David Cameron is facing a lot of anxiety and distress at the thought of Labour and the SNP taking charge. He claims to have 'mended the economy'. whilst Labour have 'ruined it'. Although he emphasises that the economy is a pivotal aspect to this election, he has other worries on his mind too.
With Nicola Sturgeon adamant to kick Cameron out of No.10 Downing Street, as well as initiating that she is willing to put Ed Miliband in power, politics has faced a revolutionary structural change. Cameron and George Osborne warned that mortgage rates will rise for millions of Londoners, if the Labour and SNP come to exist in alliance. However, Labour is working to combat this by building social housing that is far more affordable, so that the younger generation can enjoy having realistic aspirations to own and buy their own houses.
As much as I was quite confident in opting to vote for Labour, I am now facing a dilemma as to who I should elect into a trusted position of power. With the majority of the political parties so focused on out-doing each others policies, they are forgetting the real victims to their shenanigans and that is US. ME and YOU.
We live in a time where safety and security should not be disregarded nor taken lightly, with war crimes and terrorism on the rise. We live in a time where poverty is dominating and seething through the majority of London boroughs. We live in a time where the Metropolitan police, the NHS and other institutions are being exposed as being corrupt and ridding us of true dignity. We live in a time where the younger generation are loosing good old traditional values!
This is what is worrying me. This is what is worrying my next door neighbour and the man that sits next to you on the train. Our present is uncertain and our future is exciting, but it makes us anxious. We don't want to fall behind on a global scale, but mark history with our forward thinking and innovative action. We can only achieve so if we have a party with integrity and a humbling nature in power.
Cameron's stresses are rubbing of on me. It is no wonder that he is already contemplating the possible shortfall of the Crossrail 2 in the hands of Labour and the SNP. Certainly to me, as much as to him, the SNP do not care about London, but care about investing money into the Scottish economy and infrastructure.
Miliband has reportedly said outright that he is not planning a coalition between Labour and the SNP, but you don't have to have followed politics long enough to know that almost all politicians lie, and are full of surprises, good and bad.
Labour engaged me with the whole 'were for working people' speech, I didn't feel like as second-generation immigrant like myself from a low-income family was being ignored. I felt valued, I had hope in Labour to reinvent the social and welfare system, not to benefit the bourgeoisie, but those hard-working people at the bottom too.
This SNP and Labour joint forces discussion and future analysis by the Tories, has put me in lingo. I don't know about politics any more. I'll probably end up voting for Labour anyway.
With Nicola Sturgeon adamant to kick Cameron out of No.10 Downing Street, as well as initiating that she is willing to put Ed Miliband in power, politics has faced a revolutionary structural change. Cameron and George Osborne warned that mortgage rates will rise for millions of Londoners, if the Labour and SNP come to exist in alliance. However, Labour is working to combat this by building social housing that is far more affordable, so that the younger generation can enjoy having realistic aspirations to own and buy their own houses.
As much as I was quite confident in opting to vote for Labour, I am now facing a dilemma as to who I should elect into a trusted position of power. With the majority of the political parties so focused on out-doing each others policies, they are forgetting the real victims to their shenanigans and that is US. ME and YOU.
We live in a time where safety and security should not be disregarded nor taken lightly, with war crimes and terrorism on the rise. We live in a time where poverty is dominating and seething through the majority of London boroughs. We live in a time where the Metropolitan police, the NHS and other institutions are being exposed as being corrupt and ridding us of true dignity. We live in a time where the younger generation are loosing good old traditional values!
This is what is worrying me. This is what is worrying my next door neighbour and the man that sits next to you on the train. Our present is uncertain and our future is exciting, but it makes us anxious. We don't want to fall behind on a global scale, but mark history with our forward thinking and innovative action. We can only achieve so if we have a party with integrity and a humbling nature in power.
Cameron's stresses are rubbing of on me. It is no wonder that he is already contemplating the possible shortfall of the Crossrail 2 in the hands of Labour and the SNP. Certainly to me, as much as to him, the SNP do not care about London, but care about investing money into the Scottish economy and infrastructure.
Miliband has reportedly said outright that he is not planning a coalition between Labour and the SNP, but you don't have to have followed politics long enough to know that almost all politicians lie, and are full of surprises, good and bad.
Labour engaged me with the whole 'were for working people' speech, I didn't feel like as second-generation immigrant like myself from a low-income family was being ignored. I felt valued, I had hope in Labour to reinvent the social and welfare system, not to benefit the bourgeoisie, but those hard-working people at the bottom too.
This SNP and Labour joint forces discussion and future analysis by the Tories, has put me in lingo. I don't know about politics any more. I'll probably end up voting for Labour anyway.