Austerity pioneer David Cameron warns 2022 will be ‘a very tough year’ as bills soar

25 comments
  1. Funny that he’s back in the news.

    I was just thinking about David Cameron the other day when I heard how former Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko has joined a defence battalion:

    [Former President Poroshenko takes up arms on the front line (France 24)](https://youtu.be/w5bAN_01cug)

    Can anyone imagine Cameron doing this? I can only imagine him elbowing children out of the way to get in the last chopper out of Oxfordshire.

  2. Austerity, Brexit, Cameron – the ABCs of fucking up the UK for future generations, what a D for Dick

  3. I’m sure paying the bills is going to be a just as much of a struggle for him. We’re all in it together, remember?

  4. 😂 mad how in 4 years the conservatives have changed my view from supporting them to out right hating them. Remember kids, this is the party who wanted to stop free school meals, cut 20k police officers, decimated the NHS & blamed fire fighters for Grenfell tower fire.

    Literally taking food from your mouths.

  5. In 2010 the Conservatives invented the idea of only buying something if you can afford to pay for it. 🤡

  6. My concern isn’t a tough ‘year’, I’m fortunate enough to be able to ride out a year.

    But when does this end? When do prices start falling more in line with spending power? My fear is this is the new normal.

  7. Ah I see now!

    All Cameron was trying to do was prepare us for life after 2020! He saw the future and realised we need to learn how to cope being poor and depressed before the world turned to shit. So he introduced austerity as a decade long training regime.

    It all makes sense now

  8. Has anyone seen the front page of The Torygraph this morning? Let me quote a bit of it for you:

    >David Cameron has called on Rishi Sunak to ‘keep the cost of government down’ as the chancellor tries to offset an £800 surge in the average energy bill caused by sanctions on Russia. The former prime minister likened the jump in energy prices to the rise in inflation in 2010, and suggested a return to austerity.

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