Thursday, 6 May 2010

Broken Britain

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Voters are deeply pessimistic about the state of Britain today, believing that society is broken and heading in the wrong direction, a Populus poll for The Times has found.


Nearly three fifths of voters say that they hardly recognise the country they are living in, while 42 per cent say they would emigrate if they could.


But worries over the pace of social change and dislocation are balanced by the belief that life will get better, according to the survey undertaken at the weekend.


It suggests that 70 per cent believe that society is now broken, echoing a Conservative campaign theme of the past two years, while 68 per cent say people who play by the rules get a raw deal and 82 per cent think it is time for a change.


The snapshot of Britain also confirms, however, that the battle between the parties has tightened with Labour two points up at 30 per cent.


Women, working-class people and Tory voters were more likely to say that they hardly recognise their own country.


Overall, 64 per cent think that Britain is going in the wrong direction and just 31 per cent believe it is on the right track.


This is a widely used measure of mood in the United States where 57 per cent of people think America is going wrong and 37 per cent believe it is on the right track.


It is not all gloom. Three fifths (60 per cent) of those polled say they look to the future with optimism, against 38 per cent who are looking forward with anxiety. While 45 per cent say Britain’s best years are behind us, 50 per cent say that they are still to come.


More than half the public (55 per cent) say that their children’s lives will be better than their own, while 37 per cent say that they will be worse.


Voters’ main fire is directed at political institutions: 73 per cent say politics is broken in Britain and 77 per cent say there are far fewer people in public life that they admire than there used to be. The poll suggests anger at MPs who have had to repay expenses. A third say that they will vote against their local MP if he or she had been required to repay money.


David Cameron claimed yesterday that his generation of Tories were better placed than the Government to “fix broken politics”, and unveiled new rules that would bar former ministers in the private sector from lobbying government for two years.


http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article7020009.ece

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