AT THE HEART OF THE ROAD TRANSPORT INDUSTRY.

Call our Sales Team on 0208 912 2120

ADVERTISE THE PROBLEM

3rd June 1999, Page 26
3rd June 1999
Page 26
Page 26, 3rd June 1999 — ADVERTISE THE PROBLEM
Close
Noticed an error?
If you've noticed an error in this article please click here to report it so we can fix it.

Which of the following most accurately describes the problem?

It would seem that we must dig in for a long and sustainable campaign to win any compromise from this Labour Government We have been to rallies, carried placards, chanted at Downing Street and Westminster, taken trucks to the heart of Government and started discussions with people who can't, or won't, see the damage they are doing.

If we don't win this battle, then we and the British economy will be the worse for it. Although taking a truck to London has great impact and has certainly been a wonderful attention-getter, it is expensive both in time and money.

A few months from now numbers might dwindle.

They say Tony Blair is concerned when the Sun criticises Labour. That might be because it has four to five million readers: but we have 20 million looking at our 450,000 mobile billboards every day.

I have space on the rear of my vehicles for stick-on posters with a suitable message. I will happily buy these posters. Is £5 each a fair price? These posters should not be polite, but should make Labour wonder if it is going to win the next election.

Every day millions of voters will see hundreds of different messages, at a oneoff cost—perhaps the fund that MAN has started could include this project.

My first message: "Labour Amateurs Just Don't Understand Business".

Cliff Morris, Cliff Morris Trucking, Haulier and Fuel Tax Collector, Bromyard, Herefordshire,


comments powered by Disqus