the crucial thing is that all the major parties have their strengths and weaknesses, both in terms of philosophy, planning (lack of it invariably) and people talent.
237 is right - in many ways it is too early to tell.
My fundamental problem is that no one is really prepared to look ar radical other systems - and I will give the Chinese one big tick, they haven't fecked around with the HK tax system which is brilliantly simple and works
(i) lowest no of tax folk per 1000 of population
(ii) highest % of payment
(iii) simplest to administer - 15% flat on about 20k and above, no exemptions other than if you have very old folk or handicapped in your house.
(iv) screw the proverbial out of ethanol and tobacco.
No party in this country is brave enough to visit this and work through the economics - like no party is brave enough to say what would be the impact of pulling out of the EU and joining NAFTA (as we can not go it alone).
And I would love the UK to take on a bit more radicalism in seeking solutions to our issues - for example the police - why the heck do we need five police districts here in the SW which have a smaller population than say Manchester....five chief constables, five HR directors and staff, 5 PR teams, 5 finance teams and all the rest. And they want cuts, start there and keep the front line. And no-one has the balls to say no to the NHS and all their back-office waste (ditto reams of unproductive management and redundant IT systems).
The whole lot are wusses and what this country needs is strong and true leadership - however pay peanuts and get monkeys when it comes to any Prime Minister or Shadow Party leader.....
end of rant and good night. David Mitchell et al are coming on.