General Election 2019: What Britain would look like if Marxist Jeremy Corbyn got elected on December 12
IMAGINE switching on your TV on Friday the 13th and seeing PM Jeremy Corbyn amble from the door of No10 to address the nation.
Flanked by Chancellor John McDonnell oozing rottweiler charm and Home Secretary Diane Abbott, lifelong Marxist Corbyn orders immediate mass nationalisations and fresh Brexit negotiations.
In Brussels, Michel Barnier smiles wryly as he draws up negotiating papers for the only British voter neutral on Brexit.
Yet this Nightmare on Downing Street isn’t an impossibility.
In 2017 just a few thousand extra votes across a dozen seats would have been enough.
So what would Corbyn’s first 100 days look like? First they would nationalise the Royal Mail, railways, energy supply networks, water and sewerage companies.
The CBI reckon that will initially cost £196billion — about nine per cent of annual output.
Chuck in free broadband for £20billion, which Labour claim they can fund by taxing Big Tech.
All this on the premise that the State can run industry more efficiently than private companies.
A giant real-time experiment called the 1970s suggests it doesn’t.
SOARING TAXES
Nationalised firms become union-dominated behemoths serving workers’ needs not customers.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) says the move could even disrupt energy sector decarbonisation.
Then tip in Labour’s pledged day-to-day spending of £83billion a year, £55billion a year for capital spending and £400billion for a National Transformation Fund.
The colossal sums would be paid for by hiking corporation tax, City financial transaction tax and those earning more than £80,000.
The tax rise won’t hit ordinary people, the Magic Grandpa insists.
But the IFS believes his cash tsunami would involve bigger tax burdens on average earners. And business, they say, would be left with “just about the most punitive corporate tax system in the world”.
Pension funds — huge investors in the utilities up for nationalisation — would be at risk if shareholders are not properly compensated.
Firms and the rich would flee abroad, taking their taxable billions with them.
McDonnell’s plan to seize ten per cent of the shares in every big company would mean more misery. Law firm Clifford Chance says “at least £31billion of the cost will be borne by pension funds”.
Then Corbyn would roll back trade union legislation. Walkouts over ridiculous pay demands and petty grievances would be commonplace. Public sector pay hikes could lead to soaring inflation.
“Boomers” will remember the 1978-9 Winter of Discontent when 29million days were lost to strikes.
In the 1970s tens of thousands quit Britain to escape industrial unrest and high taxes. Expect another brain drain under Corbyn.
A major reason why Britain joined the EEC in 1973 was a desperate attempt to improve its uncompetitive productivity.
Under PM Corbyn talks to leave the EU would be in the hands of a Brexit neutral. Think about that logically.
Corbyn will ask Europe for a deal which he will then not back in a second referendum. So the EU will offer something as close to Remain as they can possibly get. EUref2 would be a choice between Remain and Remain-in-all-but-name.
And Corbyn believes that would placate 17million Leavers?
Corbyn needs Lib Dem and SNP help to take No10. That’s why he’s been playing footsie with Nicola Sturgeon over a Scottish vote. Britain cannot be governed by continuous referendums. They will only whip up more division and rancour.
Colonel Tim Collins, remembered for his eve-of-battle speech in Iraq in 2003, warns a Corbyn administration would not be trusted to receive vital intelligence from allies.
This would have “significant and far-reaching” consequences for Britain’s security.
Nearly half of British Jews would “seriously consider” exiting should Corbyn win.
Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis warned: “A new poison, sanctioned from the very top, has taken root in the party.”
Labour is only the second party — after the far-right BNP — to be investigated by human rights watchdog the Equality and Human Rights Commission.
Since the last election around another three million have registered to vote. Over two-thirds are under 35 — an age group that usually backs Labour and who have no memory of the Winter of Discontent.
While opinion polls favour the Conservatives, our destiny will again be decided by tiny swings in key constituencies.
So beware Friday the 13th. A Corbyn premiership would be peacetime Britain’s darkest day.
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