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The New Party News

News from the New Party

News Highlights

How to destroy political accountability
The 2010 General Election
Stop playing Scrooge Darling, we need tax cuts now
Government risks civil unrest over pensions
New Party sympathises with expenses backlash MPs
Miliband's carbon solution is to export employment during recession
New Party disappointed by CO2 advert adjudication delays
This year Christmas dinner will cost you £36million, if you are quick
IPPR plans would cause higher numbers to jump from UK Titanic
Stealth tax ‘shooting galleries’ creating killer roads
New Party slams 'perverse' lessons in domestic violence
UK needs to wake up and end this economic 'Greek tragedy'
New corruption figures highlight Kelly's Westminster failure
Queen's Speech a matter of the 'government's new clothes'
Labour's nuclear 'dithering' will have UK scrabbling in the dark, New Party leader tells nuclear heartland
YouTube debut for New Party following Politics Show appearance
Stop Westminster Council's bike rider robbery before it spreads nationwide
New Party calls for BBC to end its 'discrimination' of smaller political parties
New Party praises ASA for investigating 'sickening' carbon advert
Time to unburden 10 million low earners of income tax
'Orwellian' C02 advert prompts New Party call for withdrawal
Richard Vass' letter to the national press
Red Tape has left thousands across Britain jobless
Who are the real progressives?
Memories of '76
The reactionary left
The Democratic Imperative
Socialism for shoppers
Spivocracy in action
Precisely
The abdication of leadership
Rebuilding communities
The loser tendency
The United Nations: what moral authority?
How to banish cynicism
The Chancellor's iron grip - on power
British politics: Is it dead yet?

Monday, February 01, 2010

The 2010 General Election

The 2010 election is already being fought and the three major parties are once again ignoring the most controversial issues in case they lose votes. The biggest problems will be swept under the carpet, the electorate will be offered bribes and the national debt will get even worse. Unfortunately the media are letting them get away with this and alternative solutions are simply not being debated.

Accordingly, there is little point in the New Party standing a raft of candidates for the May election.  However, Richard Vass will stand in Central Suffolk to guage the reaction of voters to the fresh approach offered by the New Party.

If Richard succeeds in establishing a bridgehead in Suffolk then many more New Party candidates will stand in the next election which may well occur within the year. Britain's situation promises to be even more dire by then and the media may have to listen for once.

At this time we ask all members, and those who support a fresh approach to UK politics, to help us make Richard’s campaign a success. You can donate online, send a cheque to our office or help us to canvass in Suffolk.