0 language used by politicians and government officials that is intentionally difficult to understand or does not mean what it seems to mean and is therefore likely to confuse or deceive people
They are prepared to mislead and deceive the electorate with their "newspeak", saying that householders will have choices, whereas they will not.
The phrase "compulsory planning agreements"is an interesting piece of"newspeak".
We should put one question to ourselves: will biology textbooks now be rewritten using the newspeak word "pre-embryo"?
I very much hope that in the debate we can avoid the use of "newspeak".
They are the people who talk in the "newspeak"of today in which a company is not a company but a"profit margin unit".
That argument is difficult to resolve in a historical context, although we should ask how far frontiers have to be extended before encirclement is relegated to the obscurity of newspeak.
Those claims are euphemisms of newspeak.
We suffer badly from "newspeak".