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London: our comatose capital

By: Elliot Keck, head of campaigns Upon being sworn in for a third term as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan pledged “to help make London the best city in the world to grow up in.” Why it wasn’t already so given his eight-years in office is a question for another... Read more...

Why does the TPA care about facility time?

By: Shimeon Lee, researcher The TPA has been at the forefront of campaigning on the issue of trade union facility time ever since we first uncovered how much trade union “pilgrims”, as they became known, were costing taxpayers in groundbreaking research we published in 2010. Our latest research reveals the... Read more...

Britain does not need a wealth fund

By: Callum McGoldrick, researcher   Last week the general election brought the change in residency at number 10 that all of us were expecting, but it’s the new occupant of number 11 that has made the biggest policy announcement of the new government so far. On Tuesday, Rachel Reeves, the... Read more...

War on Waste: April - June 2024

While the last few months may have been bustling with promises of change, in the real world, waste has been running rampant! Naturally, as Britain’s waste watchdog, the TPA team have been keeping on top of it all, from the woke to the blatantly bizarre. Here are a few highlights... Read more...

Taxpayer manifesto: what do the manifestos mean for taxpayers?

By: Rory Meakin, research fellow   The polls open this week and voters will cast their votes to decide who represents them in parliament and, by extension, who forms a new government. So what do the manifestos say about issues important to us as taxpayers? At the TaxPayers’ Alliance, we... Read more...

The truth about the junior doctor strikes

By Shimeon Lee, researcher Junior doctors went on strike this week for the 11th time since March 2023, demanding a 35 per cent pay rise on top of an 8.8 per cent pay award they received in 2023-24. The British Medical Association (BMA), a trade union representing doctors, argues that... Read more...

Why are politicians strangling our wine industry?

By: Elliot Keck, head of campaigns   It’s currently English wine week. This has got me thinking of a wine bar, in the neighbourhood of Cedofeita, Porto. It’s an unassuming place, perched at a fork in the road, and with tables and chairs spilling out under a simple but elegant... Read more...

The productivity gamble

By Shimeon Lee, researcher Labour and the Conservatives released their manifestos this week setting out their spending plans while ruling out major tax rises. Both parties are instead choosing to rely on economic growth, and the accompanying growth in tax receipts, to deliver on their spending pledges. While the Office... Read more...

Will quangocrats be the real winners of this election?

By: William Yarwood, media campaign manager   With the election well underway, politicians have come out swinging with bright and shiny new policies in an effort to win your vote. The most recent addition to the policy pile is the Conservatives’ annual cap on immigration, an attempt to show voters... Read more...

Cracks in the safety net - is there a solution to benefit fraud?

By: Joanna Marchong, investigations campaign manager The benefits system plays a part in most people’s lives at some point, whether it's small payments to help with heating homes, money to live on when in between jobs or the state pension. The system is designed to cater to the genuinely needy... Read more...

When did the police stop policing?

By: Callum McGoldrick, researcher According to the Office of National Statistics, 430,104 shoplifting offences were committed last year, a rise of 37 per cent from last year and the highest level on record. When asked about shoplifting on LBC News last week, Archie Norman, the chairman for Marks & Spencer,... Read more...

How does the State spend £100 of your money?

By: Shimeon Lee, researcher Over the past decade growth in public sector spending has been monumental. The average person would find it difficult to understand the sheer scale of public spending when looking at official statistics. Spending by government departments often runs into the tens and even hundreds of billions,... Read more...

The cost of the diversity demagogues

By: Benjamin Elks, grassroots development manager   Early last year we launched a campaign to ditch the diversity demagogues, to channel the endless fury of taxpayers towards the massive cost being imposed by the EDI industry on the public sector. The tens of thousands of people who signed our petition... Read more...

What would the TPA have thought of the empire?

By: Kristian Niemietz, editorial director and head of political economy at the Institute of Economic Affairs   In the 18th and 19th centuries, public spending and taxation in Britain were only a fraction of what they are today. The main drivers of current-day government spending, such as healthcare, education, and... Read more...

The sickly civil service

By: Jonathan Eida, researcher at the TaxPayers’ Alliance   It has been a long time since Britain shook off the label of the sick man of Europe. The strong economic growth that developed over the course of a number of decades spanning the eighties, nineties and noughties helped alter the... Read more...

The Rwanda plan: is it really worth it?

By: Elliot Keck, head of campaigns   So, the Rwanda bill has passed. Two years on from the scheme being announced, we’re finally going to see flights take off. Taxpayers will get to see whether a key plank of the government’s plan to tackle illegal immigration will actually work.    The... Read more...

Increasing defence spending isn’t a silver bullet

By William Yarwood, Media Campaign Manager With World War 3 supposedly on the horizon, defence spending has become the latest political football which politicians of all colours have been taking their best shot at kicking around. Conservative MPs, including Defence Secretary Grant Shapps, have been insisting that the government needs... Read more...

The tobacco ban is an evidence free mess

By: Benjamin Elks, grassroots development manager   Rishi Sunak’s generational smoking ban gets its second reading today. The bill seeks to raise the legal age for purchasing tobacco by one year every year from 2027 - meaning no one who turns 15 this year will ever legally buy tobacco in... Read more...

Ten takeaways from Town Hall Rich List 2024

By William Yarwood, Media Campaign Manager We have recently released the 17th edition of our annual Town Hall Rich List. This piece of research reveals the top bureaucrats and council bosses who have been receiving hundreds of millions of pounds of taxpayer money over the last financial year.Let’s look at... Read more...

War on Waste: January - March 2024

If you thought this year would be a turning point for the public sector, think again. The TaxPayers’ Alliance’s war on waste campaign is having to be as active as ever, identifying  wasteful spending left, right, and centre.    For our first discovery of the year, the spotlight shone on... Read more...

Hold the front page: how efficiently does local government communicate?

By: Shimeon Lee, researcher at the TaxPayers' Alliance   Women Against State Pension Inequality (WASPI), made headlines this week over demands for compensation stemming from changes to the state pension age. They argue that many women received inadequate notice of the changes, a claim that has been bolstered by the... Read more...

British governance needs to decentralise

By: Charles Amos, author of the Musing Individualist Substack   In Britain the financing and spending of government is heavily centralised. In 2022 local government raised just 4.84 per cent of total government revenue, a stark contrast to   Germany at 33.79 per cent, Switzerland at 41.30 per cent, and... Read more...

Budget 2024 - the good and the bad

By: Elliot Keck, head of campaigns   Budget day has rarely delivered good news for taxpayers in recent years. Understandably, many probably view it with trepidation - after all, things can always get worse. This week was a damp squib - things certainly didn’t get worse, but they can hardly... Read more...

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