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David Schneider

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Gender Male
Age 61
Date of birth May 22,1963
Zodiac sign Gemini
Born London
United Kingdom
SpouseEmma Perry
Job Comedian
Screenwriter
Voice acting
Awards National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Screenplay
European Film Award for Best European Comedy
Height 168 (cm)
Education City of London School
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID527688

The 80/20 Investor: Investing in an Uncertain and Complex World - How to Simplify Investing with a Single Principle
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Is Western Science Just One Science Among Many?
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An Extraordinary Nuclear Occurrence: A Nuclear Novel
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Sojournic Tales (Hardcover)
The Death of Retirement: Breaking Your Reliance on a Broken System by Investing in Cash Engines
How Useful is Rawls' Original Position for Theorizing about a Just Society? A Discussion
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Route 66: Photographs and Stories from the Mother Road
Which, If Any, Meta-ethical View Do You Find Most Compelling for the Purposes of Political Theory?
Unbounded Chronicles (Hardcover)
Artificial Intelligence. Carl Schmitts Theory about Preventing Machine-Led Dictatorships
Modern Investing: Gambling in Disguise
Births, Deaths and Marriages: The Complete Series 1 and 2: The BBC Radio 4 Sitcom
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David Schneider Life story


David Schneider is a British actor, comedian, and director, best known for playing Tony Hayers in the Alan Partridge franchise.

Brexit: Claims about EU tax rules fact-checked

Feb 16,2020 8:07 am

There have been posts on Twitter for over a year claiming that Brexiteers' enthusiasm for a swift departure from the European Union (EU) is because of new tax rules that are about to come into force.

Here's a recent example from actor and writer David Schneider .

But The Rules are, in fact, all already part of UK law. A small number of them will not come into effect until 1 January, but that would have happened anyway whether or not the UK was a member of the EU.

The EU's (Atad) is an attempt to make sure companies (especially big digital companies and other multinationals) pay enough tax.

There are five aspects to The Rules . Three of them were largely already part of UK law before the EU started working on its directive (a few tweaks have been needed to bring them into line with the EU version). They are:

The Other two parts were added to UK law in response to the directive and have already been passed. They are:

While the UK is still in the EU, the EU could decide that the way the UK has implemented Atad is not consistent with the directive, but any changes would be unlikely to be huge, experts say.

So it's hard to find anything happening in January 2020 to these rules that looks significant enough to influence the speed at which some people might want to leave the EU.

The directive was produced in response to recommendations from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), and the UK will remain a member of that group after Brexit.

It should be noted that leaving the EU will mean future governments could remove any of these laws that they could get a majority for, but there has been no suggestion that the current government plans to do so.

Where it came from

The idea seems to have originated in with the headline: "Is this The Real reason why Farage and Rees-Mogg want a speedy Brexit?"

It was written by two members of Lawyers Against Brexit, who were asked to comment for this piece but have declined to do so.

The piece was still being linked to in March by Labour's David Lammy .

The original article talked about the deadline in January 2019, which was when the interest restrictions, controlled companies and The General anti-abuse rules had to be in place. During 2019, the focus of the memes has turned to January 2020, which is the deadline for The Other two areas (exit tax and anti-hybrids).

There were early references to the article by a and shortly afterwards in a featuring a picture of Jacob Rees-Mogg wearing a Top Hat .

It's also been referred to by. And it has been debunked a few times along the way by this, and by, which cited The Claim being made by.



reality check, tax, social media, brexit

Source of news: bbc.com

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