Bolton South East MP Dr Brian Iddon said the Government's plans to increase road tax would further alienate voters who were already "heavily bruised" from the smoking ban and rises in alcohol duty.
"I'm getting complaints from our core Labour vote that they feel the Labour Government is just hitting them left, right and centre," said the backbencher.
"They are heavily bruised at the moment.
"They just don't think the Labour Government is standing up for them anymore."
**Brian, oh dear it has taken you a long time to wake to the bleeding obvious. Still well done, for making the connection between taxes and bans being linked to people disliking Labour.
I know it must be hard for that to sink in, what with earning a nice wedge as an MP and clearing some £106,819 in expenses for the year 2006-07.
Now any chance that you can informed the Botter Gordon Brown of that fact and get him to repeal the smoking ban, lower duties as well as duties on fuel?
But I have a few points to make about your good self Mr Iddon, you see its all fine you complaining now about over regulation, taxes etc yet before you were quite happy to vote for ID Cards:
List of those who voted Yes for ID cards.
As Devils Kitchen stated each every person who signed this is a cunt.
I also refer you to the case of one Normando Hernández González, who is jailed in Cuba, a nation run by your idol Fidel.
A little article that show that Cuba is nothing more than a soviet style gulag with palm trees:
Link:http://www.newstatesman.com/200711080021 Plus: http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=6917
Also: http://www.pen.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/912/prmID/174
A jailed Cuban journalist whose health is rapidly deteriorating in the face of prison-contracted diseases has been chosen as one of four writers to mark the Day of the Imprisoned Writer on 15 November. The special day, held on the same date each year, is organised by PEN, the writers' organisation that backs persecuted authors around the world.
Normando Hernández González was imprisoned in 2003 for reports and broadcasts on the internet and Radio Martí that were said by the government to endanger security. Hernández was found guilty of spying and threatening national security, crimes that carry a 25-year jail term. He was one of 75 journalists arrested in the Cuban government crackdown on the press in 2003 and, according to PEN, remains one of 59 still held by the regime.
He was thrown a glimmer of hope a few months ago when the government of Costa Rica effectively granted him asylum in absentia, launching a plea for his release after reports of a downward turn in his condition.
The move came about after Hernández's mother, Bianca González, appealed to Costa Rican legislators to intervene.
José Manuel Echandi, a former Defender of the Citizens in Costa Rica, answered the call and accused Cuba of torture in blocking the journalist's release.
The Cuban journalist's illness has been partly brought about by a hunger strike he began six months ago, but he has also contracted tuberculosis in prison. Hernández has spent most of the past 12 months in a maximum security prison, but was recently moved to a hospital for treatment.
At Echandi's request, Costa Rica asked Cuba to free Hernández and allow him to be transferred across the Caribbean Sea for health care attention in that country. When they received no response, Echandi wrote to the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Louise Arbour, to seek help to speed his release.
Press freedom watchdog Reporters Without Borders is also backing the request that Hernández should be transported to Costa Rica.
"Humanitarian concerns are clearly paramount as regards all prisoners of conscience," the organisation said.
Cuba has more journalists locked up than any other country in the world, apart from China. Those still held since March 2003 are serving sentences ranging from 14 to 27 years.
According to Reporters Without Borders, three journalists held in Cuba were arrested after Fidel Castro's brother Raú took over the running of the country last year.
**Any chance of an EDM protesting his conditions Mr Iddon, or maybe a bit of your time spending raising the issue in The House of Commons, or are you just another worthless cunt of an MP?
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