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RE: Keir Starmer - and his miserable government - Rammyrascal - 12-03-2025 00:24

(11-03-2025 19:32 )skully Wrote:  It seems that whoever is in charge thinks that targeting the poor, sick and disabled is fine, they are evil, all of them. There will be blood on their hands.

Fully agree.

The backlash to these cuts has apparently got so bad for Labour, not just from the public, but also from Labour MP's, it's meant the official announcement for the cuts has been delayed till at least next week


RE: Keir Starmer - and his miserable government - Rammyrascal - 12-03-2025 00:26

(11-03-2025 20:29 )Tumble_Drier Wrote:  Well you didn't really think it was going to stop at robbing "rich" Pensioners, did you?

Nope


RE: Keir Starmer - and his miserable government - southsidestu - 12-03-2025 15:13

Its the classic government response, there is a crisis in X so we're going to do Y and Y happens to be the easy, short term, politically expedient approach that won't really make much of a difference in fact it will probably do a great deal of harm but the numbers look good

One of the big reasons Labour has lost a lot of support is that the budget & the winter fuel payments being moved to a means tested model has given the impression to voters that Labour aren't that different from the last 14 yrs of The Tories after all, which for a party that put the word "CHANGE" on its manifesto, with for some weird reason a picture of Starmer alone, thats not particularly good.

Now the proposed benefits cuts seek to lean into the very thing thats been hurting their standing with the public, is an interesting strategy.

Perhaps they look at yrs of the coalition government, all the negative press and backlash only for The Tories to improve their standing & win a majority as a signal that the silent majority, particularly the tory voters they needed to win & stay in power will reward them for being fiscally prudent


RE: Keir Starmer - and his miserable government - Snooks - 13-03-2025 20:16

The social system is broken. Labour and the Tories have pretty much both admitted that.
But even then they have not told the full story as to how absolutely chronically dire the state of so many things are as per this linked post
https://www.babeshows.co.uk/showthread.php?tid=89147&pid=2882223#pid2882223

The chosen 'solutions' have been established because of an emphasis on a set of ridiculous fiscal rules that the Chancellor has self imposed giving her no flexibility to do much other than cut, cut and cut again or alternatively mess around with NI contributions on employers in such a way it benefits neither the employer or the employee.
All so the government can loosely claim it is abiding by it's own fiscal rules.

Painful, difficult decisions are a fact of government life but the judgement calls made so far to my mind are wrong. Far better just to tell everyone straight.
'Look everything is a mess, we can't cut things any further on the basis that surgeries, hospitals, schools, universities, prisons, social care, border control, benefits, child maintenance, the courts, social services, councils and so, so much more are already in a parlous state.'
So phased income tax rises across the board on a sliding scale with the richest paying the largest increases and the poorest paying the smallest increases would seem a reasonably fair way forward.

The current policy agenda seems to me to be a degrading, dehumanising attack on the already vulnerable and an attack on the nature of the system that should be in place to protect them.
Really quite unedifying.


RE: Keir Starmer - and his miserable government - The Silent Majority - 14-03-2025 01:10

(12-03-2025 15:13 )southsidestu Wrote:  Perhaps they look at yrs of the coalition government, all the negative press and backlash only for The Tories to improve their standing & win a majority as a signal that the silent majority, particularly the tory voters they needed to win & stay in power will reward them for being fiscally prudent

What Tory voters?
There was no swing to Labour. They won because the Tories either didn't turn out, or voted Reform.

They're going against their own ideology. It's only the huge majority that's letting them get away with it, for now...


RE: Keir Starmer - and his miserable government - lovebabes56 - 14-03-2025 03:52

I'd go as far ton say if the Govt admit that if the welfare state is broken, there's a good chance that the political system will be broken too. I would not be too surprised if they end up taxing the Lottery it probably would be the only thing left that hasn't been taxed. Which means....

We are totally fucked up the Amazon. It seems to me their only real hope of balancing the books is to start chasing the big corporation tax dodgers big time.


RE: Keir Starmer - and his miserable government - southsidestu - 14-03-2025 13:31

(14-03-2025 01:10 )The Silent Majority Wrote:  
(12-03-2025 15:13 )southsidestu Wrote:  Perhaps they look at yrs of the coalition government, all the negative press and backlash only for The Tories to improve their standing & win a majority as a signal that the silent majority, particularly the tory voters they needed to win & stay in power will reward them for being fiscally prudent

What Tory voters?
There was no swing to Labour. They won because the Tories either didn't turn out, or voted Reform.

They're going against their own ideology. It's only the huge majority that's letting them get away with it, for now...

Have you got the receipts for that ? I was sure i had seen polling charts showing 2019 Tory voters going to Labour perhaps i was wrong. Nevertheless even if there were zero votes moving from Conservative to Labour that doesn't mean that Labour's policies weren't at play here either.

There were many Tory voters who didn't like the party in 2019 but voted for them anyway because the alternative was Corbyn and they disliked his economic policies even more. The fact that Labour in 2024 were promising not to raise taxes, reign in spending like their £28bn green new deal & that Starmer presented like a middle manager from Milton Keynes meant that a lot of those stay at home Tory voters did so because they did not fear Comrade Keir.

So I may be wrong about voters moving to Labour directly from the Tories but Labour's fiscal prudence and its affect on Tory voters was still an important part of winning the election, even if it was just convincing them it was ok to stay at home.


RE: Keir Starmer - and his miserable government - The Silent Majority - 14-03-2025 14:44

^ It was a generalisation, clearly Rolleyes

Starmer's landslide win was pretty much due to the way our electoral system works, rather than any great swing to Labour amongst voters. Since he barely managed to better 'unelectable' Corbyn's vote share from 2019.


RE: Keir Starmer - and his miserable government - The Silent Majority - 14-03-2025 14:47

Unexpectedly... Bounce

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cly3mdlk70no


RE: Keir Starmer - and his miserable government - HannahsPet - 18-03-2025 14:12

Watched the fucking statement and Still non the fucking wiser !!!

getting rid of the WCA in 2028

and merging some stuff but nothing on Payments or what they are doing with the LCWRA