plus 11% or so uplift plus VAT giving 12p in total.

However, depending on circumstances the CX has the option of cancelling some or all of that in March.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Adampr

There is very little in the world more British than getting angry about something that hasn't happened and may well never happen.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Engineer Andy

There is very little in the world more British than getting angry about something that hasn't happened and may well never happen.

Not everything in such statements leads to changes being made 'at 6 o'clock tonight'. Given how legal people check such documents, why wouldn't the forthcoming rise not go ahead if it is planned for (presumably) the 31st March 2023?

The only reason being is that enough public outcry that it has to be 'cancelled' to save face, though likely all that would happen is that Hunt says 'we'll have to get the money from somewhere else to balance the books' and then (say) do yet another Brownian money grab via some sneaky way you don't notice, like they did with tax boundaries.

I suspect they hoped no-one in the media (well, most of the MSM are now paid-for shills for Lib/Lab/Con and their handlers up the chain and stayed quiet) would notice, but once Liam Halligan (one of the few decent journos still left at the Telegraph) did, he brought it to our attention, but via GB News. Only then when word had sufficiently got round via independent news media did the MSM bother (today) to report on it.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Adampr

As pd says above, it was only ever 'planned' in so much as it's the default position if the Chancellor does nothing. It's sensationalist nonsense to treat it was some hidden scheme all along. Nothing at all has changed since the budget yesterday, it's just that a few reasonable people have stepped in and pointed out it's a complete misrepresentation of what the OBR said.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - alan1302

There is very little in the world more British than getting angry about something that hasn't happened and may well never happen.

Not everything in such statements leads to changes being made 'at 6 o'clock tonight'. Given how legal people check such documents, why wouldn't the forthcoming rise not go ahead if it is planned for (presumably) the 31st March 2023?

The only reason being is that enough public outcry that it has to be 'cancelled' to save face, though likely all that would happen is that Hunt says 'we'll have to get the money from somewhere else to balance the books' and then (say) do yet another Brownian money grab via some sneaky way you don't notice, like they did with tax boundaries.

I suspect they hoped no-one in the media (well, most of the MSM are now paid-for shills for Lib/Lab/Con and their handlers up the chain and stayed quiet) would notice, but once Liam Halligan (one of the few decent journos still left at the Telegraph) did, he brought it to our attention, but via GB News. Only then when word had sufficiently got round via independent news media did the MSM bother (today) to report on it.

They work for all the main political parties? How does that work when they have a conflict of interest? Do they go with the highest bidder?

Is the Telegraph not MSM as well - so Liam Halligan must be doing what his 'handlers tell him?

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Alby Back
Most people just get used to whatever things cost, they might moan about it for a while, but in the end they pay up and shut up.
Except of course those who really can’t afford it, which is a bit sad for them or indeed anyone who can empathise/sympathise with them.
To be honest, if fuel was £5.00 a litre I’d still buy it, I’d feel a bit robbed, but I’d carry on buying it. I might, for a while, be a bit circumspect about unnecessary journeys, but I suppose I’d eventually just carry on as before.
Ultimately we all grumble about things, but mostly we just suck it up.
Fuel duty increase - 23% - alan1302
Most people just get used to whatever things cost, they might moan about it for a while, but in the end they pay up and shut up. Except of course those who really can’t afford it, which is a bit sad for them or indeed anyone who can empathise/sympathise with them. To be honest, if fuel was £5.00 a litre I’d still buy it, I’d feel a bit robbed, but I’d carry on buying it. I might, for a while, be a bit circumspect about unnecessary journeys, but I suppose I’d eventually just carry on as before. Ultimately we all grumble about things, but mostly we just suck it up.

Not everyone has the money that you do to be able to afford to fill up at £5 a litre though.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Bolt
Most people just get used to whatever things cost, they might moan about it for a while, but in the end they pay up and shut up. Except of course those who really can’t afford it, which is a bit sad for them or indeed anyone who can empathise/sympathise with them. To be honest, if fuel was £5.00 a litre I’d still buy it, I’d feel a bit robbed, but I’d carry on buying it. I might, for a while, be a bit circumspect about unnecessary journeys, but I suppose I’d eventually just carry on as before. Ultimately we all grumble about things, but mostly we just suck it up.

Not everyone has the money that you do to be able to afford to fill up at £5 a litre though.

I think there would be riots if fuel went up that much. And the richer normaly complain the most.

As said the poorer just get on with life as a moan doesnt get them anywhere anyway.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Terry W

Fuel at £5 per litre may prompt even the fairly well heeled to be a little concerned.

It would make me think carefully about where I drove, what car replaced the one I currently have, my choice of work/home location, planning shopping trips etc.

But I would still fill the car up, albeit less frequently. Fuel would still be cheap - the capacity to move ~2 tons of car and contents 10-15 miles for ~25 minutes work at the minimum wage. A bargain!!

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Engineer Andy
I suspect they hoped no-one in the media (well, most of the MSM are now paid-for shills for Lib/Lab/Con and their handlers up the chain and stayed quiet) would notice, but once Liam Halligan (one of the few decent journos still left at the Telegraph) did, he brought it to our attention, but via GB News. Only then when word had sufficiently got round via independent news media did the MSM bother (today) to report on it.

They work for all the main political parties? How does that work when they have a conflict of interest? Do they go with the highest bidder?

Is the Telegraph not MSM as well - so Liam Halligan must be doing what his 'handlers tell him?

I suspect that they (the DT editorial team) have been 'using' certain selected journos to be their 'managed opposition', just enough to ward off subscribers from leaving, knowing (like with the Tories and Labour up until this year) that the alternatives (like the Times) are even less real conservative and more globalist establishment.

I suspect some of the journos know they're being played and push their own 'rules of engagement' to and sometimes slightly beyond the limits, and why some like Liam are popping up on GB News to push their uncensored views far more than they could at the DT.

As regards the legacy newspapers (generally) themselves, don't forget that all of them took huge amounts of 'advertising' revenue from the government (same abroad) during the pandemic (and still do), and that was, IMHO, likely hand-in-hand for 'favours' as regards what reports go out, what can / cannot be said (or to the degree) and the level of censorship of reader comments sections (a big problem these days).

In my view, the same has happened with the papers taking loads of $$$ / £££ from the likes of the Gates Foundation and others, in return for reporting favourable to their agendas. From reading the comments below such articles (which often rapidly get those comments removed or whole comments sections yanked), most readers are not happy with them.

I think that the DT, despite the (IMHO) propaganda money coming in, are finally reaslising that the tide has turned with subscribers (and more generally with public opinion on environmental, freedoms and woke issues) and they are changing their tune on some issues. I won't return as a subscriber because they change of tune is not sincere. It's why I follow certain journos only because of their actions elsewhere, rather than one place only.

Once that 'other funding' dries up (as it likely will soon), then you'll likely see a change back to more historical norms of reporting and opinion pieces in these newspapers. I even noticed similar things (coming from the other direction) in, for example, The Guardian, which also took similar large sums from Billy-boy.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - FP

"... the papers taking loads of $$$ / £££ from the likes of the Gates Foundation and others, in return for reporting favourable to their agendas."

- Please show what evidence there is that the Gates Foundation and other similar organisations are funding newspapers. You could also explain why the Gates Foundation and others are in any way sinister.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - edlithgow

The price of fuel certainly influences decisions made by most folk make when the car is due for replacement. That those few with £100k to spend on a big motor may be fairly unconcerned does not make the policy pointless.

That higher prices do not immediately change emissions is unsurprising. With ~30m cars on the road it will take ~12-15 years for the entire fleet to be replaced (save for a few kept past ~15 years old).

If very simplistically all replacements were one size down from existing - luxobarge down to large, large down to mid size, mid-size down to supermini and mini down to city car - the reduction in energy (EV or ICE) consumption would be ~ 15-30%.

Add in improvements to technology (both performance and driving experience) and the benefit could be 30%++.

I’m not clear if this calculation includes the city car to no car transition, which is implicit in it, but not stated. If not, It’s inclusion would presumably reduce the fuel consumption and congestion still further. Might be harder to get a seat on the buses though.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - barney100

A well used technique, tell them somethings going up by 50% and folks get worried. It goes up 20% in the end and people are relieved. 20% was the target anyway and the 50% just a smoke screen.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Terry W

Newspaper circulation - tabloid comics and "quality" has fallen for the last 20 years. Press has been overtaken by TV and now the internet via smartphone etc.

The only two newspapers which IMHO report balanced, well researched, thoughtful news and reports are the Financial Times and the Grauniad.

The FT reports objectively as accurate information is fundamental to its main goal of supporting financial and economic analysis and decisions.

The G seems to place objectivity and balance above attention seeking headlines - although I may frequently disagree with its politics it is worth reading.

The rest seem to place circulation goals well above journalistic integrity, A report in 2017 placed the UK right at the bottom of the trust league in European press - little has changed. They are largely a disgrace to their profession.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Engineer Andy

Newspaper circulation - tabloid comics and "quality" has fallen for the last 20 years. Press has been overtaken by TV and now the internet via smartphone etc.

The only two newspapers which IMHO report balanced, well researched, thoughtful news and reports are the Financial Times and the Grauniad.

The FT reports objectively as accurate information is fundamental to its main goal of supporting financial and economic analysis and decisions.

The G seems to place objectivity and balance above attention seeking headlines - although I may frequently disagree with its politics it is worth reading.

Thanks Terry, best joke of the day. I needed that.

Sorry, but they at least as bad as the other so-called serious (formerly 'broadsheet') papers, just coming from a different place politically. They've ALL sold out to the globalist cabal and their woke allies.

There's a good reason why newspaper circulation is so low - most the public don't trust the legacy media (including TV, where viewing figures are on the floor compared to before the Internet). I get far more sense from the BTL comments sections on 95% of articles these days - whether supposedly 'factual' reporting, never mind comment from columnists.

That the often insightful reader commentary shows up articles to be pure rubbish a lot of the time and unadultarated propaganda and disinformation with the near open intent to gaslight their own readership (as many TV shows and films now do) is very telling, and which often leads to BTL comments or whole sections getting deleted because it shows up the author / paper.

And sadly, it isn't limited to MSM outlets either, if you get my drift.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - alan1302

There's a good reason why newspaper circulation is so low

Yes, the internet and free access so no need to purchase a newspaper.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Adampr

There's a good reason why newspaper circulation is so low

Yes, the internet and free access so no need to purchase a newspaper.

I'm pretty sure it's the Illuminati

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Andrew-T

<< And sadly, it isn't limited to MSM outlets either, if you get my drift.

Sometimes I find it hard to decipher your drift, Andy, and occasionally I feel it may be drifting in the wrong direction :-)

Fuel duty increase - 23% - FP

"Sorry, but [the FT and G] at least as bad as the other so-called serious (formerly 'broadsheet') papers, just coming from a different place politically. They've ALL sold out to the globalist cabal and their woke allies."

- Please explain what exactly is/are "the globalist cabal and their woke allies". If you could indicate why anyone should take this sort of conspiracy theory seriously that would also be of interest.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Andrew-T

The only two newspapers which IMHO report balanced, well researched, thoughtful news and reports are the Financial Times and the Grauniad..

Aren't you forgetting Private Eye ? :-)

For quite a few years I read the Indy until it had to shrink, when I tried some alternatives and settled on The Times. I am pretty apolitical, but I don't find it a Tory paper and it seems to have a reasonable spread of opinion. Can't comment on the Grauniad I'm afraid. I think it is hard to judge whether any paper is 'balanced' - only whether one feels comfortable with whatever balance it gives. A gentle level of scepticism is needed.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Adampr

I'm very much a typical Guardian reader (in terms of age, education, politics etc) but I can't stand it (other than the sport). Pages and pages of middle class hand-wringing. My favourite was an article about how terrible the gentrification of Peckham is, written by a journalist who had moved to Peckham a few years earlier. No self awareness at all.

Fuel duty increase - 23% - Crickleymal

Yes. I'm quite left wing but the Guardian does my head in. At the weekend they have a property section where you've got to be getting on for a millionaire to own any of the properties. So I just use Google news and pick and choose what I want to read.