In My View - it's a copycat Tory manifesto
David Cameron pledged yesterday to deliver the 'good life' to hard-working Britons when he unveiled a radical Tory Manifesto, promising voters 'security at every stage of your life', only to find many of the Tory giveaways were in the original http://www.ukip.org/policies_for_people published last year for UKIP's Conference held at Doncaster.
UKIP policies proposed to abolish inheritance tax and increase personal allowance to £13,000, this is the minimum wage that incurs no tax. UKIP offers a better deal for those earning £42,285 to £55,000 with tax at 35p, thereafter the 40p rate is payable. The conservatives apply the 40p from £50,000.
The Tory also adopted UKIP's policies on abolishing green taxes and charges; withdrawing subsidy for wind farms; scrapping Human Rights Act in favour of British bill of rights. UKIP's policies went much further than David Cameron's offers, proposing to reoccupy the UK's vacant seat at the World Trade Organisation to continue trading with Europe as well as the rest of the world by exiting the EU and save £55million a day; UKIP will cut Foreign Aid by £9billions to spend on all the above pledges.
The Tories have not yet determined what services and spending they will need to cut to fund these 'good life' promises. It’s not easy to stand by these pledges to win back Tory voters under the authoritarian watchful eye of the EU, with George Osborne's final Budget based on keeping annual net migration well above 100,000, which already broke David Cameron’s promise of 2010 to keep net migration within “tens of thousands”. UKIP will be able to limit immigration by the point-system of entry without interference from the EU.
David Cameron pledged yesterday to deliver the 'good life' to hard-working Britons when he unveiled a radical Tory Manifesto, promising voters 'security at every stage of your life', only to find many of the Tory giveaways were in the original http://www.ukip.org/policies_for_people published last year for UKIP's Conference held at Doncaster.
UKIP policies proposed to abolish inheritance tax and increase personal allowance to £13,000, this is the minimum wage that incurs no tax. UKIP offers a better deal for those earning £42,285 to £55,000 with tax at 35p, thereafter the 40p rate is payable. The conservatives apply the 40p from £50,000.
The Tory also adopted UKIP's policies on abolishing green taxes and charges; withdrawing subsidy for wind farms; scrapping Human Rights Act in favour of British bill of rights. UKIP's policies went much further than David Cameron's offers, proposing to reoccupy the UK's vacant seat at the World Trade Organisation to continue trading with Europe as well as the rest of the world by exiting the EU and save £55million a day; UKIP will cut Foreign Aid by £9billions to spend on all the above pledges.
The Tories have not yet determined what services and spending they will need to cut to fund these 'good life' promises. It’s not easy to stand by these pledges to win back Tory voters under the authoritarian watchful eye of the EU, with George Osborne's final Budget based on keeping annual net migration well above 100,000, which already broke David Cameron’s promise of 2010 to keep net migration within “tens of thousands”. UKIP will be able to limit immigration by the point-system of entry without interference from the EU.
Under the EU open
border law, 187,370 Romanians and Bulgarians arrived for work in the UK in 2014 and were
given National Insurance (NI) number, an increase of 576% up on the 27,700
figure used by the Coalition in January 2014 to justify EU free-movement. The revelation by the
Department for Work and Pensions that the Romanians and Bulgarians now make up a
quarter of new NI numbers given to
foreign workers, that is an outrageous number of nearly a million extra workers in one year, being supported by the UK’s infrastructure; putting
unsustainable strain on housing, transport, schools and the NHS.
It's the century’s most
unfair competition for our under-privileged youths, the unemployed and the newly
redundant by Mr. Osborne’s austerity measures on Police, Border and
military forces and local Council workers up and down the country. Most of our job-seekers have high overheads
of rented homes or mortgage responsibilities and families of school-going and
college age, who will face a grim future queuing for jobs against new
migrants who are unafraid of sleeping rough like the Romanians in London’s
Park Lane 18 months ago, who were sent back to Romania with free bus fares, but
soon came back after a brief (paid for) holiday at their Romanian home.
This kind of
scenario is lowering British standard and our lifestyle, and the UK
Independence Party has a plethora of policies to bring this country back on
course, firstly to exit the EU to limit immigration with a point-based entry
system for migrants with sufficient English language for work, with an NHS-approved health
insurance, a job offer and accommodation arranged. After
paying tax and NI for 5 years they will then be eligible for benefits and after ten
years permanent residency will be granted.
By re-joining the
World Trade Organisation we can continue our trade with Europe, but will have
the freedom to trade globally with a vast number of fast developing countries
without incurring EU penalties. With the saving of our annual fee of over £10
billion plus perks, expenses and pay for numerous MEPs, UKIP will kick start
the economy by increasing full-time
minimum wage earnings to £13,000 before tax (personal allowance), and introduce
a 35p income tax rate on £42,285 to £55,000, thereafter the 40p rate will be
payable.
These savings plus
cutting back £9 billion on Foreign Aid proposed by UKIP will ease our national
debt as well as stop over-crowding hospitals and A&E and will give our own
people a fair crack at housing and jobs.
George Osborne’s final budget show the £23 billion surplus
outlined in his Autumn Statement for 2019-20 is down by £7 billion. The growth
forecast by the Office for Budget Responsibility is at 2.3 to 2.4% per annum
over the next five years, but our actual growth since 2010 has only averaged at
1.8% so far. David Cameron knows that
many things don’t add up.
George Osborne’s optimism knows no bound. In his June 2010 Budget he said he would
borrow just £37 billion in 2014-15, instead he is borrowing £91.3 billion this
year and last year £86.3 billion loan was added to our spiralling national
debt, nearly doubled since he took office despite many austerity measures that
reduced essential services to dangerous levels, particularly in our police,
border and vital Defence Programme, especially as we face more aggression all
around us.
Many of the Tory giveaways were borrowed from UKIP’s
policies, which were published since last year’s UKIP Doncaster Conference,
such as the increase in Personal Allowance to £13,000, scrapping the
Inheritance Tax and an extra £3 billion to NHS frontline services.
UKIP leader Nigel Farage is right to lead Britain’s fourth
political party away from the costly EU whose 3,600 laws had hampered our
prosperity and competitiveness. Our taxpayers are rightly fed up with all three
main Parties’ blind submission to EU's uncontrolled migration law and the gravy
train mentality in Brussels and Strasbourg, many voters from all walks of life
and society can see the sensibility of UKIP policies to halt the rampant advance
of immigrants, in such high number that can eventually destroy Britain’s
heritage, culture and intrinsic value.
David Cameron seemed to be under great pressure facing up to even a
second term. His reluctance to face a debate
with his oppositions revealed his sensitive personality to criticism and all
the broken promises he had made rest heavy on his shoulder. He could sense the people’s discontent in his
poll rating, and knew full well that he would be powerless to change EU’s
open border requirement, notably evident in the EU President’s response of “Mission Impossible”
when he likened himself to Tom Cruise to reform the EU before referendum in 2017.
Weighing heaviest on his shoulders is George Osborne’s final
Budget, presented on a wish (and a prayer) that the next Parliament would produce the hat-trick economy he so bravely
forecasted, if the Tory Party is returned to power.
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