We are not walking in their shoes…
We may not all be walking in their shoes but it's easy enough to understand what difficulties many people are facing. Low wages when inflation is barely falling while interest rates stay higher than they should be, shortage of jobs apart from low paid 'gig' jobs.
Many of us would not turn to Reform for solutions, but even those of us who are comfortably off are suffering from crumbling public services, crumbling infrastructure (especially those potholes which make driving into a sort of slalom course to avoid them) and rising prices.
As I have just said, it needs an understanding of how a national economy works to be able to judge whether Reform could make meaningful changes in people's lives. As it happens, they are not exactly doing this in the local councils they have taken control of, which is, to me, an indication that they wouldn't be much good handling a national economy...
My dad spent 40 years mastering his craft, and last week someone half his age told him how to eat.😠


