gordondaviesmoustache said:
This is exactly what I was alluding to. In a fucking nutshell.
If you mixed with right-wing people in any meaningful sense you would understand their deep held feelings about the last Labour government in terms of immigration, and financial mismanagement in particular. Many of them are terrified about Labour getting into power. And there's plenty of them, even if you possibly don't encounter them too frequently. In that sense, that government was every bit as "divisive" as this one. You cannot appreciate this because you (seemingly) are incapable of viewing the world outside your own prism.
The notion that this country has ever been united, politically or socially, is utterly farcical. On that basis, every government is very, very divisive.
Far from viewing the world in my own prism, I take on board the thoughts of friends from the right, including the landlord of my local who i played cricket with from we were in the under 15's together, my cousin who owns the local butcher's and a couple of mates that work in banking, though from my experiences in life, I believe that all contribute to the society we live in, and while inequality is inescapable, the level of inequality needs addressed.
I do not believe that immigration was the cause of the economic global meltdown, and know personally of companies that recruited actively abroad as it helped them deflate their wage bill and boost profits, hardly a socialist ideal.
That new labour mismanaged the finances is down to them trying imho to be right wing and left at the same time (deregulation of the financial services sector, that the tories ridiculed for not going far enough) and failing to address tax evasion being the two biggest mistakes.
For what it is worth, I would raise corporation tax (and ensure it was collected) from the national and multi national chains, and use the increased revenue to help SME's, the people that recycle their profits in the society that provides those profits, rather than a shareholder from dear knows where, a largescale housing programme (idealy on brownfield sites) with the houses remaining in public ownership (thus reducing the hb bill), with stipulations that those contracted to build the properties must employ a number of apprentices (with the numbers reducing as the apprentices become time served), thus reducing the number of NEEP's, youth unemployment, disenfranchisement and mental health issues that come with youth unemployment. This i believe if organised correctly could be cost neutral (at worst) within 10 - 15 years, and would also halt the ever rising cost of property, enabling first time buyers to get a foot on the ladder as the buy to let market becomes less lucrative