DaveO wrote:Absolute nonsense. He wasn't remotely "hostile to business". He wanted to reduce business rates for SME's by forging a planned cut in corporation tax. So corporation-tax wise no business would be worse off and SME's would have been better off. If you are referring to things like restrictions being placed on zero hours contracts, then any ordinary voter who voted against Labour for that was a turkey voting for Christmas. And to say he lurched to the left is a joke. He did no such thing.
Ok then why the did Labour member, major donor and Gordon Brown's "enterprise champion" Lord Sugar just resign from the party. He said: "In the past year I found myself losing confidence in the party due to their negative business policies and general anti-enterprise concepts they were considering if they were elected. I expressed this to the most senior figures in the party several times. I signed on to New Labour in 1997 but more recently, particularly in relation to business, I sensed a policy shift moving back towards what Old Labour stood for. By the start of this year I had made my decision to resign from the party whatever the outcome of the general election."
Then there was the open letter signed by 100 captains of industry urging people to vote for the Tories. One of the signatories was the founder of Carphone Warehouse, Sir Charles Dunstone who once signed a letter in support of Tony Blair. He said "it's worrying because we have a big deficit, an ageing populations and a health service that is hard to fund. We have to generate growth and tax revenues to pay for that. There is a nervousness that Labour doesn't regard business as part of the solution" Another said " Milliband's union affiliation and left-leaning orientation combined with an apparent lack of empathy with business would, indeed, pave the way for catastrophie"
Milliband had gone on about zero hours contracts and those at the top getting away with zero tax. According to the ONS people on zero hours contracts represent just 2.3% of the workforce, and almost two-thirds of whom describe themselves as happy with their employment (this level of satisfaction is higher than that reported by those in jobs with fixed hours contracts) With regard to the "privileged few" the HM Revenue and Customs reports that the top 0.1% of earners (about 30K people) take home roughly 5% of the total UK income but they also pay 11% of the total take of income tax. So in inconvenient truth is that our public services would collapse without them.
I never said he "lurched" to the left. But I think most of his colleagues and media pundits believe he his move to the left cost him the election and his job.
If you are saying that Labour policies were friendly to business then I guess you also believe that Milliband fought a good campaign and the vote was rigged.
DaveO wrote:Where you get the Tories up by 5% I have no idea. In 2010 they got 16.7% of the vote and in 2015 14.8%. Their share of the vote went down, not up. Your figure for UKIP is also meaningless. The got 1.6% (v 0.9% in 2010) which is 47,078 votes in all. So based given you based the rest of your post on a bunch of erroneous stats I think we can dismiss the conclusions.
Sorry wrong terminology. The Tories increased their number of votes by 5% (21,242) from 2010 to 2015. Likewise the UKIP increased the number of voters by 29,855 (173%) So my point remains the same. There is no evidence of a swing from right to left in Scotland.
The SNP picked up votes from all the other left wing parties plus most who did not vote last time (or perhaps those who only voted for the first time in the referendum and voted for the Yes campaign)