Derek Simpson
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In Denver last week, Barack Obama ignited the hopes and dreams of working Americans by boldly showing that he was their champion and that he understood that in America today there is a tremendous desire for change.
He was unapologetic in his support for the American middle classes over the very wealthy who currently hold sway over American economic policy.
There is no doubt in my mind, that the only thing that will prevent Barack Obama from becoming the next president of the United States is prejudice. In other words, such is the desire for change in the US, if Barack Obama was white he would wipe the Republicans out.
There is a similar desire for change on both sides of the Atlantic. The economic problems facing working Americans are in many ways a mirror image of the problems that working families in the UK face.
The UK is in the grip of a credit squeeze. British families are victims of falling real incomes and rising food and energy costs. There is a shortage of affordable housing and a higher proportion of taxation falls on the lowest 90% of earners than the top ten. Since January 2008 energy prices have risen by an astonishing 38% and food prices in UK supermarkets and shops have risen by 8.3% since January.
Our representatives in Government, verge on accusing us of being unpatriotic if we dare to expect our pay to keep up with the rising cost of living, and Ministers have imposed a pay deal at half the rate of inflation for public sector workers - most of whom are natural Labour supporters. Yet Ministers do not dare criticise or act against the real culprits of our current economic problems.
The finance industry was left to its own devices and displayed such staggering irresponsibility that we are now experiencing a world economic crisis. Their attempts to drive up profits coupled with rising food and energy prices, means that the government now wants to drive down the wages of hard working families. But they never had the nerve to reign in the unrestrained excesses of the boardroom.
In the coming months many low income families are going to be forced to switch their heating off because they can’t afford to stay warm this winter. The energy companies are using the thin cover of future investments to justify their refusal to meet their social responsibilities. This heartless excuse has been swallowed hook, line and sinker by the Department of Business and Enterprise. Everybody else knows that they are blatantly profiteering and paying out huge dividends to shareholders while everyone else struggles. Yet the government stands by and does nothing.
British families desperately need a champion in the way that Barack Obama has shown himself to be a future champion for American families.
Is it David Cameron and the Tories? Certainly not –Tory instincts would not and cannot ultimately deliver what people need or want. It’s Labour’s values combined with the right policies which offer the best answers. Gordon Brown is a good, decent man with strong values, but he needs to tear off the shackles of the last New Labour to reveal the real New Labour.
A week is a long time in politics and there is still 18 months to go. I believe that voters are not turning towards Conservatives because of any fundamental ideological shifts in the electorate but they will vote Conservative at the next election unless the Labour Government sets out a radical vision for change - a change in policy not a change in Leader.
However, Gordon Brown urgently needs to show that he is on our side. The bosses of the gas and electricity companies don’t vote Labour. The heads of Shell and BP don’t vote Labour but public sector workers do vote Labour and there are a lot more of them.
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If the US has any sense it will look at Britain and the crippling effects of a liberalist, left wing government and 11 years of "change". That`s what Obama is offering but the effects will be magnified by being the world`s superpower. Obama - a different shade of Blair but with the same effect.
Rick O`Shea, UK,
This government spends more than £600 billion pounds in the public sector ,£ 50 billion more than it raises in taxation. Why is it not committed to reducing this level of wasteful expenditure by at least 1%?
Why,too, do we tolerate 5 million people aged 16-65 living off state benefits?
Goodbye lab
david jones , reigate, uk
Nothing will change until we elect a BNP Government with Griffin as resident of 10 Downing Street.
Simon, New York, New York
This pub.sec. worker has never voted Labour. Don't make assumptions. Its not just the economy: its immigration, stealth taxes, Lisbon ConTreaty, fat-cat MPs(Lab MPs voted to keep expenses), Govt incompetence/data, nanny-state, stasi-type laws, fuel tax, Lab.lies, West Lothian Q, Council tax, Gordon.
Donna Walker, Effingham, England
Why are they called 'New Labour'? New Labour = New Taxation ,they are the party of tax ,always have been,always will be.
They cannot change,we have the 'Human Rights' Act firmly esconced in British law and the PC brigade two Labour staples,they do nothing about crime,schools are a shambles & so on.
michael, newcastle, uk
I totally agree. I have also voted Labour all my life, but not any more. Brown is a disaster : worse, he is an arrogant disaster.
Yet this is the man, if the media are to be believed, who spent years undermining Tony Blair, convinced that he could do better. He has to go - and soon.
Richard Cleeve, EASTBOURNE, U.K.
If the energy companies are making excessive profits;then were is the regulator 0n this matter. I have had enough of these innuendoes. Every thing as some sort of regulation, and Labour have failed dismally on the ones that matter.To give them further chances to disappoint is ridiculous.
A Walton, Leicester, England
Obama is another Tony Blair, a great orator and he can certainly talk the talk but he can't walk the walk. Similarly, there is no one in Labour that could ignite the party as its viewed as defunct, dysfunctional and beyond repair. People want achievers not more snake oil salesmen like these two.
Mike, Alicante, Spain
All very well but it is a Labour government that got us here!!! That's why people like me who have always voted Labour, been a party member for years (and even a councillor )have had enough. We have already deserted Labour. We are going to vote Tory. We are not coming back. Labour is finished.
Chris, Crawley,