P/T Indie wrote:You would end up with more coallation governments on those figures labour would go with snp so tories would have to go with UKIP Meaning UKIP would get a big say on Govt. Also a lot more chance it wouldn't work and the govt would break up. A bit OTT but that's how Hitler got in through coallations.
P/T Indie wrote:No not at all that wasn't aimed at UKIP My post was two parts one saying the SNP and UKIP would suddenly get a big say. THE second part just saying PR can be dangerous If you look back over history.
BoroRedShrimp wrote:SolentShrimp wrote:
Labour created the Benefits culture, making scrounging a much better option than working.
Think if you do you're research you'll find it was the Tories who created Incapacity Benefit.
It replaced Invalidity Benefit which I believe was also introduced during a Tory reign.
The Tories like to make out they reduce unemployment but basically they like to reduce figures.
Last I heard there was more people not working full time but not counted in the unemployed figure as they were students, not claiming, etc than with the last Labour government.
SolentShrimp wrote:BoroRedShrimp wrote:SolentShrimp wrote:
Labour created the Benefits culture, making scrounging a much better option than working.
Think if you do you're research you'll find it was the Tories who created Incapacity Benefit.
It replaced Invalidity Benefit which I believe was also introduced during a Tory reign.
The Tories like to make out they reduce unemployment but basically they like to reduce figures.
Last I heard there was more people not working full time but not counted in the unemployed figure as they were students, not claiming, etc than with the last Labour government.
There' a bit of a difference between who introduced the Benefit, and who made claiming Benefits an easy way of making a comfortable way of living for the rest of their lives.
Freez wrote:..and yet some Tory silver spooner was on the news at teatime saying they will continue to cut the deficit, when they have actually borrowed more!!
All of them couldn't lie straight in bed.
Wild Bill wrote:The coalition could and should have cleared the deficit during the last parliament, as they clearly promised; if they had not chocked off the recovery (yes GDP was growing when they took over in 2010) and offered a blended plan of necessary cuts along with tax rises.
With the vicious cuts the economy dipped back in to recession and then flat lined for years. There was a cost of living crisis for most of the parliament, but fortunately for them this eased during the last 12 months or so, right in time for the election.
If the Coalition was serious about about cutting the deficit and looking after working people, why on earth did they give a whopping 5% tax breaks to the wealthiest? To make this acceptable to the masses they offered piecemeal cuts to those on low incomes by raising the personal allowance.
Common sense tells us deficit needs to be cleared, but its its blatantly being used as a smokescreen by the Tories to implement their ideological cuts to the public sector and change the voting attitudes of the population. Sadly it appears to be working quite well right now.
Freez wrote:Thanks I'm fully aware of the difference between deficit and for borrowing, the two are different but inextricably linked.
My point was the Conservatives have persistently criticized previous Governments for borrowing too much, then hypocrisy was rife and they did the same. Necessity? Quite possibly. Then don't use it to attack the other side!
Freez wrote:My point was the Conservatives have persistently criticized previous Governments for borrowing too much, then hypocrisy was rife and they did the same. Necessity? Quite possibly. Then don't use it to attack the other side!
Phil Anderer wrote:We were frankly horrified at the prospect of Miliband outlawing zero hours contracts, as it would have left her struggling to get the work she needs.
Wild Bill wrote:SoletShrimp seems to be basing the whole debate on what he has been fed from the shamefully biased Murdoch press. Do you really think the Tories didn't know the state of the economy until they received a tongue in cheek note from a departing political rival? Get a grip.
Wild Bill wrote:Few charts to give some balance to the debate:
http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Gua ... or-001.jpg
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10613201
http://www.ukpublicspending.co.uk/uk_na ... chart.html
Think its clear that both Labour and the Conservatives have had some successes and failures running the national economy over the last 25 years. Lets be honest, the financial crisis could have happened just as easily to the Tories as they believe in the free market and actually deregulated the market back in the 1980s. Labour's biggest mistake was leaving things how they were.
SoletShrimp seems to be basing the whole debate on what he has been fed from the shamefully biased Murdoch press. Do you really think the Tories didn't know the state of the economy until they received a tongue in cheek note from a departing political rival? Get a grip.
Wild Bill wrote:A day before the general election and no political thread? Have we all had enough already?
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