Reblogged from Vox Political:
David
Tennant’s outstanding run as the title character in Doctor Who began by
ending the career of fictional Prime Minister Harriet Jones with just six words
to an aide: “Don’t you think she looks tired?”
The character had been PM for a very short time but had made serious errors
of judgement. In that respect – and that alone – she is the David Cameron of the
Doctor Who universe.
Cameron and his cronies are currently wheeling out a succession of policies
that they want us to believe are new. The latest of these, according to the BBC
News website, involves extended opening hours for local doctors.
That’s right – he’ll be piloting a £50 million scheme in nine areas of
England where surgeries will be able to bid for funding to open from 8am to 8pm,
seven days a week.
Perhaps he’s hoping that our memories have suffered rapid ill-health
recently, because this is nothing but an old Labour scheme, painted
blue.
Labour offered GP practices extra money to open later in the evening and on
weekends, and most surgeries tried it out – until lack of demand meant funding
was reduced and hours cut back.
Many surgeries still offer out-of-hours appointments – so it seems unlikely
that there is any need for Cameron’s version at all…
… unless he is considering making an appointment for himself. Look at the
image. Don’t you think he looks tired?
Other policies introduced during the Tory conference include the indefinite
extension of Workfare for the long-term unemployed, which is nothing more than
an underhanded plot to make it seem that joblessness has dropped, allowing the
Bank of England to raise interest rates, as
this blog revealed yesterday.
And the much-touted but low-paying married tax allowance turned out
to be even lower-paying for the low-waged who are already receiving
help through tax credits, which are due to be phased out in favour of Universal
Credit, paid to people whose incomes are low after tax. Their higher after-tax
income means their UC will drop by £130, making them just £70 per year
better-off.
Meanwhile, the ‘free school meals’ policy unveiled by Coalition partners the
Liberal Democrats has also left a nasty taste in peoples’ mouths. It turns out
that the number of people receiving such help is about the only indicator of
low-income households available to school authorities, and is part of how
schools show regulators that SAT results are not their only priority – they are
doing their best in areas where parents are out of work. Losing that marker
means schools in challenging circumstances will be unable to demonstrate
their situation and will suffer as a result.
That leaves just the new tax on plastic bags in England, which is an idea
the Coalition stole from the much-maligned Labour Welsh Government – another
Labour idea the Tories have adopted (and this should serve as a warning sign for
Labour: When Tories adopt your policies, you have drifted much too far to the
right of the political spectrum).
Clearly the strain – of trying to dream up new policies that will make his
party look good - has taken its toll on clueless Cameron.
Don’t you think he looks tired?