David cameron tory party

To david Cameron Conservative / Tory Party.
I DON’T do ‘PC’.
I ONLY DO ‘common sense’.
The only way for Iraq to find it’s own way forward is to pull out all
foreign armed forces.
Western armed forces have now become the problem not the cure. Iraq is
now a religious civil war that will continue following this simple
basic but true human concept:

‘You don’t change until the fear of change becomes less than the fear
no change’

This applies to virtually everything in life, right down to when a
personal / dating relationship comes to an end.

I’m no history buff but Northern Irland was basically a religious civil
war. What did it take- 50 years plus to get to the relative peace they
have now but it’s still not perfect yet is it?
Iraq has the potential of becoming the worlds ‘Vietnam’ - a war you
can’t win. We were RIGHT to go in & take down Saddam. Now it’s time to
pull out, not for the sake of our losses but for the sake of the Iraq
people.

All armed forces are just target’s. Get them out with pride for the job
they’ve done & the risks they’ve taken (Let’s not forgot those who
don’t get to come home alive of course). Iraq needs to find it’s own
‘balance’ it will take time and, yes, cost lives. Western armed forces in
Iraq should consist only of training for the Iraq army / police if
requested for training. Also special forces eg. the SAS / SBS for the sole
purpose of supplying inteligence and / or taking out the bad guys
insiteing violence. If you doubled the wages of every special forces member it
would save millions of £ / $ that could be used much more constructivly
supplying food / medical & economical aid.

Finally, just don’t get me started on the Labour party! I got back to
England in 2004 after the best part of a decade. What a shock! If this
Labour party showed just 50% of the balls it’s shown in going to war to
deal with issues in our own country it would’nt be in the big mess it
is now. I mentioned this earlier:

‘You don’t change until the fear of change becomes less than the fear
no change’

This is how the Labour Party will lose, not just because the Tories are
better. The Tory party no longer has any balls. David Cameron, be a
leader & lead your own path based on common sense. Stop being a Tory
‘Blair’ clone. You are not earning much respect at the moment & that next
general election really isn’t that far away now is it? (I voted Tory last
election out of principle)

The above text is from an email I sent to the conservative party website! Now heres their reply.

Dear David,

Many thanks for your email to David Cameron - I am replying on his
behalf.

We have set out what we are fighting for today in a statement of our
aims and values, Built to Last, a copy of which is available on our
web-site - www.conservatives.com. There is resounding support for the
document from Party members with 92.7 percent in favour.

This result confirms that the Party has changed. It shows that
Conservatives support the vital changes that we have made over the last year.

Those changes are clear. For example, we will put economic stability
and fiscal responsibility ahead of promises to cut taxes. Protecting the
environment and tackling climate change will be given equal prominence
to public services and the economy. We will improve public services for
all, rather than promote opt outs for a few. The test for all our
policies will be how they help the most disadvantaged in society. We will
take action so that our Party reflects Britain as it is today, not
Britain as it was.

We stand for social responsibility - the idea that government doesn’t
have all the answers and that we’ve got to work together to fight crime,
improve the environment and make life better for families and children.
That’s a big difference from Labour’s approach and a new direction for
our country.

David Cameron is aware that there has been far too much short term
policy making in recent years. Time and again we have seen policy
initiatives announced to get headlines in the media which then fall apart, fail
to deliver, and end up being abandoned or reversed. He has set up six
policy groups to examine key areas of concern and challenges we face.
These challenges are complex, interconnected and require serious
long-term thinking. We want to make sure we get the solutions to these
challenges right, and that is why our policy review is spread over eighteen
months.

But preparing the ground is just the first stage. Now we must show
what we will build there. That means laying strong foundations and making
clear exactly what we stand for. Not pulling policies out of a hat to
try and show what sort of government we will be. But explaining the
idea that defines the sort of Britain we want to see.

David Cameron pledged to transform the party and the way the public see
us - he’s well on his way to doing that. He pledged to make the police
more accountable - and with the police reorganisation shelved we’re
winning there. He promised to put the environment at the heart of our
policies, and he has. He promised that we would bring forward proposals to
actively support marriage through the tax and benefits system, and he’s
since outlined how we’d do that - reforming the tax credits system to
make it simpler and fairer and getting our policy review to look at how
tax relief on childcare, and transferable tax allowances, might help.

So there can be no doubt that David Cameron was elected on a broad
programme and that he’s delivering across the board.

We cannot afford to slow down at the moment - we are providing
constructive opposition to this government whilst building up our platform so
that we are an attractive and credible alternative. We are not betraying
traditional Conservative values; as David has said before, our change
is not a betrayal, but recognition and a fulfilment. A recognition that
Britain is not the same as it was thirty years ago, so we need to start
understanding what we will inherit, and a fulfilment of building a
better Britain.

David, along with the rest of our Party, is confident in our policy
review, and instead of responding to criticisms that he is a ‘Blair
clone’, we are looking forward to upcoming challenges.

Thank you once again for writing.

Yours sincerely,

Alice Sheffield

David Cameron’s Office
House of Commons
London SW1A 0AA

Posted in General on Apr 13th, 2007, 4:08 pm by David Elton

 
David cameron tory party