Lower West Stander
Well-known member
Do you? If you do, maybe you can elaborate beyond words like these.
I was alive in the seventies.....
Do you? If you do, maybe you can elaborate beyond words like these.
Er ? confused by your angle here ? support for public services means the removal of the wage cap of 1% and actually putting money in to funding those services rather than the current slow decline and loss of things we once held dear. Why should public service workers at the sharp end have their wages cut year on year by a combination of little or no pay rises and inflation ?...
How else would anyone get elected? They wouldn't want to go around improving things for people would they?
Yeah I'm aware that this is how politics work. It just frustrates me that any political discussion between opposing parties, whether on here or in our venerated Houses of Parliament, devolves into childish "he said, she said" point scoring with very little progress made towards solving the issue that sparked the debate.
It's so f**king tedious.
Yes I know, I was agreeing with you. Politics is ****ed. It would be so refreshing to hear someone talking about what they are going to do to improve things for the voters.
I was alive in the seventies.....
The fact that my question to you confuses you says all I need to know about you!
So was I. Why was it that even with the same weak labour laws and an open door policy for immigration from the commonwealth (policies dating from 1948) we had a 1960s boom (under Wilson) and yet as soon as Heath got it it all went to bollocks? Heath was weak and foolish. The One Nation conservatives were effectively managing a set of process, introduced after the war, that included widespread nationalisation, that they didn't really believe in, but for which they had no plan B. Heath mismanaged this and the unions went for him. The three day week, and power cuts (I remember having a candle lit bath - not like a romantic one with the missus but because the house was in harkness) took place under Heath. Wilson (then Callaghan) were left to clear up the mess (and failed). A few weeks before I left university, in came Thatcher. He manifesto spoke about selling off loss making nationalised industries (coal, steel, shipbuilding) whichmade sense. There was nothing about selling profit making nationalisd industries (flogging of the family jewels, as MacMillan, still alive, put it) with big companys (run by her pals) getting first dibs.
Personally I don't actually blame Heath for the debacle of the 70s, but he is more culpable than Labour, if you want to play the blame game. Like it or not, now, the young people are likely to vote Corbyn in, and the old are too fed up with sad Theresa to put up much of a fight. There is also a vacuum in conservative politics right now which is never good in the UK - in the 70s it allowed the national front and overt racism to bcome semi-respectable and acceptable. Without wishing to go too far off topic, the far right have never been an answer to anything, and as we see today with UKIP there is in-fighting, flagrant arrogance, and sexual pecadillos. There was a photo of John Tyndall (of Hove) circulating in the 80s of him, dressed like a german SS type surrounded by blond boys. Yes, he was a ****ing pervert.
And, no, the 70s was not the decade that England's Glory, built by good Conservative knowhow, was destroyed by socialism. It was much more nuanced than that.
Nevertheless it was much easier to take sides. As Bron Waugh said on a radio programme 'you want to change society because you want what I've got. I want society to stay as it is because I don't want you to have it'. Once you scrape away all the bullshit language and pretend allegiance to the NHS etc on one side and Blairist PPP on the other, this pretty much sums up how it has always been and how it will always be.
Yet another despicable Tory
How in touch are you ? are you still in Bournemouth 1970 ? there are so few union members these days there is zero chance of a Labour government being held to ransom by unions. have you not noticed that people are flocking to the Labour cause because they see their pay and conditions and public services constantly being eroded ? And your last point, I am really lucky, I have no mortgage and no rent to pay thanks to hard work and a couple of redundancies and a divorce, however, I will never be rich as what cash I have will slip through my fingers like sand...Go on, crack on about the unions and lefties. The reality is that the tide is turning because too many people feel they have been left behind and that the economy " Does not work for them . May, Theresa,".
How thick are you that you can't see how sad this country has become and how devoid Mrs May is of ideas to change anything ? so, vote Tory for a continual slide in to the abyss or vote Labour for a hope of change for the better.
I can understand some of your sentiment here - but disagree with much of what you say.
In the 70s the unions were defending archaic working practices which needed to be changed - remember Red Robbo walking out over tea breaks? The Labour Party we’re effectively run by the Trade Unions at the time and whilst I agree Heath was weak it is overly simplistic to say he left a mess which Wilson couldn’t sort out. Like it or not High Scanlon, Joe Gormley et al had a political agenda.
I also agree there is a power vacuum - but not just in the Tory Party. Neither Labour or Tory centrists have any power at the moment as Labour moves too far left under Corbyn and the stories too far right under Brexiteers. That’s the worry for me. Theresa’s May’s greatest strength at the moment is her weakness.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Lets look at the " Question " again shall we ?
Chicken Run "Seriously, the majority of people don’t actually work in public service, how the hell are the Labour Party ever going to help anyone but those is public service? " ... I'm assuming that the IS before public service is meant to be an IN ?
Anyway, I'll go as slow and simple as I can. You are a member of the public and you pay local and national taxes to the council and government. The council and government provides services to the population, this is called being a society. At some time or other during their lifetime all citizens will use public services to varying degrees. What the Labour Party are proposing is to properly fund those services in the form of wages for staff and support for those services, really simply, money for books or money for medicine or employing enough people to maintain public toilets. Currently many services are being cut back or subjected to a freeze in investment. if Labour invests in these services it supports society.. ie, all of us. Hope this helps,
Was a while ago but :Er, NO.
How in touch are you ? are you still in Bournemouth 1970 ? there are so few union members these days there is zero chance of a Labour government being held to ransom by unions. have you not noticed that people are flocking to the Labour cause because they see their pay and conditions and public services constantly being eroded ? And your last point, I am really lucky, I have no mortgage and no rent to pay thanks to hard work and a couple of redundancies and a divorce, however, I will never be rich as what cash I have will slip through my fingers like sand...Go on, crack on about the unions and lefties. The reality is that the tide is turning because too many people feel they have been left behind and that the economy " Does not work for them . May, Theresa,".
How thick are you that you can't see how sad this country has become and how devoid Mrs May is of ideas to change anything ? so, vote Tory for a continual slide in to the abyss or vote Labour for a hope of change for the better.
Was a while ago but :
Elliot Morley
Former environment minister and Labour MP for Scunthorpe
Offence – Pleaded guilty to fraudulently claiming £32,000 of parliamentary expenses.
Details – Between April 2004 and February 2006, Morley submitted 19 claims for excessive mortgage payments to which he was not entitled. Between April 2004 and February 2006 he submitted 21 second home allowance forms for a mortgage he had already paid off.
Sentence – Jailed for 16 months in May 2011.
Released – September 2011 after serving a quarter of his term.
David Chaytor
Former Labour MP for Bury North
Offence – Pleaded guilty to three counts of false accounting relating to approximately £18,000 of parliamentary expenses.
Details – Submitted claims for the rent of a flat in Westminster which he had bought in 1999 and had paid off the mortgage for in 2003.
Sentence – Jailed for 18 months in January 2011.
Released – May 2011 after serving almost a third of his sentence.
Eric Illsley
Former Labour MP for Barnsley Central
Offence – Pleaded guilty to fraudulently claiming £14,000 in parliamentary expenses.
Details – Made false claims for his second home between 2005 and 2008 and also over claimed for council tax and utility bills.
Sentence – Jailed for 12 months in February 2011.
Released – May 2011 after serving four months.
Jim Devine
Former Labour MP for Livingston
Offence – Found guilty of dishonestly claiming £8,385 in parliamentary expenses.
Details – Claimed for cleaning and maintenance and printing work that the judge said was “entirely bogus”.
Sentence – Jailed for 16 months.
Released – August after serving a quarter of his sentence.
There were some tories too. I am of the opinion that most MPs are dubious. Especially here!
So I’ll cut to the chase fairly quickly, Labour will only help those who work in public services then? The rest of us will muddle on with shit pay a no pensions?
Politics for the many not the few sound familiar?
Not half as despicable as the hard lefty socialist workers Corbyn led loony sorry Labour Party, appealing to the half wits amongst us .,
an ignorance of economics will do that.
Come back when a labour, lib dem, green or SNP member of parliament has claimed a charity donation as an expense. Until then, that is nothing more than piffly tit for tat nonsense. The fact is, it takes a certain type of charmless greedy tw4t to indulge in that, and those people are usually found in the Tory party.