Poverty is the theme of the 2015 UK general election

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[Image: Joseph Rowntree Foundation.]

If the 2015 general election should have any theme at all, it is POVERTY.

Think about it; poverty has been the defining force in all our lives since David Cameron squelched into office with all his slimy mates and his treacherous new allies in the Liberal Democrats.

They used the threat of it to get more seats than the Labour Party (even though Labour did not overspend, and Labour’s methods of dealing with the ballooning national deficit – created by bankers – were far more effective than Tory austerity) and gain office in the first place.

They imposed it on the nation with their austerity cuts to investment, public services, and benefits.

Then they used it to divide us against ourselves, by pointing at the ‘have nots’ and calling them ugly words like ‘scrounger’, or ‘layabout’, or saying that ‘a life on benefits has become their lifestyle’. None of this is true. On Question Time last night (it is Friday as this is written), Michael Heseltine trotted out Iain Duncan Smith’s tired line about three generations of people on benefits as if it had any credibility (it hasn’t).

Meanwhile, the number of people in poverty is increasing rapidly. Today, 13 million people in the UK are in poverty – that’s nearly a quarter of the population. In 2010-11, the year the Coalition came into office, 61,468 people were using food-banks. By 2013-14, this had risen by nearly 1,500 per cent to 913,138 people.

The Coalition government consider this to be a great success and David Cameron wants you to re-elect him so he can inflict even more cuts and poverty on you, your family and your friends.

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Perhaps you don’t know what poverty is like. Perhaps you’ve never experienced it.

Jack Monroe has. She gave evidence to the all-party parliamentary group inquiry into hunger and food bank use in the UK. Here’s part of how she describes it:

“Poverty took me from being the girl who was always the lead in the school play, to a woman who can’t open her own front door. I suffer panic attacks, anxiety attacks, seemingly random triggers that immobilise me, render me useless but simultaneously unable to explain myself. I’ve cancelled talks and events, crushed into a corner of my sofa, sobbing until my guts ache at the drop of a final demand letter from a years-old debt landing on my door mat. One doorbell ringing unexpectedly last April sent me scuttling to hide at the top of my landing, peering fearfully down the hallway until whoever it was went away. I often miss interviews, because a certain broadcasting corporation calls from unknown or withheld numbers, and I just can’t bring myself to answer them. I’ve lost count of the number of people who tell me my poverty wasn’t real enough, or long enough, or whatever their particular factors deem to be poor enough – and all I can say to them, is that I can’t even open my own front door.”

Is that what you want for yourself? For your family (what kind of person would want that for their family)? For your friends (what kind of person would want that for their friends)?

Of course you don’t. But if you go out on May 7 and vote Conservative, you’ll be condemning somebody to it – or to the kind of death that we’ve seen too often over the last few years. Remember the man who was crushed in a waste compactor while he was looking for food in litter bins? Remember the man who froze to death on the street after being sanctioned off-benefit? How many have hanged themselves because the couldn’t see any future for themselves?

Here’s some advice. If you’re thinking of voting Conservative on May 7, do the whole country a favour:

Don’t even open your own front door.

Follow me on Twitter: @MidWalesMike

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One Comment

  1. Jeffery Davies February 20, 2015 at 6:22 am - Reply

    Oh whot a party of crooked peoples they pulled the wool over the eyes of most plebbs telling you you never had it so good but quietly putting into place all those private companies who cut jobs and takes their profits offshore
    they take away justice they take away your benefits how you wonder are you going to live food halls will be your saviour but they aint rtu ids now heres a proper demon whose culled the stock figures are going to be so many the plebbs wont be it saying how many and grasping it was that many but they taking backhanders from these companies they award contracts to isnt this conflict of interest nah we been tucked up by the greatest trick this century taken and spat out by crooked politicians jeff3

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