Sentences with phrase «fear in labour»

Fear in labour can create tension, which creates pain, then more fear and the cycle continues.
Mr Mitchell voiced growing fears in Labour ranks that Mr Miliband has been unable to translate four years of political thinking into policies that can be sold on the doorstep.

Not exact matches

Proper application of Canadian laws (governing environmental protection, labour, competition and much else besides) should go a long way in assuaging our fears.
The labour market has seen considerably softer conditions, but there has been little decline in overall employment, and the rise in unemployment, to date, looks smaller than had been feared a few months ago.
And while GWNFA has complained that head office is not allowing franchisees to raise their price points in response to the minimum wage increase in Ontario, their biggest operating region, head office might fear that «if customer counts are down and franchisees raise their prices to cover the labour cost increase, that will drive more customers away,» Fisher said.
Holiness for me was found in the mess and labour of giving birth, in birthday parties and community pools, in the battling sweetness of breastfeeding, in the repetition of cleaning, in the step of faith it took to go back to church again, in the hours of chatting that have to precede the real heart - to - heart talks, in the yelling at my kids sometimes, in the crying in restaurants with broken hearted friends, in the uncomfortable silences at our bible study when we're all weighing whether or not to say what we really think, in the arguments inherent to staying in love with each other, in the unwelcome number on the scale, in the sounding out of vowels during bedtime book reading, in the dust and stink and heat of a tent city in Port au Prince, in the beauty of a soccer game in the Haitian dust, in the listening to someone else's story, in the telling of my own brokenness, in the repentance, in the secret telling and the secret keeping, in the suffering and the mourning, in the late nights tending sick babies, in confronting fears, in the all of a life.
Exclusion of Asians from immigration to the United States seems just to those who fear competition in the labour force, but it looks otherwise to those who need jobs and do not find them where they are.
That Man is the product of causes which had no prevision of the end they were achieving; that his origin, his growth, his hopes and fears, his loves and his beliefs, are but the outcome of accidental collocations of atoms; that no fire, no heroism, no intensity of thought and feeling, can preserve an individual life beyond the grave; that all the labours of the ages, all the devotion, all the inspiration, all the noonday brightness of human genius, are destined to extinction in the vast death of the solar system, and that the whole temple of Man's achievement must inevitably be buried beneath the debris of a universe in ruins — all these things, if not quite beyond dispute, are yet so nearly certain, that no philosophy which rejects them can hope to stand.
If a woman feels comfortable in a hospital setting, she will not feel threatened or fear, her labour should hopefully be fine as much as possible and she will hopefully have as great a birth as possible.
It is entirely normal to have fears and worries about how you'll cope in labour, but all your friends who are already mums will be able to reassure you that you just WILL!
Many women fear dying in labour, but for the most part both mother and baby come through the procedure fine.
Labour strategists fear that partnership with an «establishment» campaign including Conservatives would alienate their core support — as it did in Scotland.
While Labour could be clear in their opposition and so respectful and dignified like Ed Miliband, or angry like Glenda Jackson, the Lib Dems appeared to be paralysed by fear of «being too close to the Tories» or endorsing Thatcherite politics in some way.
It's not hostility to migrants, it's a fear of increased competition in labour markets.
The Condems aren't the only ones to have introduced them, & I fear that by introducing them in acts like the Digital Economy Act, Labour may have handed the Condems a loaded gun.
Labour might also prefer a pact to a coalition, fearing that having to square Clegg, Cable and Huhne (and perhaps others) to get their acquiescence in every Cabinet decision, as well as having to give them major departments of state, might make firm and decisive government, in the middle of a major economic and fiscal crisis, virtually impossible.
A Labour official justified floating the plans in the Mail because it was important to speak to key swing voters, but the decision is bound to prove controversial with those who fear Miliband is weakened by sending out mixed messages on migration.
Miliband was in cabinet at the end of the last Labour government, but he said that government did not take action against the press «because they were feared the consequences».
Labour did lose ground, but it did not have the dreadful night that many in the party had feared.
The Tories» own version of Project Fear in England managed to scare Tory leaning UKIP voters and some soft Labour votes in their direction, while Labour - leaning kippers kept to the purples.
The government is struggling to craft a motion that satisfies Liberal Democrat MPs — who in many cases owe their seats to anti-Iraq-war defections from Labour in 2005 — as well as little England Tory backbenchers who, nudged by Ukip's anti-intervention stance yesterday, fear that Nigel Farage speaks for their voters better than Cameron does.
«Ministers fear Lib Dem activists at the party's annual conference, which starts this weekend in Glasgow, are set to rebel against key Government policies and may vote to reinstate the 50p rate introduced by Labour weeks before it lost power in 2010.
In the light of what is happening, the slant of the newspapers, and just by gauging the feel of current public opinion «on the streets» I can not see how Ed Miliband can now shrug off the dire warnings (and fears) of a minority Labour government in hock to the ScotNats, and become Prime MinisteIn the light of what is happening, the slant of the newspapers, and just by gauging the feel of current public opinion «on the streets» I can not see how Ed Miliband can now shrug off the dire warnings (and fears) of a minority Labour government in hock to the ScotNats, and become Prime Ministein hock to the ScotNats, and become Prime Minister.
One thing Lib Dem strategists fear above all in this election is being written out of the script by a media focused on the Labour / Tory ding - dong.
An (English) public outcry, as noted in the previous paragraph would be feared, and the Labour leadership might feel democratic principle dictates that they do not govern rump UK without a rump UK majority.
In other words, some potential Labour voters hope you will greatly increase public spending, and others fear that you will.
Most voters — including two fifths of those who say they would vote Labour tomorrow — fear Labour would spend and borrow more than the country can afford, and has not learned the right lessons from its time in government.
Voters» fears were exacerbated by the false impression in opinion polls that the election was a neck - and - neck race between Labour and the Tories.
The comment suggests Clegg has reason to fear the bill will run into trouble as rebels prepare to join Labour in voting against the «programme motion» — the timetable motion limiting the amount of time MPs can spend debating the bill as it goes through its remaining stages in the Commons.
But if you refuse to step aside, I fear you will go down in history as the man who broke the Labour party.»
Labour fears the Ukip threat in the north of England almost as much as the Tories do - making this oddly misshapen debate about immigration depressingly one - sided.
A mysterious group called Saving Labour, which declines to comment on its leadership or funding — allegedly for fear of being abused — is organising over a hundred street stalls, paying for content on Facebook and even mounting an advertising campaign in the pages of the Guardian and the Observer in order to collect voters who will oppose Corbyn.
Mr Mandelson is regarded as a divisive figure in the Labour Party and some MPs close to the Prime Minister fear that he may undermine him in future.
Labour has been seeking to align itself with the Liberal Democrats, leading to fears that Mr Brown would remain Prime Minister — even if Labour came third in the polls.
Even after a decade in power Labour fears this is an essentially conservative country, where the centre left are interlopers in power, while it is the Tory leadership which knows that the reality is that of a social democratic Britain, to which they must persuade their party to adapt.
The politics of fear, as practised in Britain by Labour, is ultimately self - defeating.
According to the paper, the bloc is concerned that Britain under Labour would provide generous subsidies to manufacturers that could give them an unfair advantage in trade with the EU, while there are fears that nationalised utilities firms could out - compete foreign rivals.
The fact remains that while Labour under Corbyn has not suffered the catastrophic defeat feared by many in the parliamentary party, his personal standing with voters remained unimpressive.
Last night's doubts about the leader's speech, widely expressed in the bars and receptions of Labour conference, are crystallising into a genuine fear on what happens next for Labour.
The existence of the dossier appears to be confirmation that Labour sympathisers fear Mr Bailey's appeal amongst the large number of black voters in the Hammersmith seat.
Corbyn fears any move that would appear anti-Brexit would hit Labour support hard in the many Leave areas where it routinely returns MPs — a view backed by many of those MPs themselves.
Labour peers table amendment to set up committee to consider changes in how trade unions donate to parties amid funding fears
We were hit by a very well organised national campaign based on people's fear of a Labour government and the Scottish nationalists and we will see in the days that follow what are the implications.
I get that Corbyn cultists see Blair's great crime being that he actually won elections and see winning as a sign that you are not pure enough, but on these numbers Labour can not even mount a credible opposition which means May fears her extreme right more than she does Labour, this can only lead to awful things for working people in Britain.
Top Tories fear taking City Hall in May would be a big «psychological boost» for Labour under Jeremy Corbyn.
Tony Blair hesitated over standing for the Labour leadership, fearing it was such a big «psychological step» to reverse the party perception that Gordon Brown was «the main man», Alastair Campbell, Labour's former communications chief, reveals in the first unabridged volume of his diaries, Prelude to Power, serialised today.
I fear that instead of doing this — Labour will end up giving credence to the message that the Tories will peddle (see Tim Montgomerie's piece in the Daily Mail this week)-- that is that Ed Miliband is a rubbish leader — after all, they've done it before.
But overall these Labour back - stabbers have no comprehension of the strength of the British people and their own members as the United Kingdom has nothing in the long - term to fear from Brexit.
It's a message not only important in reassuring backers of the coalition and Nick Clegg, but also in reassuring those liberals still in the Labour party who fear their leader is turning them into a party of protest and dogma.
Fears have grown in Tory circles, as the return of economic growth is failing to dent the Labour party's lead.
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