Hampster Gull
Well-known member
- Dec 22, 2010
- 13,465
We were not left "in an absolute mess" at all. We had a highish level of borrowing, that's all. This "mess" is an absolute myth. And if we been left with the high levels of borrowing without any infrastructural improvements, then that would be a worry. But that's not the case at all. Schools were well funded and hospitals had better funding (but Labour had pretended and still do pretend that the problem with appalling NHS management doesn't exist).
Put it this way - take a look around you. There is infrastructure everywhere. Our level of public borrowing is a drop in the ocean compared to the value of the infrastructure all around you. It's like owning a £1m house with a hefty £300k mortgage. There's nothing wrong with that mortgage as long as you can service the debt. And that's the sort of position Labour left us in. It was not "an absolute mess", and certainly no more of a mess than leaving 915,000 people (that's an awful lot of people) dependent on food banks.
Under Labour we have experienceof no being able to pay our debts. At the time it was the biggest ask on IMF resources