Cut the cuts!
Greens across Scotland are campaigning against the Tory-led UK Government's savage agenda of cuts to
public services and their attacks on the fundamental principles of the welfare state.
While most people agree that the UK's deficit needs to come down, there is no
need to do it so early, so sharply, or so unfairly. By doing taking this course
the UK Government will make Britain a more unequal society, and will
actually put at risk any prospect of economic recovery and low-carbon
investment.
Communities around the country will be paying the price for generations
to come, unless we work together to put a stop to this vandalism
now.
It has been inspiring to see the citizen-led activism around the country,
which has been overwhelmingly peaceful and constructive in the face of a
violent and destructive Government agenda.
A new generation of students in particular are learning the strength of their democratic political power when
they join together to call the other parties on their hypocrisy and their broken promises.
It takes a political act of will to pay for public services collectively, and the generation of politicians just after
the Second World War knew this. Facing a budget deficit every bit as daunting as today's, they built the
foundations of the welfare state and handed on a legacy to be proud of. That legacy now needs to be
defended. Greens believe we need to support public services like health care, free education and social
security now more than ever, and that the richest individuals and companies should pay their fair share in
taxes.
The Tory-led UK Government are instead pretending that their cuts are both progressive and economically
essential. In fact the poorest in society are being made to pay the price for the failures of others, notably the
bankers and the deregulating politicians who courted them during the boom years.
Cuts to Housing Benefit risk making yet more people homeless, while research by the Fawcett Society
shows that 72% of the cost of the cuts will be borne by women. Education is being squeezed, and hikes in
fees in England will affect Scotland too, not just because many Scots students have traditionally studied in
England.
The economic consequences are also likely to be dire. David Blanchflower, former independent member of
the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee has warned that the cuts will lead to "unemployment,
followed by more unemployment". More vulnerable countries like Greece and Ireland have been forced to
make rapid cuts and have seen yet more jobs lost as a result.
Despite the Scottish Parliament having the power to take a different course, Labour and the SNP are just
squabbling about how to hand on the cuts, and the SNP even let Parliament's power to vary income tax
rates lapse. The Greens are offering the only alternative to this ideological failure.
We believe the richest should start to pay their fair share, and that the existing powers of the Scottish
Parliament to bring in a progressive taxation system should be used, either through a land value tax that
would also bring major social and environmental benefits, or through the income tax powers once restored.
Above all, the cuts which directly target the poorest in society must be blocked.
Where there are cuts and savings to be made, they should be in scandalous projects like Trident, or in the
motorway schemes all the other parties have backed at Holyrood.
The other parties are all signed up to the cuts, and only the Greens are prepared to look at
progressive alternatives to this ideological agenda. Join the party and help us make this case in the
election.
Stirling and Clackmannanshire Greens