Phew, there's some dodgy assertions and grasping at straws there, even by wheels' standards!
haven't Labour and their friends tried to convince us that Tution Fees came out of the Coalition when in fact they (Labour) introduced them and the coalition considerably improved the system.
There have been university tuition fees since the late 1990s, as wheels points out. They started at £1,000 per year, means tested. They then rose to £3,000 a year in the early noughties, but the present government tripled them to £9K! But that's less of a problem than what we now know is the long term position of student finance which has resulted from that disastrous move. See
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-26688018. The key bit of that link is this: 'Responding to a parliamentary question, universities minister David Willetts said the government had been reviewing its modelling on student loans and now estimated that about 45% would be written off - an increase from 40% six months ago. Economics consultancy London Economics said the "tipping point" at which the costs of the new system will exceed those of the old one would be reached if 48.6% of all student loans were not repaid.'
So in the long run, because of this government's badly thought out student loan system, higher education is likely to cost the taxpayer more, not less. If that's 'improving the system' I'd love to know what making it worse would look like!
Were not Labour first to introduce the Bedroom Tax which they operated via the Housing Benefit system
No they weren't.
Was it not Labour that introduced rail fare iincreases
No. that was Sir Robert Peel's Tory government of 1841-1846!
Was it not Labour who first introduced the market into the NHS.
No, it was the Thatcher Government's NHS and Community Care Act of 1990.
the last Labour Govt was just about the most shambolic I can recall in a lifetime which broadly covers the same time period as yours.
If wheels' lifetime is similar to mine then he's got a short memory! The Wilson/Callaghan Labour government of 1974-79 was surely more shambolic than any since.
IMO, this discussion would be much better if it were less tribal and more balanced and ready to recognise the truth, which is that both the present coalition government and the long Labour parliament which preceded it have had their successes and also their failures.