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8 responses to “Treasury Graph shows Increase in Hot Air”
This quite good but if we made statistic about everything in life you would find a lot of simulates. At the moment I don’t support any party. But If I think your party will be doing good for country I will be voting for you. Lets face it there a lot of work to be done. Can you leave a blog the next time your going to be on The Wright Stuff it is Normally good week when your on there.
Manjit - good point! Probably not at all I’d imagine.
I agree with the basic point Ed is making that Gordon Brown has a poor track record on taking the environment seriously - and showing it. But as much as politics is about following your convictions and speaking out there is also a lot of cross-party imitation going on and I suppose it is the job of the front bench to respond accordingly. The tories also were notoriously slow movers on greater social justice but now seem to support greater social provision by the state. Cameron has got the Chancellor moving on the environment. Good for him. But there are also a whole host of issues where the government has advocated something, Cameron has opposed it, then quietly changed tack and supported it - foundation hospitals and tuition fees leap to mind.
People complain that there is less ‘green taxes’ now but that is mainly because the fuel duty esculator was frozen because of fuel protestors. From memory I seem to recall the majority of Tories and other MP’s agreeing with the Chancellor that it should be frozen or even decreased. The true test of any party’s so-called Green/Climate credentials will come when they start to advocate some tough choices. Remember when the Lib Dems announced there Green Tax plans at there party conference, perfectly sensible and properly costed also off-set with tax cuts in personal taxation but they were crucifed in the national media for adovacting a increase in the cost of motering etc.
Let’s play this “no. of times mentionned” game then - that would properly show up the Tories for their band-wagon jumping too. Indeed, you’ll also see that it has consistenly been something that the Lib Dems have taken seriously.
Antony Capewell said on November 13th, 2006 at 3:43 am:
This quite good but if we made statistic about everything in life you would find a lot of simulates. At the moment I don’t support any party. But If I think your party will be doing good for country I will be voting for you. Lets face it there a lot of work to be done. Can you leave a blog the next time your going to be on The Wright Stuff it is Normally good week when your on there.
UK Daily Pundit said on November 13th, 2006 at 1:55 pm:
That one above isn’t me pretending to be someone else. Just thought I’d let you know. And have you cancelled your rooftop wind turbine yet?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=415993&in_page_id=1770
Alice said on November 14th, 2006 at 7:34 pm:
Of course Gordon’s always cared about the environment…
Manjit said on November 15th, 2006 at 3:48 am:
Hello Ed,
Just out of interest, how many times was ‘climate’ mentioned in the Tory 2005 election manifesto that Mr Cameron had a huge hand in writing?
Adam said on November 15th, 2006 at 4:06 pm:
Manjit - good point! Probably not at all I’d imagine.
I agree with the basic point Ed is making that Gordon Brown has a poor track record on taking the environment seriously - and showing it. But as much as politics is about following your convictions and speaking out there is also a lot of cross-party imitation going on and I suppose it is the job of the front bench to respond accordingly. The tories also were notoriously slow movers on greater social justice but now seem to support greater social provision by the state. Cameron has got the Chancellor moving on the environment. Good for him. But there are also a whole host of issues where the government has advocated something, Cameron has opposed it, then quietly changed tack and supported it - foundation hospitals and tuition fees leap to mind.
Manjit said on November 15th, 2006 at 8:10 pm:
People complain that there is less ‘green taxes’ now but that is mainly because the fuel duty esculator was frozen because of fuel protestors. From memory I seem to recall the majority of Tories and other MP’s agreeing with the Chancellor that it should be frozen or even decreased. The true test of any party’s so-called Green/Climate credentials will come when they start to advocate some tough choices. Remember when the Lib Dems announced there Green Tax plans at there party conference, perfectly sensible and properly costed also off-set with tax cuts in personal taxation but they were crucifed in the national media for adovacting a increase in the cost of motering etc.
John said on November 20th, 2006 at 1:06 pm:
Let’s play this “no. of times mentionned” game then - that would properly show up the Tories for their band-wagon jumping too. Indeed, you’ll also see that it has consistenly been something that the Lib Dems have taken seriously.
Tom Freeman said on November 22nd, 2006 at 5:58 pm:
If that’s the game we’re playing, then…
The word ‘climate’ appears a grand total of once in the Conservative manifesto that David Cameron wrote just last year.
It appears 11 times in Labour’s.