Originally posted by malvolio
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Squeaky bum time for public sector contractors?
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So far (I'm about a week behind actual announcements), none of the spending announced was in the Manifesto.
Also RR is on record (pre-election) as saying she would not touch pension triple lock or winter fuel allowence.Comment
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Originally posted by ensignia View Post
You are deranged.
Blog? What blog...?Comment
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Originally posted by malvolio View Post
Ms Reeves is eminently qualified for the role (then again, so was Gordon Brown...) but her agenda is the problem. It seems we need to suffer a range of tax increases to pay for public sector pay rises that weren't in the manifesto (nor in the Tories' plans and hence not in the Treasury/OBR reporting on which she based her planning), hence the instant black hole.
In effect she's giving away £1bn per day in office so far. Still, I suppose that a lot easier than trying to negotiate something more reasonable with her paymasters. Or perhaps even explaining Labour's fully costed plans
We're already being lied to in a far more serious way than Boris and pals managed. It doesn't look good for the future.
It is acknowledged by developed countries that Gordon Brown and his economic advisors devised the QE plan that saved western countries from the brink of true disaster. It's why your pension didn't take a haircut; why your bank account remained at the same figure you expected it to; why western democracy didn't collapse. Yes, certain banks were clearly at fault, but to not even mention that Gordon Brown was chief architect of the only viable proposal to save western developed economies during the financial crisis and to spew rubbish about the current administration after only a month is suggestive of someone unintelligent who relies upon the joke Daily Telegraph for their 'information'.
Bet you voted Tory again too. Christ.Comment
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Originally posted by agentzero View Post
I think ensignia is on to something, in the sense of you being deranged.
It is acknowledged by developed countries that Gordon Brown and his economic advisors devised the QE plan that saved western countries from the brink of true disaster. It's why your pension didn't take a haircut; why your bank account remained at the same figure you expected it to; why western democracy didn't collapse. Yes, certain banks were clearly at fault, but to not even mention that Gordon Brown was chief architect of the only viable proposal to save western developed economies during the financial crisis and to spew rubbish about the current administration after only a month is suggestive of someone unintelligent who relies upon the joke Daily Telegraph for their 'information'.
Bet you voted Tory again too. Christ.
‘History suggests “boom and bust” won’t go away’ | History and PolicyBut I discovered nothing else but depraved, excessive superstition. Pliny the youngerComment
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Originally posted by agentzero View Post
I think ensignia is on to something, in the sense of you being deranged.
It is acknowledged by developed countries that Gordon Brown and his economic advisors devised the QE plan that saved western countries from the brink of true disaster. It's why your pension didn't take a haircut; why your bank account remained at the same figure you expected it to; why western democracy didn't collapse. Yes, certain banks were clearly at fault, but to not even mention that Gordon Brown was chief architect of the only viable proposal to save western developed economies during the financial crisis and to spew rubbish about the current administration after only a month is suggestive of someone unintelligent who relies upon the joke Daily Telegraph for their 'information'.
Bet you voted Tory again too. Christ.Comment
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Originally posted by Snooky View Post
I'm not a Tory supporter, but Gordon Brown hugely relaxed oversight on the financial sector during his tenure (as did most US administrations from the late 70s onwards), so financial institutions were able to invest hugely in very questionable assets such as subprime mortgages. He even admitted as much in 2011. So while he may have been instrumental in coming up with a plan to fix the problem, the scale and impact of the problem in the UK was hugely exacerbated by his previous actions (or inactions) as Chancellor.
But since we suffer from a cadre of Labour supporters who refuse to contemplate anything that can't be ascribed to the Tories, there's little point arguing with them.
Meanwhile I stand by my opinion on this Labour administration (difficult word "opinion", some people need to look it up).
Blog? What blog...?Comment
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Originally posted by Snooky View Post
I'm not a Tory supporter, but Gordon Brown hugely relaxed oversight on the financial sector during his tenure (as did most US administrations from the late 70s onwards), so financial institutions were able to invest hugely in very questionable assets such as subprime mortgages. He even admitted as much in 2011. So while he may have been instrumental in coming up with a plan to fix the problem, the scale and impact of the problem in the UK was hugely exacerbated by his previous actions (or inactions) as Chancellor.Comment
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Originally posted by agentzero View Post
You and Malvolio forget that there were only two parties competing for power in those elections. The tories consistently called for more deregulation and freedom for the banks. If they had been in power, it would have been oh so much worse. The notion that Gordon Brown made mistakes is true, but compared to the alternative who could have been in power it is obvious that he was the best option. Parliamentary debates of the era confirm that the tories kept calling for amendments to further bank deregulation.
Does that remind you of anything over the last 15years?Blog? What blog...?Comment
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