UK Prime Minister flaunts housing plan and rights on exit agreement

By IVCPOST Staff Reporter

Sep 29, 2013 05:50 PM EDT

UK Prime Minister David Cameron had started his campaign for the 2015 election last Sunday. This was by unveiling his planned boost on home ownership. Cameron also suggested that Britain could throw away its main human rights treaty which had been an object of hate for skeptics in Europe.

Cameron had been seeking to reverse negative opinion polls before the Conservative party's annual conference, said a Reuters report. Cameron said his decision to bring the government's new GBP12 billion mortgage guarantee scheme would be a good move for those who had been seeking to have their own homes.

The Prime Minister had made his plans clear amid criticism from political rivals and economists who said risks his plans were too risky. Cameron stated his plans in the heart of the next election and during a time when a fast growing data was seen.

Cameron told BBC TV in an interview, "The housing market is recovering, but from a low base. Talk of a housing bubble to people here in Manchester or Salford and they would literally laugh in your face."

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