The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Tory civil war hurting public

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Sir, - From self-proclaimed strong and stable, the Tory cabinet has quickly descended in a matter of weeks to being weak and wobbly as cabinet ministers ferociousl­y brief against each other.

Chancellor of the Exchequer, Philip Hammond, is now firmly in the firing line, claiming that public sector workers are overpaid as he rebuffs advances to end the 1% pay cap. This is even though the incomes of five million of them have fallen since the Tories came to power.

Well, as the Chancellor said: “driving a train is so easy a woman could do it”.

This from a man who has to endure a salary of a mere £143,000 per annum, plus a free house and chauffeur-driven limousine.

In the year since Mr Hammond has been Chancellor, so well has he performed that the UK has slumped to the bottom of the league of G7 industrial countries in terms of economic growth.

North of the border our economic news is a little rosier, with growth in the first quarter of 2017 at 0.8%, four times that of the UK as a whole, confoundin­g those gleefully awaiting a Scottish recession and to be able to criticise the “failing” Scottish Government.

As this was not the case, it was the “broad shoulders of the UK” according to the doomsayers, that led to this growth.

The Tory Government is in total meltdown at one of the crucial moments in the UK’s political history, as we negotiate Brexit.

Our public sector, indeed all of us, deserve better than being caught in the middle of a Tory civil war, reinforcin­g their already woeful performanc­e. Alex Orr. Flat Two, 77 Leamington Terrace, Edinburgh.

Our public sector, indeed all of us, deserve better than being caught in the middle of a Tory civil war, reinforcin­g their already woeful performanc­e.

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