Labour's proposal of a mansion tax is political posturing at its worst.
It is Ed Miliband saying to the common man, "Look, we hate rich people! Please vote for us....... " before forgetting the rest of his speech.
I'm disappointed in Ed Miliband, his policies are sounding so inconsequential. Instead of putting forward a coherent and decisive strategy to make the UK more equal, he is out to patronise, offering up these moronic policy nuggets in hope they might appear greater than they really are.
We have three main parties in England, each offering the exact same political cake, but for the colour of the icing. Instead of three victoria sponges, voters want coffee, walnut and carrot. We want a real choice instead of this pretend version. No wonder nobody bothers voting these days.
I was hoping that post 'New Labour' we might get something different, more left, but sadly we have a party lead by Blair's B-team, with a centre forward that really should have been left back - in the changing rooms ( that's an Ed Miliband style pun for you, painfully funny I know. )
These misfits are desperately trying to appear connected to real people, when quite clearly they are not, and never at any point in their lives have been. Listening to the two Ed's is like sitting through David Brent at his most cringe-worthy sincere - the toe curling embarrassment of their speeches makes me perspire.
Ok, end of my rant, and back to mansion tax proposal - it's a rubbish idea.
The premise that if you live in a £2 million pound house you should pay 1 percent of its value is ridiculous and totally impractical, and I can't begin to imagine the kind of games and disputes that will go on for those living in properties around the £2 million figure.
If Labour do get into power, expect a long list of embarrassing data releases, until after a wasteful couple of years the policy is dropped.
RICS response about the proposed mansion tax was" a classic pre-election sweetener that would be unfair, fraught with unintended consequences and which could not cover increased NHS spending alone."
Surely, there are better and simpler ways of increasing the tax burden on the rich?
Unfortunately, two Eds are clearly not bright enough to think of it.