Tuesday 12 November 2019

I received this today, more totally fake news from the Tories.

  1. Why is it fake? Labour hasn't released its manifesto yet so how could they possibly know. This is just a bunch of made up guesses.
  2. Its absolute rubbish the only people paying a bit more tax are those top 5% of people, with the Tories you see your money given away to those that don't need it.
  3. The Tories haven't released a manifesto yet either and it looks like they don't intend to until towards the end of the election, what are they scared of?
  4. In 2017 the Tories never released any financial statement and the country let them get away with it, a blank cheque!
  5. In 2010 the Tories claimed we were bankrupt, but managed in 2014 to give away 94 billion in tax concessions to big corporations?  Basically they lied and are still lying through their teeth to this day.
  6. BloJo is the biggest snake oil charmer of them all, with all the lies and misinformation he's spread why would anyone believe a word he says?
  7. Through the worst austerity for decades the Tories have added over 800 billion to UK debt since 2010

Dear Gary,

The Cost of Corbyn has been revealed – and Labour's £1.2 trillion spending plans would hit you straight in the pocket.

It would cost the average worker a month’s wages in higher taxes to pay for Corbyn’s reckless spending.

Under Corbyn’s plans, you’d have to pay an extra £2,400 in tax. Every single year.

A new homes tax. A new gifts tax. Higher fuel duty. Higher aviation duty. The list goes on.

If Corbyn wins this election, he’s not just going to run out of money. He’s going to run out of new taxes.

And that means chaos for our economy.

The latest jobs data out today showed just how important it is to make the right choices on our economy. Employment is up, unemployment is down and wages are rising.

Only the Conservatives can be trusted to build on the decade of recovery. Don't let Corbyn and McDonnell bury it under a mountain of new debt and higher taxes.






LINKS
https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/governmentpublicsectorandtaxes/publicspending/bulletins/ukgovernmentdebtanddeficitforeurostatmaast/march2019



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