cat wrote:Personally, I feel 'safe' with Labour. I don't think everything is going swimmingly, but I think it's going pretty well and slow progress is better than the no progress that the Tories made. It's on that basis that i'll be voting for them. Also don't want to put myself out of a job, but still.
I'm a bit jealous of that, cat. I'd love to feel 'safer' with a party, but I think my desire and willingness to make the leap of faith died with Tony.
The first big blow was the abolition of student grants and the later introduction of top-up fees. I never ever though a Labour government would do this. I was Disgusted from Tunbridge Wells when they did that.
Education is a right, and an investment in a nation's future. What's the point in spending all that money up until the age of 18, investing in a person's future, only to charge them £10Ks for the privelege of taking that education to its logical conclusion.
I'm a right-winger on many issues, but on other issues I am very left wing. A Labour government doing this? I still went to Uni when there were grants and left with only £4K worth of debts. Nowadays, it's a multiple of that, and it's just not fair or right.
I'm like everyone else when it comes to paying taxes - I do it through gritted teeth. But we're all in this together as a nation and we should pay through taxes to make sure we have an educated and advanced country.
The second was the pensions raid. £5bn is 'stolen' out of private pension funds every year. If state pensions are to be a thing of the past soon, at least make sure that whatever a person saves they can have at retirement.
And thirdly, Iraq. I could go into the multiple reasons why, but I don't want to bore you all.
The thing that upsets me, cat, is that I can't help feeling that, no matter who was in power, those three things would have eventually happened anyway.
I admire your optimism, and wish I could lose my cynicism.