Sentences with phrase «tax exiles»

«This ruling could open the floodgates for HMRC to pursue thousands of British tax exiles for backdated tax.
Jason Collins, partner at McGrigors, says tax exiles «urgently» need to review their financial affairs in light of the ruling.
There is simply no comparison with the strict regime imposed on trade union political donations and the far more lax arrangements that are in place for the corporate donors and tax exiles who bankroll the Tory Party.
The reason it wasn't adopted was because the Conservatives walked out, keen to protect donations from tax exiles such as Lord Ashcroft.
«There is an amendment there which was passed in the Lords to deprive tax exiles of the right to make donations to political parties.
The interim Ukip leader boasted to the room of donors, tax exiles and newspaper barons, that his movement was now on the march.
Labour and Lib Dem peers have inflicted a blow against the government after they passed an amendment to the political parties and elections bill barring tax exiles from donating to political parties.
Gordon Brown's authority faces another test as Labour backbenchers square up over an amendment barring tax exiles from being party donors.
MPs voted to ban tax exiles like Lord Ashcroft from making large donations to political parties last like, after a U-turn from Jack Straw.
The government has performed a spectacular U-turn on the law concerning party donations from tax exiles, losing cross-party consensus as a result.
Already, the U.K. press has pounced on his wife's tweet about the availability of a decent home in the city — in reference to French tax exiles leaving, and perhaps easing, the sky - high housing costs in London.
«The offshore system is ultimately not about celebrity tax exiles and mobsters,» Shaxson writes.
Grubbs responded to the complaint by characterizing Browder's OFAC filing as an attempt to obfuscate Russia's side of the story and slamming the wealthy investor as «a billionaire tax exile
And I mean the wealthy, not the merely well - off: only someone with a net worth of at least several million dollars is likely to find it worthwhile to become a tax exile,
He said: «The bigger story here... it is quite astonishing that a tax exile of more than 10 years decides to lay into and make a political intervention which is essentially what this is on social media in a very public way.»
In his speech in Swansea, he will return to his attacks on the boss of Boots for being a tax exile and on a Conservative peer's use of a Swiss bank account.
The exchanges between the then prime minister, Tony Blair, the then leader of the opposition, William Hague, and the honours scrutiny committee detail how Ashcroft was twice turned down for a peerage, partly because of concerns about his status as a «tax exile».
Former tax exile Andrew Rosenfeld's # 1 million pledge to the Labour party has attracted the anger of a Conservative MP, John Glen, the Financial Times newspaper reported.
Cameron attacks Labour for using a tax exile for their election campaign.
It was Mr Hague, as Tory leader, who put Mr Ashcroft forward for a peerage in March 1999, but the honours scrutiny committee turned him down on the grounds that he was a tax exile.
End tax exile by following the US and taxing without reference to either the location of the earner's domicile or the country of the income's origin.
-- Tracey Emin is not about to leave Britain as a tax exile interview independent.co.uk — What's Tracey Emin's problem with the Guardian?
Gaines - Cooper was heard alongside another tax exile case involving two men who worked in Belgium for a whole tax year.

Not exact matches

Competing teams will include the exiled people of Tibet, the Zimbabwean region of Matabeleland, and, erm, the tax haven of the Isle of Man.
Given the 15 % property transfer tax on foreign real estate buyers in Metro Vancouver, though, British Columbian's should not expect a flock of Trump exiles to re-fuel Metro Vancouver housing market anytime soon.
Self - exile is often depicted as a form of protest by the person that claims it, to avoid persecution or legal matters (such as tax or criminal allegations), an act of shame or repentance, or isolating oneself to be able to devote time to a particular thing.
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