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    • Not sure what to make of that or what it means for me, I was just about to head to my kip and it's a bit too late for legalise. When is the "expenditure occured"?  When they start spending money to write to me?  Or is this a bad thing (as "harsh" would imply)? When all is said and done, I do not have two beans to rub together, we rent our home and EVERYTHING of value has been purchased by and is in my wife's name and we are not financially linked in any way.  So at least if I can't escape my fate I can at least know that they will get sweet FA from me anyway   edit:  ah.. Sophia Harrison: Time bar decision tough on claimants WWW.SCOTTISHLEGAL.COM Time bar is a very complex area of law in Scotland relating to the period in which a claim for breach of duty can be pursued. The Scottish government...   This explains it like I am 5.  So, a good thing then because creditors clearly know they have suffered a loss the minute I stop paying them, this is why it is "harsh" (for them, not me)? Am I understanding this correctly?  
    • urm......exactly what you filed .....read it carefully... it puts them to strict proof to prove the debt is enforceable, so thus 'holds' their claim till they coughup or not and discontinue. you need to get readingthose threads i posted so you understand. then you'll know whats maybe next how to react or not and whats after that. 5-10 threads a day INHO. dont ever do anything without checking here 1st.
    • I've done a new version including LFI's suggestions.  I've also change the order to put your strongest arguments first.  Where possible the changes are in red.  The numbering is obviously knackered.  Methinks stuff about the consideration period could be added but I'm too tired now.  See what you think. Background  1.1  The Defendant received the Parking Charge Notice (PCN) on the 06th of November 2020 following the vehicle being parked at Arla Old Dairy, South Ruislip on the 05th of December 2019.  Unfair PCN  4.1  On XXXXX the Defendant sent the Claimant's solicitors a CPR request.  As shown in Exhibit 1 (pages 7-13) the solicitors helpfully sent photos of 46 signs in their evidence all  clearly showing a £60.00 parking charge notice (which will  be reduced to £30 if paid within 14 days of issue).  There can be no room for doubt here - there are 46 signs produced in the Claimant's own evidence. 4.2  Yet the PCN affixed to the vehicle was for a £100.00 parking charge notice (reduced to £60 if paid promptly).  The reminder letters from the Claimant again all demanded £100. 4.3        The Claimant relies on signage to create a contract.  It is unlawful for the Claimant to write that the charge is £60 on their signs and then send demands for £100.   4.4        The unlawful £100 charge is also the basis for the Claimant's Particulars of Claim. No Locus Standi 2.1  I do not believe a contract exists with the landowner that gives MET Parking Services a right to bring claims in their own name. Definition of “Relevant contract” from the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012, Schedule 4,  2 [1] means a contract Including a contract arising only when the vehicle was parked on the relevant land between the driver and a person who is-  (a) the owner or occupier of the land; or  (b) Authorised, under or by virtue of arrangements made by the owner or occupier of the land, to enter into a contract with the driver requiring the payment of parking charges in respect of the parking of the vehicle on the land. According to https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2006/46/section/44  For a contract to be valid, it requires a director from each company to sign and then two independent witnesses must confirm those signatures.  2.2  The Defendant requested to see such a contract in the CPR request.  The contract produced was largely illegible and heavily redacted, and the fact that it contained no witness signatures present means the contract has not been validly executed. Therefore, there can be no contract established between MET Parking Services and the motorist. Even if “No Parking in Electric Bay” could form a contract (which it cannot), it is immaterial. There is no valid contract. Illegal Conduct – No Contract Formed  3.1 At the time of writing, the Claimant has failed to provide proof of planning permission granted for signage etc under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990. Lack of planning permission is a criminal offence under this Act and no contract can be formed where criminality is involved.  3.4        I also do not believe the claimant possesses this document.  No Keeper Liability  5.1        The defendant was not the driver at the time and date mentioned in the PCN and the claimant has not established keeper liability under schedule 4 of the PoFA 2012. In this matter, the defendant puts it to the claimant to produce strict proof as to who was driving at the time.  5.2 The claimant in their Notice To Keeper also failed to comply with PoFA 2012 Schedule 4 section 9[2][f] while mentioning “the right to recover from the keeper so much of that parking charge as remains unpaid” where they did not include statement “(if all the applicable conditions under this Schedule are met)”.    5.3        The claimant did not mention the parking period instead only mentioned time 20:25 which is not sufficient to qualify as a parking period.   Protection of Freedoms Act 2012  The notice must -  (a) specify the vehicle, the relevant land on which it was parked and the period of parking to which the notice relates; 22. In the persuasive judgement K4GF167G - Premier Park Ltd v Mr Mathur - Horsham County Court – 5 January 2024 it was on this very point that the judge dismissed this claim. 5.4  A the PCN does not comply with the Act the Defendant as keeper is not liable.   Interest 6.2  It is unreasonable for the Claimant to delay litigation for four years in order to add excessive interest. Double Recovery  7.1  The claim is littered with made-up charges. 7.2  As noted above, the Claimant's signs state a £60 charge yet their PCN is for £100. 7.3  As well as the £100 parking charge, the Claimant seeks recovery of an additional £70.  This is simply a poor attempt to circumvent the legal costs cap at small claims. 29. Since 2019, many County Courts have considered claims in excess of £100 to be an abuse of process leading to them being struck out ab initio. An example, in the Caernarfon Court in VCS v Davies, case No. FTQZ4W28 on 4th September 2019, District Judge Jones-Evans stated “Upon it being recorded that District Judge Jones- Evans has over a very significant period of time warned advocates (...) in many cases of this nature before this court that their claim for £60 is unenforceable in law and is an abuse of process and is nothing more than a poor attempt to go behind the decision of the Supreme Court v Beavis which inter alia decided that a figure of £160 as a global sum claimed in this case would be a penalty and not a genuine pre-estimate of loss and therefore unenforceable in law and if the practise continued, he would treat all cases as a claim for £160 and therefore a penalty and unenforceable in law it is hereby declared (…) the claim is struck out and declared to be wholly without merit and an abuse of process.” 30. In Claim Nos. F0DP806M and F0DP201T, District Judge Taylor echoed earlier General Judgment or Orders of District Judge Grand, stating ''It is ordered that the claim is struck out as an abuse of process. The claim contains a substantial charge additional to the parking charge which it is alleged the Defendant contracted to pay. This additional charge is not recoverable under the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012, Schedule 4 nor with reference to the judgment in Parking Eye v Beavis. It is an abuse of process from the Claimant to issue a knowingly inflated claim for an additional sum which it is not entitled to recover. This order has been made by the court of its own initiative without a hearing pursuant to CPR Rule 3.3(4)) of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998...'' 31. In the persuasive case of G4QZ465V - Excel Parking Services Ltd v Wilkinson – Bradford County Court -2 July 2020 (Exhibit 4) the judge had decided that Excel had won. However, due to Excel adding on the £60 the Judge dismissed the case. 7.7        The addition of costs not previously specified on signage are also in breach of the Consumer Rights Act 2015, Schedule 2, specifically paras 6, 10 and 14.  7.8        It is the Defendant’s position that the Claimant in this case has knowingly submitted inflated costs and thus the entire claim should be similarly struck out in accordance with Civil Procedure Rule 3.3(4).  In Conclusion  8.1        I invite the court to dismiss the claim. Statement of Truth I believe that the facts stated in this witness statement are true. I understand that proceedings for contempt of court may be brought against anyone who makes, or causes to be made, a false statement in a document verified by a statement of truth without an honest belief in its truth. 
    • Scottish time bar: Scottish appeal court re-affirms the “harsh” rule (cms-lawnow.com)  
    • I suppose I felt my defence would be that it was an honest mistake and even the initial £60 charges seemed unjust, let alone the now two £170's he is now demanding. There is no Justpark code for 'Sea View' on the signs in the car park and the first/nearest car park that comes up when you're in the Sea View car park is the 'Polzeath beach car park'. If I have to accept that I need to pay £340 to avoid the stress of him maybe taking me to court, then so be it. If people here advise me I don't have a case then I will just have to pay.
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    • We have finally managed to obtain the transcript of this case.

      The judge's reasoning is very useful and will certainly be helpful in any other cases relating to third-party rights where the customer has contracted with the courier company by using a broker.
      This is generally speaking the problem with using PackLink who are domiciled in Spain and very conveniently out of reach of the British justice system.

      Frankly I don't think that is any accident.

      One of the points that the judge made was that the customers contract with the broker specifically refers to the courier – and it is clear that the courier knows that they are acting for a third party. There is no need to name the third party. They just have to be recognisably part of a class of person – such as a sender or a recipient of the parcel.

      Please note that a recent case against UPS failed on exactly the same issue with the judge held that the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 did not apply.

      We will be getting that transcript very soon. We will look at it and we will understand how the judge made such catastrophic mistakes. It was a very poor judgement.
      We will be recommending that people do include this adverse judgement in their bundle so that when they go to county court the judge will see both sides and see the arguments against this adverse judgement.
      Also, we will be to demonstrate to the judge that we are fair-minded and that we don't mind bringing everything to the attention of the judge even if it is against our own interests.
      This is good ethical practice.

      It would be very nice if the parcel delivery companies – including EVRi – practised this kind of thing as well.

       

      OT APPROVED, 365MC637, FAROOQ, EVRi, 12.07.23 (BRENT) - J v4.pdf
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THE Election - Made your mind up yet ??


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Well the new government has a bit of a mess to sort out that it didn't create. You can blame it on who you like but you can't blame it on the Lib Dems or the Conservatives. It has to be sorted out and we all knew that whoever got in, taxes would have to rise.
Oh yes, I forgot, Labour is to blame for everything, so even if the ConDem renege on every one of their pledges, that will STILL be Labour's fault! :rolleyes:

 

I suppose their attempt to ensconce themselves in the Commons by raising the percentage to 55% so they can never be kicked out no matter how much they f*** up is to be blamed on Labour too? :rolleyes:

 

 

Oh, and apologies to AC, I thought the fact that you have been posting links to all the "good" things the ConDem are supposed to be doing for us was a deliberate attempt to prove a point that you were right, I never realised that it was purely a coincidence that of all the press available, it was only the rose-tinted ones that made it past your cut and paste skills! :razz:

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Anyone else think the 55% thing is just incase the ConDem coalition breaks down so the conservatives still keep power?

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Anyone else think it's strange that timing of this rise to 55%? It comes at a time when the conservatives have just over 47% of the votes! Is it a coincedance that all the others added together only equal 53%?

 

Edit: Meh didn't think I submitted the 1st one :p

Edited by locutus
See Edit:

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Look on the bright side. At least Gordon has been booted out.

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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by Booky:

 

Oh, and apologies to AC, I thought the fact that you have been posting links to all the "good" things the ConDem are supposed to be doing for us was a deliberate attempt to prove a point that you were right, I never realised that it was purely a coincidence that of all the press available, it was only the rose-tinted ones that made it past your cut and paste skills!"

 

Did I infer that the content of the link was good, or bad?

 

No, I did not!

 

To reiterate, I simply posted the link up, because I came across it on the AOL home page and thought that it would be of interest to members.

 

Good God, these little side swipes are extremely tedious...

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Gordon is out but someone else i don't trust is in... makes very little difference to me.

 

All this talk of "political reform" seems to just make it harder to vote anyone else in so far, and the "alternative vote" doesn't go anywhere near close enough to making it fair.

 

Still, I'm feeling like the eternal optimist falling off the empire states building... passing the 35th floor, everything is OK so far!!

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Gordon is out but someone else i don't trust is in... makes very little difference to me.

 

All this talk of "political reform" seems to just make it harder to vote anyone else in so far, and the "alternative vote" doesn't go anywhere near close enough to making it fair.

 

Still, I'm feeling like the eternal optimist falling off the empire states building... passing the 35th floor, everything is OK so far!!

 

I know what you mean. For 35th floor, read year 10 of the last Labour Government.

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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by Booky:Did I infer that the content of the link was good, or bad?

 

No, I did not!

 

To reiterate, I simply posted the link up, because I came across it on the AOL home page and thought that it would be of interest to members.

Of course. Hence the apology. If you're being sincere, then I must be too.

Good God, these little side swipes are extremely tedious...

So sorry, m'lady. I know, I know, life would be soooo much easier if the people would know their place and stop agitating and expressing their opinion so! I guess that's what comes with giving the common people education and a vote. :-D
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Look on the bright side. At least Gordon has been booted out.

Oh yes, the bright side. Looks suspiciously like the flames of Hell from where I am standing.

 

The light at the end of a tunnel... except it's actually a train rushing towards you.

 

:rolleyes:

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Oh yes, the bright side. Looks suspiciously like the flames of Hell from where I am standing.

 

The light at the end of a tunnel... except it's actually a train rushing towards you.

 

:rolleyes:

 

We've had 13 years of Gordon Brown, his stealth taxes, his lies and his broken promises. 4 days on and already you're whinging about the new government. We'll all be paying for Brown's efforts for the next 20 years or so and the equality agenda is unlikely to get us out of this mess, so you'd better get used to it.

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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Just as a reminder, here are Gordon's first 90 stealth taxes - just the ones until 2004:

 

July 1997

01 • Mortgage Interest Tax Relief At Source (MIRAS) reduced from 15% to 10%

02 • Dividend Tax Credits for pension schemes abolished

03 • Income tax relief on health insurance abolished

04 • Insurance Premium Tax extended to some health insurance

05 • Road Fuel Tax escalator increased to 6%

06 • Vehicle Excise Duty increased

07 • Tobacco duty escalator increased to 5%

08 • Stamp Duty raised to 2%

09 • Carry back of Corporation Tax losses limited to 1 year

10 • Windfall tax on utilities

March 1998

11 • Tax relief for the married couple's allowance (MCA) cut to 10%

12 • Top rate of Insurance Premium Tax extended to travel insurance

13 • Exceptional increase in tobacco and alcohol duties

14 • Duties on casinos and gaming machines raised

15 • Road Fuel Tax escalator increase brought forward

16 • Tax on company cars increased

17 • Tax relief on foreign earnings abolished

18 • Tax concessions for certain professions abolished

19 • Capital gains tax imposed on certain non-residents

20 • Restriction of Capital Gains Tax relief on reinvestment

21 • Corporation tax payments on account brought forward

22 • Stamp duty increased again

23 • Certain hydrocarbon duties increased

24 • Additional diesel duties introduced

25 • Landfill Tax increased

26 • Double tax credits on certain dividends restricted

 

March 1999

27 • National Insurance Contributions earning limit raised

28 • NI Contributions for self-employed increased

29 • Tax relief of Married Couple's Allowance abolished

30 • MIRAS abolished

31 • Self-employed contractors to pay NI and income tax as if employees

32 • Company car business mileage discount limited

33 • Double escalator on tobacco duties

34 • Insurance Premium Tax increased to 5%

35 • Vocational training relief abolished

36 • Employer NI Contribution base broadened to include all benefits in kind

37 • VAT on some banking services increased

38 • Tax on reverse premiums paid to tenants by landlords introduced

39 • Duty on domestic fuel oils up

40 • Vehicle Excise Duty for lorries increased

41 • Landfill tax escalator introduced

42 • Stamp Duty rates raised again to 2.5/3.5%

 

March 2000

43 • Tobacco duties increased above inflation

44 • Stamp duty raised for 4th time, scope of duty extended

45 • Extra taxation of life assurance companies

46 • Rules on tax havens tightened up

47 • Company car taxes raised

 

2001

The Chancellor gives the exhausted nation a year off – no new stealth taxes!

 

April 2002

48 • Personal tax allowances frozen

49 • National Insurance threshold frozen

50 • NI Contributions for employers raised

51 • NI Contributions for employees raised [Class 1 up 1%]

52 • NI Contributions for self-employed raised

53 • North Sea taxation increased

54 • Duty on some alcoholic drinks raised

55 • Stamp duty thresholds frozen

56 • Tax relief on investment in film industy restricted

57 • Rules on corporate debt tightened

58 • Nil-rate threshold for inheritance tax raised by less than the rate of inflation

 

April 2003

59 • VAT imposed on electronically supplied services

60 • Domestic staff on £89/week to pay NI & income tax, employers to pay NI

61 • Betting duty increases

62 • Tax on red diesel and fuel oil increased

63 • Anti-tax haven rules tightened to cover more UK firms with Irish subsidiaries

64 • Vehicle excise duty raised

65 • Personal tax allowances frozen again

 

July, 2003

66 • £35 added to all fines and £3 added to the cost of a home insurance policy

 

September, 2003

67 • Price of petrol raised 7p per gallon (with the VAT)

 

October, 2003

68 • Up to 8 times increase in the stamp duty on leases for retail premises

69 • Airport Tax doubled

 

December, 2003

70 • 40% extra Council Tax on second homes was sneaked in while the Westminster Wonders were breaking up for their hols a whole week before Xmas.

Additional info : It has been pointed out that a number of councils gave an even bigger discount for second homes and the increase for some people can be 80%. Plus the usual 6-18% annual rise, depending on how bloated the council's operations have become.

Exemptions may be granted if the second home owner (1) has to live somewhere because of his/her employment, (2) the dwelling comes with the job, or (3) there are special threat/security reasons involved. All of which excuses apply to 10, Downing Street, the home of a certain Mr. Anthony B. Liar. (Thanks to M.K.)

 

January, 2004

71 • £60 per day fine for late submission of self-assessment income tax forms

72 • Traffic wardens to receive powers to impose fines for a whole bunch of offences to keep poor people off the roads. The offences will include parking more than 19 inches from the kerb (£100) and dithering by people who are lost over, and who don't know whether to make a turn or keep straight on

73 • A 'Victims Fund' surcharge fine on everyone who passes through the courts. £5 for speeding up to £30 for murder.

74 • Legal Aid for the middle classes abolished

 

February, 2004

75 • £40 per week charge to middle-class parents for formerly free nursery places

76 • £200 per year charge to middle-class parents for places on formerly free school buses

77 • £250 per hour charge from the fire brigade for non-fire-related call-outs, e.g. clearing up after road accidents and rescuing pussy cats from trees

 

March, 2004

78 • £550 tax rise (at standard rate) for people using a company van or people-carrier out of work time

79 • Council Tax will rise at least 7.4% next year (according to the Budget)

80 • The tax incentive for owner-operator small businesses to become companies abolished

81 • Tax on cross-border payments for goods and services between multi-divisional companies extended to transactions within the UK

82 • Tax on trusts up from 34% to 40%

83 • Duty on red diesel up 1p/litre above inflation (57% rise)

84 • Duty on liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) used as fuel up 1p/litre above inflation (45% rise)

85 • Personal allowances for taxpayers under 65 frozen

 

April 2004

86 • PEPs and ISAs containing shares lose their tax break on dividends and the annual ISA allowance cut by £2,000 to £5,000

87 • The 100% tax allowance for small businesses & self-employed on new computer/advanced telephone equipment cut to 50% for 2004/5 tax year

88 • Passports – in addition to costing twice as much as the present price of £42, the new 'biometric data' passports will be valid for half as long. They will have to be renewed every 5 years instead of every 10 years, which doubles the cost yet again.

89 • £100 per year 'lighthouse tax' on small boats over 8 metres long. Commerial shipping lines think they should pay £2.6 million per year towards the annual £73 million cost of maintaining lighthouses and navigational equipment.

 

May 2004

90 • Council Tax bills to rise a further £110 in the affected areas to pay for 'Two Jags' Prescott's regional assemblies

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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4 days on and already you're whinging about the new government. .
a) I am not "whinging" about anything, I am expressing quite firmly my extremely legitimate concerns about the way this new government, as soon as they are in, seems to want to change the way they traditionally get challenged in such a way that they can no longer get ousted! If that trampling on democracy doesn't worry you, then that's your choice of course.

 

b) I started worrying about the new government long before day ONE of it, never mind 4, no "already" about it, "still" may be more accurate. And I can pretty much guarantee I will be doing so, me and the hell of a lot of people who did NOT vote for this, for a very very long time... and no doubt even longer if they get their way with the 55% fix they're trying to pull.

 

Thankfully, even Cameron didn't foresee the backlash this odious attempt at manipulating the Commons system would create, and I read earlier that he is already backpedalling on it. Thank goodness for small mercies if that's true.

 

As for getting us out of this mess, if you really believe that salvation lies with that shower, then you truly are deluded.

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a) I am not "whinging" about anything, I am expressing quite firmly my extremely legitimate concerns about the way this new government, as soon as they are in, seems to want to change the way they traditionally get challenged in such a way that they can no longer get ousted! If that trampling on democracy doesn't worry you, then that's your choice of course.

 

b) I started worrying about the new government long before day ONE of it, never mind 4, no "already" about it, "still" may be more accurate. And I can pretty much guarantee I will be doing so, me and the hell of a lot of people who did NOT vote for this, for a very very long time... and no doubt even longer if they get their way with the 55% fix they're trying to pull.

 

Thankfully, even Cameron didn't foresee the backlash this odious attempt at manipulating the Commons system would create, and I read earlier that he is already backpedalling on it. Thank goodness for small mercies if that's true.

 

As for getting us out of this mess, if you really believe that salvation lies with that shower, then you truly are deluded.

 

I'm not sure who salvation lies with except that it certainly isn't with the rabble that created the mess we're in to start with.

 

But Gordon's gone so relax, things can only get better.

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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Ther best thing to come out of all of this is that there is a very good chance that both the tories and the lib dems have shot themselves in the foot in creating this unwanted alliance and, as a result will find themselves unelectable for (and I qoute the govenor of the bank of England here) a generation.

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Ther best thing to come out of all of this is that there is a very good chance that both the tories and the lib dems have shot themselves in the foot in creating this unwanted alliance and, as a result will find themselves unelectable for (and I qoute the govenor of the bank of England here) a generation.

 

It's quite possible that might happen. Logic says that Labour should have been wiped out at the election just gone, but they weren't because not enough people trusted the opposition parties. As to the calibre of the two geek-looking brothers standing for leadership of the labour party at the moment, it is more likely that the 'none of the above' will be the voters' first choice come the next election.

 

You just don't know though. Let's face it, some people are still stuck in a 'I hate Maggie' timewarp, so what's to say the same won't happen to Labour, especially when every tax rise will be attributable to Gordon Brown and Labour.

 

We'll find out in 5 years time, unless of course 55% of MPs can vote the current government down. Personally, to borrow a phrase, I'm intensely relaxed about the whole thing.

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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We'll find out in 5 years time, unless of course 55% of MPs can vote the current government down. Personally, to borrow a phrase, I'm intensely relaxed about the whole thing.

 

I'd be ralaxed if all of labour, all of the lib dems, all of the independants, all of the smaller parties also needed 5% of my own party to vote for a dissolution of parliament!

If in doubt, contact a qualified insured legal professional (or my wife... she knows EVERYTHING)

 

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We've had 13 years of Gordon Brown, his stealth taxes, his lies and his broken promises. 4 days on and already you're whinging about the new government. We'll all be paying for Brown's efforts for the next 20 years or so and the equality agenda is unlikely to get us out of this mess, so you'd better get used to it.

 

Labour hid ‘scorched earth’ debts worth billions - Times Online

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:

Maude, who has been given the task of reducing Whitehall waste, insisted that ministers were not scaremongering to paint their predecessors in a negative light. He said there was widespread concern that Labour had become particularly spendthrift in the run-up to the election campaign.

 

“We put the last government on notice that contracts should not be signed without specific ministerial direction,” he said. “We are now seeking to find out what has been committed in the last few months.”

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:

 

...The “black holes” that ministers have already unearthed include:

 

- A series of defence contracts signed shortly before the election, including a £13 billion tanker aircraft programme whose cost has “astonished and baffled” ministers.

 

- £420m of school building contracts, many targeting Labour marginals, signed off by Ed Balls, the former schools secretary, weeks before the general election was called."

 

Absolutely Outrageous!!!

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Well that should come as no surprise to anyone, especially this bit: £420m of school building contracts, many targeting Labour marginals, signed off by Ed Balls, the former schools secretary, weeks before the general election was called.

 

Here in Dorset, the funding per pupil is the lowest in the country, yet still the schools are in about the top third according to the league tables (I'll bet somebody will be on here moaning about league tables next, but they are the only thing parents can use to compare). It does show that throwing money at problems isn't always the answer though which is just as well because areas like Dorset were deliberately neglected by Labour because down here we don't vote for them. The people of Weymouth had a mad moment at the last election but this time around common sense and normality has been restored.

Edited by Fred Bassett

Before you criticise another man you should first walk a mile in his shoes. Then, when you criticise him, you'll be a mile away and he won't have any shoes on.

 

Don't get me confused with somebody knowledgeable by all those green blobs. I got most of them by making people laugh.

 

I am not European, I am English.

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Share on other sites

Well that should come as no surprise to anyone, especially this bit: £420m of school building contracts, many targeting Labour marginals, signed off by Ed Balls, the former schools secretary, weeks before the general election was called.

 

Here in Dorset, the funding per pupil is the lowest in the country, yet still the schools are in about the top third according to the league tables (I'll bet somebody will be on here moaning about league tables next, but they are the only thing parents can use to compare). It does show that throwing money at problems isn't always the answer though which is just as well because areas like Dorset were deliberately neglected by Labour because down here we don't vote for them. The people of Weymouth had a mad moment at the last election but this time around common sense and normality has been restored.

 

An old article but relevant!

Ed Balls accused of wasting £1bn on red tape | Education | guardian.co.uk

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