The way Miliband is going the Tories would end up with a coalition
again with labour, Tory lab pack
Not exact matches
But, then
again, Ottawa already spends more than $ 12 billion a year on post-secondary education, plus billions more on joint
labour force training agreements
with the provinces.
Since 2007 (
with the exception of 2009), purchasers of residential properties
again necessitate more than 400 weeks (or eight years) of
labour time to make all their mortgage payments.
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.
Gary: To do a thing apart from His Spirit is just self works: It is not in and by The Faith of the Son of God: Paul said; he lives by the Faith of the Son of God, that comes
with the in workings of the Holy Spirit: Even as Paul says; follow me as am of Christ: This was Paul commission: Little Children I
labour in birth
again until Christ be formed in you, this takes us from self works into the in workings of the Holy Spirit, that we too are conformed into the image and likeness of Christ, as Christ is formed in us: Even as it was
with Peter's commission, Peter when thouest is converted convert thine brethren: But we can see many left Jesus and Paul when it can time for the strong meat to be had: So too is it in each generation: The great falling away, that only the faithful remain: Thank - you Gary; In Jesus name Alexandria: P.S. if Peter or Jesus or Paul would stand here today in your presence and speak forth what they spoke forth then, would you truly receive them??? Now it is the Christ in us that comes forth to minister the Words of the Lord through others as they: That is why Christ is not divided, those of the same Spirit will know because we speak the same things in and by His Holy Spirit:
Now the operation of Faith comes
with the Will of God to have Christ formed in us: The Faith of Christ will do (bring in His works) for that to be a reality in our own lives as we are fed the truth through the words of Jesus and Paul (Jesus said the words that I speak are Spirit and Life) Paul said; I am of Christ, therefore; as we heed to all that is written by Jesus and Paul to have that excellent work done in us, to even take us from Faith to Faith (in His greater works) and from Glory to Glory (up in His life as we mature); then we too can come to the place where even as Paul says: I am Crucified
with Christ, yet; I live, yet; not I, but Christ lives in me, and the life I live now, I live by the FAITH of the Son of God who gave His life for me: Paul ministers only in and by the Christ that he has become as Christ was formed in Him: Even as it was
with Peter
with Israel, when thouest is converted, convert thine brethren; it is also
with Paul; I
Labour again in birth
with you until Christ be formed in you:
Pre-ordered about a month ago, amazon.ca & cant wait, wish you so much enjoyment from your new
labour of love and want to thank you for sharing
with us all these great recepies, just yesterday I made your cashew cauliflower curry, it was sooo good I couldn't stop eating it!!!! Thank's
again Heidi
It wasn't until 13/14 when we seemed to start to yield some fruits of
labour from the new stadium and have some money
again - able to compete
with the billionaire backed clubs that had come into the prem, & buying some ready - made, expensive stars like never before.
My first pregnancy and
labour were so wonderful I looked so forward to it when pregnant
with my second daughter Talara and couldn't wait for the empowerment of it all
again!
We showed up in
labour with our first baby just as the hospital cafeteria was closing, and delivered before it opened
again the next day.
But McDonnell is proving to be more multi-layered than his caricature, seeking late in his career to match expediency
with belief, gripped by the need to prove economic competence (he reads the findings of focus groups as avidly as New
Labour's leading figures used to do), knows the importance of narrative and how George Osborne impressively framed one about how
Labour crashed the car and should never be given the keys
again.
New
Labour figures believe any move to the left makes the party unelectable, but many figures in the party think voters need a decisive break
with the past if they are to put their faith in
Labour again.
He needs to get the voters to trust
Labour with the economy
again, just as Brown did.
Coalition talks are on the agenda
again at the moment as Andrew Adonis, a prominent
Labour supporter of an alliance
with the Lib Dems, publicises his new book Five Days In May: The Coalition And Beyond.
Jeremy Corbyn's stand - in once
again rallied the
Labour troops
with her trademark deadpan humour.
(Although since then Scottish
Labour has
again left the field
with Kezia Dugdale quitting the leadership for love triggering a leadership battle between Richard Leonard and Anas Sarwar that's increasingly unseemly even though left wing Leonard has already all but won thanks to the now normal
Labour practise of signing up lots of union members on the cheap.)
However, his real fear, he said, was of a worst - case scenario
with the Tories and the Lib Dems going into the next election
with an even closer alliance — and
Labour being «caught
with its trousers down»
again.
A serving
Labour minister
with a future stands up and says managerialism and triangulation are bad, New
Labour is basically over, that
Labour needs to be a movement
again — gives tentative respect to the Iraq war marches, and says more public service reform and tax credits won't solve the challenges of a liveable decent society.
The antics of Damian McBride and Derek Draper, the latter now beyond redemption (
again), epitomise all that has gone wrong
with the
Labour Party.
I think activists can work to get Greens and Respect elected in a handful of FPTP seats and we must all hope for an embarrassingly massive Tory landslide (300 seats or so) on < 50 % of the vote that will make everyone see what an absurd situation we are in, make Cameron's parliamentary party more unruly and nekedly nasty and — crucially — smash the
Labour Party so hard that both its right and its left give up all hope of ever winning a FPTP election
again, and destroy the hubris that decrees that they never collaborate
with other progressive / left forces.
The result was another hung parliament,
with the Liberals
again relying on
Labour and the Irish Parliamentary Party.
(2) They make it more likely that a coup will happen still (
again, have to agree
with John Rentoul) and a new leader will try some semblance of making a clean break from Brown & Blair (there's no other way) in order to make the electorate listen, very briefly, to why people should vote
Labour.
Burnham was criticised for jokingly saying that
Labour should have a woman leader «when the time is right»,
with the New Statesman saying that he had «tripped over his mouth
again».
How will you assure members and the public that
Labour MPs will never
again become so dissociated from reality and so institutionalised by Westminster that they do anything on a par
with home flipping, expenses rigging, agree to lobby for money or do anything at all that brings the party into disrepute?
This fundamental rebuilding of confidence in
Labour - that the party could be trusted
with the economy
again - was arguably the biggest single component of Tony Blair's 1997 landslide.
At the time, we had been shortlisted for «Best Agency» by Research magazine — the most prestigious award in the market research industry — so I was a bit alarmed at first to receive a letter from
Labour peer Lord Joffe, possibly frustrated that his attempts to change the law on assisted suicide had failed yet
again, expressing unhappiness
with the wording of a question.
Pretty lukewarm session there
with the Tories
again seeming much more jubilant and confident than
Labour.
Then he lays into
Labour,
again,
with an enthusiasm which makes a Lib - Lab coalition look very far away.
To be frank his views made what should have been an easy decision into a difficult one.I don't trust Smith and will back Jeremy
again but I am concerned.Having sensible views on immigration and defence is ethical and doesn't turn me into a raging right winger or closet racist and is probably in line
with what most potential
Labour voters want.I'd like to think that more will join our party and that Corbyn will continue democratizing it, giving us the opportunity to shape policy ourselves.
Based on this, I am expecting the polls to be in error
again with the Conservative lead over
Labour underestimated by 2.6 %.
However, although the Liberal Democrats might argue
with the SNP,
Labour and the Greens about the details of how this should be done, their proposed direction of travel is
again shared
with others.
«Never trust a
Labour government
with your money
again,» Osborne shouts.
All ten of our January polls have found the two parties neck - and - neck,
with Labour on 33 % plus or minus one, and the Conservatives on 32 %,
again plus or minus one.
Time and time
again the
Labour party has voted against the Welsh national interest, has failed to empower our National Assembly
with additional powers and responsibilities, and has instead chosen to keep power in the hands of the Westminster elite.
YouGov said: «
With the ballot papers out for the
Labour leadership contest,
Labour members will be dismayed to see the party's rating in the polls dipping below the 30 % mark once
again.»
There are plenty who say that none of the candidates — Liz Kendall, Andy Burnham, Mary Creagh, Yvette Cooper, and possibly Tristram Hunt (Chuka Umunna pulled out after less than a week in the field, citing media intrusion)-- appears up to the task of rebuilding a party
with shattered morale and no clear sense of how to win
again now that Scottish
Labour is all but obliterated, the Tories have taken 25 marginals from the Lib Dems, and boundary changes are about to make it all much more difficult.
It has been the case that time and time
again that the Yes campaign has tried to bounce
Labour into adopting its position, along
with its allies in The Guardian — a newspaper which incidentally gives a totally biased and unchallenged hearing to the Yes camp and seemingly refuses to publish articles from the No camp.
Meanwhile, Piers Tempest will be the Conservative candidate in Barnsley Central, where
Labour will defend a notional majority of 11,839 -
again over the Lib Dems
with the Tories chasing in third place.
That's why the
Labour Party can never be trusted
with the economy
again.
For the last two years the Refounding
Labour funds, established
with membership subscriptions, have been channelled into key seats, but after the election constituencies will
again be able to bid for support for projects to improve local organisation or enhance democracy and diversity.
After leading the party through the second Holyrood elections in 2003 Elections,
again winning 17 MSPs but
with a higher share of the vote, he led the party into a second coalition
with Labour.
Louise King, a
Labour Councillor for Bedford, replied to me
with almost exactly the same words, and said it was «worrying» that Serco had «been given the opportunity
again».
He would be taking the initiative like he did when Brown got the election bug after the good
labour conference and then Brown would have to put up or shut up and be faced
with calling a risky election before he's sure he could win or looking like Chicken little
again.
It is still in the balance whether there will be a Conservative - led government, possibly
with the Liberal Democrats on board
again, or a
Labour - led one.
We can't risk allowing the
Labour party to govern on their own; time and time
again we have seen that they can't be trusted
with our country's finances.
They will talk
again this afternoon, while Mr Watson also plans to discuss the situation
with the leaders of other
Labour - backing unions Unison, the GMB and CWU in the coming days.
Stuart Weir was an early Bennite in the 1970s, fell out
with his hero over Tony Benn's campaign against the
Labour Party leadership in the 1980s, and fell for him
again when he became a popular sage after 2001.
The compass crystal ball has not proved infallible in the aftermath of the last election, but it now seems to mean pessimistically admitting that
Labour will probably never ever win
again under first past the post, so must negotiate a way to power
with the Liberal Democrats.
«Never trust a
Labour government
with your money
again!»
For the political geeks among us (basically you, if you're reading this) the most interesting aspect was probably his relentless attack on
Labour, including the line «never, ever trust
Labour with our economy
again».