I can't see it myself Zippy. Although there is a longstanding unfairness, arguably, in the 40% tax relief (which I attempted to take maximum advantage of).
Don't fall for all the surrender carp. The Cons are crumbling before our eyes and I'm beginning to think there is no way back for them. This is not necessarily a good thing.
The truth is most voters huddle around the centre, even if now and again they are a bit racist or jingoistic (or for that matter big fans of nationalisation and other characteristically socialist ideas.)
Both Labour and Cons for 60 years up to 2015 have found most of their support in the centre ground. Starmer is occupying that ground today. The Cons have veered way off to the right and, finding their popularity waning, have veered some more.
If Labour wins, Sunak will go. Should say Braverman or Badenoch get the job then don't expect them to move back to the centre. They might even absorb Reform. The centre right people have gone - Rory, Grieve, Clark, Gauke etc., and there's nobody left to drag the Cons back to reality.
You sound as if you really want to vote Conservative. Fair enough. Your nearest available vote to the one-nation-type Tories you might be imagining is almost certainly Labour.
Does that sound plausible? It does to me.
Yes there will be tax rises,, as there would be with the Cons. £2000 per household over a full term is actually not at all outlandish even if it were true. But there is no possibility IMO the Starmer is cynically hoodwinking the electorate only to turn UK into a Stalinist regime in the first term. What he sees as his mission needs at least two terms to take root.
The Blair government also adopted the fiscal rules of the previous Tory one in its first term. It didn't really start motoring for a good while, even though it started from a better place than where we are now.
Last edited by: Manatee on Sat 29 Jun 24 at 12:21
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