Take the personal allegiances out of it, and policy differences
about public service reform are not an ideological argument to cascade down the generations.
Not exact matches
That «coalition» approach is underpinned by the 97 - 01 policy agenda of new deal on jobs and windfall tax, minimum wage, devolution and FoI,
public services, social chapter and pro-EU, feminisation of the PLP through shortlists, alongside macroecon stability, aversion to tax rises spoke to a party coalition; the post-01 agenda was arguably rather narrower, with new labour seeming to be
about a particular method of
public service reform.
Compassites like Jon Cruddas, Ed Miliband and Neal Lawson seem completly relaxed
about applying a more enlightened and compassionate liberalism to
public services and are not particularly critical of New Labour's
public service reforms.
Just still on the domestic agenda: One of the things Brown could talk a bit more
about is
public service reform.
He needs to focus on bread and butter issues like jobs and mortgages and
public services and, above all, to develop a clear route map to growth, and stop fixating on the agenda of a liberal clique around him and barmy policies such as Lords
reform and gay marriage, which people either don't like or don't care
about.
Finally in the traditionalist Conservative mould YouGov asked
about radical
reform of the
public services, involving the private sector.
More revelations
about John Prescott are in Fleet Street's pipeline, Scotland Yard is still investigating loans - for - peerages and Labour MPs are not going to keep quiet when Tony Blair brings forward further
public service reforms.
I am under no illusions
about the Labour Party, their current response is to oppose the «severity» of the coalitions
reforms and the «pace» of cuts, rather than the concept of privatising and slashing
public services.
«The
reforms have created widespread
public fear
about the scale and impact of
public spending cuts and the privatisation of
public services.
There is huge frustration amongst charity leaders that these ideas
about reforming public services don't seem to be going anywhere.
As he so often does when asked
about fundraising, de Blasio stressed the need for campaign finance
reform, advocating for full
public financing of elections that would not only pull big moneyed interests out of politics but would also focus, «all that time that goes into fundraising now back into
public service.»
At the same time, the findings from the study, by the Geiger Gibson / RCHN Community Health Foundation Research Collaborative at the George Washington University School of
Public Health and Health
Services, show that health centers working in restrictive states are hampered in their outreach and enrollment efforts and are significantly less optimistic
about the impact of health
reform in their communities.
Law professor at the University of South Carolina whose current research focuses on constitutional law and
public education, Derek Black has written
about charter schools in the context of education
reform, civil rights, and
service of the
public priorities.
Troy LaRaviere's Blog post
about the loss of special education
services in Chicago
Public Schools was informative, but there are many other great posts
about CPS and
reform too!
In our latest regular column for Legal Action magazine, YLAL co-chairs Ollie and Rachel wrote
about the common ground between legal aid lawyers, teachers and doctors, all professions providing a
public service which have opposed damaging cuts and
reforms imposed by the government in recent years.
About Blog Latest insights from What Works Scotland, a project to improve how localities use evidence and research for
public service development and
reform in Scotland.