4 January, 2010
New Decade
This the first year of the second decade will define the first half of the century. The General election will not be about protest but about choice. The end of this century’s first decade exposed the myth of stand alone nationalism and the act alone Conservativism as espoused by the Nationalists and David Cameron’s Conservatives.
Questions?
This General Election will answer two questions: 1. who will be the Prime Minister? and 2, who will be elected into Government? However frustrated and angry people feel about the global recession that started in America and engulfed the world economies large and small, or with politics in general, the day after the General Election we will either have Gordon Brown and a Labour government or David Cameron and a Conservative government.
Other parties who are united in talking up a hung parliament know the consequences of that scenario, e.g. any seat lost by Labour to the Lib/Dems, Greens, BNP or Nats effectively makes it easier for the Tories to win the election. Therefore a vote against Labour is a vote for a David Cameron Tory government.
Question1: Who increased VAT on pensioners’ fuel bills from 5% to 8% and wanted to further up it to 17.5%? Question 2: Who said this weekend that he would not rule out increasing VAT? Answer Rt Hon Kenneth Clarke MP, former Tory Chancellor of the Exchequer and currently David Cameron’s Shadow Cabinet Minister for Business and Trade.
New Decade / Questions
4 January, 2010
New Decade
This the first year of the second decade will define the first half of the century. The General election will not be about protest but about choice. The end of this century’s first decade exposed the myth of stand alone nationalism and the act alone Conservativism as espoused by the Nationalists and David Cameron’s Conservatives.
Questions?
This General Election will answer two questions: 1. who will be the Prime Minister? and 2, who will be elected into Government? However frustrated and angry people feel about the global recession that started in America and engulfed the world economies large and small, or with politics in general, the day after the General Election we will either have Gordon Brown and a Labour government or David Cameron and a Conservative government.
Other parties who are united in talking up a hung parliament know the consequences of that scenario, e.g. any seat lost by Labour to the Lib/Dems, Greens, BNP or Nats effectively makes it easier for the Tories to win the election. Therefore a vote against Labour is a vote for a David Cameron Tory government.
Question1: Who increased VAT on pensioners’ fuel bills from 5% to 8% and wanted to further up it to 17.5%? Question 2: Who said this weekend that he would not rule out increasing VAT? Answer Rt Hon Kenneth Clarke MP, former Tory Chancellor of the Exchequer and currently David Cameron’s Shadow Cabinet Minister for Business and Trade.