25/4/09 That was the week that was…
This was the week that…
· The Budget was unveiled to severe criticism, revealing the dire state of the nation’s finances [more]
· Labour broke their election manifesto promise by raising the top rate of income tax to 50% [more]
· The Education Minister and the General Secretary of the Labour Party were drawn into the email smears scandal [more]; [more]
· The Education Minister faced further criticism for allegedly ‘sexing up’ evidence given to an inquiry [more]
· Francis Maude became the latest Conservative politician to become embroiled in an expenses scandal [more]
· A former Labour MP resigned from the party, citing the culture of spin as her reason [more]
· The Lib Dems new tax proposals were well received by influential political figures [more]
· Unison, a Labour supporting union, attacked the government over their “childish venom” [more]
· Allegations of ballot-box tampering threw the selection of a Labour parliamentary candidate into further controversy [more]
· A leading think-tank said that the government’s income tax rises could lose the Treasury money [more]
Over the last week we learnt that…
· Unemployment has hit a new high of 2.1m [more]
· The national debt has crept over 50% of GDP [more]
· Deflation has arrived in Britain for the first time in 50 years [more]
· The IMF are far less optimistic about the economy than Alistair Darling [more]
· 1 in 10 households are struggling to pay their council tax this year [more]
· The care system is “catastrophic” for vulnerable children a report concludes [more]
· The number of burglaries has risen for the second quarter in a row [more]
· UK youth are some of the unhappiest in Europe [more]
Over the last week the Liberal Democrats…
· Launched tax proposals including a pledge to cut income tax £700 for low and middle income earners [more]
· Attacked the Budget as “a political supermarket sweep of random promises” [more]
· Reacted to the Budget’s proposals for housing [more], broadband networks [more], car scrappage [more], energy [more] pensions [more], child poverty [more] and college funding [more]
· Gained council seats from Labour, the Conservatives and an Independent in a spectacular week of council by-election results north and south of the border [more]; [more]
· Nick Clegg rejected Gordon Brown’s proposals for reforming the system of MPs expenses [more]
· Warned that the UK was facing a “credit crunch crime wave” [more]
· Demanded that David Miliband corrects the Parliamentary record over torture allegations [more]
· Led a debate calling on the government to provide greater support to armed forces veterans [more]
· Criticised banks for charging exorbitant credit card interest rates [more]
· Called for greater support for the children of nuclear test veterans [more]

April 25th, 2009 at 6:05 pm
[...] Original post by VIC DALBERT [...]