Conservative Policy Impact



Conservative Policy Impacts Analysis of Conservative Policy and its Negative Outcomes

 Education Healthcare Economy Policing Brexit Welfare Housing Community</li> Democracy</li> Pensions</li> Propaganda</li> Other</li> </ul>

AXED It only took them 8 years
 * 109 Jobcentres
 * 535 Libraries
 * 1000 Sure Start centres
 * 103 NHS clinics
 * 35 Fire stations
 * 18 Prisons
 * 17 A&E wards
 * 21,000 Police officers
 * 14,000 Nurses

Global Britain
This wiki deals with the impact the Tory government has had on UK society since coming to power in 2010 up until the present. Let’s not beat around the bush, if when government won the 2010 election they had decided to do absolutely nothing and leave everything as it was, we would be in a far stronger position now. In every single area they have touched they have made the situation worse for the majority of people. The only positive action under this government has been an improvement in LGBT rights. However when you consider that the LGBT cohort comes from a cross section of society, then in reality the government has handed a gift with one hand and smashed them in the face with the other.

To provide as detailed an insight of the Tory record, the wiki is broken down into sections covering each of the areas in society and the devastating impacts of the Tory record. It is not about analysis or opinion; it is about the bare facts on the performance of the UK both domestically and internationally. It is not about Tory incompetence, although this plays a large part in their failure to provide anything but decline to everybody except the rich. It details their intentional destruction of British society based on an ideology that refuses to look at the impact that ideology inflicts on the majority of the population.

If when reading any of these sections you identify presented facts that you can evidence to be incorrect, then please don’t dismiss the page as propaganda, but rather present to administrators evidence contrary to those presented. The situation for the UK is far too serious to allow information to go unchallenged.