Tories' message: no more "Drink drink drrrINK!" |
Conservative party officials say that currently, strong lager can be bought for as little as 13p a can, and a 2-litre bottle of gin for 29p. Last year too, figures claim, drink-related hospital admissions rose to 58 million.
North of the border, in Scotland a minimum price of 50p per unit has
already been launched. It’s proved a popular move leading to spontaneous widespread
teetotalism, while Scots are also starting to eat vegetables.
But there’s been criticism of the plan from ugly freakish people, who claim their sex lives will decline if drink is made harder to obtain. Today too, by mid-morning coffee-time Google had logged six million searches from housewives in leafy Cheshire alone, for ‘moonshine’.
Supermarket ‘dine-in meal’ deals, which include wine, will also suffer when the hike comes in. M&S, Tesco and Sainsbury’s will all be affected. In far-flung Cornwall though, a mini-mart serving the rundown town of Camborne is fighting back. Owner Len Prole said: “This week
we’re launching our £3.99 ‘Too Poor To Go Out, Ever’ eating-in dinner for two. You’ll
get 20 cans of cider, some own-brand crisps and a pack of three
Econodoms. It’s great value; usually the
johnnies alone are a pound a pop.”
It’s not yet clear where the extra revenue raised by the increase
will go, though the NHS is unlikely to receive any additional funding. From the
House of Commons’ subsidised bar Prime Minister David Pillsbury explained: “The
health service already does a fantastic job on its existing resources. In fact
once no-one in Britain can afford to drink, we’ll be able to cut billions from NHS
budgets. Now, trebles all round!”
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