or should I call it "Tax Brakes"?
No, this story is about tax discs not disc brakes.
I'm not sure why George Osborne announced that he was scrapping the Tax Disc this afternoon.
Because everyone knew that it was happening this morning - along with the rest of his Autumn Statement. The BBC had it here. Autocar had it here.
They used this picture. That registration number belongs to a Range-Rover. I wonder if it was just parked outside their offices or it belongs to a member of staff there - it isn't the one that comes up if you look for a review of a Range-Rover on their site.
The BBC have also used this as an excuse to bring back their occasional (and amusing) RIP item with "R.I.P. Car Tax Disc". These sometimes prompt amusing tributes from the readership - I await these in mild anticipation.
What the scrapping of the discs doesn't mean, though, is the scrapping of the tax. That will continue to be collected and the Police will have access to the databases which tell them who has actually paid - although your average traffic warden or nosey neighbour won't be able to easily tell.
The tax itself is "vehicle excise duty" not "road tax". I make this point because this comes up every time anyone mentions tax discs - it comes up a lot in the comments at the end of the main BBC article. Cyclists generally make this point a lot.
I am an occasional cyclist myself but very much take the Jeremy Clarkson point-of-view on this: