I actually agree Frog that deliberately setting out to highlight wealthy people as the baddies is likely to be counterproductive as normal voters are quite literate on the potential negative impact of stultifying wealth creation. I think that many more extreme voters would point to the ongoing widening of wealth inequality, the substantial increases in the top % of wealthy people despite the economic crash (and in some cases, being partly responsible for it but not held to account) and the quite blatant presence of work based poverty with tax payers propping up poor wages, as well as poor public services and are looking at easy scapegoats as opposed to reasoned arguments and restrained plans to lesson inequality and deal with these issues.
I would prefer Labour to cut the class war bollo and just emphasise the benefits of their tax proposals which are moderate and in line with overseas competition. Clive Lewis is quite a moderate Labour MP but he sums it up well here:
https://www.theguardian.com/commenti...ax-rich-tories
I agree with what Kerr said earlier that across the board attempts to ‘sell’ income tax rises which involve everyone paying more has shown not to translate into election success. But the progressive raising of the top 5% (80k per year+ earners) seemed to prove quite popular in the last election although not enough. I think that a similar approach on tax could still prove quite a significant factor in stopping a Tory majority (I think outright majority for Labour is very unlikely) and them getting a mandate for hard right policies. But I agree that ‘wealth bashing’ is crass and I’d like not to see it.
What are the polls saying? Labour are gaining quite a lot from other parties according to the Telegraph today:
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics...-2019-uk-odds/ Although obviously as a Conservative supporting paper I like the words: “The latest polling average has the Conservative Party on over 35 points, with Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Party trailing in the high-20s” – diding the fact that Labour gained around 4% in the last week Still looks comfy for the Tories though.