Unpredictable election remains the unanimous opinion one month the parliamentary elections in the UK. Only two certainties are emerging. The first is the Prime Minister who is played out between the Conservative David Cameron and Leader of the Opposition, Labour Ed Miliband. The second relates to the disappearance of bipartisanship. Neither the Conservatives nor Labour will not reach an absolute majority, the time alliances with one or more secondary training is come.
The economy, health care, immigration and Europe are the main topics of this early season.
David Cameron, credited with 34% of the vote in the polls, asked voters to give him a second term, for, he said, "finish the job", availing themselves of record growth and interest rate of less than 6% unemployment. David Cameron has also promised to create two million jobs in five years.
"We do not say we believe some forecasts, we say we believe performance to create a thousand jobs a day and if we stick to very low tax rates, making attractive Britain for investors, which is placed on the training of apprentices, which carries out major infrastructure projects such as Crossrail, we will continue to create those jobs, "said David Cameron.
David Cameron is closely followed by Ed Miliband, the Labour which itself highlights the collateral damage caused by five years of conservative austerity and highlights increasing inequality and impoverishment of the middle classes.
"David Cameron failed to defend an economy that excludes most people who work and has reduced the health system. I propose to straighten it beyond the London alone, to see how we can save our health system and beyond the idea that England succeeds only when the workforce is successful, "argues Ed Miliband.
Evidence of a change in the political spectrum, the emergence of UKIP, the party MEP Nigel Farage has managed to radicalize the discourse on immigration and Europe among conservatives. So much so that David Cameron wished, if re-elected, organize earlier than planned referendum on keeping the United Kingdom in the European Union, promised in 2017.
"I made it clear that after May 7, if we are in good position, the key issue will be the referendum, but that does not mean it will be the only" promises Nigel Farage.
In the longer term, a second referendum looming in Scotland since the SNP, the Scottish National Party after having just missed a first historic meeting in September, do not give up. According to analysts, the rise of nationalist accelerate evolution "towards a federal quasi-state" of the UK.
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