A clear choice for Britain
As the dust settles on the Party Conferences, Britain’s choice could not be clearer.
David Cameron as Prime Minister. Reducing the deficit, cutting taxes for working people and giving us an in-out referendum on Europe. A long term economic plan that has made the UK the fastest growing advanced economy in the world, with record employment.
Or Ed Miliband. With no plan for the economy and not a word on the deficit. Forgetting to mention the deficit is not a slip. It demonstrates that Labour has not learned a single lesson from the Great Recession it presided over in 2008.
Conservative promises are backed by our record
When David Cameron and the Conservatives set out our promises for the next five years, you can look to our record and know we have delivered. These pledges are not pulled from the air, but are built upon five years of credible, successful stewardship of the economy. This is our record.
- The fastest growing advanced economy in the world.
- Income tax abolished for 3 million low paid workers.
- 1.8 million jobs, 1.8 million apprenticeships and record employment.
- £800 a year extra on the basic state pension.
- 50,000 people owning a home of their own through Help to Buy.
Give us another five years, without the leg shackle of coalition government, and you know what you will get. Our long term economic plan is the foundation for all we will achieve in the next five years.
- A balanced national budget, so we can start paying back Labour’s debt.
- Continuing to protect the NHS budget.
- English votes for English laws.
- An in-out referendum on Europe.
- An increase in minimum wage to £7 and income tax abolished for minimum wage workers.
- Further tax cuts for 30 million people.
Go to bed with Lindsay Hoyle, wake up with Ed Miliband
On 7 May next year, we will all have a choice to make between David Cameron and Ed Miliband. This is a choice between the Conservative long term plan and whatever it is that Labour stand for.
But if we stick with the status quo in Chorley, Ed Miliband will be Prime Minister. Labour will be back in charge of the economy it wrecked in 2008 – and Britain will face unique danger.
If you go to bed with Lindsay Hoyle on election night, you will wake up with Ed in the morning.