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The press release [8] was issued on 9 March 1999, the same day as the Chancellor of the Exchequer's Budget Statement. IR35 came into force throughout the UK in April 2000. Although it was part of that year's Finance Act and was not law at the start of the Financial Year, the Act backdated its commencement to 6 April 2000.
The Vote Leave campaign used a large red battle bus in the lead up to the 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum.A decal on the side of the bus made the false claim and following pledge that "We send the EU £350 million a week, let's fund our NHS instead", [1] accompanied with the slogan "Let's take back control". [2]
The levy charges £350 on each parking space made available to employees at businesses with more than ten such parking spaces. The council have used the revenue of around £10 million a year to develop the city's tram system. [46] There has been a 9% reduction in traffic and 15% increase in public transport use since the introduction of the ...
The Office for Budget Responsibility now projects taxes as a share of GDP to climb to 37.4 per cent in the 2025-2026 financial year – surpassing the previous record of 37.2 per cent in 1948, and ...
The Act limits the total amount of money available to social security claimants. As of 2013 – the year that the cap was first introduced – total benefits paid to a single person could not exceed £350 per week; the maximum available to families (single parents and couples with children) was £500 per week.
The clip shows her running towards the waves with her back to the camera before stopping to trace “2025” in the sand before running away dressed in an all-white outfit.
Hundreds of children’s care home placements are costing councils over £10,000 a week, new figures obtained by The Independent show.. English councils are spending these staggering amounts for ...
A "Vote Leave" poster in Omagh saying "We send the EU £50 million every day. Let's spend it on our NHS instead." Michael Dougan, Professor of European Law at the University of Liverpool, in a viral video of one of his lectures prior to the referendum, described the Leave campaign as peddling "dishonesty on an industrial scale". [91] [92]