"In the coming year we will see another challenge which Brown, Cameron and Clegg have all seen fit to ignore - the very strong likelihood of vast increases in consumer prices, " he said.
Earlier, Gordon Brown, David Cameron and the town's MP James Gray all condemned the group's plans.
"Gordon Brown and David Cameron are like two dogs fighting over the wrong bone, " he said.
For decades, both right and left ignored co-ops (though both Gordon Brown and David Cameron have recently endorsed the ideal).
In April a YouGov poll showed that a third of voters trusted no politician to tell the truth (Mr Brown and Mr Cameron were trusted by only 12% and 21%, respectively, of respondents).
Mr Salmond said he had met Mr Murdoch senior "five times in five years" which he believed was "pretty reasonable" and "isn't in the same league as Mr Blair, Mr Brown or Mr Cameron".
Both Mr Brown and Mr Cameron hope that by making enthusiastic noises about constitutional reform they will win over the liberal chattering classes, who have never cared much for the Tories and have drifted away from Labour since 1997.
Miliband wrong footed Cameron on hacking in the way Cameron outwitted Brown on MPs expenses.
Today's clones of Baldwin and MacDonald are not just David Cameron and Gordon Brown.
Moreover, the campaign will probably remind voters that their choice is ultimately between Mr Cameron and Mr Brown.
ECONOMIST: The Conservatives' mini-malaise: Tory blues | The
Mr Brown and Conservative leader David Cameron clashed over the reasons behind it.
But Conservative leader David Cameron said Mr Brown and his critics were locked in "a slow dance of political death".
He is also slated to meet British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and opposition leader David Cameron in London later Friday.
In practical terms, Mr Brown said little that David Cameron, the Tory leader, could not have espoused, had he dared to.
ECONOMIST: It might win Gordon Brown an election. But then what?
The two men most likely to succeed Blair - Chancellor Gordon Brown and Tory leader David Cameron - will be more similar to French President Jacques Chirac than to Blair in their attitudes toward Israel and the US. This is the case first and foremost because that is what the British people expect of them.
Opposition leader David Cameron of the Conservative Party challenged Brown Wednesday to explain why he was sending 500 troops rather than the 2, 000 which Cameron said military commanders wanted.
Mr Cameron also accused Gordon Brown of running a "top down state control" of "telling people what to do".
BBC: NEWS | UK | UK Politics | Cameron setting out battle lines
Worcestershire old boy Davies was caught at mid-off and then Hamilton-Brown was well taken by James Cameron at deep extra cover.
Mr Cameron also pressed Mr Brown on when an announcement might be expected from US President Barack Obama on the deployment of more US troops to Afghanistan.
At the Lib Dem conference a week earlier, leader Sir Menzies Campbell said he aimed to "rattle the cage" of British politics and smash the "cosy consensus" between Labour under Mr Brown and the Conservatives under Mr Cameron.
BBC: NEWS | UK | UK Politics | We can beat Brown, insists Hague
Mr Cameron's predecessor Gordon Brown met Warner for face-to-face talks during a visit to Trinidad last year.
He also claimed Mr Blair had told him Gordon Brown could not beat Tory leader David Cameron in an election.
Ever since Mr Brown had backed Mr Blair, Mr Cameron asserted, the former prime minister's campaign had been in "freefall".
Mr Cameron tried to embarrass Mr Brown over his tense relationship with Mr Darling in the past but did not quite make the case that it mattered for the present.
But Mr Brown, who sometimes seems to despise Mr Cameron so much that he can scarcely speak his name, exhibits it too.
Mr Blair has tried to occupy this ground, but since Mr Brown seems less comfortable on it, Mr Cameron should try to make it his own.
Still, in an opinion poll by ComRes done just after the debate, he was rated the winner by 43%. 26% backed Mr Cameron, who edged out Mr Brown.
The fuss over marriage and Mr Brown overshadowed the big issue with which Mr Cameron chose to launch his campaign on January 4th: the National Health Service (NHS).
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