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Sunday, 16 May 2010

'Labour hid ‘scorched earth’ debts worth billions'

The Times have the unsurprising news that (my emphasis):
'THE government last night accused Labour of pursuing a “scorched earth policy” before the general election, leaving behind billions of pounds of previously hidden spending commitments.

The newly discovered Whitehall “black holes” could force even more severe public spending cuts, or higher tax rises, ministers fear.

Vince Cable, the business secretary, said: “I fear that a lot of bad news about the public finances has been hidden and stored up for the new government. The skeletons are starting to fall out of the cupboard.”

The new cabinet has been discovering previously unknown contracts and uncosted spending commitments left by their spendthrift predecessors.

“There are some worrying early signs that numbers left by the outgoing government may not add up,” said Francis Maude, the Cabinet Office minister.

David Willetts, the universities minister, claimed that Labour had left behind “not so much an in-tray as a minefield”.

Billions of pounds in public money was committed in the run-up to the election campaign in a deliberate strategy to boost Labour’s chances at the ballot box and sabotage the next government.

One former Labour minister told The Sunday Times: “There was collusion between ministers and civil servants to get as many contracts signed off as possible before the election was called.”

One former adviser to the schools department said there was a deliberate policy of “scorched earth”. “The atmosphere was ‘pull up all the railways, burn the grain stores, leave nothing for the Tories’,” he added. '
I have been blogging about Labour's deliberate 'scorched earth' policy. It seems that Gordon Brown and his cabal of ministers and advisers have deliberately made the economy as bad as possible for the Conservatives to take-over; is anyone surprised? The facts about Labour's activities in this area need to be presented the UK public and their lies and deceits shouted about on every news channel. We also need an audit of the country's finances so that the public know that the coming cuts are not 'Tory cuts' but 'Labour cuts' and tax rises are not 'Tory tax rises' but 'Brown taxes'.

1 comment:

Craig said...

Are fraud charges against Labour ministers a possibility? If not, why not?

P.S. Love the new Twitter feature!