Jeremy Corbyn’s U-turn on tuition fees debt is jaw-dropping and only a ruse to persuade voters
PERHAPS he deserves some credit for being so open about his own uselessness, but Jeremy Corbyn’s U-turn on tuition fees debt is jaw-dropping.
The Labour leader’s claim that his promise to abolish student debt was meaningless is certainly an original approach to persuading voters that he deserves the keys to Number Ten.
Speaking a week before polling day the Labour leader was unambiguous.
Referring to the tuition fee debts of students, he said, “I will deal with it”.
Now he wants us to believe that when he said, “I will” he meant, “I won’t”.
And in any case, he says he was “unaware of the size” of the debt burden.
How could he have been expected to know it would cost £100billion? It’s not as if he wants to be put in charge of the nation’s finances.
Not so much the economics of the madhouse as just another example of what counts for normal in Corbyn’s Labour.
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Diesel weasels
IN 2001, then-Chancellor Gordon Brown cut the duty on diesel. He wanted to encourage motorists to switch because diesel cars emit less carbon than petrol.
Now we know diesel cars emit dangerously high levels of particulates — tiny soot particles — and nitrogen oxides.
The wheel has turned full circle and the Government wants to get diesel vehicles off the roads.
But it would be wrong to punish the drivers who simply did what the Labour Government asked and switched.
Instead of putting up taxes on diesel drivers, the fair solution is to give them tax breaks to go back to petrol.
The horrordays
THE heavens have opened.
Who needs a calendar?
It can only be the British summer.
Take a stand
PART of being British is battling against an army of jobsworths.
Shamed, the council has waived the fine. Now she’s had dozens of offers to set up her stall.
The council look like right lemons.