Sentences with phrase «labour needs real»

Not exact matches

Labour, which will have been in power for 12 years by this May, can not sell itself on a concept of «change»: right now, it's only real narrative is that the last thing Britain needs to do is change its government.
It is all too real, a fact recognised by many of the voters Labour needs.
Manchester needs a real opposition to question the decisions of the Labour Council.
Last year I wrote about Labour's thoughtful commentariat - the sensible lefties willing to accept the fact that cuts do need to be made, and willing to engage with the real political debate - as opposed to those irresponsible voices on the left who would condemn anything the Coalition does as «out of touch» «Tory cuts» made by a «Cabinet of millionaires», and so on.
There are massive issues in Scotland as there are here, we need to address those here in order to prove our worth, sadly we need our representatives north of the border to inspire the Scots with a real vision of what Labour actually means.
The idea of four New Labour ministers engaging in a turgid, managerial debate in public for a number of months, would not have offered the real debate the party needed, and filled me with dread.
«But it doesn't end there, there is a need for Nigeria labour to continuously use the power workforce to enforce the real change of the current administration.
But the US, like so many other EuroAtlantic nations, need to reinvent their labour markets and especially their trade unions who came in with the 20th century and have gone out with it as a real counter-balance to capitalism.
I think he needs to get into the real world mate after a long time in the Labour party I've left so have my mates and friends, New labour or the Tories who can tell the difference, I cLabour party I've left so have my mates and friends, New labour or the Tories who can tell the difference, I clabour or the Tories who can tell the difference, I can not
After 17 years of Labour failure, Wales needs real change.
And to take the crucial next step on the path to electing a Labour government, led by Jeremy Corbyn, that will understand our way of life and deliver the real change we so desperately need.
The claims came as a Labour frontbencher warned there was «real alarm» at the scale of the problem - while comedian Eddie Izzard, who became a member of the party's ruling national executive committee (NEC), said they needed to «make amends» to the Jewish community.
I think a lot of the people with real power in and around the party need to do some reflecting on what these practices say about Labour's real «values»: let alone, God forbid, «One Nation Labour
To win in 2015, we need to give people who voted Tory or Lib Dem last year real, credible reasons to vote Labour,» he added.
«This is a new era... which needs new ideas, and seeks new possibilities,» Miliband continued describing it as a time for «Next Labour» - which would build a real, popular movement for change.
Ed Miliband doesn't need to set out concrete policies — it would be good if the Labour movement is given a real opportunity now to help draw up that political alternative, but the party desperately needs a narrative and to be seen identifying with working and middle class voters who now find themselves at the sharp end.
He spoke of the need for Labour to find a real alternative to austerity around which the trades unions could come together.
But what is so absurd about these flights of wishful thinking is that there is not a single word about the real lessons which Labour needs to learn — the need for radical banking reform, the need for a massive revival of British manufacturing (when this year the UK deficit on traded goods is likely to exceed the entire UK budget deficit), the need to take back public control of the NHS and education system, the need for a jobs and growth strategy rather than a programme of endless cuts, the need for an effective anti-poverty strategy and a huge reduction in inequality.
Labour's priorities for reform in the EU would be different, and David Cameron's deal is a missed opportunity to make the real changes we need.
«The next Labour government will support our schools by giving them the resources they need, increasing per pupil funding in real terms and providing ring - fenced funding to end the pay cap and give our teachers the pay rise they deserve,» Rayner said today.
Every existing client is also a prospective client: they may be using your real estate services and now they need a will, or they've purchased a business and now they need employment & labour advice.
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