Sentences with phrase «future labour policy»

Corbyn spoke in a way that was absolutely unprecedented about the rights of women, which he placed at the heart of both this speech and future Labour policy.

Not exact matches

They said in their statement that future policy will be contingent on a handful of factors, including the «evolution» of «labour market conditions.»
In fact Stephen Beer claimed Labour needed to respond to the tough decisions it faced on the economy, outline an economic plan for the future rather than a retrospective attack on Coalition policy and most importantly close the economic credibility gap that was first conceived and then grew during Labour's last years in office.
It would be good for the future of progress in the UK, for Labour and the lib dems to discuss what they have in common with each other, and develop policy together.
[100] Miliband subsequently unveiled five pledges at a rally in Birmingham which would form the focus of a future Labour government, specifically identifying policies on deficit reduction, living standards, the NHS, immigration controls and tuition fees.
Building on a successful Policy Network fringe event, at which Liam Byrne, Peter Kellner and Fiona MacTaggart joined the authors in discussing the research, The Independent and The Economist carried pieces on Southern Discomfort, with columnist Mary Ann Sieghart reflecting on the implications of this «fascinating new research» for Labour's future.
Left Futures recently published an article of mine, Labour needs to rediscover comprehensive economic planning, in which I argued that Labour, and the radical Left generally, needed to rediscover the centrality of the need for a comprehensive Left Economic Programme both as a core policy offer for Labour, and as a guide and implementation tool -LSB-...]
Labour needs to stop worrying about its electoral future, and start attacking the tories on POLICIES not personalities, but for that it needs to define policies that will inspire confidence in the vast majority of people in the UK, whose gross annual income is belPOLICIES not personalities, but for that it needs to define policies that will inspire confidence in the vast majority of people in the UK, whose gross annual income is belpolicies that will inspire confidence in the vast majority of people in the UK, whose gross annual income is below # 25k
The inescapable reality is that, for the forseeable future, there is only one way the Lib Dems will be able to put their policies into practice: in partnership with either the left - leaning Labour party, or the right - leaning Conservatives.
At least what an account of Labour latest national policy forum revealed here on Left Futures in a piece headlined Trade unions vote against ending austerity in 2015.
Industrial policy and the need for a vision of the role of the labour movement outside parliament will have to be at the forefront of a future Labour manilabour movement outside parliament will have to be at the forefront of a future Labour maniLabour manifesto.
The discussions do not need to lead to a firm policy programme, but we need to find out what views on Labour's future direction exist within the Labour Movement so we can then have a meaningful leadership contest in which the candidates and those voting understand each other.
In his first post-election political move, Lord Mandelson has agreed to chair an inquiry into the future of globalisation for the left of centre thinktank the IPPR — an inquiry that is likely to be influential on Labour's policy review.
The policy the public are looking for is not how far Labour can out - tory the Tories over austerity, but rather a policy of growth and hope for the future.
«It is not a manifesto because it is not for a political party — it is for people whether they are in the Labour party, Conservative party, Liberal Democrats, wherever, who can see the way politics is developing in the country and who think there must be a better set of policy ideas for the future
Next week the Labour policy forum will meet to discuss the party's future direction and the unions, holding nearly a quarter of votes, will act as a bloc to push through their changes.
Labour's review into the future of the UK's nuclear deterrent is ongoing, and Falconer insists that it «will determine what Labour Party policy is, and then I assume the leader will then accept what the Labour Party says».
A Labour government will drive forward the economic and industrial policy that Ed Miliband, Ed Balls and Chuka Umunna have been developing to create more high quality jobs in every region of the country by reforming our banking sector, modernising our infrastructure, and working with businesses to get the long - term investment we need in growing SMEs and the high productivity, growth industries of the future.
Last week loyal Blairites Charles Clarke and Alan Milburn launched the Vision2020 website to debate the future of Labour policy, but commentators have speculated that the site is designed to be a staging ground for anti-Brown opinions.
While much is made of the continuity between Jeremy Corbyn, John McDonnell, Diana Abbott and others with the legacy projects of the Labour left, and the absurd attempts by self - proclaimed «moderates» to conjure up the ghost of the early 1980s; the far more significant phenomenon is the discontinuity with the establishment consensus about austerity economics, and the development of economic policies by John McDonnell and his team which commit a future Labour government to calibrated state intervention for a capitalist economy that works.
The idea that Ed Miliband is a «comfort zone» candidate irks John Denham, the Southampton MP who has focused most on Labour's southern challenge and who is leading on future policy development for Ed Miliband's campaign.
I am someone who believes that Labour needs to do much more to popularise its (social democratic) policies and engage the membership if it is to win an election in the near future.
She says the key aspect of Norman Lamb MP's contribution was «that he says a future coalition with Labour is possible if they were one day ever able to show they had moved on from the policy platforms of New Labour»»
All future positions on foreign policy will be directed by Corbyn, a Labour source said.
There is no future for Labour in the comfortable but deadening policies of the past.
EdMiliband's whole leadership style was premised on the tactical exploitation of this and that issue, on scraping back to power in a multi-party world without ever trying to resolve the larger issues or achieve genuinely popular policies that might compromise a future Labour government's grip on the levers of power.
In a letter to Jeremy Corbyn, he said: «I have always seen your election as Labour Leader as a catalyst for the Labour Party to have a wide debate about its future and policy positions.
Get stuck into promoting policy to allow people to compare a future Britain to the one Brown has made for taxpayers, home buyers, motorists and businesses by injecting a bit of oomph in it with the likes of David Davis, John Redwood, Michael Fallon, Lord Strathclyde, Michael Howard and the like who can all talk the talk when it comes to laying out the real shambles Labour has created.
«When it comes down to future debates, we won't have a situation where he will be speaking from the frontbench when there is a major disagreement on policy and where the Parliamentary Labour Party is in the majority against him.
Labour should have started 2016 hammering Govt on economy and with policy agenda for future.
The discussion has now moved on from the «Labour's bound to lose because they're so useless» narrative so beloved of Atul to what are we going to do in coalition and looking further ahead to future policy approaches such as Blue Labour.
She is a cog in the machine politics dominating the Labour Party that will prevent a future Labour Government from having credible economic policies.
But the notable lack of any kind of strategic industrial, labour & (re) training policies has failed much of the workforce — from workers in dying industries abandoned to the depredations of unions («once a steelworker, always a steelworker»), all the way to students who still believe 4 years of college & a back - breaking student loan somehow guarantees their future.
The political shifts and policy changes impact on critical labour market issues like skills development and the future of Temporary Foreign Worker Programs.
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