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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 05 May 10 - 07:05 PM Gervase, thank you, but I am sure he said "Do not be ordinary". It was the dead rat smack - and we have seen it all come true. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Lox Date: 05 May 10 - 06:35 PM The Main argument against the tories is that they claim to be the anti tax party, yet they will up VAT. VAT is the poor mans tax. So they will punish the poor for the mistakes of the bankers, while giving tax breaks to the rich. That isn't unfair, its cruel. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Bonzo3legs Date: 05 May 10 - 06:09 PM It is proposed that fatuous jokes like that, along with 'ZaNuLabour', and 'Liebore', have officially jumped the shark. Grow up and get over it. Or do you really want to go back to a world where you can call someone a nigger or insist that a woman does the same job for less pay? Actually, you probably do, don't you? It's part of the Monster Raving Looney Party policies, and I think it's very funny. Another one - a solution for shortening the dole queues - make them stand closer together!!!!! |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: The Sandman Date: 05 May 10 - 05:51 PM Mcgrath,I agree it is a good speech. I hope Gordon Brown wins the election. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Gervase Date: 05 May 10 - 05:45 PM It is proposed that fatuous jokes like that, along with 'ZaNuLabour', and 'Liebore', have officially jumped the shark. Grow up and get over it. Or do you really want to go back to a world where you can call someone a nigger or insist that a woman does the same job for less pay? Actually, you probably do, don't you? |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Bonzo3legs Date: 05 May 10 - 05:40 PM It is proposed that The European Union end its discrimination by creating a "Court of Human Lefts" because their present policy is one_sided. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Gervase Date: 05 May 10 - 04:33 PM Kinnock's words today seem prescient, even if they might make uncomfortable reading for his succesors. Nevertheless, substitue 'Cameron' for 'Thatcher' and it still sends a chill down the spine. If Margaret Thatcher is re-elected as prime minister on Thursday, I warn you. I warn you that you will have pain – when healing and relief depend upon payment. I warn you that you will have ignorance – when talents are untended and wits are wasted, when learning is a privilege and not a right. I warn you that you will have poverty – when pensions slip and benefits are whittled away by a government that won't pay in an economy that can't pay. I warn you that you will be cold – when fuel charges are used as a tax system that the rich don't notice and the poor can't afford. I warn you that you must not expect work – when many cannot spend, more will not be able to earn. When they don't earn, they don't spend. When they don't spend, work dies. I warn you not to go into the streets alone after dark or into the streets in large crowds of protest in the light. I warn you that you will be quiet – when the curfew of fear and the gibbet of unemployment make you obedient. I warn you that you will have defence of a sort – with a risk and at a price that passes all understanding. I warn you that you will be home-bound – when fares and transport bills kill leisure and lock you up. I warn you that you will borrow less – when credit, loans, mortgages and easy payments are refused to people on your melting income. If Margaret Thatcher wins on Thursday, I warn you not to be ordinary. I warn you not to be young. I warn you not to fall ill. I warn you not to get old. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Bonzo3legs Date: 05 May 10 - 01:12 PM And all you inverted snobs will have to live with it! |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Stu Date: 05 May 10 - 12:41 PM Malcolm Tucker sum's up the Tory manifesto: ". . . the one their design agency pitched as the Dangerous Book for Boys crossed with the Bible. And we need to be savage but creative about the contents. The Stasi on acid. Maybe they have a secret plan for a supertax on cats? Monday after the election, aren't they going to ask for winter fuel payments back? The angle is, if it isn't explicitly ruled out, the toffee-nosed bastards are thinking about doing it." |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 05 May 10 - 12:10 PM I fear I must echo the last heartfelt words of Neil Kinnock as potential PM. "Under the conservatives, do not be sick, do not be poor, do not be ordinary". Maybe not an exact quote. If we get the conservatives and their fellow-travellers, god help us. In the new Rochester and Strood the "banker" "Reckless" (a real Alan B'stard clone) is not only praising the Lib dems for their "constructive" support for the conservatives on the local council but trying to steal the credit due to Labour with support from the Lib Dems in opposing school closures proposed by his own party. And UKIP had bottled, to support him. Do we really want a "banker" called "Reckless"? |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 04 May 10 - 04:36 PM There was a sort of unofficial fourth debate on May 3rd yesterday, at a rally of Citizens UK - a pity Gordon Brown couldn't have let rip like this when millions were watching the TV Debates - here is his speech at Citizens UK |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 26 Apr 10 - 06:31 PM He may not be nice but he does seem pretty on the ball. I am getting very worried about the way Clegg is cosying up to Cameron and vice versa. I have recently discovered that my local Lib-Dem candidate, Geoff Juby, has been supportive of some conservative moves on teh local council. That is making me think very hard about whether I would vote for him in a two-horse conservative/Lib-Dem race, if that was what we were going to get after the recent boundary changes here. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Lox Date: 26 Apr 10 - 05:13 PM Because he was mentioned above, therefore a part of the conversation, and therefore subject to an opinion/reaction, as is anything else that has been said in this thread, if anyone chooses to opine on it or react to it. In this case the opinion (mine) is that he is not a journalist of any merit/substance, and that any comment, line of questioning or other involvement he has in any part of the political process is not of any substantive interest. In short, he is a preposterous, jumped up, populist, sensationalist. I think he and people like him damage politics and the political process and besides, he makes my skin crawl. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 26 Apr 10 - 02:43 PM How is it in any way relevant whether Andrew Neil is "insufferable" or not? He's not trying to get elected. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Lox Date: 26 Apr 10 - 02:23 PM Andrew Neil? Don't tell me you pay hin any attention ... ... The man is insufferable! |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: GUEST Date: 25 Apr 10 - 06:45 PM The axe will fall everywhere irrespective of which party actually wins. The pledge "no cuts in frontline staff" is meaningless. The consultant you see may be frontline and still there but if (as is already happening) there is no-one to type his letter in a timely manner then the fact that you've been seen in two weeks or whatever is irrelevant. The figures are so bad that no-one is daring to tell the truth. Steve |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 25 Apr 10 - 06:30 PM I had to be amused at Ken Clarke being quizzed by Andrew Neil tonight. The only remaining great beaast in the conservative jungle was tapdancing around questions about where the conservative axe would fall, and Neil let him squirm, without ever quite going to the "lies in Labour pamplets" point. All the more effective a demolition for that, I thought. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 25 Apr 10 - 05:57 PM A warning that someone may do something in the future cannot be a lie, strictly speaking, unless there something has already occurred which means that it is impossible for them to do that. That's not a matter of political opinion, it's a matter of elementary logic. Speculations about the possible actions of a future government, or about the consequences of those actions, are a normal part of the political process. So are complaints about such speculations. All parties go in for both. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 25 Apr 10 - 05:20 PM For a lawyer, you are really inept at twisting others' words. I have made no attempt to gag you, Which part of "I ask nobody to vote for any particular party. You please yourselves" was beyond your power to comprehend? I shall simply refuse to respond to your increasingly intemperate, not to say desperate language. I can't see why it is so essential to your psychological well being to win me over. From my point of view, it is you who inhabit the dark side. The difference between us is that I am quite content for you to remain there. You have your opinion, I have mine. Rant away, I'll not be here. Otherwise one of us will step over the line, and I don't intend to be that one. Don T. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 25 Apr 10 - 04:56 PM I will not be gagged by agreement or otherwise Don. I am shocked by the harm that you intend to do to the nation and in particular those less privileged in it - all seemingly in service to a system that has done great dis-service to you. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 25 Apr 10 - 04:29 PM ""I don't think that this was an occasion of a Labour Party untruth, even if the truth was told in a way calculated to cause alarm."" Now even you are doing it. Without a shred of evidence, you put on your prediction persona, and make a statement designed to alarm and mislead by intimating that Cameron may do this, that, and the other. Twist it how you like, such a statement is a lie, and were you selling a product, you would be liable, under current legislation, to legal sanction. Or did you perhaps learn the technique while selling fire alarms to pensioners? A party Manifesto is not intended to be a complete and definitive description of the whole of the next five years' actions, but a general outline of the salient features of proposed policy. What you are selling is a lame duck, and if you can point to things Cameron did not include in his party's Manifesto, and claim that to be indicative of intent, then you are not a very good lawyer. I would suggest that I could find at least as many items not included in New Labour's Manifesto, and make the same dumb claims, but I've got more sense. In any case, I don't need to predict some nebulous future possibilities. I can point to thirteen years of his abysmal record, his dishonesty, and his ineptitude, and judging by the polls, I'm not the only one that sees it. I'm not interested in any more of your inane attempts to make everyone conform to your opinion. I ask nobody to vote for any particular party. You please yourselves. I vote as I wish and I simply don't give a toss whether anyone likes it or not. I choose my path, not you....LIVE WITH IT! It's called freedom of choice, and I'm surprised at the number on this forum who only believe in it when it applies to themselves. You and I, Richard, will always be poles apart politically and I see no way to remedy that. It has never made any difference to the fact that we are good friends, and I want that situation to continue. I shall take no further part in any political thread in which you are involved. We agree to disagree, and leave it at that, Yes? Don T. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 24 Apr 10 - 07:11 PM As for the unfair results which the existing electoral system can have, if it ends up with a perverse result in which the loser gets most seats, it'll be pretty rich if the Tories complain about that, since they are the people who are committed to keeping that system - and the same goes for the people who vote for them. After all, they've benefited in the past from this - back in 1951 the Attlee government lost power to the Conservatives after getting more popular votes in the General Election. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 24 Apr 10 - 06:54 PM Where can I see the video? BBC iPlayer have it. Put "Sky News" in its Search. ........................... If the Tories didn't say in their manifesto they are going to continue to provide benefits that were introduced by Labour, and which they opposed in some cases, it seems reasonable enough to warn people that they are at risk if there is a Tory win. For that matter even when they do promise to keep them in their manifesto, that's no guarantee they'll keep that promise. It never is with any party - after all, Labour promised a referendum on Electoral Reform back in 1997, and ratted on that. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: MikeL2 Date: 24 Apr 10 - 10:05 AM Richard I don't think it was an untruth either..... I have the leaflet and it clearly does not contain any untruths. cheers MikeL2 |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: s&r Date: 24 Apr 10 - 09:57 AM What is Cameron bleating on about with 'unelected PMs'? We don't elect PMs in the UK. You'd have thought a public school education would have taught him the difference between a PM and a president... Stu |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 24 Apr 10 - 06:25 AM MikeL2 - I don't think that this was an occasion of a Labour Party untruth, even if the truth was told in a way calculated to cause alarm. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: MikeL2 Date: 24 Apr 10 - 05:24 AM Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Don(Wyziwyg)T - PM Date: 23 Apr 10 - 10:20 AM Hi don Do I see a case of pot calling kettle black here ?? Scaremongering (if it happened - which is doubtful ) is not only used bt the Labour Party. I refer to Kenneth Clarke's outburst this week saying that if the Conservatives didn't win the election the country would be plunged into much deeper debt. There is no basis for this statement and indeed many financial "experts" are rubbishing this. Clark is a seasoned politition who knows exactly what he is saying and what impact his claims will have - or at least he should do !! He has had to try to back out of a statement he made about the Goverment's financing of Vauxhall in Ellesmere Port. So scaremongering with untruths is not confined to the Labour party. Cheers MikeL2 |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 23 Apr 10 - 02:15 PM Actually, Don, the quotes that I have seen from the accused pamphlets say "could lose". Since, until Cameron rapidly made policy on the hoof, conservative policy was not to say what if anything would be ringfenced in that area, the statement "could lose" was absolutely correct, and indeed the possibility of those losses was a distinct risk. Thus there were no lies such as you attribute. Thus Brown's denials that there were such lies or that he had authorised them were wholly true. Your accusation is as ill founded as (it seems) your assertion (of which another person recently reminded me) that the Brown government had reduced your income by £80 per week. You might have intended to say "month" but you definitely said "week". Even if you meant "month" is seems improbable since you were going off about the 10p tax rate and the best information I have been able to find without wasting too much time is that the theoretical maximum loss from that change was £223 per year and that once pensioners reached 65 other effects turned them into net gainers. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 23 Apr 10 - 10:20 AM ""What was the story beheind Camerons accusation of a leaaflet telling lies and Brown saying he had sanctioned no such leaflet?"" All over the country pensioners have received leaflets from New Labour, claiming that, if David Cameron gets in, they will lose winter fuel payments, free bus passes, free eye tests, and a lot besides. Typical scaremongering by a desperate politician trying to hang on to power! What else is new? Well, what is new is that Gordon Brown, when asked about this during the debate, at first denied the exixtence of the leaflets, and then, under pressure, stated that he didn't sanction them. On "The Daily Politics" BBC 2 TV, a screenshot from New Labour's official website was displayed, showing the same lies (which may well by now have been swiftly removed). One wonders how anyone who is either a scaremongering liar, or a puppet frontman, ignorant of what is being done in his name, can be trusted to run a country. There are a lot of people here calling David Cameron a liar, based on their expectations (unsupported by evidence) that he will not keep his word. But Gordon Brown is proven to be either a liar or a fool, on current, incontrovertible, evidence. Don T. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Dave the Gnome Date: 23 Apr 10 - 08:45 AM What was the story beheind Camerons accusation of a leaaflet telling lies and Brown saying he had sanctioned no such leaflet? The stories I have seen are not clear about what the leaflets were and where they came from. It's probably there but I have mental block when it comes to politics and newspapers. Stops my brain leaking out of my ears... DeG |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 23 Apr 10 - 07:43 AM Incidentally the flyer that arrived today for the Lib-Dems in the new Rochester and Strood constituency, which even if the admirable Bob Marshall-Andrwes had not retired would on the last election's stats have been slightly conservative (it's the nice country hice new rural bits wot causes that) asserts that the LDs are statistically (on current swings) likely to take the seat. Regrettably it's a set of poor candidates. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 23 Apr 10 - 06:25 AM It was on BBC news (Freeview 80) and that may lead you to a replay link. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Lox Date: 23 Apr 10 - 06:14 AM Where can I see the video? I've tried Sky 1 online but to no avail ... |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: GUEST,Allan Date: 23 Apr 10 - 02:25 AM "I dislike Gordon Brown intensely and wonder why if they have the smallest % vote that they will have the greatest seats. That is just disgusting." Because it doesn't depend on how many votes you have as much as how these votes are spread through the country. The Lib Dems vote is far more evenly spread hence they struggle to gain seats. The only major party to still openly oppose reform is the Conservative Party though. Labour may indeed become the largest party with a smaller vote - and actually that happened in English constituencies at the last election. Labour may be unenthusiastically (for obvious reasons) moving towards reform but it looks like the only thing that would stop it now is a clear Tory majority or them being near enough to a majority so that they don't need Lib Dem support. For instance if they could work a deal with the unionist MPs from Northern Ireland or something. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Mavis Enderby Date: 23 Apr 10 - 01:51 AM "Brown combines mastery of the facts and figures with moments of genuine conviction" - if only..... |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 22 Apr 10 - 06:07 PM Well, I am disappointed that the rest of the viewers did not see what I did, apparently. While Oily Cameron picks his 6th form debating points it seems to me that only Brown combines mastery of the facts and figures with moments of genuine conviction (for example on sexual equality). Amusing to see Cameron so skewered on bus passes and winter fuel - it's a fact that until tonight there was no official conservative promise on bus passes, nor winter fuel. Who was that presenter? I did not like him. Two fingers to Rupert Murdoch is a good plan. He remains a menace to democracy - as rabid as the Spectator, but alas covering much more ground. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Acorn4 Date: 22 Apr 10 - 05:08 PM i think it would be just as much use for the three of them to have a darts match! |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Lox Date: 22 Apr 10 - 04:50 PM Another reason to vote lib dem is to give a strong message to rupert murdoch that he DOES NOT represent us. The fact that his rags have gone for cleggs throat like rabid dogs shows what a corrupt scoundrel murdoch is. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: GUEST,The Smiler Date: 22 Apr 10 - 04:42 PM I have just listened to the latest debate. I am not happy that a greater % vote does not give a party overall control of the country. I am appalled that a 30% vote for Lib Dems still makes them a lesser party than the other 2 twatbags. Conservatives do not fill me with any faith. I dislike Gordon Brown intensely and wonder why if they have the smallest % vote that they will have the greatest seats. That is just disgusting. So I am going to vote Lib Dem in the hope that twatbag Brown and his crap party can be held in control over the next few years. My vote will unfortunatley give twatbag Brown the chance to carry on as PM (god forbid us ) but at least it will give the Lib Dems a chance to stop them (Labour)taking the piss out of the British public. I am not happy, but I have to make my choice. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 22 Apr 10 - 11:42 AM BBC comparison of key policies It leaves out the Lib-Dem plans to close funding gaps by clamping down on tax loopholes, which raises interesting questions of legal methodoligy. I find there is only one conservative key policy that I think attractive, and only one Labour that I do not. Interesting that only Labour want to stick with the new pass laws. I find that unattractive. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Dave the Gnome Date: 22 Apr 10 - 05:25 AM It's round 2 tonight. 8pm on Sky 1. Discussing foreign policy. I would guess questions on Iraq and Afganistan will be to the fore. I liked Will Carlings ideas this morning. For thos that do not know, Will has been nominated by Chris Evans as the total inappropriate political correspondant. He knows nothing about politics and wishes to know even less:-) His idea was to make the debate mre interesting by having the candidates dress as their favourite super-heroes and enabling the audience to respond in panto style - "Answer the question!", "He's behind you!" and "Oh no he isn't". Sounds good to me. Cheers DeG |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 22 Apr 10 - 04:36 AM If your priority is to unseat Labour you should go and read teh fable of King Log and King Stork. Unless you are stinking rich of course. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Lox Date: 21 Apr 10 - 07:00 PM "If your priority is to unseat Labour your best chance would probably be to vote Tory. And if you want a chance to be able to elect a Green candidate someday, you need to hold your nose, and vote for whoever has the best chance to beat the Tory." It isn't, but if it were, the Tories 'In my Constituency' would be a bad choice of alternative. In Lewisham the Greens are Labours biggest challengers. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 21 Apr 10 - 02:30 PM If your priority is to unseat Labour your best chance would probably be to vote Tory. And if you want a chance to be able to elect a Green candidate someday, you need to hold your nose, and vote for whoever has the best chance to beat the Tory. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 20 Apr 10 - 10:24 PM RB@DT - Hoofuckingray |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Lox Date: 20 Apr 10 - 08:53 PM I have discovered that my constituency in south London, is one of three that have a chance of electing a green MP for once. It would be interesting indeed. I will see who polls higher for our seat - the greens or lib dem - and I will support whichever one is most likely to unseat labour. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: melodeonboy Date: 20 Apr 10 - 07:33 PM I saw the Green Party manifesto launch and found that there wasn't much I could disagree with. Unfortunately, there's no Green Party candidate in my constituency, so I shall have to vote for one of the other Herberts! (Either that or spoil the ballot paper!) |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 20 Apr 10 - 06:55 PM ""I know my enemy, and it beggars belief that you do not know yours."" Your enemies are a sad old woman on her last legs, and a rabid hatred for anything to the right of Stalin. Bottom line T'ain't worth arguing with you. It seems that we will have five more years of Mr Bean, who has amply deonstrated his lack of qualifications for the job, along with the whizz kid hanging off his coat tails, so by the next general election I should be nicely placed to serve your words up for lunch. Bon Appetit. I'm outa here. Don T. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 20 Apr 10 - 06:32 PM The Conservative Party is committed to retaining a voting system under which it is possible to win an election by losing the vote and lose it by winning the vote. The other two parties are committed to giving the electorate a chance to change that system. That's reason enough to hope for a Tory defeat. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 20 Apr 10 - 05:58 PM Don, look at what the backwoodsmen say about travelling second class. Look at what the front benchers say about any non blue rinse lifestyle. Look at the plainly innumerate plans to save money from "efficiency". Look at the untruthfulness in one day saying Labour was not cutting deeply or taxing enough and the next day objecting to National Insurance rises. Anyone who believes that the core of the conservative party has changed would believe in the tooth fairy. I know my enemy, and it beggars belief that you do not know yours. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 20 Apr 10 - 05:46 PM ""Very much in keeping with St Matthew's Gospel - "So the last shall be first, and the first last", but I think it's not really a healthy way to run a democracy."" Nor is it a particularly brilliant way to run a democracy, if you continue to vote for a bunch of proven corrupt failures, simply because the alternative choice was once led by somebody you hated, twenty years ago. Even though all the labour voters here know that their party is neither socialist nor "Labour", they are hard wired to believe that nothing has changed, or can ever change, in the Conservative Party. They hold this view, in spite of the fact that New Labour is actually challenging the current Tory Party for the most right wing position. If New Labour could move from near Communism to where it is today, it is illogical to believe that Conservatism cannot move half that distance, especially as it is self evident that it has already done so. Who was it, on the day that the expenses scandal came to light, who said that any member of his party who did not make restitution would not stand as a candidate again, and made it so. A CLUE! It wasn't Gordon Brown, nor was it Nick Clegg. Who was it, after several days of deliberation, who sacked a couple of his culpable MPs, who were not exactly his best friends, while allowing others, equally culpable but more loyal, not only to retain their positions, but to appeal against paying back money. Don T. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 20 Apr 10 - 03:37 PM Only way to get electoral reform is if neither Tories nor Labour have a majority. Then we can have a proper election. The present system means that it is possible that the party coming third in number of votes will get the largest number of MPs, and the party comimg first in number of votes will get the smallest number of MPs. Very much in keeping with St Matthew's Gospel - "So the last shall be first, and the first last", but I think it's not really a healthy way to run a democracy. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 20 Apr 10 - 01:13 PM I composed another long and thoughtful post - but fucking Opera crashed again and ate it. I've had enough. I'm going to find out how to export bookmarks and go back to the dark side. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 20 Apr 10 - 12:53 PM Most MPs are in it for what they can get. A few I am sure make less than if they were full time at their other professions - Bob Marshall Andrews QC could I am sure have made a lot lot more if he pushed his profession as barrister to the limit. I don't see sufficient evidence to conclude that Labour MPs on the whole are more venal than conservative. I bought a house once from the then Labour Gravesham MP and it was quite modest and not at all flash. But those things are not the central thrust. The central thrust is who is for what. The conservatives are for free market capitalism and the rich. Labour has been hijacked by what economic theory terms neo-liberals (free-market capitalists) but the it is on a basis of alleged necessity not enthusiasm, and the core belief is still that the rich should help the poor not the other way round. Even the willowy Mandelbaum is merely "intensely relaxed" about people (including him) getting rich. Don: Brown did not promise no overall tax rise. He got trapped in promising no income tax rise, and that's what he delivered. Even his biggest income tax cockup (and I don't think the figures on it are as bad as you say they were) was the withdrawal of a tax reduction previously introduced by Labour in 1999. I would consider voting Lib-Dem now that we have locally lost Bob Marshall-Andrews, if I thought that that would not merely divide the opposition to the conservatives. But the most important thing for the country (apart from the Gestapo re-enactment society) is to be sure that never, never, again do we let capitalists make war on the rest of society. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Arnie Date: 20 Apr 10 - 11:25 AM My local Labour MP has managed to end up with three homes, two of them in London. He did explain how he ended up with three homes on public expenses some time ago, but I've forgotten the details now. Not bad for someone who started out working on the ferries. The Tory candidate hasn't bothered putting in an appearance so far, perhaps he's thrown in the towel already as this is/was a safe Labour seat. So that leaves an equally anonymous Lib Dem candidate who may well get my vote simply because he isn't one of the other pair. I'm fed up with the whole shower of politicians and their hangers-on, especially the spin doctors and press secretaries. What sort of despicable lowlife could think that 9/11 was a good day on which to release bad news? She was Byers' press secretary I recall, and look what he's been up to recently. I still believe in voting, but despair at the shower that end up on the green benches. I despair just as much at the shower who end up on the red benches - especially as their Lordships have all escaped prosecution despite fiddling their expenses for decades. Somewhere online you can view the mansion that Baroness Uddin has built in Bangladesh on taxpayers money, and meanwhile living in Housing Association accommodation in London meant for families on low incomes. You have really got to wonder how these people can live with their consciences. Are politicians a breed apart from ordinary people, or do they start out ok but become subverted by the taxpayer-funded gravy-train they've managed to get on-board? |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 20 Apr 10 - 10:09 AM ""That greed was what captured the stage that BLiar walked upon. Slowly Labour was edging away from that. There is no way that there will be anything other than a return to it if the conservatives return to more direct power. I suppose if you want to get back to forelock tugging and the poor giving to the rich you can vote for it. Makes no sense (much like Cameron's budgetary plans) to me"" Far from edging away from it, New Labour jumped in at the deep end, spent all the dosh, and wound up out of their depth. Their heads are still under water, but they don't realise it because they've got 'em stuck up their a***s. Incidentally, forelock tugging went out some time (about 150 years) ago, but since you pay no attention to what is happening outside of your preferred party, you obviously wouldn't be aware of that. My local Conservative candidate is a very pleasant, hard working, young woman, who is a damn sight easier to deal with than the incumbent New Labourite, who seems to feel that it is an imposition to be contacted by constituents. Strange isn't it? He's posh and ill mannered, and it takes ages for him to respond (a fortnight to answer an E-Mail), only to say he can't help. The young lady is down to earth, state school educated, and an E-Mail gets a response within 24 hours, and the response is polite and helpful. If she is unable to help, she usually knows a man/woman who can, and puts you in touch. If you walk around with blinkers and dark glasses, you miss a lot of what's happening all around you. Don T. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 20 Apr 10 - 09:53 AM ""Don, you know as well as I do that the taxes that rose were not those that had been promised not to rise."" Tell that fairy tale to the pensioners who thought Tony B Liar was a GOD, when he gave them a £5 per week increase, only to realise three months down the line that he had taken £4.50 of it back in hidden taxes. It matters little to those on a fixed income which tax went up. They still had to pay it. Don T. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 20 Apr 10 - 09:43 AM Naturally. And of course the money saved by the free work will go in tax cuts for the rich. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Gervase Date: 20 Apr 10 - 09:39 AM When unemployment goes beyond three million again, I'm sure the Tories will have plenty of people with time on their hands. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: GUEST,Shimrod Date: 20 Apr 10 - 09:25 AM I suppose these 'neighbourhood group' members will still have to work for a living, bring up their children, do their shopping, maintain their houses, gardens and vehicles etc., etc.? Perhaps the Tories should also be bringing in 36 hour days! |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 20 Apr 10 - 07:33 AM Well Gervase, I think it's worse than that - it's the state copping out of its responsibilities. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Gervase Date: 20 Apr 10 - 07:22 AM To get back to the election debate and the curious incident of the dog in the night-time, I found it interesting that Cameron failed to bang on about the central plank of his own party's manifesto; the idea of 'Big Society'. Perhaps his reticence is undertandable when one actually looks at the policy. For all its fine words, you have to remember that it comes from a party which did more than any other to centralise government and emasculate local decision-making by removing power from parish and district councils and centralising everything on Westminster. And the premise would seem to me to be one of abrogating responsibility. As I see it, the Conservatives want to break up public services and hand them over to individuals, charities and private enterprise. Does anyone honestly imagine that a poorly-performing school in an impoverished area is going to be galvanised by parent power or by a local charity or a private company? Encouraging people to take on the delivery of local services is fine in an area where you have an involved middle class and people with entrepreneurial experience, but what about those areas where arguably such things are most needed? As such, the 'big society' plan would merely reinforce difference and inequality. What's more, to set up a host of small organisations, each responsible for a small patch, would surely massively increase bureaucracy and hugely duplicate an enormous number of administrative areas away from the 'sharp end'. You would also have the problem of accountability. Who will ensure that all these little satrapies and fiefdoms are run honestly and fairly? The scope for corruption is pretty huge, to be honest. The overall impression is one of a Thatcherite philosophy rigged out in new clothes – but with the old notion of ordinary people left to sink or swim depending on where they have the good fortune to live. The same old ideology persists – that state intervention is intrinsically bad. Perhaps that's why Cameron has rather reined back on the 'Big Society' notion and didn't mention it in the television debate. It's not a new political philosophy; it's an old one that was tried and found sorely wanting in the 1980s. To try to distance themselves from the policies which led to more than three million unemployed and which really did threaten a 'broken society', the Tories have come up with some wonderful waffle. This is from the Conservative manifesto. Read it, and then try to imagine it actually working. It really is from cloud-cuckoo land: Our ambition is for every adult in the country to be a member of an active neighbourhood group. We will stimulate the creation and development of neighbourhood groups, which can take action to improve their local area. We will use Cabinet Office budgets to fund the training of independent community organisers to help people establish and run neighbourhood groups, and provide neighbourhood grants to the UK's poorest areas to ensure they play a leading role in the rebuilding of civic society. To stimulate social action further, we will: • transform the civil service into a 'civic service' by making sure that participation in social action is recognised in civil servants' appraisals; • launch an annual Big Society Day to celebrate the work of neighbourhood groups and encourage more people to take part in social action; • provide funding from the Big Society Bank to intermediary bodies with a track record of supporting and growing social enterprises; and, • develop a measure of well-being that encapsulates the social value of state action. It's little wonder the Cameron is reluctant to submit such nonsense to public debate. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Backwoodsman Date: 20 Apr 10 - 03:22 AM Never been that near to him. Nor would I want to be (**shudder**). :-) :-) |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 19 Apr 10 - 04:06 PM The Lord Mandelson moves in mysterious ways. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: DMcG Date: 19 Apr 10 - 03:45 PM Nice comment from Mandelson that the current polls with all parties having very similar shares of the vote and giving the libdems only about a sixth of the vote would give them "disproportionate" power. One of us needs to by a dictionary. Unless he means disportionately few seats. Of course |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 19 Apr 10 - 02:29 PM Why not start a thread about speed limits and such, Richard? |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Gervase Date: 19 Apr 10 - 12:22 PM I won't hold my breath for a seismic shift in the political landscape. Opinion polls tend to do just that; canvass opinions. They rarely tie in opinions with actual voting intentions. Plenty of people, if asked, "if there was a general election tomorow, who would get your vote?" do plump for the Lib Dems. But the poll analysis shows that a lot of those who now profess to support the Lib Dems are the under 30s and women; and neither of these groups has a great record for actually voting. Add to that the fact that Clegg has two more television debates (and he's already played his joker insofaras he can't make another remarkable debut for the non-political public) before polling day and that the party's policies are now coming in for serious criticism and scrutiny, and I think we'll see a depressingly familiar political landscape after May 6th. Quite what stinky old cars (like my ancient Land Rover) have to do with the election debate is beyond me, however. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Mavis Enderby Date: 19 Apr 10 - 11:48 AM Sigh... yes I have driven on the M25, eyes wide open, obeyed the (variable) speed limit and lived to tell the tale. Most other drivers seemed to be doing the same. My last words on this, except to say: National speed limit introduced by Barbara Castle - Labour, Tax exemption for 25+ year old cars introduced by Kenneth Clarke - Conservative |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 18 Apr 10 - 08:14 PM When the law is universally (or largely so) objected to, enforcement is not productive. Remember Ireland, the former English colony? Tootler, are you listening? Burton Coggles - obviously you have never driven on the M25. Or if you ahve you ahve done so with your eyes closed. Red flags are not (in the motoring sense) needed. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Tootler Date: 18 Apr 10 - 05:03 PM The 70 (or, where national is 60, 60) speed limit is one of laws that is universally broken: first that shows that the law is out of touch with reality, second, it creates, as I said, disrespect for many laws. The reason the law is universally broken is that it is not enforced. When they did try to enforce it, the howls of "how dare they enforce the law on speeding" from the Daily Rant and their like caused the politicians to behave like cowardly pratts and back down, so the law is no longer enforced. The Daily Rant also has a campaign against average speed cameras because they work and motorists tend to stick to the speed limit where they are fitted. For some reason the Daily Rant seems to think that speed limits should not be enforced. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 18 Apr 10 - 04:43 PM ...a phalanx of cars across 3 lanes all doing 80 mph separated by sometimes less than one car length. Fine the bastards for speeding, ban them for for dangerous driving, and make it much safer for the rest of us. Nothing unrealistic about driving at a sensible and safe speed, and taking people who refuse to do that off the road. ....................... To get back to the "debates". They aren't really about politics, they're about image. The political talk is part of the image being presented, and the purpose is to encourage viewers (and non-viewers reading the media verdict on who won) to buy the image. That's why my post about David Cameron as Iggle Piggle wasn't wholly frivolous. It refers to aspects of the image he presented to me at any rate - bland, smooth and somehow appearing out of touch - which help explain why he did so badly compared with Nick Clegg. Anyway the effect of the beauty parade appears to be that it is now more likely the outcome of the election will be a hung parliament. This could mean the possibility of a government which had been backed by over sixty per cent of voters (unlike the more traditional pattern where maybe just over one in three of voters voted for the government that comes to power), under which people will be given the option of a referendum on whether they want a reformed voting system which will make possible a far more representative line of of political options in the future. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Acorn4 Date: 18 Apr 10 - 02:35 PM I hope they get Anne Robinson to do the questions next time! |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Mavis Enderby Date: 18 Apr 10 - 02:05 PM Not universally broken Richard, quite a few of us stick to the limits. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Crow Sister (off with the fairies) Date: 18 Apr 10 - 01:32 PM As a non-driver I'd like to see less emphasis on car-culture altogether. I live in a village where there are horses, cyclists, ramblers, joggers and dog walkers (not to mention the kids walking home from school without pavements) and speeding big posh motors zooming through the middle of it all on their rush to cut through from A to B (with us in the middle being neither A nor B). Otherwise I agree with RB, the focus on new cars is not anywhere as helpful to the environment as it is claimed to be, or indeed the British economy. Plus I'd rather have the dusty MG's rumbling through the village than electric blue Subaru's startling the bunny rabbits ;-) |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 18 Apr 10 - 01:13 PM Yes, 25 years. The 70 (or, where national is 60, 60) speed limit is one of laws that is universally broken: first that shows that the law is out of touch with reality, second, it creates, as I said, disrespect for many laws. Don, you know as well as I do that the taxes that rose were not those that had been promised not to rise. What Thatcher did was intentionally get the nation hooked on the greed is good game. That was the progenitor of bank deregulation, and the acceptance of unwise debt flowed from both the greed and the deregulation. That greed was what captured the stage that BLiar walked upon. Slowly Labour was edging away from that. There is no way that there will be anything other than a return to it if the conservatives return to more direct power. I suppose if you want to get back to forelock tugging and the poor giving to the rich you can vote for it. Makes no sense (much like Cameron's budgetary plans) to me. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Mavis Enderby Date: 18 Apr 10 - 12:10 PM Richard, I have some sympathy with your views, but I don't really see why classic car owners (and I'm assuming you mean 25 year old cars rather than 2!) should be treated differently to any other car owners really. I was surprised when Ken Clarke introduced the policy originally, even though I benefited from it at the time. I'm also not convinced by the "everyone ignores it anyway" excuse for speeding either. There's probably room for increasing some speed limits (and reducing others), but ignoring limits just because you think it's OK is a bad idea IMHO. Anyway, like I said earlier, fairly trivial points in the grand scheme of things... Pete |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 18 Apr 10 - 09:13 AM """New Labour", in order to be electable, in the culture of greed actively promoted under Thatcherwasm, had to make and did make a range of promises about for example taxation, and I am sure you would support politicians keeping promises."" What are you on today Richard?....It must be damn good stuff, but I'm not sure I want to get into something which destroys both memory, and critical faculties. Within two years New Labour introduced some several dozen new stealth taxes. Even Thatcher never managed to put the whole population into personal debt, and the treasury into bankruptcy. You are a lawyer, and you should be well aware that a company which had suffered this level of mismanagement would be in administration, or bankrupt. "NEW LABOUR" was cynically remodelled by Blair/Brown, to bring it close enough to Tory ideology to capture Tory voters. They affected a more moderate centreist position, while in reality they threw out every last principle of labour socialism. It was bad under Wilson/Callaghan, and infinitely worse under Blair/Brown. In light of that, how can you possibly believe that they would have cared about keeping promises (in fact they never kept any). They reduced unemployment by cooking the books. There are no more unemployed. They are "Jobseekers", "In Retraining", "Gaining Work Experience", etc. etc. Brown, just a few weeks ago, was making much of the fact that there were 33,000 fewer registered unemployed over a three month period. He stopped mentioning that one, when it was pointed out that there were 54,000 fewer people in employment in the same three month period. They tinkered with everything (at enormous expense) and solved nothing. Five more years of totally inept, and unprincipled, New Labour under Brown is exactly what is needed to finish the job of bringing this country down to the financial level of Greece, Eire, or Iceland. _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ""It should be a no-brainer and I remain baffled why with your intelligence in some things you cannot see it. Shame about the Medway Labour candidate though!"" I guess we have different ideas about what constitutes intelligence, and for me, it isn't blindly continuing to hand your wallet to the conman who has emptied it three times in thirteen years. Your mileage may differ. Don T. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 18 Apr 10 - 08:34 AM We can all point to individuals who are exceptionally good at their jobs, and they are not restricted to any one party. Your LibDem MP is a case in point, and I'm sure he does his absolute best for his constituents. A recent poll, carried out in the Maidstone constituency, showed that Tory Anne Widdecombe was well respected, and considered a good constituency representative, even by the labour voters in that area. I'm sure that Labour's Bob Marshall-Andrews was just as well thought of in his constituency. I know I rated him as one of the few honest politicians. But all of them share one constraint, when it comes to operating in the House of Commons. They are under the cosh of the party whip system, when voting on measures. So, while your MP may be great when conducting a meeting in the village hall of Little Dither in the Wold, in Westminster he either toes the party line on two and three line whips, or he becomes your next independent candidate, devoid of influence even if he is still elected. And it is the party apparat which formulates policy, not the grunts who are ordered to endorse it. Don T. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: GUEST,Shimrod Date: 18 Apr 10 - 05:49 AM I've often thought that, in this country, we tend to over-estimate the importance of the national and under-estimate the importance of the local. Hence fewer people vote in local elections than vote in national ones - and (I'm convinced) partly as a result of that successive national governments have been able to emasculate local governments. But local issues affect our day-to-day lives as much as national ones and, in some cases, more so. We have a Lib Dem MP where I live and he is more in touch with, and has worked harder for, this community than any MP we have ever had. This is the main reason why I will be voting Lib Dem. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Backwoodsman Date: 18 Apr 10 - 05:13 AM "Cars over 2 years old are few in number" WTF? What planet do you live on, Richard. Might be true in Surrey Stockbroker Country, but it's patently, demonstrably untrue in the rest of the UK. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 18 Apr 10 - 04:47 AM Yes, Pete. The national speed limit is dangerous on two fronts. First it is the predominant cause of the deadly bunching you see perhaps more on the M25 than anywhere else, with a phalanx of cars across 3 lanes all doing 80 mph separated by sometimes less than one car length. Second since almost everyone breaks it unless they fear a speed camera it inculcates disrespect for the law in general - which leeches over into disrespect for sensible laws too. Cars over 2 years old are few in number and mostly low annual mileage vehicles. The damage they do to the environment through emissions is trivial, and indeed offset by the reduction in damage through manufacture of new cars (which manufacture largely sends money out of this country to countries producing massive pollution). They do represent an innocent historical pleasure - that is why they are classic cars and represented by classic car clubs. Some (like my Volvos) actually have hugely low emissions too. The British built classics can represent a small step towards representing pride in this country and its traditions (without being a gift to you-know-who). Don, your aguments that Blair/Brown policies were freely chosen cannot be taken seriously. "New Labour", in order to be electable, in the culture of greed actively promoted under Thatcherwasm, had to make and did make a range of promises about for example taxation, and I am sure you would support politicians keeping promises. Slowly but slowly the cultore of greed was being reduced, and although you criticise the increased rich/poor gap that was partly caused by the influx of those who stole state assets from the disintegrating Soviet Union. If you read JK Rowling's piece in the Times you will recollect that there had been a reduction in child poverty and benefits poverty, with "through the net" failures being largely caused by other hangovers from conservatives vieews and the necessity to keep the blue-rinse Daily Mail brigade under control. Darling, if you consider his history (and strive to ignore the fact that he went to Loretto, the only other pupils at which that I know have been wholly and studiedly offensive) has a good track record on reversing conservative doctrinaire evil. Pending the possibility that the Lib-Dems actually have achieved critical mass at last, the choice is between a party the roots of which are in the protection of the poor and one whose roots are in the protection of the rich. It should be a no-brainer and I remain baffled why with your intelligence in some things you cannot see it. Shame about the Medway Labour candidate though! |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Mavis Enderby Date: 18 Apr 10 - 03:54 AM Richard, fairly petty points in the grand scheme of things, but "Raise the National Speed limit" "Re-introduce the "rolling age" for classic car car tax exemption" Could you explain why? Pete. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Lox Date: 17 Apr 10 - 09:43 PM The reason to vote lib dem is that they will be pushing for electoral reform. As things stand, they could beat both the tories and labour by a single percent each, and yet have less than 20% of the seats. They could win the election and yet come a distant third. I will not be held hostage by that type of blackmail any more. To be forced to choose between two undesirables on the basis that they have stitched up power between them is not a choice I am prepared to make any more. Under PR, we would have a coouple of greens - a few socialists - we would also have UKIP and maybe a BNP or two, but at least peoples views would be reflected in paarliament. I will be voting Lib Dem! |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 17 Apr 10 - 08:18 PM Just one more quite important point to make. It is futile, and dishonest, to try to blame current difficulties on David Cameron and the current Tory Party. For thirteen years, New Labour has enjoyed a majority which enabled it to do exactly what it chose, and the end results are entirely of its own manufacture. Brown is the one who has been at, or near, the top of that party since day one, and Brown, the so-called fiscally responsible, is directly and solely to blame for the current mess. It is doubly infuriating to hear him in the debate, responding to questions on a number of issues with "We are working on that". He's had thirteen years to work on it, sort it, and move on. What kind of gullible half brain still thinks that he can be trusted to do so in another five years?...............<>OR FIFTY! Don T. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 17 Apr 10 - 08:05 PM And the gap between poorest and richest has widenened under New Labour more than it ever did under the Tories. Brown has actually robbed the poor and rewarded the rich, and the policies in place which deregulated the banking industry, plunged the whole country into a mounting debt spiral, and allowed the investment bankers to bring the Western world close to disaster, had nothing whatever to do with the Tories. It was a Blair/Brown initiative start to finish. In 1997, under the Tory government of John Major, a working man on my income at the time had trouble getting a bank account, and no hope whatever of a loan, or a credit card. By 2003, I had at least five letters each day begging me to borrow money, and I had three credit cards. In 97, Blair took over a treasury loaded with money, an inflation rate of under three percent, and mortgage rates below five percent. Brown frittered all that away, as well as all the pension money he stole from working people, on futile tinkering around the edges of this country's problems. In terms of immigration, New Labour couldn't even organise a system which would alert them to the release of foreign criminals, held in our prisons, and due for deportation at end of sentence. They disappeared, and are still operating freely in the UK. So how can we trust them to control immigration where they don't actually have the subjects in custody? In respect of your suggested changes, I would agree with most of them, especially nationalised public transport. Where we differ is that I am not snorting whatever it is that enables you to believe you'll get any of it from New Labour. If you want a proper socialist "LABOUR PARTY", Brown and Co will have to be sidelined for the five years it will take to clear out the suits and restore the party it once was. I never liked it that much but it did, long ago, just what it said on the can. Don T. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 17 Apr 10 - 11:32 AM Don: 5 years in a different part of opposition would give the LDs no more practical experience of anything than they have now. The idea that the conservatives (or any other party) would feel constrained by an opposition is so novel as to be incredible - unless they risked losing a vote of confidence. The Brown/Darling axis has done incredibly well in the face of an economic crisis caused by the hangover of conservative get-rich-quick policies. Its vulnerability lies in other areas - but on all of which the conservatives are still the party of injustice. Cameron is only a thin-lipped smile on the face of Combat 13-20. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Tug the Cox Date: 17 Apr 10 - 10:30 AM Now now, Don. Don't let's lose our sense of humour.They're all puppets anyway! |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Richard Bridge Date: 17 Apr 10 - 10:22 AM Regrettably I was folking, so missed the debate. The general consensus seems to be that the Lib-Dems did do well, and some of their policies are very attractive. I like the mansion tax, but I don't see how they are going to close tax loopholes much as I would agree with doing so. The conservatives focus on tax bribes they do not know how to pay for, coupled with the totally extraordinary manifesto focus on the concept that people should do, for nothing, jobs that the government should be doing and paying for out of tax money is simply cloud-cuckoo stuff. Do they would really think it would fix the economy if everyone were to work for nothing (apart from their banker mates)? JK Rowling's feisty piece about them in the Times tells it (for my money) like it is. However, the reported genuine glowering hatred by Brown of Cameron will I think play well - coupled with the spoof "Step outside, Posh Boy" teeshirt. The big news however is that the latest polls appear to have the Lib Dems ahead of Labour and the Conservatives within reach. If that holds so that the "wasted vote" argument is defeated, a breakthrough might happen for them. They are already threatening the Licensing Act. If they would commit to the Robin Hood Tax, I think they might do it. I do however have a few other policies I'd like to see: - Reverse "Tesco Law" and ban Licensed Conveyancers and Will Writers - every time I see a file that one of those cheapskates has been near it contains at least one disaster for the client. Nationalise Public transport - and restore it so that you can use public transport to go fromwhere you are to where you want to be when you want to go. Ban the use of Oyster cards for spying on people. Free (er, that's "free") NHS dentistry, at least for those under 13 and over 60 and all on benefits. Benefits should reach reasonable subsistence level - and 100% of mortgage payments for houses valued at up to £200,000 (South East prices - it could be linked to Council tax bands to reduce regional bias). Rather than means testing benefits, make them taxable. Cancel ID cards. Raise the National Speed limit. Re-introduce the "rolling age" for classic car car tax exemption. Rreframe internet "common carrier" exemption - if a "service provider" (the wide EU definition) wnats exemption in respect of otherwise actionable or criminal material he should have to identify the sender. The power of arrest needs sorting out (again) so that it balances necessary enforcement with the individual liberty that is being lost. Undo the larger part of the "Woolf reforms" - the primary objective of court proceedings of all kinds should be justice. Re-think legal aid. Civil legal aid should only be available where a prudent private funder would fund. Contingency fees should be banned. The net benefit of legal aid (civil or criminal) should be taxable. Maybe there should be a national law service, a bit like a national health service, with those who want to go private being able to. NHS service to holders of private health insurance should be charged to the insurers. Getting a bit too het-up here, time for my afternoon nap! |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: s&r Date: 17 Apr 10 - 10:22 AM I find it bizarre that the government of the country, for a long time governed by a football team approach where you support a club right or wrong, has now become a sixth form debating society. I would like to see a parliament where party affiliations were banned, and where politicians were paid no more than they had earned in the real world. Dennis Skinner for president - the mos honest man in British politics. Stu |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 17 Apr 10 - 08:36 AM I should have known a reasoned, on topic, response would not be forthcoming. But I hadn't expected such an inane from one I always considered one of Mudcat's more erudite and sensible debaters. Don T. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 16 Apr 10 - 07:42 PM For ages it's been nagging at me as to who it is that David Cameron looks like - then a letter in today's paper reminded me - Iggle Piggle from the TV children's show In the Night Garden |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 16 Apr 10 - 07:18 PM Stilted, contrived, and virtually useless to anyone with an analytical turn of mind. Brown came over as the bumbling idiot, repeating over and over on just about every subject "We're working on that". Wake up Mr Bean! You've had thirteen years to work on it, and if you ain't sorted it by now, another five years won't cut it. Cameron was, to a Tory like me, a bit disappointing. Strong at the start and finish, but lost it a bit in the middle. He still wiped the floor with Brown, but failed to put Clegg in his place. Clegg won hands down on style, and deserves credit for that, but on substance he was much less credible. With nothing to lose, because he can't actually win the election, he made a multitude of populist pledges he knows he won't have to keep, which is just as well given that he wouldn't have the money for any of them. I came to the conclusion that the best result for the nation would be a LibDem official opposition to a Tory government. Now, before the bricks start flying I'll give my reasons, which are IMO cogent and compelling. Five years in opposition would give the LibDems the experience of practical government which, at the moment, they lack, and give the voting public the chance to see how they perform. This would mean that at the next election they would have the skills and experience to command the respect of voters who have hitherto regarded them as irrelevant. The mere thought that the next election would mean trying to overcome a now fully qualified new kid on the block, would militate aginst any possible excesses on the part of the Tories. New labour are now largely irrelevant, and until they shift a long way back toward their proper, and historical, place on the political spectrum, should remain so. It will do them considerable good to be sidelined for a while. OK, I know what to expect, and from whom, so go ahead. Let Fly! Don T. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Lox Date: 16 Apr 10 - 03:27 PM Worst Kraftwerk gig I've ever seen .... |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: The Smiler Date: 16 Apr 10 - 03:27 PM To True, but it is refreshing for once. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: Peter the Squeezer Date: 16 Apr 10 - 03:15 PM Clegg came over best by far - but he's got nothing to lose. |
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Subject: RE: BS: Election Debates UK From: s&r Date: 16 Apr 10 - 02:48 PM The non-event of the century. Anything new? Will it change anything? And why not have a compere with a bit of clout like a Dimbleby or a Paxman. The rules which forbade audience reaction resulted in a pastiche of silent movies. I feel mytrusting naivety moving towards jaundiced cynicism. Stu |
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Subject: BS: Election Debates UK From: The Smiler Date: 16 Apr 10 - 01:36 PM Well for me Clegg won hands down. I liked his fresh honest approach and guess what I kind of trust him. This will be the first time I have ever voted Lib Dem. Cameron looked a right smarmy and not sure if I could trust him anymore than Brown. Brown is just a lying toad. He has had enough time to put things right. What is making me smile, is how the Scottish & Welsh parties are green with envy. That will teach you to take the English money and provide freebies that we do not get in England. Discuss, but please do not flame individual mudcatters. Each one of us is entitled to our opinion. If you think that one party is better than the other, then please explain why and please don't don't come the I vote for this party becuase my Dad or Mom did or becuase it's handed down. Sound reasoning please. Can we also not blame Margaret Thatcher for all the ills of this country sour grapes approach. As per Joe (I think) BNP subjects are banned. Guest posting is also not allowed. When the bell goes, come out fighting but keep it clean. :-) |