I thought you was off somewhere my little gay friend. You seem very angry for some reason after our nice little chatbox discussion x
yes she has shes getting desperate that more Londoners are voting for labour over her nasty polices she today had a double page advertisement in the south London press scare mongering and utter bullshit torys are finished
I've found myself firmly cheering on Corbyn now - May's “If you believe you are a citizen of the world, you’re a citizen of nowhere” view of enlightenment values means she can suck my remoaning balls. Plus all those mental tax hikes Corbyn is proposing will do wonders for off-shore business.
may has blown it trouble is she got to cocky and people can see right through her scare tactics and now I here voting labour I predict a labour snp coalition wipe the smile right off her smug lying face she talks **** 99 per cent of the time
I'm a conservative and I'm not in the least bit nervous. Corbyn's list to Santa isn't convincing anybody born before the turn of the millennium.
His manifesto is fully costed. Why do you trust the Tories with our economy? What pleases you in their manifesto? More tax breaks for the rich, a Brexit with no deal with the EU and fox hunting unbanned?
1: I have some faith with the current regime regarding the economy. Philip Hammond is woeful as we all found out when he proposed NI/VAT/Income tax rises for the self employed. But he is expected to be replaced in the event Theresa May puts her cabinet back together. In fact it's of my opinion a shake up is the biggest reason TM called for the general election. 2: The highlights from the manifesto for me is the party's stance on Brexit and their education policies also appeal to me. I trust Theresa May as she is adamant that Leave ought to get the Brexit they voted for as Leave were the side to win it and she holds this view despite being on he Remain side of the argument during the referendum campaign. On education I myself believe that variety in the education system is the right way to go. Grammar schooling for instance offers working class children the chance to gain a better education through merit which insures that children don't have to be from a particular background to have the best start in life. 3:Regarding tax breaks for the rich (in which I'm assuming your'e meaning corporations) I am happy with because the consequences can either be that company's will produce goods outside of the UK which will ofcourse be costing jobs and not just higher paid jobs but jobs for genuine working class folk and also the ones who keep their businesses here will undoubtedly seek to make up for those losses and will ofcourse raise the prices of their goods and I'm taking about supermarkets/retail. 4: I disagree with Theresa May on fox hunting. If your'e killing not for the purpose of filling your stomach then you're not a hunter but a sadistic c***.
His manifesto is bonkers. The rises in corporation taxes combined with Brexit will be the end of the City and its £75bn a year in tax contributions, to start - and let's see if the international bond market will keep lending him billions to fund a much bigger deficit at the current rates. He'll be printing money like Venezuela in no time. Anywho, May's a **** - get her tae ****.
May could set fire to babies on the steps of St Paul's cathedral and Nige would still elect her and her bunch of ****wit pals. Sorry but thems the facts.
As as has been mentioned previously dozens of times on here, it'll still be lower than all of the G7. I trust Labour to **** Brexit up less than the Tories will. Corbyn hasn't been attacking the EU leaders for a start, and there'll be no sign of Boris. If we keep single market access (including bank passporting and staying part of the Customs Union), most of the damage will be averted. Not sure it'll be possible without free movement, but time will tell. IF we lose single market access they'll all **** off anyways.