Baldseagull
Well-known member
You can see that, I can see that, why can't most of the electorate see that? Almost everything you hear about why people won't vote Lib Dem is because of the compromises they had to make as a result of going into coalition, and very little is about their policies. I'm especially surprised by the number of voters who have rejected Labour but have switched their alliance to the Green Party, as the Lib Dems are left of centre on a number of topics, especially taxation.
Two years into the recession in tax year 2010/11 Labour still had the Higher Rate tax threshold at £43,875, the Lib Dems come into and reduce it down to £41,450. So even though the Tories say we're back to pre-recession levels this is contradicted by the fact the Higher Rate threshold is still below 2010/11 level AND - according to the coalition Budget of last week - won't exceed the 2010/11 level until 2017/18.
There is no doubt in my mind that had the Lib Dems not been in government the Tories would have raised the Higher Rate to above £43,875 for 2015/16.
I think a lot of people would have seen Labour as the more aligned party to go into coalition with for the Lib Dems, including most Liberal party members, but given that Labour had less seats than the Cons, it would have been a less legitimate looking Government.
The biggest problem they have though is the tuition fees promise they made, they didn't just have it in the manifesto, they signed pledges and it was the policy they most trumpeted.
In reality, I think even if they had been the majority party in coalition, or had an outright government, this pledge was unaffordable and could not be kept, given the state of UK economy. Without this issue I think most people would be more sympathetic to them.
Clegg has to get an apology out there, not for going against what they said, but for making a promise that could not be kept. He should not try and tag on to it the fact that the loan scheme they devised is actually pretty good. But he will, and it will sound like a cop out to a lot of people.
Even then, I think they are too pro EU, and not good enough at explaining why, for many at the moment.