Posh wrote:
I realise that politicians of all parties are abusing the system but the majority aren't and only receive what's needed, not for themselves, but in order to properly do their jobs and to server their constituents. If you don't like it you can vote them out (unlike bankers etc.). I find the cynicism utterly appalling but, given the current climate its understandable.
The biggest problem I have is that the debate is fuelled by the likes of the Daily Express. They've slashed the number of journalists, sub-editors etc. sometimes in appalling fashion, yet the owner paid himself £11 million last year from earnings from the Star, Express and his hardcore porn empire; and the editor drives around in a chaufferred car with his £500,000 salary - bigger than any MP can earn in 8 years or the Prime Minister who looks after a £1/2 trillion pound budget and millions of staff can earn in three. P.S. The editor of the Daily Mail took home £1.2 million last year, despite breaches of privacy, paying money to the McCann family etc. etc. A plague on their houses too.
To be honest, Mr Posh (IF that's your real name, which I doubt) As we don't have total transparency on these expenses, we don't actually know that everything they are claiming IS "what's needed" We can vote them out, but the alternative is almost certainly someone who will do just the same.
As for the Daily Express, and I dislike everything about it with a passion, the owner is the owner and so can pay himself what he likes, and if he feels buisness needs require staff reduction then that is, unfortunately, his right to go ahead and do so. I wholly agree with you that bthese people are the lice on the worlds' bottom, but you need to remember that we, wffectively, employ those in Parliament, and yet unlike any other employer, we don't choose what our staff get paid, or what perks they can have.
I don't like my next bit, but it's true, this isn't the fault of those we see as abusing the system they have, it is the fauly of the system and also of ours for not voting them out or kicking up a bigger stink. Instead, we sit around tables and in bars telling each other how bad it is.