Sunday, October 26, 2008

KHOODEELAAR! No to 'Big Business Crossrail', updated advice to Boris Johnson: Stop irresponsibly peddling wasteful Crossrail [254]

This page was last edited at 0448 GMT London Monday 27 October 2008

0445 GMT London Monday 27 October 2008: KHOODEELAAR! Editor©Muhammad Haque....


KHOODEELAAR! REMINDING Boris Johnson that there is NO EVIDENCE that ‘Crossrail’ is the priority transport need for the people of London. There is no evidence that even officially ‘cited’ experts on transport found any evidence to support the UK treasury incurring public debts to fund the Big Business -craved Crossrail.. There IS evidence that the public money which the touts of Big Business Crossrail scam want to put into the Big business pockets CAN and should be applied to already well and widely recognised transport needs in London....


Boris Johnson must show that he is a thoughtful, rational and responsible holder of the post that he now holds in the name of the people of London Boris Johnson must not confuse a craze that is being driven by Ken Livingstone and his ilk from the background with a considered, responsible and sustainable way forward. ‘Spending public money’ is NOT beyond the universally, objectively recognisable requirements of accountable office... What is even more important right now, spending any amount of public money will have ti be at the expense of cutting back on something even more urgent.... So before Boris Johnson gets too used to being ‘friends’ with the residual foot-soldiers and place men and place women from the regime of Ken Livingstone and assorted, fellow-travelling peddlers of corruption at the expense of the public, he [Boris Johnson] must think very seriously about the immediate effects on his own credibility...Boris Johnson cannot say he has not been warned about Crossrail and the City of London interests..... He has no need to act as a tout of these interests interests... Not only does that role contradict everything Boris Johnson aid in his ‘acceptance’ speech. It also shows that he is not adhering to the principle of telling the truth... Boris knows that everyone who has been watching him is aware of his record as a person who has told lies including a widely documented involvement in seeking to shield a convicted fraudster friend and in doing so, trying to have someone physically attacked...Not to speak of the many reported incidents o adultery and lying to his wife ...... The fact that he is now in office could change so dramatically if any of the as yet unpublicised incidents of Boris Johnson being dishiest, untruthful and immoral ... were to come out... So Boris Johnson has got to make sure that he does not lumber the public with £Billions od debts that can be avoided by listening to reason and dropping Crossrail.....Boris John must not confuse his ‘ability’ to make utterances with the actual entity. Integrity., Does Boris Johnson have integrity? And if he does have integrity, how does he show, in reality, that he has integrity? Integrity will not be substantiated if he is callous in his ‘use’ or misuse of the [powers that go with the post he holds He has not shown what evidence there is that Crossrail is the priority that London;’s transport needs demand.......He has not shown that the alternative spending priorities on Transport and on other aspects of London peoples’ lives are LESS important. Boris Johnson should take the KHOODEELAAR! advice, being repeated here because he has failed to pay attention on previous occasions. Shut up about Crossrail... You do NOT know the facts. Find the facts first. Find the evidence and then open your mouth on Crossrail. And when you do, do it rationally, thoughtfully. And truthfully and honestly. And responsibly Not as a crazy fanatic that is deranged with the egotistic insanity of power... That is what Livingstone did.....And another thing, read up on the leis that Livingstone uttered in talking up THE IMAGE of the City of London.....No rational holder of public office would do that.....[KHOODEELAAR! will return to the duties and the obligations o Boris Johnson in due course]


KHOODEELAAR! [below] quoting the following item about the confused state of Alistair Darling, from the web site of the London daily the INDEPENDENT Monday 27 October 2008.

Darling under pressure to avert meltdown of sterling
By Alistair Dawber and Sean O'Grady
Monday, 27 October 2008

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Alistair Darling will come under pressure this week to act to halt the dramatic slide in the value of the pound, which has tumbled to a six-year low against the dollar and all-time low against the euro.

The currency has taken a battering in the markets as investors have become increasingly nervous about the state of the UK economy, the Government's public spending plans and a widely anticipated programme of interest rate cuts by the Bank of England.

The Chancellor of the Exchequer, who is due to make a speech at City University in London on Wednesday evening, is expected to attempt to slow the fall of the pound, which slipped through the $1.60 mark on Thursday last week for the first time since 2003, by assuring the financial community that the Government has not abandoned its budgetary rules.

The pound closed at $1.59 on Friday, its lowest level for six years, and is also down to a record low against the euro, which appreciated to 83p last week.

Investors' nerves were not helped on Friday when the UK economy was shown to have contracted by 0.5 per cent in the last quarter, a bigger slowdown than expected, and after Gordon Brown and the Bank of England's Governor, Mervyn King, said that a recession, measured as two consecutive quarters of negative growth, was likely.

The markets are worried that the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Bank of England will be forced to rapidly cut interest rates in the coming months, starting at its next meeting on 6 November, to reflate the flagging economy. The consensus view among City economists is that the MPC will reduce rates by 0.75 percentage points. This, it is feared, will offer investors fewer incentives to hold the currency, leading to a more dramatic sell-off.

A number of analysts expect thatthe MPC will need to cut rates to just2 per cent by next year, a level that has not been seen in the UK since the 1950s.

It is not just falling interest rates that have put the pound under pressure. As the global economic downturn takes hold, investors are looking for what are traditionally considered to be safe havens, such as short-term US Treasury Bills, the Swiss franc and the yen.

The markets are also worried that as the economy enters a recessionary period the Government will be forced to increase borrowing, paid for largely by issuing government debt in the form of gilts. As the number of bonds floods the market, already saturated by securities from other countries attempting to raise money, so investors are worried that the Government will be forced to increase yields to attract buyers. Some also fear that the higher taxes needed to service the debt, which will soar as a result of the bank recapitalisation programme as well as the economic downturn, could hamper the MPC's ability to reduce base rates, slowing any economic recovery and, ironically, leading to inflationary pressure.

Ruth Lea, a former director of the Centre for Policy Studies and now economic adviser to the Arbuthnot Banking Group, said: "The worst case is that all this leads to a run on the pound: that is the meltdown scenario, and while I would not say it is a probability at this stage, it is certainly a possibility. Sterling has dropped rapidly in the last few days, and while some of that is due to investors rushing to the dollar, which is still the only currency people have to have, the speed of that drop is a concern. Given the amount of borrowing the Government has to do, there is a chance that foreigners will no longer be prepared to hold sterling, and if that happens, it is 1976 all over again and it is back to the IMF."

It is the rate of sterling's decline that has spooked the markets. The pound was worth nearly $2 earlier this year, with many now predicting that the pound could drop as low as the psychologically important $1.50. The currency has also devalued by more than 15 per cent in the last year against a trade-weighted basket of leading currencies.

The Treasury declined to comment on what Mr Darling would say this week, but it is understood that the Government will not take action to artificially stimulate sterling. The last time the UK actively supported the pound was in the early 1990s, when sterling was in the Exchange Rate Mechanism. Last Wednesday sterling fell 6.25 cents against the dollar, suffering its steepest fall since the aftermath of Black Wednesday in 1992, when the Major government had to abandon the ERM.

Instead, Mr Darling is likely to reassert the Government's commitment to its spending plans, saying that the Treasury will stick to its budgetary rules.

Many observers will be keen to see how far Mr Darling wants to go in bringing forward large public spending projects, such as Crossrail and the 2012 Olympics. The bailing out of the banks and reports that the Government will try to spend its way out of recession by using reflationary policies has undermined sterling, some analysts believe.

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