A week ago Chris Carter, of Get Britain Out, claimed we spoke only for ourselves. Let’s set the record straight.
There must be special measures and exemptions for the self-employed so not to harm the ‘self-employment miracle’.
Total trade will not rise if shops are open longer: it will merely be spread to different parts of the week, and so will not add to GDP.
I have also been horrified to learn that the UK regularly incurs millions of pounds of costs each year in fines.
Ninety per cent think exempting UK businesses from EU regulation would have a positive effect.
The current entrepreneurial spirit and endeavour are the strongest I have experienced in my career.
“During the last Parliament we’ve saved businesses from around ten billion pounds of costs, collectively, in regulation, and I think we can do at least that again.”
A majority means a free hand to shape the Cabinet, and key appointments prove businesses are one of Cameron’s priorities.
A lesson of Miliband’s assault on businesses is that they can no longer rely on others to communicate the benefits of what they do to voters.
I am critical of some measures which the Government has taken to accommodate some of Labour’s class warfare propaganda.
This is the first parliament in modern history with a lower burden of regulations at the end of it than at the start.
Cutting red tape is an easy slogan but takes political courage.
The fundamental difference between us is that Labour seek to help people in poverty; the Conservatives seek to help people out of poverty.
The Conservatives must strike the right balance between tackling corporate abuses and bashing big business.
Allowing deferred payment of Corporation Tax and wider access to high speed broadband are among the proposals from a new report.