ChatterBank2 mins ago
Pms Questions
I hope Milliband is more prepared for tonight than he was in yesterday's questions. Taking the equivalent of a 6-0 drubbing was embarrasing to listen to.
Bit of a loaded question - but here goes anyway - does anybody on this site honestly think Ed Milliband is a viable alternative? If so, why?
Bit of a loaded question - but here goes anyway - does anybody on this site honestly think Ed Milliband is a viable alternative? If so, why?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The new Labour luvvies will be along in a mo no doubt but for me I do not see "leader", with Blair, I hated the site of him but I could see his potential, not so with Ed. He gets a kicking most weeks in PMQs and lerches from blunder to blunder, got his a5se kiced by Myleeen Klass the other week. Gawd help us if gets the big chair. Our EU enemies will make mincemeat of him and we'll be worse off than the bubbles within 5 years.
Cameron and Clegg are not an hard act to follow.
Dave is basically a PR man, it's what he did at LWT.
But their record is not a good one. Virtually everything they announced over the last 5 years they have had to u-turn on to some degree. There have been literally hundreds of policies that have had to be drastically changed after they have been announced. That is a terrible way to run a Government.
Of course, this will not be the first time Cameron has been less than honest on VAT. At the last election in an interview with Jeremy Paxman on 23 April 2010, Cameron said: "We have absolutely no plans to raise VAT. Our first Budget is all about recognising we need to get spending under control rather than putting up tax." Then in his first budget, Osborne raise VAT by 2.5%.
If the Conservative's win a majority, mark my words, VAT will rise.
Dave is basically a PR man, it's what he did at LWT.
But their record is not a good one. Virtually everything they announced over the last 5 years they have had to u-turn on to some degree. There have been literally hundreds of policies that have had to be drastically changed after they have been announced. That is a terrible way to run a Government.
Of course, this will not be the first time Cameron has been less than honest on VAT. At the last election in an interview with Jeremy Paxman on 23 April 2010, Cameron said: "We have absolutely no plans to raise VAT. Our first Budget is all about recognising we need to get spending under control rather than putting up tax." Then in his first budget, Osborne raise VAT by 2.5%.
If the Conservative's win a majority, mark my words, VAT will rise.