Tory Manifesto offers a blank cheque for Britain – John McDonnell

Now the
Tories have published their manifesto in full we can see how a party that
has added £700 billion to the national debt since 2010 really approaches the
public finances.

Today they
have produced an 84 page document in which they made 60 spending commitments
but provide costings for only one, just a day after Philip Hammond revealed he
had no idea how much High Speed 2 will cost.

This
contrasts with Labour’s fully-costed manifesto, published on Tuesday that
identified funding covering all spending commitments.

Commenting,
John McDonnell, the Shadow Chancellor, said:

“The Tories’ numbers don’t add up. They have published an
84 page blank cheque that provides a tax giveaway guarantee for big business,
while offering a roll of the dice for working families with no commitments to
rule out rises in income tax and National Insurance.

“Now we can
see why Theresa May is running scared of debating Jeremy Corbyn, when she
publishes a document like this that contains more questions than answers. It
also further shows how her party has managed to add £700 billion to the
national debt since 2010, as they won’t be straight with the British people on
how much their plans for a wealthy few truly cost.

“One of the few revenue
raisers they identified was withdrawing free school meals from children and
withdrawing support for pensioners struggling to heat their homes – this just
sums up the Tory approach.

“This is the
equivalent of the Prime Minister going
to the shops with the nation’s cheque book and not
checking the price of the goods as she puts them in the trolley.

“All we know if the
Tories are returned next month is that if you’re a pensioner you face the
penalty of losing your winter fuel payments, control of your home, and the value of your pension.

“Today has
revealed that only the Labour Party at this election will stand up for
pensioners, and the 95 percent of taxpayers to build an economy for the many
not the few.”




Jeremy Corbyn response to the launch of the Conservative manifesto

Jeremy Corbyn, Leader
of the Labour Party
, responding
to the launch of the Conservative manifesto, said:

“Millions of pensioners are
betrayed by Theresa May’s manifesto. She is hitting older people with a classic
Nasty Party triple whammy:  Scrapping the triple lock on pensions,
removing the Winter Fuel Allowance and forcing those who need social care
to pay for it with their homes.

“The Conservatives’ record is one
of broken promises and failure. They promised to raise living standards, but
working families are set to be on average over £1,400 a year worse off. They
promised to improve all standards of NHS care, but A&Es are in crisis. They
promised to protect school spending, but schools are facing crippling cuts and
class sizes are soaring. You can’t trust a word Theresa May says.

“Despite Theresa May’s warm
words, she leads a party that has created a rigged economy that only works for
the super-rich. The Conservatives have not changed. While the Labour Party
has promised to protect low and middle earners from any tax rises, all Theresa
May has promised is a cut to Corporation Tax for their big business friends.
Unlike the Conservatives, Labour is standing up for the many, not the few.”




This is a manifesto that offers the majority of working people and pensioners insecurity – Gwynne

Andrew
Gwynne, Labour’s National Election co-ordinator,
responding to
the launch of the Conservative manifesto, said:

“Behind
the rhetoric, this is a manifesto that offers the majority of working people
and pensioners insecurity with a huge question mark over their living
standards.

“The
tax guarantee they previously made is gone. While they’ll guarantee Corporation
Tax falls to 17p they’re dropping their promise not to raise income tax and
National Insurance contributions, raising the spectre of tax rises on lower and
middle incomes. No wonder they’ve dropped their previous promise to raising
living standards and the phrase “living standards” doesn’t appear at all.

“This
manifesto is proof the Tories are ditching any claim to stand up for older
people. Pensioners stand to lose the pension guarantee in the next parliament,
the Winter Fuel Allowance is being hacked away at and their social care plans
could see those who need care forced to pay for it with their homes.

“For
our public services – slashed back by the Tories – there’s nothing but
insecurity in these plans. They’ve failed to match Labour’s commitment on
education and there’s no detail other than a vague promise on giving the NHS
funding – a promise they made in the past and broke.

“The
Tories stand up only for the few. For the many they offer the prospect of five
years of insecurity.”

Ends




You can’t trust the Tories’ promises on social care – Barbara Keeley

Barbara Keeley, Labour’s Shadow Mental
Health Minister,

responding to the Tories’ social care announcement ahead of their manifesto,
said:

“You can’t trust the
Tories’ promises on social care. In their last manifesto they promised a cap on
care costs. But they broke their promise, letting older and vulnerable people
down.

“It’s the Tories who have
pushed social care into crisis; their cuts to councils have meant £4.6bn axed
from social care budgets between 2010-2015, leaving 1.2 million
people struggling to get by without care. And NHS bosses have recently said
that the money the Tories promised them won’t help alleviate the problems, with
bosses warning the system won’t see anything like the level of resource
required.

“We need real action to
fix the system, not reheated broken promises with little detail about how
they’ll be delivered.

“While the Tories offer
more of the same failure and broken promises, Labour has pledged action. We’ll
increase social care budgets by £8bn over the lifetime of the Parliament,
including an additional £1bn for the first year. We will set up a National Care
Service to provide the care that people deserve.”




‘You can’t trust the Tories’ – Labour publishes dossier of Tory broken promises ahead of their manifesto launch

Ahead
of the Conservative Party’s Manifesto launch, Labour is today publishing a
document looking at the Tories’ record of broken promises.

The
document – entitled: ‘One Tory Manifesto. Two years of Failure. 50 Broken
Promises’ – lists 50 examples of when the Conservatives broke their word. From
the NHS to education, from living standards to policing, the Tories have broken
their promises time and again. 

·        
They promised on the economy, but they have
missed every debt and deficit target they set themselves

·        
They promised to raise living standards, but working
families are set to be on average over £1,400 a year worse off

·        
They promised to improve all standards of NHS care,
but A&Es are in their worst state on record and hospitals are in
financial crisis

·        
They promised to protect school spending, but per
pupil spending is going down and class sizes are soaring

As
they launch their latest manifesto, it is a reminder that the Tories can’t be
trusted to keep their word.

Andrew
Gwynne, Labour’s National Election Co-ordinator
, said:

“When Theresa May launches the Tory manifesto we can
expect her to make a raft of promises to the British people. But, as the
Conservatives make their latest solemn pledge there’s one thing we must bear in
mind: we’ve been here before.

“Theresa May pretends
otherwise, but she is a politician with a track record of failure and broken
promises. From the economy to the NHS, and policing to schools, Theresa May’s
Tories have failed again and again to deliver on the pledges they made.

“They made promises, they
quickly broke them; they would do so again. The Tories can’t be trusted.
Britain cannot afford five more years of them and their broken promises.”