Wednesday, April 7, 2010

'East Coast Weasel' Labour MSP Iain Gray starts raving at bottled water plant making false promises, campaigned for a few hours and burnt out already?




















Dear All

We are just a day into the General Election campaign and the Labour Party is already lying through its teeth.

The latest howler is that they will bring at least 100,000 skilled jobs to Scotland in five years.

So, can anyone explain why they haven’t before?

The claim of 100,000 high tech jobs has been made by the ‘East Coast Weasel’ Labour MSP Iain Gray, a man so bereft of talent and ability; he can’t even hold a ragbag collection of MSPs together.

Although politicians will make wild claims through-out this campaign, Gray’s claim is patently nonsense.

High tech jobs mean high tech education, where is the money going to fund these training places?

Where is the money going to come from to fund these businesses?

Where are these businesses going to be located?

There is absolutely nothing of substance from, honestly the boy’s just raving!

Gray says;

"Labour will bring at least 100,000 skilled jobs to Scotland by building a high-tech economy."

Companies bring jobs, not government.

At the time of Gray’s wild claim, he was visiting a bottled water company called Highland Spring.

So, perhaps he should stay off the water!

‘East Coast Weasel’ Iain Gray isn’t an asset to the Labour Party; he is yesterday’s man in Scotland’s tomorrow.

His final high pitch whine was voting SNP would bring in a Tory government "through the back door".

It is only voting SNP that guarantees Scotland’s future; Alex Salmond and the SNP have been at the front of leading Scotland’s green revolution in projects like carbon capture and wave technology.

The SNP are even fighting for Scotland to get a fair settlement for electricity supply to the national grid.

All these issues to help Scotland’s future are high on the SNP agenda for change.

By one thing is certain, “More Nats means less cuts”.

Yours sincerely

George Laird
The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow University

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