FullRange
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Songs | SongsFrogs 90BPMCycle The Best · 2020 Ten Seconds 95bpmTrance Plane 140 bpmExplosion Aero-Step · 2020 View 10+ more |
---|---|
List | Frogs 90BPMCycle The Best · 2020 |
Listen artist | open.spotify.com |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 3236845 |
About FullRange
Sarms: Illegal muscle drugs sold in UK shops, BBC finds
... The Full Range of effects of taking Sarms is not yet known, but some doctors warn they could have worse side effects than steroids...
Why food bills aren't shrinking - five things to know
... And there could be other factors looming - the Full Range of checks and other formalities around food imported from the European continent have yet to be introduced, for example...
Brexit: Northern Ireland Protocol talks at their end stages, sources say
... Full Range of challenges Interestingly, there has been no suggestion that negotiators are rewriting the original treaty - instead, it appears they are seeking to add to or clarify it...
Northern Ireland Protocol is lawful, Supreme Court rules
... Intensive talks with the EU continue to that end, looking across the Full Range of issues we have raised...
Black Boy Lane poster installed behind new La Rose Lane sign
... " Ms Ahmet added: " I fully understand that this is a decision that has generated passionate responses and our Corporate Committee took those Full Range of views into consideration when deciding to change the name of the road...
Tory think tank Bright Blue calls for ‘minimum income'
... " " The proposed social security digital platform will improve accessibility to the Full Range of benefits and a serious discussion about a positive contributory system could open the door to a fairer system overall, " he added...
Children's social work agency spending soars, research suggests
... Mr Gregg said: " The reality is if we re spending more money on children s services and vulnerable children, and we re spending on agency workers, rather than a Full Range of services for children, it does mean that children are going to get less of a service...
SNP budget may go down in left-leaning history
... Supporters of independence say the country could do much better with the Full Range of powers available to independent nations...
SNP budget may go down in left-leaning history
By James CookScotland editor
John Swinney's budget was devolution in action.
Scotland already had more generous welfare payments than other parts of the UK, as well as state-funded access to prescriptions, tuition fees, and personal care for the elderly.
It has also been striking its own public sector pay deals, avoiding at least some of the industrial action which has hit the NHS elsewhere in the UK.
The divergence continued with the budget statement by The Deputy First Minister in his role as acting finance secretary, covering for Kate Forbes who is on maternity leave.
She was probably glad not to be there, for The First few minutes at least.
The Event began badly amid a row about a leak to The Bbc , with Mr Swinney and his boss, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon , summoned to see the presiding officer Alison Johnstone who wanted to know what was going on.
Proceedings were delayed for More Than half an hour and, when they resumed, from The Press gallery it was hard to hear Ms Johnstone at times as she was Drowned Out by angry opposition MSPs, to her obvious irritation.
That row will pass but Mr Swinney's budget statement will be remembered for pushing Scottish income taxes further away from those in the rest of the UK.
Or, to put it another way, it may go down as The Moment when the SNP leant a little further to The Left — and a lot further than at some points in its history.
Decades ago, when The Party drew much of its support from rural Scotland and competed with Conservatives in Angus, Perthshire and The Like , critics often maligned the nationalists as " Tartan Tories. "
After devolution in 1999 The Party moved onto urban ground, taking votes from Labour in Scotland's old industrial heartlands, most notably in Glasgow and Dundee.
Even then some socialists accused it of timidity, of aping Tony Blair 's New Labour by embracing the capitalist consensus.
The Heart of the constitutional debateNow Mr Swinney has gone some way to addressing that criticism by placing what he calls the " social contract" at the centre of the SNP project, stressing that while middle and higher earners are paying more in Scotland than are those elsewhere in the UK, Scottish taxpayers on the lowest wages are paying less than those in England, Wales and Northern Ireland .
Whether that decision was born out of ideology or necessity is an interesting point to ponder.
The tax and welfare powers of the devolved Scottish state have expanded since the opening of the Scottish Parliament 23 years ago, as illustrated by this very budget.
But, crucially, Holyrood still does not have The Power to borrow, leaving Mr Swinney forced to consider tax hikes, spending cuts or a combination of both, to balance the budget.
Which brings us, inevitably, to independence.
A string of recent polls have suggested that there is currently a majority of voters in Scotland who want to leave the UK.
Supporters of independence say the country could do much better with the Full Range of powers available to independent nations.
Opponents say it would be an economic disaster.
As it happens, both sides point to the cost of living crisis as evidence for their Case — and in that sense this budget, which above all is designed to respond to the economic emergency, is already at The Heart of the constitutional debate.
Source of news: bbc.com