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Greg Greg
Andy The Gabby Cabby
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Comments by "Greg Greg" (@SlowhandGreg) on "Starmer LIED About Your Bills 👀" video.
The carbon bit raises 8 billion there is 10 billion committed by the Tories for fiscal year 2023/24 in additional Fossil subsidies They would have to reverse part of the NI cut to cover the 8 billion shortfall
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If we had a renewable grid the prices would be a lot more stable because you'd have mass storage doing load balancing. Our reliance on gas means you have to have large Gas Stations running on idle for peak demand in winter which cost an arm and a leg
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what that it's disinformation that you've not bothered to fact check , really no I'm not surprised
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@katmayful The standing charge pays for bailing out companies that go bankrupt in the Tories quasi artificial market in a public monopoly.
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no doubt but this story isn't true before committing to comments I always fact check
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Thatcherism for you asset strip all the way
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Just this one is disinformation go fact check it
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yes but this isn't true go fact check stuff
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Labour left a national debt of 800 billion during their tenure last time they borrowed 300 billion in 14 years the Tories have added 1.6 trillion to the debt which now stands at 2.4 trillion So no they didn't bankrupt the country the only person to try that was Truss who managed to wipe out 425 billion off pension assets in 2 months = 24%
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don't get duped into spreading disinformation always check your facts I do its a good habit to get into quote Labour’s promise in the document was to keep the cap at £1,971 per year for a typical household between October 2022 and April 2023. The party’s promise in this document was therefore not intended to protect households in 2024. Equally, even if it was still in force, Labour had said it would cap bills at £1,971, while Friday’s announcement from Ofgem will see a typical household billed £1,717 per year from October 1, which is lower than Labour pledged.
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Labour had said it would cap bills at £1,971 in 2022/23, while Friday’s announcement from Ofgem will see a typical household billed £1,717 per year from October 1, which is lower than Labour pledged. But hey don't let facts get in the way
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