During the summer's hustings, he spoke often
about the hard work Labour need to do to get back in power — now it's time to lead by example and start doing it.
Not exact matches
Tony and his gang loved to talk
about the family as
hard working tax payers god forgive if you were not
hard working then you were not part of the New
Labour regime.
This enabled the
Labour leader to move the national economic debate from dry discussions
about deficits on to the impact of coalition policies on ordinary,
hard -
working families squeezed by rising prices.
Tackling the BNP is
about recognising that there are hundreds of thousands of
hard -
working families in northern mill - towns, the once - smokey bits of the Midlands, blue collar estates in the Thames estuary and pockets of post-industrial Britain around the country who feel let down by the Establishment and are turning to the only party that talks
about their concerns (Incidentally, they aren't necessarily core
Labour voters, they are mostly long - standing, fed - up non-voters).
He sounds like an MP already, banging out lines
about «one nation»
Labour and
hard -
working families.
The trouble is that it is very
hard to get any discussion
about education going in the
Labour Party because, frankly, not many are interested in it or are not prepared to do the
work needed to penetrate the fog of misinformation
about the issues.
David Cameron's task in this year of the striver - is not to talk a lot
about Europe but to address the concerns of the millions of
hard -
working families who have had enough of
Labour's taxes, regulations, crime and failing public services.
57 % think that
Labour no longer have a clear sense of direction, 49 % think the party is badly divided, 49 % think it «looks as though the wheels are falling off the coach», 60 % think it is
hard to know what the
Labour party stands for anymore and only 31 % think the government is still concerned
about promoting the welfare of ordinary
working people.
Make no mistake
about it; this is a
labour of love by Remedy and they obviously
worked really
hard on Quantum Break, taking risks and striving to commit to their vision but ultimately, it all breaks down like a cheap Rolex you bought for the price of a box of staples at a car boot sale.