Prime Minister's Questions 23 November 2011 Best Moment

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Uploaded by on Nov 24, 2011

Cameron wins the day:
Edward Miliband: There he goes again; when it goes wrong, it is nothing to do with the Prime Minister. It is his ABC—Anyone But Cameron to blame when things go wrong.
What did the Chancellor say at the time of the Budget last year? He said that his approach would deliver
"a steady and sustained economic recovery, with low inflation and falling unemployment."—[Official Report, 22 June 2010; Vol. 512, c. 168.]
Three promises made; three promises broken. The Government's plan is failing, and that is the truth. Does that not show why at the autumn statement, the Prime Minister should change course?
The Prime Minister: Let me just give the right hon. Gentleman the latest growth figures in Europe. Britain grew at 0.5% in the last quarter, which is the same as the US and Germany, faster than France, faster than Spain, faster than the EU average and faster than the eurozone average. That is the fact. Of course it is a difficult economic environment that we are in, but is there a single other mainstream party anywhere in Europe that thinks the answer to the debt problem is more spending and more borrowing? If he is worried about the level of debt, why is he proposing to add another £100 billion to it? It is the height of irresponsibility, and the reason why people will never trust Labour with the economy again.
Edward Miliband: How out of touch does this Prime Minister sound? Some 1 million young people and their families are worried about finding a job and all he offers is complacency and more of the same. Now we know it: however high youth unemployment goes and however bad it gets, it is a price worth paying to protect his failed plan. I tell him this: unless he changes course next week, 1 million young people will become the symbol of his failed economic plan and an out-of-touch Prime Minister.
The Prime Minister: The right hon. Gentleman asks for a change of course. Let me just say to him what the leading economic organisations in our country and, indeed, across the world say about that issue. The IMF says this:
"'Is there a justification for a shift in the policy mix', we think the answer is no."
Let us listen to the Governor of the Bank of England, Mervyn King:
"There has to be a Plan A."
[ Interruption. ] The Leader of the Opposition says that he would not listen to him; it was Labour who appointed him.
"There has to be a Plan A...this country needs a fiscal consolidation starting from its largest peacetime budget...ever".
Who was it who gave us that peacetime budget? The Labour party. Let us listen to the CBI, the leading business organisation in this country:
"Priorities for the next 12 months: Stick closely to the existing credible plan".
That is what the experts say; that is what business says; that is what the Bank of England says. Would you listen to them or would you listen to the people who got us into this mess in the first place?

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  • Yet another testament to why Labour should never, ever, EVER be voted into power again!!!

  • sling it Ed.

  • @5keko

    I so agree.

    No teeth, no alternative, no policies, no chance.

    He has to go.

  • Go Ed

  • Gotta love "question time."

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