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Society gets the vote

Posted: 07 April 2005 | Subscribe Online


So 5 May it is. And already much of the electorate is bored and irritated by the whole thing. But those working in social care are peculiarly exposed to a change of political climate, and this general election seems particularly uncertain.

There seems little to choose between Labour and Conservatives. Yet polls suggest voters who can't bear to vote for Tony "don't-mention-the-war" Blair or Michael "we're-not-thinking-what-you're-thinking" Howard will swing to the Lib Dems. And to be fair, Charles Kennedy's party has so far steered an impressive course, seizing the moral high ground on a range of issues and refusing to take cheap shots at easy targets like asylum seekers and travellers.
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But although there are many reasons to feel angry and let down by Labour, most social care staff will recognise this government's commitment to tackling social injustice, poverty and exclusion. True, its policies have too often been underresourced and poorly thought-out. Others have been based on likeable ideals, only to be undermined by woefully inadequate detail. But generally, this government has behaved as if it believes in society, and in the rights of the most vulnerable to be protected within it.

We must hope that, whatever happens on 5 May, this principle continues to lie at the heart of government.


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