IT turns out the majority of Brits believe Labour is anti-fun!
That’s according to polling from the Adam Smith Institute, revealed by this very paper.
GettyPrime Minister Sir Keir Starmer is doubling down on the nanny-state agenda[/caption]
GettyDecades of high tax and red tape are crushing our world-renowned hospitality industry[/caption]
GettyNigel Farage says Reform UK is the only party serious about protecting your right to enjoy a pint[/caption]
Anyone who’s been to their local recently won’t be surprised.
High taxes and red tape are making it harder to enjoy a pint.
But, rather than fix this mess, Keir Starmer is doubling down on the nanny-state agenda.
He is planning to make pub landlords responsible for what their customers say in their venues — or risk legal consequences.
If he gets his way, landlords will have to act like the fun police, kicking out anyone who makes a joke in case it might offend someone.
But Labour’s war on fun, just like the Tories’, doesn’t end there.
Decades of high tax and red tape are crushing our world-renowned hospitality industry.
Pubs, bars and clubs are not just businesses, they are the beating hearts of communities.
Any decent government would protect them. Not this lot.
Rachel Reeves’ hikes to employers’ National Insurance and the minimum wage have piled even more pressure on struggling venues. Some have shut their doors for good.
But it’s not just nightlife that Labour takes issue with.
The party is coming for smokers and vapers, starting with today’s Tobacco and Vapes Bill, doubling down on the Tories’ generational smoking ban.
This ban is obviously unworkable. We’d end up in a bizarre situation where a 30-year-old could legally buy cigarettes, but a 29-year-old could not.
And just look at the crime wave happening in Australia, where they’ve slapped incredibly high taxes on cigarettes. Tobacco hasn’t gone away — it’s now in the hands of the criminal gangs.
But, more importantly, the ban is deeply illiberal. It goes against Britain’s long-standing ‘live and let live’ tradition. In this country, we believe in freedom to make our own choices, even if others disagree.
This kind of patronising thinking is all too common in Westminster.
Whether they’re slapping new levies on casinos and bookmakers or strangling pubs in red tape, politicians seem to forget how their ideology affects our day-to-day lives.
It’s no wonder Labour voters are turning to us. Reform UK is the only party serious about protecting your right to enjoy a pint, a cigarette and to stick a tenner on a football match.
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