General Election June 8th

Who will you vote for at the General Election?

  • Conservatives

    Votes: 189 28.8%
  • Labour

    Votes: 366 55.8%
  • Liberal Democrats

    Votes: 37 5.6%
  • SNP

    Votes: 8 1.2%
  • UKIP

    Votes: 23 3.5%
  • Other

    Votes: 33 5.0%

  • Total voters
    656
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Lots of hostile people in this crowd! Unnecessarily so I feel.

You're not on your soapboxes, you're a participant asking questions on behalf of others in the nation who want clear answers about the upcoming policies on matters that will affect the UK. It's not your opportunity to 'shout at the Tories', it just makes us as an electorate look rather emotionally unbalanced. If you cannot get your point across rationally, why bother at all?
 
The first question was loaded and she fended it off brilliantly, I don't know if she's telling the truth but impressive.

Obviously it was loaded, they are all loaded, no point otherwise, if that's the case she and jezza may as well make a statement and bugger off.
 
Lots of hostile people in this crowd! Unnecessarily so I feel.

You're not on your soapboxes, you're a participant asking questions on behalf of others in the nation who want clear answers about the upcoming policies on matters that will affect the UK. It's not your opportunity to 'shout at the Tories', it just makes us as an electorate look rather emotionally unbalanced. If you cannot get your point across rationally, why bother at all?

Wait until Corbyn comes on. I wouldn't be surprised if the BBC have dug up Martin Mcguiness to testify he was a member of the Provos.

They do love a plant
 
Date of article would be handy.
April 2017

Ah. So it's up from 2010 levels
It's just about at the level it was in Q4 2007 which was prior to the crash and at no point in the last 9 years has it been above that level.

You're a bright lad who knows his economics. Growth has been steady if not spectacular, corporate profitability is increasing, employment is up, corporate taxation rates are lower yet productivity has been stagnant. That should tell you that, despite all this, companies have not been investing. Any growth therefore has come from a increase in output achieved by increasing the labour force allied with the additional consumption by those extra workers. The pound is weak so that's good for exports. But in an era of relatively low unemployment, where the chance of increasing the labour force further is limited, you'll hit a financial brick wall unless you find a way of increasing productivity.

Agreed?
 
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