Dear Mr Cameron, Mr Clegg and Mr Miliband,
I
am writing to try to convince you all to put aside your ideological
differences and work together to solve the financial crisis that the
country finds itself in at the present time.
I
am sure that I am not alone in being sick and tired of the constant
blame game, buck-passing and excuses that the political parties in this
country engage in. They do nothing but stall any hope of getting any real progress made. Yes,
Labour left a financial mess when they left office but it was not all
their fault as the major global banking crisis too its toll as well. It
would be nice if Labour held their hands up and accepted some
responsibility but I believe we are passed the point of apportioning
blame.
It
angers me that the Coalition keeps on blaming Labour for the financial
mess they left when the country has been under Coalition control for two
years and the country has dropped into the double-dip recession the
austerity measures were meant to avoid. The Coalition cannot blame Labour for their own measures being ineffective; that is the Coalition’s fault and their fault alone.
Is it any wonder that the voters of this country are disaffected with politicians? All
you seem to do is compound each other’s errors and barrack each other
like schoolchildren, playing the blame game and making excuses.
Surely,
in a time of crisis such as the one the country finds itself in at
present, you could forget your petty differences, look at the expertise
within all the political parties and offer individuals with specialist
knowledge or interests positions within a larger Coalition encompassing
all political creeds?
I
am not suggesting that members of opposition parties are given
ministerial positions; it is only right and proper that the
Conservatives and Liberal Democrat Coalition takes the lead. I
am suggesting, however, that members of opposition parties may have
knowledge and ideas that may be of great value in solving the country’s
troubles. I am suggesting that
even the smallest parties should be utilised in the collaborative
undertaking; for instance, Green MP Caroline Lucas could be offered an
advisory position on energy and environmental issues.
I believe that there is a time for party politics and there is a time to put party politics aside. The current crisis is a case for the latter. The
electorate is disaffected with politicians and the only way to
re-engage voters in the political process is showing them that, when it
really counts, you can work collaboratively in the interests of the
entire population. Only then can you start to address the trust issues the electorate have with politicians as a group. Only then, will the public start to engage with politics again.
I am not a politician. I
am not an expert in politics. I am an ordinary member of the public who
is tired of this country as a whole suffering, of the poor and
disadvantaged suffering whilst the rich prosper. I
am an individual who finds it distasteful that politicians deal in the
politics of fear and scape goating instead of dealing in the politics of
aspiration for all. I am a man who wants to have respect in the people who are supposed to represent me and my views in Government. I am a person who sees what UK
society is and what it could be and weeps to see the enormous gulf
in-between caused by the inability of politicians to put aside their
ideological differences for the greater good.
Yours sincerely,
Myles Cook (Mr), Grays, Essex
Previously posted at http://valen1971.blogspot.com/2012/05/open-letter-to-leaders-of-three-main.html
Previously posted at http://valen1971.blogspot.com/2012/05/open-letter-to-leaders-of-three-main.html
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