Wed Apr 15, 2015 3:39 pm
so what have we seen so far:-
The Tories
1. making grand statements about inheritance tax when it accounts for only 2% or so of government receipts
2. the deficit is £80bn or so but they are looking at cuts of around £30bn when growth of 2.5% per annum should see around 60-70bn of that eroded by the end of the next parliament.
3. Dave Cameron has a shiny head. honestly
4. Right to Buy, which I could never understand why the left were so against this form of wealth distribution through the tax system - its a conservative policy so it must be bad despite the fact we don't change the housing stock, the demand for housing or anything else other than legal ownership.
Labour
1. lots of noise about zero hour contracts when they make up around 2% of employed people and two thirds of those are happy with the situation. not only that, many Labour MPs are happy to employ workers on zero hour contracts.
2. Ed Milliband cannot eat a bacon sandwich. good grief.
3. £30bn cuts like the Tories in a vain attempt to look economically credible, which they probably aren't. Cuts of that magnitude are probably not needed by the end of this Parliament
Plaid
Their manifesto was like a wishlist and is quite easy to put together when you have no chance of getting in to power
UKIP
All I can say is that Farage is comedy gold and was by far the most entertaining in the leaders debate. The best bit was that the NHS is struggling because Africans have HIV.
LibDems
probably the most sensible manifesto with the fairest cuts to government spend but have little chance due to loss of the student vote
as long as our politicians treat the whole jamboree as the punch and judy show that it is then the electorate will no doubt do the same. The undeniable fact is most people are so disenfranchised with politics and the way that there are ad hominem attacks rather than promotion of policy and having courage in their convictions. I refer to the stories of Cameron's shiny head and Millibands inability to eat a bacon butty - as if it matters.