Written By:
notices and features - Date published:
10:30 am, June 3rd, 2009 - 8 comments
Categories: election 2008, john key -
Tags: broken promises
The current rise of populism challenges the way we think about peopleâs relationship to the economy.We seem to be entering an era of populism, in which leadership in a democracy is based on preferences of the population which do not seem entirely rational nor serving their longer interests. ...
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Regarding promise number 2, I’m yet to see an increase in public transport funding. In fact the Government Policy Statement rips $420 million away from things other than state highways, which includes public transport losing money.
I’ll give you lot one thing and that is the dishonesty displayed by Key and English over the promised tax cuts.
For Key to state that he didn’t foresee the size of the economic downturn and then use that as an excuse to abandon the tax cuts is an OUTRIGHT LIE.
It has seriously weakened his cred. In my own silopsided world anyway..
I guess we can all see how much John Key’s personal guarantee is worth now.
(No pun intended)
I dont have one handy but those fold out cards of promises by Helen Clark which were distributed at two elections routinely had broken promises.
squirrel… wasn’t that why people voted National though? Because they didn’t want to support that kind of behaviour?
So we now just have the other side in who are currently doing everything they can to get their political ideology realized. I don’t have an issue with that so much as the duplicitous nature of their election promises… đ
“routinely”, troll?
Yeah, enough examples to be considered routine but you can’t think of any to mention. If only there were some way of searching for information on the internet…
I might not have been paying attention, how has promise 3 been broken?