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A letter to Mr Cameron shared on facebook

(83 Posts)
ayse Sat 09-May-15 11:59:29

Written by a younger person on face book. I thought I would share it with you all.

Dear Prime Minister,

I don't know if you will ever read this, but I have some things I wish to say to you.

You have won the General Election and command a majority in the House of Commons, and as such will feel you have a legitimate mandate to govern. However, you must also know that you don't command a majority of the British people.

Although our political views are very much at odds on many issues, I'm willing to believe that you are a good man, as sure of your ideals as I am of mine, and believe your plan is what's best for us all. You said today that you will govern for the whole country and bring back together that which has clearly fractured. I hope you will.

But Prime Minister, though you can obviously see your party did not win the confidence of Scotland and huge swathes of the north of England, I'm not sure your party quite understands why. It's not because we're all 'loony-left' or extremists and nationalists, it's because so many of us are scared. Scared of what your policies will do to our communities and families. Scared of what will happen to our health service and our schools. Scared of losing our family homes for the sake of a few quid saving from the bedroom tax, or not being able to heat our home and have enough left to buy food.

I don't disagree with you that the best way out of poverty is to work, nor do I think that people should get something for nothing and expect the the tax-payer to support people indefinitely if they are able to work. Who would think that that was ok and fair?

But your party's policies on these issues, couched in terms of reducing the deficit and balancing the books, don't seem to take into account the social and human cost of such actions. The country isn't a business, it's its people. All its people. And you are everyone's Prime Minister whether we voted for you or not.

You said today you will govern for everyone and unite the country. I hope you do. But to be able to do so you need to make it a priority in your first 100 days, to spend time in Scotland visiting people on zero hours contracts. Come to Manchester and talk with those who have been sanctioned for having a spare room, but have nowhere else to go. Go to Liverpool and meet people with disabled dependents who can't afford even one nanny, or to Newcastle and talk to people still living in poverty due to the demise of the coal industry. Spend a week or two living on the minimum wage, or volunteer in a food bank for a whole day.

Then Prime Minister you might begin to understand the cost of your policies from the other side, to see people as more than their net contribution to the economy, or as deliberate drains on the system. If you do that, then maybe you can heal some of the fractures in our society. Without this I just don't believe you can see just how crucial these issues are.

So please Prime Minister, leave Westminster for a few hours a week and truly strive to govern for all of us.

Rev'd Mike Walsh
The United Reformed Church

soontobe Sun 10-May-15 09:35:49

I think that you are probably right Ariadne.

I took it that whitewave was talking about hard print newspapers. I havent looked up hard print circulations in a long while.
And for some, probably wrong reason, didnt think many people read newspapers online. I suppose that is difficult to measure. Plus, I think, having spent too long on gransnet, I get the impression that GN readers read hard print a lot more than online. I am being a bit thick.

rosesarered Sun 10-May-15 11:29:45

We G'netters are a mixed bunch, not only with politics, but with technology!
Some will be as tech savvy as any young person, some less so, but manage to get around he virtual world, and others content with emailing and a few games and a forum or two.Many people still enjoy reading an actual newspaper though, me included.Let's be honest, there are right wing, centre and left wing newspapers out there and we all know which they are.

GrannyTwice Sun 10-May-15 11:55:47

But far more on the right!

Ana Sun 10-May-15 12:00:12

To answer your question, durhamjen, I am not rich at all. Probably rather less so than you.

POGS Sun 10-May-15 14:00:31

Again I say only an idiot takes their political knowledge from the printed press because we all know they are left/right wing. It is what the left/right papers do not report because of their partisan stance that makes for interesting reading and sourcing your knowledge base.

The BBC is another bone of contention some think it is biased to the left some to the right, you have to look past the BBC for your information to be honest, it is tantamount to a political spin doctor whilst claiming to be neutral, no it isn't. Like the papers there are some decent journalistic progs. but you have to look at other sources to evaluate even those.

I think pointing out there are more right wing papers is a faux argument unless you really do take everything they print as your political bible then you will only see politics through their eyes and won't know any different.

rosesarered Sun 10-May-15 16:49:43

yes, we all need to think for ourselves. Look at different sources etc and not believe touchingly that everything we read is gospel.This goes for all the left, right and centre voters.

Lilygran Sun 10-May-15 17:22:08

It depends what you mean by 'political knowledge'. All the media have the same map of the election results because that is the fact. There is also fudge and spin and informed and uninformed opinion. The thing is, to learn the difference between fact and opinion. Cameron speaks of 'One nation Conservatism'. What exactly does 'one nation' mean when the UK is so obviously divided?