Professional Documents
Culture Documents
MANIFESTO
for
C O M M O N S E N S E
Recognising the natural state of Human Nature, and its desire for Self
Responsibility , Rule of Law and Personal Freedom.
A Manifesto for Common Sense
Introduction
Statement of Intent
We, the Libertarian Party, hold that each and every adult is the sole
and sovereign owner of their life and legitimately acquired property;
and that they will be free to live in whatever manner they so choose,
so long as they do not infringe upon the freedom of others to do the
same. We further hold that the defence of the individual against force
or fraud by others should be the single function of government.
Overview
The manifesto outlined below is designed to act as a set of stepping-
stones towards a more Libertarian society. It is not our end goal. Unlike
other political parties, we have a vision to pursue, which will lead to a
truly free society for all. This manifesto is simply the first step on the
long journey required to free UK citizens from all aspects of state
slavery.
Our Vision
The qualities of life shown above have slowly been accrued over the
centuries by the bravery, courage, sacrifice and blood of our forebears.
Much of this has been eroded in recent years. We wish to restore these
hard-won freedoms to the United Kingdom, and this is why we formed
the Libertarian Party.
Rule Of Law
The concept of Rule of Law is distinct from just being ruled by laws.
Rule of Law encompasses, amongst other things, property rights, due
process, equality and transparency. It also includes the notion that
there should be as few laws as possible and that those that do exist be
as simple and clear as possible, and predictable in their application.
Economy
Economy Overview
Our short-term goal will be to reduce and simplify taxation and shift it
towards consumption not income, to increase transparency and
accountability, and to begin repayment of the National Debt. Our long-
term goal is to have a vibrant, transparent, open, honest, low-tax,
sustainable and true market economy, in which the Pound Sterling
value is preserved and little or no National Debt exists.
"I am in favor of cutting taxes under any circumstances and for any excuse,
for any reason, whenever it's possible. The reason I am is because I believe
the big problem is not taxes, the big problem is spending. The question is,
'How do you hold down government spending?' Government spending now
amounts to close to 40% of national income not counting indirect spending
through regulation and the like. If you include that, you get up to roughly half.
The real danger we face is that number will creep up and up and up. The only
effective way I think to hold it down, is to hold down the amount of income
the government has. The way to do that is to cut taxes." — Milton Friedman
Free Markets
Libertarians believe passionately in free markets. And when we say
'free markets' we mean exactly that—people and organisations trading
freely, honestly and voluntarily, for the benefit of all. Some lobby
groups use the term 'free markets' to mean the economic rule over us
by faceless corporations. Such corporatism (sometimes called political
capitalism) is anathema to libertarians, and many of our policy
proposals are squarely aimed at tackling this abuse of the honest
marketplace by the corporate/state hegemony. Of course, any
attempts to reform our economic system would founder if we ignored
one of the major underlying structural issues; the question of how our
money supply is created. Monetary reform is addressed below.
VAT
• Replace VAT with national and local Sales Taxes.
• Local Sales Tax set by Local Authorities to fund their services,
replacing Council Tax.
• Business to business transactions paid between bank accounts
of registered companies will not be subject to Sales Tax.
• National Sales Tax rate initially set at 17.5%, as a direct
replacement for VAT.
Monetary Reform
[1] Sound Money is focused on maintaining a stable value and purchasing power of
the currency. This, in essence, is a means to uphold the implied contract that the
note represents. As the Bank of England is the entity that issues the currency, it is
the body that will be charged with upholding and maintaining it. Examples of Sound
Money would be not artificially raising or lowering interest rates, devaluing the
currency or refusing to increase the money supply to keep pace with economic
growth. Quantitative Easing is an opposite of sound money policy – expanding the
money supply at a time when the economy looks to contract.
[2] the Bank of England lost a number of powers to other bodies such as The
Treasury and The Financial Services Authority. Those that still apply to the role of the
Bank of England will be repatriated.
[3] Depositors will be at liberty to seek insurance for their deposits at their own
expense.
[4] "Free Banking" is not to be confused with "free at the point of use"
current/checking accounts common in the UK.
“Green” Taxes
• Adoption of the IPCC SRES A1 framework in accordance with the UK
being a Highly Industrialised Nation.
Intervention
• As a general principle, the State should not intervene in the
finance industry unless to ensure transparency and protect
against fraud. The outcome of our current monetary policy
review will dictate how much State intervention our Party
believes is necessary.
• It is not the duty of the State to underwrite private financial
entities or absorb risk as this would encourage irresponsible and
reckless investment and unsustainable business practice.
QUANGOs
• Entities with legal/statutory powers to be formally recognised
as State bodies and returned to direct oversight by the
Government and Civil Service.
• Systematically review the remaining funding of QUANGOs, with
the aim of its withdrawal. A comprehensive report on our
QUANGOcracy, published in 2008 by The Taxpayers' Alliance,
found that:
o In 2006-07, taxpayers funded 1,162 QUANGOs—at a cost
of nearly £64 billion, equivalent to £2,550 per household.
o QUANGOs now employ over 700,000 bureaucrats.
o Even on the Cabinet Office's restricted definition of what
constitutes a QUANGO, their cost has increased by 50% in 10
years.
Minimum Wage
We would abolish the statutory minimum wage to encourage economic
growth, and to allow individuals to escape the "welfare trap".
The first question to ask is: why might we need a minimum wage? Who
actually earns minimum wage and thus might be earning less without
it? Most of those who earn minimum wage have either recently left (or
are in) education, previously retired, recently immigrated or are in
some sort of training, such as an apprenticeship. None of these groups
tend to remain on minimum wage for long, and thus would not remain
on wages below the current legal minimum for long if this limit were
removed.
Those who are in or have recently left education lack the skills and
experience to command higher wages. As they gain these things (or
when they get their qualifications or degree) their wage rate will rise.
Being able to get a low paid job while in education, or when one is
young and in need of experience, is vital.
Older people who have retired often go on to take on low paid jobs,
sometimes as something to do, and sometimes as a way to bolster
their other sources of income (primarily pensions, in most cases). For
these people, they are either not working for the purpose of gaining
income, or the job is not their only source of income. In addition,
thought it is dismal to speak of it, they tend not to remain in such
employment long due to old age or, sadly, passing away. Despite this,
being able to take such work is of great importance to older people,
who cannot take high paid jobs but still want to be able to work.
Some immigrants are highly skilled and can command high wages, like
most Britons. But many lack these skills and must work for low pay
until they can gain these skills. In many cases immigrants will start off
in low paid work and move up the economic ladder to more profitable
employment. This first rung is essential for allowing immigrants to
develop and flourish. It is important to remember that even wages
below our current legal minimum can offer a higher standard of living
for many immigrants, especially when combined with the availability of
cheap, high quality goods and services in Britain, compared to many of
the countries whence immigrants originate.
Of course, it is not just that the minimum wage is a neutral policy that
does no good, it is a bad policy that causes harm. Whilst minimum
wage laws may increase the wages of a lucky few, they do not create a
net benefit. This is because employers cannot produce money from
thin air; by increasing the price employers must pay for their labour
government necessarily reduces the quantity of labour that employers
can afford to buy. Some workers will get higher wages, but there will
be fewer jobs available and thus greater unemployment. What is rarely
explained is that minimum wage laws are a prohibition, they ban most
low skilled workers from getting a job, creating a situation where
employers may want to employ workers, and workers may want to be
employed, but the law prevents them from doing so. Supposedly, this
is for their own good. It is better, they say, that they be forced from
employment at the barrel of a gun and on to state benefits. To make
matters worse, this dependence on benefits is often long term:
because low skilled workers need to work to gain skills and experience,
if they are banned from working they can't gain what they need to
command higher wages. Instead of short term low paid employment,
people find themselves on low income benefits long term.
However, the minimum wage is not merely a problem for low skilled
workers, it is a problem for all of us. Whilst most Britons will not be
directly affected by the minimum wage because their market wage
rates are higher than the minimum level, the indirect effects are still
felt. With the increased cost of labour employers can't afford to employ
as many workers as would otherwise be the case. With fewer workers,
they produce fewer goods and services, and this fall in supply leads to
higher prices. This even feeds back to the detriment of those forced
onto benefits by the minimum wage law, because they must suffer
higher prices in addition to lower incomes.
Health
Healthcare Overview
Our aim is to enable people to hold their healthcare provider to
account and, if found wanting, have the freedom to take their business
elsewhere. This cannot be done while the State is the monopoly
provider who takes payment, commissions, runs and administers that
monopoly. We will introduce measures to redress this position, whilst
maintaining existing commitments in areas such as care for the elderly
and the mentally ill. We do not envisage a mass sell-off of State assets,
but a switch to independent not-for-profit and private entities
competing openly.
The short term will be to evolve the massive State run monopolies into
independent, pluralistic providers where the patient is actively involved
in service choice either directly via voucher schemes, or indirectly via
their selection of an insurance provider. By ending the PCT and SHA
monopoly control over patients and Hospitals, inefficient providers or
those seen as being incompetent will be at risk of losing their patients
and thus funding and reason for existing. It will be essential to remove
barriers to new entrants to ensure that all participants are as efficient
and as effective as possible, and so as not to replace a National
monopoly with a provincial or private one.
The long term goal will be that of no direct State provision of services
nor the universal funding of such, for once you have State services
they tend back to monopoly and, unlike private organizations, they
have the force of law and access to tax funded subsidy to impose such
a monopoly. Financial State assistance towards the healthcare needs
of the destitute will exist, forming part of our "safety net, not
hammock" approach to Welfare, drawing on the best systems
worldwide. Similarly, we will look into best practice for the provision of
A&E.
Education
Education Overview
The de-facto State monopoly and control over education will be
dismantled with the introduction of a Swedish-style voucher system.
There will be no mass privatisation. Increased parental choice will lead
to schools that genuinely serve the needs of our children’s
development. Government interference in the curriculum and
examination system will end as will the target culture. We will not seek
to replace the local gatekeepers with a central one.
Tertiary Education
• Move towards greater sponsorship, bursaries, scholarships and
bonds by all sectors of the economy to free the Universities,
Polytechnics and Technical Colleges from the dead hand of State
interference.
• Entities that cannot provide the full University range—Bachelor,
Masters, Doctorate and research faculties—shall no longer be
called Universities so as not to mislead prospective students.
• Dismantle any subsidies distorting the market and size of the
University population.
Due to our proposal to abolish Income Tax, the contention over the
charitable status of some educational establishments will eventually
become irrelevant in most cases.
Home Education
On the one hand parents may wish to be free from any State control,
while Taxpayers have a right to expect the State to spend their taxes
prudently. The nub is “prudently”, as it immediately becomes a value
judgment and a collectivised one at that.
Our position is that we would not prevent people Home Educating, nor
would be demand any kind of “notification” across the board, which
can rapidly become a Trojan Horse for State control[2].
However, should the Educator request that the taxpayer fund such
education – take the State’s Shilling as it were - there would need to be
evidence that the funding was in fact delivering an education [3]. It is
unreasonable for anyone to demand no strings funding from the
Taxpayer and we feel that genuine Home Educators will understand
this point completely.
[1] This differs from the Conservative Party approach, which still retains central
control, commissioning, granting and approval powers. Fake, in other words.
[2] The idea of notification has been touted by others, including the Liberal
Democrats: "It is quite sensible for all home educators to be obliged to notify local
authorities that they are home educating. Local Authorities cannot do their present
job if they do not know which children are being home educated. A voluntary system
would do little or nothing to address the minority of cases where home education
could be of poor quality or non existent." – Nick Clegg, Leader, The Liberal
Democrats. The unasked question: is the “present job” of the Local Authority
necessary, correct or beneficial? What is also ironic is that there are cases where the
education of children by the Local Authority in schools is “of poor quality or non
existent” and that is sometimes the motivation for Parents or Guardians to embark
on Home Education in the first place. The problem with notification is that it rapidly
becomes registration then an approval process – “granted until refused” then
“refused until granted” - backed by monitoring, box ticking, targets, curricula and
logistics such as teaching environment. The conceit of many that the State “owns”
children, “knows best” or they need to be tagged/tracked like livestock is not lost on
the Libertarian Party. We reject such self-serving notions.
[3] Blank cheques will create all manner of unintended consequences when one
considers that a child might “yield” £’000’s pa in cash each year for a parent.
[4] In some cases this might not apply due to the particular child and this must be
taken into account.
Armed Forces
• Our national stance will be one of armed neutrality.
• We expect to support the Armed Services, their families and
veterans. Reservist and Cadet wings are also seen as vital
components of a sustainable, professional force.
• We are committed to undertake a proper review of our genuine
defence needs, based upon the reality of the threats that our
nation faces today, rather than the position that we were in
during the cold war; this review to include analysis of
presumptions regarding safe international sea trade.
• All defence procurement decisions to be made on pragmatic
rather than jingoist grounds.
• Our Armed Forces need to be able to make an enemy think
twice, so must have the ability to project force rapidly, globally
and flexibly in focused ways, e.g. submarines, amphibious
assault, Marines, Special Forces.
• To protect supply lines and commercial shipping and fisheries
from piracy and other interference will require a suitably sized
fleet of Corvettes, Frigates and associated support craft.
• Maintain membership of NATO while in the National Interest.
• Maintain strong ties with non-aggressive Commonwealth
countries.
• Any Nuclear deterrent to be made truly independent, retained,
maintained and eventually replaced in the foreseeable future.
Energy Independence
• All practical local fuel and energy resources (such as coal) to
be considered alongside the continuation and, if economically
viable and necessary, the renewal of nuclear power until
dependable, alternative sources are available.
• End counter-productive subsidies and grants for biofuels and
wind farms. Open up the marketplace to all alternatives, e.g.
wave and tidal.
• No unreasonable obstructions to microgeneration shall be put
in place by the State.
Immigration
Immigration Overview
Our immigration policy will be points based whilst the State provided
Welfare System exists. In parallel, we will establish bilateral
agreements with countries to enable free flows of people. Longer term,
and in conjunction with the disappearance of our current Welfare
System, we are committed to pursuing an open borders policy towards
those who would wish to come to the United Kingdom in order to
contribute to our (by then) thriving economy and peaceful shores.
Until bilateral arrangements are in place, and in line with the Rule of
Law, a transparent and consistent points-based system is one of the
key measures that we are proposing.
Policy
• The UK shall have full control over its immigration policy, with
any right of final appeal remaining within the UK.
• For countries without a bilateral agreement on the free flow of
citizens we propose the adoption of a points-based immigration
policy for economic migrants.
• Asylum Seekers must present at a UK border, otherwise their
claim shall not be accepted. Those refusing to declare originating
country and accept that the failure of their application will result
in their return shall be denied entry, and any right to seek
asylum will be refused outright without appeal.
• Move towards asylum seekers to be held "air side" while their
case is heard as swiftly as possible, e.g. weeks, not months or
years.
• End automatic access to education and resources for any child
who presents itself to the authorities, i.e. vouchers will not be
available.
Welfare was envisaged as being a safety net, not the hammock it has
become. We aim to refrain from nurturing dependency while
encouraging self-reliance and charitable works via a steady evolution
and review of existing welfare arrangements. As with healthcare, the
Libertarian Party believes strongly in honouring existing commitments,
and this applies to the State Pension.
Welfare
• An end to State funding of lifestyle choices. People dependent
on the State shall not normally get additional housing or cash
provision if they expand their family, either through birth or the
accumulation of additional dependants for whatever reason.
Although this may seem harsh, there is an injustice in
entitlements that accumulate, forcing tax payers unable to
provide for or expand their own families to fund that choices for
others.
• An end to taxing the income of the poorest. Abolishing Income
Tax will remove the need for complex tax credits and similar
benefits. In future, taxes will be on consumption, not earnings.
• We will seek to encourage wider discussion within the nation
on incentivisation away from a life of dependency.
• Migration to a plurality of non-State organisations providing
low-cost housing. Such bodies will be able to set their own
standards for tenant behaviour and so forth, with no binding
"duty of care" upon them to house all comers.
• Abuses of welfare will be dramatically reduced via a
simplification of the benefits structure and closure of loopholes
and exploits.
Pensions
• The Libertarian Party will uphold existing State pension
commitments to the retired. However, we recognise that our
existing national pensions scheme is not viable in the long-term,
for it is, in effect, a Ponzi scheme. We will expect individuals to
start to make their own provision for a future pension. We will
also advise individuals against the use of company pension
schemes that are linked in any way to the ongoing viability of the
company.
• State pensions liabilities will be reviewed with the intention of
making them transparent and openly securitized; this will be
achieved through the issuance of government debt and/or the
realisation of unnecessary State assets.
Policy
• Abolish Stamp Duty: the de-facto tax on house buying.
• We will undertake a thorough review of planning laws to
facilitate a speeding up of the planning process whilst enabling
people to resist moves by Authorities who may be attempting to
push through a project that is not necessarily in the interests of
residents, e.g. the ending of compulsory purchases for
“regeneration”.
• Until a practical Land Value Taxation system can be devised,
forms of zoning (such as Green Belts) will remain.
• Review building regulations, and repeal any that impose
impractical limitations on configuration or liveability.
• Make HIPs voluntary.
• Create a planning environment that does not hamper the
investment in infrastructure necessary to improve economic
efficiency and to make Britain the location of choice—to become
the "Hong Kong of the Atlantic". Example projects in this
category include High Speed Rail, new airports, and new
commuter and freight railways.
• Permit more private toll roads, but do not subsidise them
through national taxation.
• Planning consent to return to the historic position of implied
consent for development unless objections can be proven,
reversing the recent trend to put the burden of proof on the
developer.
• Encourage a framework for local residents to have first call on
land sales/developments by Local Authorities in their village/town
to remove bias against local voluntary collectives building
heterogeneous developments.
Transport
Transport Overview
Subsidies and cartels that distort the running and creation of our
national transport infrastructure are addressed by our policies, and
resolved.
Policy
• Our proposed policies in the areas of housing, education and
stamp duty will mean that individuals will be more willing to
move closer to their place of work, so reducing the strain on
transport.
• We will end the indirect subsidy of road freight. This may
require retention of a form of distance-based road pricing for
HGVs, which in 38-tonne form, do 10,000 times more damage to
roads than a 1 tonne car.
• It is expected that the move towards locally elected Police
Chiefs shall result in the removal of the majority of speed
cameras and the return to intelligent use of Traffic Police,
without the need for compulsion from central government.
• Repeal specific legislation about phone use, smoking and so
on, and rely on established laws in regard to vehicle control.
Killing as a result of driving a vehicle while incapacitated—for
whatever reason—could be manslaughter, and should be treated
accordingly.
• Repeal nanny-state legislation such as compulsory seatbelt and
crash helmet use. Motorists and riders should have the right to
make their own choices on their use of safety equipment;
insurance companies should have the right to charge additional
premiums (or decline cover) to those who do.
• Disband the cartel of the rolling stock leasing arrangements.
• Resolve the geographic monopoly that is the rail tendering
mechanism.
• Undertake a review of existing, proposed and potential road
charging schemes. In principle, we are against charging for non-
freight vehicles.
• We will not oppose a move towards a combined MOT—
insurance certificate to tidy up the de-facto linkage that currently
exists.
Freedoms won for us by the blood of our ancestors have been seriously
eroded over the decades, and this erosion is gaining speed and must
be reversed. It is a core responsibility of the State to enable the
citizens to go safely about their lawful business without let or
hindrance.
Freedoms won for us by the blood of our ancestors have been seriously
eroded over the decades, and this erosion is gaining speed and must
be reversed. It is a core responsibility of the State to enable the
citizens to go safely about their lawful business without let or
hindrance.
Police
• Chief Constables to be locally elected, and given a large
amount of autonomy. We expect this to:
o Drastically simplify and reform Police/CPS targets, now
the remit of the Chief Constable, and to remove the desire to
prosecute innocent parties.
o A reduction in paperwork to enable more beat officers to
remain on patrol for as long as possible.
• We will undertake a review of the PCSO concept, with the
potential to recruit those capable into the main police force, and
to disband the remainder.
• More funding for more police, especially traffic police (see
Transport re: Speed Cameras).
• Limit retention of DNA only in the event of a conviction, and to
discard after that conviction is spent.
• We will reaffirm the 9 Peelian Principles. These are:
0 The basic mission for which the police exist is to prevent
crime and disorder.
1 The ability of the police to perform their duties is
dependent upon the public approval of police
actions.
2 Police must secure the willing co-operation of the public
in voluntary observation of the law to be able to
secure and maintain the respect of the public.
3 The degree of co-operation of the public that can be
secured diminishes proportionately to the necessity
of the use of physical force.
4 Police seek and preserve public favour not by catering to
public opinion, but by constantly demonstrating
absolute impartial service to the law.
5 Police use physical force to the extent necessary to
secure observance of the law or to restore order only
when the exercise of persuasion, advice, and
warning is found to be insufficient.
6 Police, at all times, should maintain a relationship with
the public that gives reality to the historic tradition
that the police are the public and the public are the
police; the police being only members of the public
who are paid to give full-time attention to duties
which are incumbent upon every citizen in the
interests of community welfare and existence.
7 Police should always direct their action strictly towards
their functions, and never appear to usurp the
powers of the judiciary.
8 The test of police efficiency is the absence of crime and
disorder, not the visible evidence of police action in
dealing with it.
Legislation
• Establish a parliamentary Standing Committee to review all
legislation enacted over the past 30+ years with the remit to
propose repeal unless absolutely necessary. Such unnecessary
legislation is expected to include ASBOs and on-the-spot fines.
• Property owners to be freed from the nuisance claims of
assault by criminals.
• Disorder to be handled via the courts, not on-the-spot fines,
which we believe are unconstitutional as laid out in the 1689 Bill
of Rights.
• Repeal inhibitions to "right to lawful assembly".
• Wiretap evidence to be permitted as evidence in court cases.
• Undertake a review to consider returning juries to all criminal
trials.
• Immediate repeal of Control Orders.
• Implement a maximum period for detention without charge of
48 hours; arrests should be evidenced based, not fishing
expeditions.
• Legalisation of all narcotic substances for adult consumption.
The well respected Transform Drug Policy Foundation has a
wealth of information explaining how this approach is the only
one that will effectively address the problems that illegal drug
use currently cause individuals and the wider nation.
• Decriminalisation of all activity related to adult prostitution.
• Roll back the right of government agents to enter property
without a warrant.
• All new legislation to have a Sunset Clause by default.
Identity Cards
We will immediately scrap the compulsory National ID card scheme.
Prisons
• We will ensure that sufficient prison places are available to
make capacity not a factor in detention, bail or sentencing
decisions.
• Make prison harsher for uncooperative inmates as necessary
while rewarding cooperation.
• End the practice of using regular prisons for the incarceration
of the mentally ill.
• Life to mean life, and an end to early release of the violent or
abuser.
• The legalisation of drugs and prostitution and proper diagnosis
and treatment of the mentally ill should reduce the numbers of
women in prison significantly.
• No consideration for age or gender should influence
sentencing.
• We will undertake a review to examine the options available for
the provision of training and educational facilities within prisons,
and also investigate the possibility of prisoners being able to
perform paid work whilst incarcerated should they wish.
• Ensure first time remand prisoners are kept separate from
other inmates.
Firearms Legislation
The Libertarian Party stands by the right of peaceful citizens to defend
themselves against violent attackers and burglars within the law, and
will make it a priority to bring the laws on self defence back into line
with common sense.
When seconds count, the police are just minutes away. The police are
not your bodyguards. They can outline you in chalk, they can break the
news to your family, they can maybe catch whoever did it after the
fact, but they cannot protect you. It will take police anywhere from 5 to
30 minutes to reach you, if they even bother to come at all. An
attacker can break in and search your entire house in under three
minutes or travel 100m in under 15 seconds.
As one of our first steps to reduce the violent crime rate, a Libertarian
Government will immediately move to repeal the ban on the ownership
and carrying of non-lethal defensive weaponry by law-abiding people.
Muggers, rapists and racist thugs make a habit of carrying knives and
other lethal weapons in order to prey on the innocent. For too long the
law has prevented their intended victims from protecting themselves
using the non-lethal technology which is available to the citizens of
most civilised countries.
This long-overdue reform is not a charter for vigilantes, but will have
the effect of shifting the balance of power on the streets back towards
peaceful citizens, where it belongs.
We will amend the Firearms Acts to repeal the pistol ban, which has
both completely failed to reduce armed crime and crippled our
country's ability to compete in the pistol shooting events in the
Olympic and Commonwealth Games, while depriving law-abiding
householders of the ability to defend their homes with one of the most
suitable weapons available. We will also remove the legal anomaly that
requires antique-patterned muzzle-loading firearms to be licensed and
registered as if they were modern weapons, when the originals can be
bought over the counter. Since the technology is long obsolete, we will
follow the path of most European countries by removing this
bureaucratic requirement.
Throughout our first term in office we will work to further reduce and
eliminate bureaucratic and legal barriers to lawful self-defence and
peaceful participation in the shooting sports.
Constitutional
Constitutional Overview
"And I do declare that no foreign prince, person, prelate, state or potentate
hath or ought to have any jurisdiction, power, superiority, pre-eminence or
authority, ecclesiastical or spiritual, within this realm. So help me God." —
from the Oath of Allegiance in the English Bill of Rights, 1689
The Libertarian Party is committed to reassert the primacy of our Bill of
Rights and Common Law system over the Napoleonic system that has
encroached from the Continent in recent years, whilst in the short term
a new written Constitution will be drawn up. Combining the freedoms
established by these documents with others secured by our forebears
will have the net effect of restoring and forever enshrining vital
freedoms lost to our countrymen and women during the recent
decades.
Policy
• Law and taxation shall be applied consistently and without
favour.
• Repeal Human Rights Act. We will enact a formal Constitution,
and reassert the 1689 Bill of Rights to reinforce established
freedoms under Common Law.
• We will abolish the compulsory TV License and resolve the
status of BBC; options to be investigated include the potential for
privatisation or a voluntary license.
• Abolish Regional Agencies as a priority in the QANGO cull.
• We will ensure that the UK does not enter into any binding
agreements with supra-national entities that require the
imposition of fines or demand policy actions on domestic affairs
or those affecting national security including energy policy. Such
agencies include the EU and the United Nations.
• Review membership, funding and all obligations towards supra-
national bodies.
• End the neglect of UK ties with the Commonwealth nations.
• We will ensure that people are free to practice their religion.
However, freedom of religion does not mean allowing people to
commit (or threaten to commit) acts of violence against others.
This includes using religious texts as any form of justification,
merely that all people should be equal in the eyes of the law,
regardless of their creed; and that all should be able to worship
whatever deity or deities they wish—including worshipping none
at all—and to peacefully practice their chosen religion. Even
though a religious text may contain passages that could be seen
by some to be inciting violence, it should not be banned. Yet,
that same text shall not be entertained as justification or as an
excuse for force or fraud upon another.
Lobbying
Political lobbying by business, NGOs, charities and the like has the
potential to subvert governmental decision-making. The lobbying
'industry' is so tightly bound with the political class that the practice of
politicians performing favours for outside interests and then, at a later
date, joining their ranks (and vice versa), has come to be widely
perceived as the 'revolving door' problem.
The Libertarian Party shall augment the above to state that the cooling
off period be no less than one parliament in length and that it be
extended to employment in a company involved in a sector that the
minister, MP or senior official had been involved in, e.g. Select
Committees. Further, that any entity be considered to have potential
for lobbying, including NGOs, charities, Unions or groups of any kind.
Appendices
Below, we'll demonstrate that this neither need, nor should, be the
case.
With a starting rate of just under 1%, Pitt's tax was modest by today's
standards, but still deeply unpopular. Following a cessation of
hostilities, Pitt's successor, Addington, repealed the Income Tax.
Unfortunately, war broke out again and, in 1803, Addington was forced
to reintroduce the tax.
For almost 30 years, Britain was again free of Income Tax. This came
to an end in 1842, when Peel reintroduced the tax. Peel's proposals
were very much aimed at taxing only the wealthy in society and, by
simultaneously cutting customs duties, he ensured that the less well
off actually benefited from his taxation changes.
Although there was earnest talk throughout the remainder of the 19th
century about repeal of the tax, it remained in place, largely
unchanged, until the First World War. At the outbreak of hostilities, the
standard rate of tax was still a modest 6% but, just 4 years later, this
had risen to 30%. The modern Income Tax regime has altered little
since.
A Misuse Of Funds
As can be seen from the above, Income Tax was initially intended to be
levied simply to deal with a pressing national emergency. Even when
the system was extended to peacetime by Peel, the net effect was an
actual reduction in the tax burden for many in society.
However, since the First World War, successive governments have
continued to spend the money originally earmarked for our national
defence upon other projects, without any concern for the damage that
this has actually done to our economy.
It also doesn't take much thought to realise how using our money
directly would generate huge benefits for Britain's wider economy. The
desk-bound bureaucrats would lose, but real people and real
businesses creating real wealth would benefit from the full purchasing
power of your £1. The Libertarian Party believes in putting our broader
economic interests ahead of those of the State—do you?
Have the improvements to our public services since 2002 really been
worth 40% of everything that you've earned? Could you have got
better value buying these services directly, leaving your family better
off?
Implementation
Maintaining the cosy fantasy that Income Tax is still only "a temporary
measure" (in Pitt's original words), parliament enacts annual legislation
in the form of a Finance Act to allow it to be collected during the
coming year.
The abolition of Income Tax is the right thing to do, for us and
our economy. Help us make this proposal a reality.
Sources
Department for Work and Pensions: Tax benefit model tables 2007