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Honestly I do not know a single person that voted Conservative and that's out of a very broad age-range. All the right wing grey voters I know hate Tories and are all about UKIP. Who is even the demographic? And if they're the rich 1%..why are there so many of them?
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Tbf Tories have lots of policies that help the lower paid people, just not the unemployed. Like if you take 1997-2010 under Labour, tax free bit of income tax rose by about £2000, under the 5 years of coalition it rose almost £4000, giving people more of a right to their income. Then there's the whole 30 hours or less on minimum wage and you pay no income tax, and there are a lot of Euroskeptics who can't bring themselves to vote UKIP, so they go for the Tory referendum. Then there's the general annoyance towards falsely claimed benefits that make people want to see welfare cut. NHS is getting a further £8 billion on it's budget on top of inflation by 2020 as well.Not saying they won't hurt vulnerable people, they likely will, but there's a lot of reasons people voted for them and I'm just really glad we didn't get Labour majority or Labour / SNP informal coalition (both would end up the same, SNP couldn't have afforded to vote against a labour minority government, Scotland would hate them if they brought labour down and let the Tories in), it's horribly unfair that anyone should be paying 50% of their income in tax, socialists don't seem to realise the fundamental flaw in that when all the rich people leave they have no one else's money to steal.
All very true regarding being better off not working than working on minimum wage, but New Labour made this problem.
During thatchers reign, no one wanted to be unemployed, and that's the way it should be, now you get people who want to stay unemployed and you can't really blame them when they get more than they would for working - it's common sense to do less work for more money. Labours solution seems to be raise minimum wage, but this will choke business, raising unemployment, or lead to artificial inflation of products, rendering the whole process useless as wages still buy the same. Ideally they'd just say housing benefit stays until you earn over so much, but this isn't going to happen in the current climate.
Bedroom tax needs revision, yeah, but it's a sensible policy. This government seeks to create 200,000 new homes, hopefully alleviating some of the strain on bedroom tax. Still think it needs a clause that says where there is no alternative but to live in a greater bedroom-ed house they don't suffer the loss of housing benefit. Fully agree with the policy at it's heart though, just needs better implementation.
they support those who work first and then with what's left will prop up those who can't/won't, and that's the way it should be.
During thatchers reign, no one wanted to be unemployed, and that's the way it should be, now you get people who want to stay unemployed and you can't really blame them when they get more than they would for working -
Thatcher's children when that was in fact a small minority of people from already favourable backgrounds in the centre of London. The rest of the country had it very very badly,
People stay unemployed because it's quicker and easier to claim JSA than it is to get up out of bed and actually earn it. Too many young people want money and status but they're too bone idle to walk across the road to go and get it as if the world owes them a living and that a job will magically appear for them the second they leave school. I was lucky- Couldn't get a teaching job anywhere (where I met a lot of these younger people that can't be bothered) but I left uni on the Tuesday and was at a different job (working for my father in law) on the Friday. He's the sort of person (and I am too) that will give people a chance if they're prepared to work for it. There's no work ethic anymore.
Thatcher screwed everybody north of Watford Gap Services. Hence the reason a lot of the northern cities and Scotland (until now) vote Labour.
I was lucky- Couldn't get a teaching job anywhere (where I met a lot of these younger people that can't be bothered) but I left uni on the Tuesday and was at a different job (working for my father in law) on the Friday.
I even had my designated job advisor suggest that I lie and feign experience if I had none, which I'm pretty sure is illegal.
Constantly going to the Job Centre is so annoying, they constantly look down at you as if you're not good enough and tell you you're not looking for jobs properly.The face on the one woman when I got a job before they could force me on a placement was so satisfying.Shame my job sucks and I'm still not really going anywhere in life but hey ho