Showing posts with label Conservative. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Conservative. Show all posts

Friday, September 7, 2012

Prime Minister gives thumbs up to Harlow College



This summer, we have seen record-breaking results at Harlow College. This is thanks to the hard work of Principal Colin Hindmarch, College staff, and all their students. Harlow College is now number one - not just in Essex, but across the whole country.

In Parliament this week, David Cameron offered his warm congratulations - as you can see from the photograph above.

The Prime Minister said:

“Harlow College shows that if students work hard and are well supported, they can achieve world class results. I wish the students all the very best for the future.”

He is absolutely right. As local MP for Harlow, I am proud to have such a famous College in our town.

by Robert Halfon MP - Working Hard for Harlow.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

TODAY IS POLLING DAY: Vote Conservative for a freeze in Council Tax



Dear Resident,

Today, Thursday 03 May, YOU will decide who will lead our town through the difficult times ahead.


Harlow Conservatives have been in charge now since 2008. They can be proud of their record:
  • Council tax has been frozen for THREE YEARS running, helping with the cost of living. 
  • Valued services like Pet's Corner have stayed OPEN AND FREE TO THE PUBLIC.
People are claiming that this election is about many different things.

But actually this election is about just one - who is best placed to lead our town in these difficult times, with a clear plan for creating jobs, cutting our council tax and investing in our community services.

If you share our belief that we need a Council who will bring Harlow together, not divide it, and who we can trust to give us value for money, please vote Conservative today.

Please join me in voting tomorrow. Never forget that every single vote counts, no matter where in Harlow you live. And whatever you think the result is going to be, please don't leave it to others to vote - they may be leaving it to you.

Together we can help deliver a bright future for Harlow.

Yours sincerely,
Robert Halfon MP - Working Hard for Harlow.

Monday, April 30, 2012

The Conservative record in Harlow - THE FACTS

What is the Conservative record in Harlow?

As we head into the local elections, many residents have asked me: "What is the Conservative record in Harlow? What have you done for the town?"

It is a fair question. Are Harlow residents better off? Here are the facts:

1) A FREEZE IN COUNCIL TAX. Conservatives on Harlow Council have frozen the council tax now for a THIRD YEAR in a row. Saving an ordinary Harlow family around £70 a year.

2) LOWER TAXES FOR LOWER EARNERS. A Conservative-led Government has lifted 2,895 workers in Harlow out of paying income tax altogether. This especially helps part-time workers, and those on the lowest incomes. Plus, approximately 40,000 Harlow workers will benefit from £220 lower taxes each year.

3) HIGHER PENSIONS. In April, the state pension rose by £5.30 a week, for the more than 16,400 pensioners in Harlow. This is the largest increase since 1948. We will NEVER return to the bad old days of Gordon Brown's miserly 75p increase.

4) MORE MONEY FOR SCHOOLS. Essex is now receiving over eleven million pounds this year through the Pupil Premium. £11,306,000 pounds will go to local schools including every single Harlow school, to provide support for children from poorer backgrounds. In schools like Burnt Mill, this is being used to boost literacy and numeracy skills.

5) A GENEROUS RIGHT-TO-BUY. The 11,000 families in our town who rent a Council house will now have a much better chance of owning their home outright. Conservatives have restored the Right to Buy, and increased the maximum discount from £34,000 to £75,000.


6) LOWER BUSINESS TAXES. Our local small businesses have already had their taxes cut to 20%. Now, Harlow's larger employers will see their taxes reduce by 2% this year, to 24%. This will help them to grow, to invest, and to create more jobs.

7) ENTERPRISE ZONE. Next year, an enterprise zone will open in Harlow, with superfast broadband and reinvestment of business rates. This is expected to create more than 5,000 local jobs for Harlow residents, over the next few years.

8) SCRAPPING THE FUEL DUTY ESCALATOR. High oil prices have put real pressure on Harlow families. I have campaigned on this, and the Government has listened. Fuel duty was CUT in 2011, and FROZEN in January 2012. The Government has also SCRAPPED Labour's fuel duty escalator, which was pushing prices up above inflation.

9) APPRENTICESHIPS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE. There has been a 78% rise in Harlow apprenticeships already, under the Conservatives (bringing the total number of apprentices in our town to 800 a year). The Youth Contract will also now give firms a subsidy to hire their first young apprentice - a cash payment of £1,500 per apprentice.

10) UNIVERSITY TECHNICAL COLLEGES. An extra 24 new University Technical Schools are being set up across the country. We have applied for one to open in Harlow, in partnership with employers such as Princess Alexandra Hospital, Rivers Hospital, Anglia Ruskin University, Harlow College, and other local firms. If we are successful, it will give our young people high-tech jobs and opportunities for the future.

by Robert Halfon MP - Working Hard for Harlow.

VIDEO: LibDem minister praises Harlow Conservatives



Today the LibDem Minister for Local Government agreed with me that freezing Council Tax was the best thing local Councils can do to help those with low incomes.

He went on to praise the Conservative Harlow council for freezing council tax not just for one year, or for two years - but for THREE YEARS RUNNING.

Please read my question and his answer below:

Robert Halfon (Harlow): Is it not the best way to help those on low incomes to freeze council tax, and is the Minister aware, that Harlow Conservative Council has frozen Council Tax not just for one year or two years, but for three years?


Local Government Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State (Andrew Stunell OBE): Clearly a good way of reducing the cost to the state, the Council Tax benefit system and the cost to the house holder is to freeze council tax. And I commend his Council for the work they've done. 

by Robert Halfon MP - Working Hard for Harlow.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Harlow Conservatives praised by the Leader of the House of Commons over decision to freeze council tax


 

The Leader of the House of Commons, Sir George Young, has said the decision taken by Harlow Conservatives to freeze council tax for a third successive year is to be applauded.

Sir George was speaking in the House of Commons responding to a question that I put to the House.


Good management of the council has saved an ordinary household in our town more than £70 a year.
I highlighted the fact that Harlow Conservatives had frozen the Harlow Council share of council tax bills not just for one year, or two years but for the last three years, and protected discretionary services.

I asked "does this not show that Conservative councils cost taxpayers less?”

Sir George replied: "The short answer is ‘yes'.


"It is the case that under the last Labour Government council tax doubled across England. This Government has worked with councils to freeze the council tax for two years – but I applaud what has happened in Harlow, where they have anticipated this policy by freezing the council tax a for a third year, and those who have an opportunity to vote next month should cast their votes accordingly."


Harlow residents are better off with a Conservative council - with lower bills, and also protection for our valued services, like Pets' Corner.

The full exchange in the House of Commons was:


Robert Halfon (Harlow): "Can we have a statement on which Councils are providing value for money for taxpayers? Harlow Conservative Council has frozen council tax not just for one year, or two years, but for the last three years - and protected discretionary services. Does this not show that Conservative Councils cost taxpayers less?"

Sir George Young (Leader of the House): "The short answer is, Yes! It is the case that under the last Labour Government, council tax doubled across England. This Government has worked with Councils to freeze the council tax for two years – but I applaud what has happened in Harlow, where they have anticipated this policy by freezing the council tax for a third year, and those who have an opportunity to vote next month should cast their votes accordingly."

Friday, January 13, 2012

Ed Balls comes out... as a Conservative






An astonishing interview in The Guardian, where Shadow Chancellor Ed Balls - appears to sign up to Coalition economic policy.  Here is what he had to say:

On Public Sector Pay:

"It is now inevitable that public sector pay restraint will have to continue through this parliament. Labour cannot duck that reality and won't. There is no way we should be arguing for higher pay when the choice is between higher pay and bringing unemployment down."

On Cuts:
"My starting point is, I am afraid, we are going to have keep all these cuts. There is a big squeeze happening on budgets across the piece. The squeeze on defence spending, for instance, is £15bn by 2015. We are going to have to start from that being the baseline. At this stage, we can make no commitments to reverse any of that, on spending or on tax. So I am being absolutely clear about that".

Mr Balls also suggests that Labour will soon come up with "tough decisions" on welfare and waste.

After months of opposition, the Labour Party appear to have conceded defeat.  Their previous policy of campaigning against every Coalition 'cut', looks to have been consigned to the dustbin.  Perhaps it is because of the unpopularity of Ed Milliband, perhaps a realisation that the public no longer trust Labour on the economy - especially after Gordon Brown's virtual bankrupting of the country.

Whatever the reason, I think Coalition Ministers will be able to sleep safer in their beds in future.

by Robert Halfon - www.roberthalfon.blogspot.com

Sunday, October 2, 2011

The Freedom Zone: Why we need Cheaper Petrol


Today at the Freedom Zone, I said we urgently need lower fuel taxes, alongside Martin Vickers MP, Mark Wallace, Simon Richards, and Peter Carroll from the FairFuelUK campaign.

For many months now, I have campaigned for cheaper petrol, with the All-Party Group for Fair Fuel. This is because rip-off petrol prices are the number one issue in Harlow, my home-town.

We have started an e-petition, which has received over 100,000 signatures. It is the third most popular e-petition, and will help us to force an MP's debate in Parliament on the issue.

Now I accept that George Osborne has taken some action. He scrapped Labour’s “fuel tax escalator”, delayed some “inflationary” tax increases, and cut fuel duty by 1p. But we urgently need to do more. We need NO NEW FUEL TAXES IN THIS PARLIAMENT.

It is worth looking at the arguments in detail. Ultimately, I am campaigning for cheaper petrol, because...

- Fuel is already a huge burden. According to figures released by the Royal Automobile Club, the average motorist in my constituency of Harlow is getting fleeced for £1,700 a year just to fill up the family car. This is one tenth of the average local salary. The Government defines “fuel poverty” as spending a tenth of your income just heating your home, but what about spending a tenth of your income just driving to work? Earlier this month, ex-Tesco boss, Sir Terry Leahy, blamed the catastrophic slump in retail sales on the cost of fuel. He told The Sun: 'I don't think people fully appreciated what an oil shock we've had. Filling up the family car has gone up 70% in two years, causing what was a steady recovery to go sideways'.

- High petrol prices are causing unemployment. Businesses are under immense pressure, especially the road freight industry. Unemployment has stayed at around 2.5 million since the election, with petrol prices hitting 150 pence in some places, and there is increasing evidence that these are linked. In 2006, for example, when petrol was just 95p per litre, experts at the London School of Economics, and University College London, published a major piece of research showing that unemployed workers who could not afford to drive or commute to jobs “stayed unemployed for longer”. Since then fuel prices have surged by 40%, despite the recession and many workers suffering from redundancy or wage-freezes. The insolvency firm SFP have said that three quarters of transport business failures in the past year have been caused by excessive fuel prices, compared with Europe.

- UK Haulage firms are being taxed out of existence. Facing higher taxes than in countries such as Ireland, UK Haulage firms are being driven out of business. The Government has taken some action, as foreign lorry drivers are to be charged up to £9 a day to use our roads. But still, foreign drivers – who number one in eight of all those on the roads – have a huge advantage over British drivers as they pay no road tax or other charges.

- The wholesale oil markets are not competitive enough. As the Sunday Times reported a few weeks ago, the cost of oil has fallen by 18% in the past four months, but UK petrol prices have risen by nearly 2% over the same period. Data over the past 4 years, from the AA, shows exactly the same pattern. Cheaper oil is not being passed on to motorists, or businesses, and someone somewhere is making a lot of money out of that. The problem is not forecourts or supermarket retailers, which are very competitive: the problem is the wholesale market, which is dominated by just a few major firms. The lack of competition is similar to the beer market, where pubs are tied by strict contracts to the big brewers.

- Remember the Laffer Curve. Petrol is now so astronomically expensive, that it is now COSTING the Government money. This is because fewer people can afford to drive, leading to lower tax revenues. As I have raised in Parliament, figures from the AA show that the Treasury received £637 million less in revenue from petrol taxes than in the equivalent quarter three years ago. If this is true, it is disastrous. We urgently need a Laffer curve study of petrol taxes, by the Office of Budget Responsibility, or the Treasury, to see whether high taxes are actually making the deficit worse.

- The release of “strategic oil stocks” has helped investment banks, not motorists. This summer, Western countries staged the first release of 60 million barrels of "strategic oil stocks”. This was supposed to cut petrol prices for struggling motorists. But according to the US Department of Energy, much of the subsidised oil was actually diverted away from consumers, and hoarded instead by major American banks. The US Government has confirmed, for example, that JPMorgan bought over 150 million dollars-worth of the oil stocks, and instead of selling these on to motorists, they appear to have hoarded the oil on offshore tankers, waiting for prices to rise. As Bloomberg reported in 2008, they routinely do the same thing with heating oil. There is nothing wrong with trading. But if oil is subsidised by the taxpayer, is should go towards helping struggling motorists, not towards bank profits.

- Cutting fuel duty now must be a priority for the Chancellor, over and above the clamour to cut taxes for millionaires. Rip-off petrol prices are now so high they are a poverty trap, keeping people on benefits, as job-seekers can’t afford to travel, and businesses are struggling to stay afloat.
- Environmentalism has become a luxury for the rich. To those 'do-gooders' who say we shouldn't be using cars, I say: Get In The Real World. In Harlow, the question is not whether can you afford to have a car - but whether can you afford not to.

- Expensive energy costs are THE NUMBER ONE CONCERN for voters. As Conservative Home has repeatedly said, electricity, gas, and petrol prices now outstrip all other issues in terms of public concern. Polling by Populus shows that two thirds of voters are “very concerned”, and a staggering nine out of ten voters are “concerned” overall. The Labour Party are waking up to the political realities of this, hence Ed Miliband is calling for reform of energy firms.

That is why my e-petition calls on the Government to:

1) Scrap the planned 4p fuel duty increases, which are scheduled for January and August 2012.
2) Create a price stabilisation mechanism that smooths out fluctuations in the pump price.
3) Pressure big oil companies to pass on cheaper oil to motorists.
4) Set up a Commission to look at market competitiveness, and radical ways of cutting fuel taxes in the longer term - especially around this issue of the Laffer Curve, and whether high taxes are actually costing us money.
by Robert Halfon - www.roberthalfon.blogspot.com

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Harlow Council stand against Waste Transfer Station

 
I was delighted to hear of the sensible decision by Harlow Council, as Councillors agreed unanimously last night to oppose plans for a Waste Transfer Station in north Harlow. 
The Conservative-led Planning Committee said formally that the North Weald site in rural Epping Forest was their preferred option, rather than the West Road site in Harlow.
However, the final decision still rests with Essex County Council, in Chelmsford, as the matter is deemed to be a "strategic" planning decision for the county.

As regular readers will know, I have huge reservations about the proposed location of this scheme. That is why - like many local residents - I have written formally to Essex Council objecting to the plans. As soon as I heard the news, I took Tany's Dell primary school, local businesses and residents to meet with Essex Council to find out the facts. We have been working together on the campaign ever since.

In recent weeks, it has become increasingly clear that West Road is the wrong location. The extra traffic will overload Edinburgh Way, and the site is the wrong end of Harlow. It is literally miles from our single M11 junction. This means that big waste trucks from Epping Forest will have to drive across our town on a daily basis.

On top of that, many parents are worried, as Tany's Dell primary school is very close to the planned site. There is likely to be a damaging impact on local residents and small businesses.

As I have said for many months, I am in favour of recycling and the overall idea, but this is simply the wrong location. Essex Council need to think again.
You can write to Essex Council, and tell them your feelings about the plans at mineralsandwasteDM@essex.gov.uk
by Robert Halfon - www.roberthalfon.blogspot.com

Friday, February 26, 2010

Six Conservative pledges


Want to know what a Conservative Government's priorities will be? The answers are above in a graphic provided by the Daily Mail and reproduced on Conservative Home. These pledges chime with the instincts of most people, and are the kind of issues brought up with me again and again on the doorstep. Only today in the Harvey Centre, (when I was buying my Mother a birthday present), did two members of the public, express real alarm about the state of the nations' finances and the debt we will have to pay for years to come - thanks to Mr G Brown.

by Robert Halfon - www.roberthalfon.blogspot.com

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Good news: Money for Home Insulation

I am really pleased to give backing to bold Conservative plans to help households in Harlow, Hastingwood, Nazeing, Roydon and Sheering protect the environment and save money.

Major policy proposals for a Conservative government include providing up to £6,500 for home insulation improvements at no upfront cost to residents. Under the plans, every household will have the right to have home energy efficiency work of up to £6,500. There will be no upfront cost, as the work will be paid for by the much larger savings on energy bills from the improved insulation.

This will open up a whole new market in energy efficiency, create tens of thousands of skilled jobs and cut carbon emissions. It will also save families money and make homes in Hastingwood, Nazeing, Roydon and Sheering warmer in winter - helping the elderly and 'fuel poor' in particular.

A typical home could see £30 a month knocked off its final bill.

The Green Deal of insulating people's homes for no upfront cost and rewarding people for recycling will not only protect the environment, but also help families and pensioners who are struggling to make ends meet.

A good reason to vote Conservative.

You can read more details of the proposal from Grant Shapps MP (Conservative Housing Spokesman), HERE.

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