I am very pleased to have been selected as the Liberal Democrat
parliamentary candidate for Morley and Outwood.
I was born, grew up and studied in West Yorkshire and spent 2.5
years as one of the region's MEPs, so I understand not only the problems, but
also the potential that areas like Morley & Outwood face. I also have
friends who live in the constituency.
Morley and Outwood deserves a hard working Liberal Democrat MP to
represent the views of local people in Westminster, and ensure that Liberal
Democrat policies that can help and support the people of Morley and Outwood
are implemented. Such policies include:
• A
further £400 tax
cut for low and middle income workers
by increasing tax the threshold to £12,500
(full time minimum wage).
• Strict
new rules to clamp down and tax evasion and avoidance to make sure that the
wealthy and large corporations pay their fair share and those that do not face
serious consequences.
• Supporting
families by increasing free childcare provision for working parents and
improving shared parental leave.
• Protecting
education funding from crรจche
to college.
• Providing
the health service with the £8bn
additional funding NHS bosses say is needed in next 5 years.
In addition, why
would anyone not want to represent an area that includes the famous Rhubarb
triangle?! The Yorkshire rhubarb of course benefits from having European
protected regional food speciality status and is great when used to make
crumble (slight vested
interest here as my Mum makes a great rhubarb crumble....).
It is important to remind voters of Labour's poor handling of the
economy in which Ed Balls played a key role first as an economic advisor to
Gordon Brown, then as a government minister. As City Minister he championed Labour's
"light touch regulation" of financial services, which nearly toppled
our banking system, yet in 2011, unbelievably he denied there had been a budget
deficit under Labour's watch, telling the BBC: “I don't think we had a structural
deficit at all in that period.”
Labour actually ran a budget deficit since 2002 more than five (!)
years before the financial crisis happened.
The Liberal Democrats went into government to help clear up the economic
mess Labour had left behind and significant progress has now been made, but the
job is not done yet. The Conservatives deficit reduction plans (that there were
unable to implement in coalition with the Liberal Democrats) rely purely on cuts,
mainly targeting the working poor, but require no additional contributions from
the better off in society.
The Liberal Democrats believe that finishing the job
of balancing the nation’s books can be done in a fairer way using
tax rises that target the wealthiest, banks and big businesses and limiting
spending cuts to protect the least well off in society. When not opposing every single government cut, the Labour party would borrow more to fund their spending promises because their Bank levy can't really be spent more than once, leaving our children with debts to pay off.
Unlike Labour and the Tories, Liberal Democrat candidates do not
have funds flowing from trade unions or big business, but rely on small
donations from ordinary people. You can donate to my campaign by clicking the
"donate" button on the Wakefield and Morley Liberal Democrat website:
http://www.wakefieldlibdems.org.uk
Thanks in advance for your support!
Rebecca Taylor
As the Lib Dem parliamentary candidate for Wakefield I can whole heartedly endorse Rebecca Taylor and believe she would bring a whole new approach to politics in Morley and Outwood. Rebecca would provide a breath of fresh air following Ed Balls and would use her experience from when she was Yorkshire & Humber Member of European Parliament to show you how easy it is to communicate with her and have your letters and enquiries answered!
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