Which is the point I'm making, if one party lacks economic credibility then really both do.That is not an unreasonable comment, even at the time my thoughts were that the inept Conservative oposition were trying to wear New labour's clothes on the economy because they thought it was electorally the only place to be, rather than it was where they wanted to be. Until the fiscal problems of 2008 onwards any suggestion of cutting the size of the state was met with pure contempt, and for a lot of people still is, as demonstrated by the support of Corbyn.
It's easy for the opposition to play 20/20 hindsight after the fact, but the reality is had the Conservatives been In at the time it would be them with the reputation for mismanagement.
Essentially we are blaming the person holding the torch for it going out when both would have done the same to prevent it happening & ignoring the man next to them with the bucket.
There are plenty of genuine criticisms of Labour, failing to address the poverty gap, the housing crisis, Iraq war, surveillance etc. Those are the real failings, not the economy (which actually was doing well before the crash).
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