52% refuse to pay home tax!

A propaganda campaign is being waged by the government to disguise the level of non-registration for the Household Tax.

A propaganda campaign is being waged by the government to disguise the level of non-registration for the Household Tax.

There are two lies being told. Firstly, the government is deliberately minimising the number of properties that must register. Willingly aided by most media, the spin is that 1.6 million must register for the charge and that a majority have done so. This is not true.

Census 2011  – the most reliable measure there is – shows 1,994,845 units of housing in the state. When exemptions are taken out, 1.81 million properties must register and 1.76 million are liable to pay it. If you work off the government’s figures, then obviously the non-registration rate would be lower.

The second deception is around the number of actual homeowners who have registered, rather than properties.

In a Dáil answer to Clare Daly TD, 915,408 properties had paid, with 17,167 waivers. On their own, those figures show a powerful boycott level of about 900,000. However, when the detail of the properties is shown, it boosts the boycott figure even more.

Owners of multiple properties and landlords make up 332,900 of those registrations (or 14%.) When these are excluded, the stats for registration by actual HOMEOWNERS looks like this: registered 706,007; not registered 763,249.

This confirms that 52% of owners have not paid the household charge. This should be publicised widely by campaign groups.

A clear majority of home owners are supporting the CAHWT’s boycott call. This has even been acknowledged by the troika in their comments to government.
Let’s ensure as high a level as possible is maintained when the government piles on the threats in the summer or autumn.

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

Greece day 4: A New Democracy struggle and the struggle ahead

Next Article

Wallace must take obligation to repay tax debt seriously

Related Posts

Golden Circle Developers leave D15 high & dry

By Councillor Ruth Coppinger

IMAGINE THOUSANDS of houses left bereft of schools, open space or a community centre for years. Imagine green areas, playgrounds, parks and pitches left unfinished and/or withheld from residents for years while builders move on happily to their next profitable project. 

Read More

London’s Burning: Looking back at the Brixton riots of 1981

The recent riots in the most unequal borough in the UK - Tottenham, London - in response to the shooting of Mark Duggan by police have many parrallels with the Brixton riots in London 30 years ago. In advance of a fuller analysis of the recent events, we repost an article for our readers from April of this year, where the Socialist Party of England and Wales (our sister group) loked back at the Brixton riots on it's thirtieth anniversary and warned that the "conditions for new 'Brixtons' are being prepared".