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General Election 8th June

Discussion in 'General Chat' started by The Anilingus Aficionado, Apr 18, 2017.

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Which party do you intend to vote for?

Poll closed Jun 9, 2017.
  1. Conservative and Unionist Party

    22.7%
  2. Labour Party

    22.7%
  3. Liberal Democrats

    9.1%
  4. Scottish Nose Pickers

    13.6%
  5. UKIP

    4.5%
  6. Green Party

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  7. DUP

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  8. Shin Feign

    9.1%
  9. gas - FK OFF ****

    18.2%
  1. DevAdvocate

    DevAdvocate Gigging bassist

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    Nowt wrong with that, you voted for the party that was best for you at the time, only a fool would do otherwise.
     
    #941
    Null likes this.
  2. Girvan Loyal 1690

    Girvan Loyal 1690 Nobody's safe now

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    MD could be sitting on a Harvard law degree if only he was allowed to sit that darned geography standard grade
     
    #942
  3. DevAdvocate

    DevAdvocate Gigging bassist

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    I just had to do something.
     
    #943
  4. Girvan Loyal 1690

    Girvan Loyal 1690 Nobody's safe now

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    I noticed the Greens have answered the pleas of their big brothers and have agreed not to fight for seats that the tories are targeting <laugh>

    #democracy
     
    #944
  5. Ciaran

    Ciaran Going for 55

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    I disagree with them but electrole pacts and tactical voting is common place.
     
    #945
    DevAdvocate likes this.
  6. Mind The Duck

    Mind The Duck Well-Known Member

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    So is election fraud it appears

    But its ok

    Back to work servants
     
    #946
  7. Toby

    Toby GC's Life Coach

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    *sigh*

    So do all rich people vote Conservative or do some vote Labour/Green, knowing full well they won't get the same advantages/breaks?

    Or are you just going to ignore me again as I've made a **** of your ridiculous statement?
     
    #947
  8. Toby

    Toby GC's Life Coach

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    please log in to view this image
     
    #948
  9. Toby

    Toby GC's Life Coach

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    Jeremy Corbyn will lay out plans to take parts of Britain’s energy industry back into public ownership alongside the railways and Royal Mail in a radical manifesto that will also promise an annual injection of £6bn for the NHS and £1.6bn for social care.

    A draft document drawn up by the leadership will also pledge a phased abolition of tuition fees, a dramatic boost in finance for childcare, and scrapping the bedroom tax, the Guardian has learned.

    Sources say that Corbyn wants to promise a “transformational programme” with a package covering the NHS, education, housing and jobs as well as industrial intervention and sweeping nationalisation.

    One central promise will be to build 100,000 new council houses a year and alongside a policy to ban fracking.

    The manifesto claims that the policies will be fully costed with tax rises for those earning over £80,000 – although full details are not included. There will also be a reversal of corporation and inheritance tax cuts.

    Excerpts seen by the Guardian says the party will “take energy back into public ownership to deliver renewable energy, affordability for consumers and democratic control”. It includes plans for a public owned energy company in every region of the UK. The manifesto will include a 20:1 pay cap for businesses that have public contracts.

    There is also a promise to review decisions on welfare cuts, although not necessarily reverse them. A ministry of labour will oversee a new raft of reforms on workers’ rights and planned hikes in the pension age beyond 66 will not go ahead.

    The draft manifesto also sets out plans to borrow £250bn to invest in infrastructure.

    Meanwhile, there will be a promise to “review” other government decisions, with a view to reversing them. Among those in line to be considered are the plans for a £3.4bn cut to the Conservative’s flagship welfare policy of universal credit.

    The draft manifesto will be scrutinised by Labour’s national executive committee (NEC) and shadow cabinet from midday on Thursday at what is known as the Clause V meeting.

    The session, which also involves the heads of the national policy forums, will hammer down a final document that will be published next week.

    Corbyn hinted on Wednesday that he would make good on a previous commitment to scrap tuition fees for higher education and restore maintenance grants for the poorest students.

    Speaking at Leeds community college alongside the shadow education secretary Angela Rayner, Corbyn said: “You’ll have to wait for the manifesto. I know you’re desperate for it and I’ve got some stuff in my pocket, but, sorry, I’m not allowed to give it to you. Is that alright? Do you mind? Can you cope with the excitement?”

    However, his comments came as a recording emerged of John McDonnell, the shadow chancellor, telling an audience in Mansfield that Labour would abolish university tuition fees. “[We] want to introduce – just as the Attlee government with Nye Bevan introduced the National Health Service – we want to introduce a national education service,” McDonnell said.

    “Free at the point of need throughout life. And that means ending the cuts in the schools at primary and secondary level. It means free childcare. It means free school training when you need it throughout life. And yes it means scrapping tuition fees once and for all so we don’t burden our kids with debt for the future.”

    Theresa May softened the blow for recipients of cuts to universal credit last year by changing the “taper rate”, but Labour would review the Tory cuts, and look at ploughing money back into the “work allowance” – the threshold at which the benefit is removed.

    The decision to limit tax credit and universal credit payments to the first two children in the family is also expected to be placed under review, while the so-called “rape clause” will be ended immediately.

    There is also a suggestion that legal aid cuts will be reviewed, but without a guarantee to reverse them.

    A Conservative spokesman said: “Jeremy Corbyn appears to be on a spending spree paid for by the biggest tax rises in 30 years to somehow fund his nonsensical policies.

    “So many of these policies are being paid for by the same tax rises over and over again, they lack any credibility.”

    Theresa May said she would not make similar reforms to higher education, suggesting it was unaffordable.

    “Tuition fees will remain but the question you have to ask the Labour party is how do they actually pay for all of this they are proposing,” she said. May also said she did not agree with Labour’s policy of four new bank holidays, claiming employers “might have some views” on the cost of it.

    In Labour’s 2015 general election manifesto, the party pledged to cut tuition fees from £9,000 to £6,000 a year. In the subsequent Labour leadership campaign, Corbyn pledged to abolish tuition fees by either increasing national insurance for higher earners or raising corporation tax.

    By reversing repeated cuts to the corporation tax rate made by the Tories since 2010, Labour believes it could fund a series of ambitious pledges, including restoring maintenance grants for the poorest students, guaranteeing that five-, six- and seven-year-olds will not be taught in classes of more than 30, and restoring the educational maintenance allowance, paid to 16- to 18-year-olds in full-time study.

    In total, Labour claims the package of education measures, including school funding and increasing the adult skills budget would cost £6.7bn a year by the end of parliament in 2020/21. The party calculates this would leave revenue from the corporation tax rise to spend on other manifesto measures.

    But Rayner’s biggest passion is early years education, with sources suggesting that Labour is planning a major drive on childcare.

    The package offered by Corbyn will be built around the party’s “10 pledges” from last year’s annual conference. That focused on infrastructure to help create “a million good quality jobs”, a promise to build half a million council homes, getting rid of zero hours contracts, ending privatisation in the NHS and funding social care, the national education service, more focus on climate change, renationalisation of the railways and a more progressive tax system.

    There was also a commitment around placing “peace and justice at the heart of foreign policy”, which Corbyn is expected to expand on later this week.
     
    #949
    Mind The Duck likes this.
  10. Toby

    Toby GC's Life Coach

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  11. monacoger

    monacoger POTY 2021

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    Not sure I know what you mean, mate

    image.jpg
     
    #951
    Girvan Loyal 1690 likes this.
  12. Archers Road

    Archers Road Urban Spaceman

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    Just make sure you keep up the buildings insurance.
     
    #952
  13. Toby

    Toby GC's Life Coach

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  14. Mind The Duck

    Mind The Duck Well-Known Member

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    Two Toby posts liked in a row

    If Corbyn can achieve this he can achieve anything
     
    #954
  15. GroveRanger

    GroveRanger Well-Known Member

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    please log in to view this image
     
    #955
  16. Toby

    Toby GC's Life Coach

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    Try the Metro, there'll be more pictures in the article <ok>
     
    #956
  17. GroveRanger

    GroveRanger Well-Known Member

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    #957
    Girvan Loyal 1690 likes this.
  18. Mind The Duck

    Mind The Duck Well-Known Member

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    #958
    Void and Girvan Loyal 1690 like this.
  19. Girvan Loyal 1690

    Girvan Loyal 1690 Nobody's safe now

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    If?

    *when
     
    #959
  20. Mind The Duck

    Mind The Duck Well-Known Member

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    Don't vote for them then
     
    #960

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