Sentences with phrase «happened in labour»

The chancellor even published charts breaking down the impact of the austerity measures — not something that happened in Labour - era budgets.
Nothing that happened in the Labour conference impinged on the public.
What happened in the Labour party in parliament last week was not so much a coup as a riot of despair.
But who knows what will have happened in the Labour party by then?
To get an idea of how disastrous this election has been for the Conservatives, look at what has happened in the Labour held seats that the Tories were targeting yesterday but didn't win:
The immediate answer is that not a lot will happen in the Labour party.
«When we first did it, the audience's obsession was much more about the coalition government in 2010 and how that was working out, and now it's much more about what's happening in the Labour party.»
But much of this growth is happening in Labour territory.
The NUT Executive should take a look at what is happening in the Labour Party and learn some lessons.
If you want to maintain employment and ensure your employability in the future you need to pay attention to what is happening in the labour market.

Not exact matches

But even had the financial crisis not happened, Dan Hallett believes the labour - sponsored funds industry would still be in trouble today.
But because of the labour situation in Mexico, the easiest thing for us to do was to put some nannies in there and see what happens.
I don't know what was happening to Canadian productivity before 1973, but even if there was no growth in output per worker, the increase in our labour terms of trade would have induced significant gains in real wages.
This third pillar includes raising the minimum wage in a transparent and predictable manner, improving associated employment standards legislation, and generally making sure labour laws have kept pace with what's happening in workplaces across the country.
Finally, he puts it in the place of man and relieves him of his hardest labour... and the Church, this most loving of mothers, seeing all this happen, has no intention of hindering it but rather is glad to see it and rejoices over it.
This happened in several countries in Europe, which mostly after WW II opened their borders to receive immigrants from Eastern European countries and from some Asian countries because they were short of labour.
I'll be honest, having run up to labour at a fast pace in a slightly stressful environment with a house that was still a building site from a long overdue reno project as we left... a long night's sleep and nothing happening for a day wasn't sad.
It's all happening this weekend and following the manual labour carried out in the garden we are T to the IRED.
Unlike what you see on television, a woman's water breaking as the sign that labour is starting only happens in approximately 5 % of cases.
Some women choose to have absolutely no medical involvement in their labour, meaning they have no pain relief, no medication and no foetal monitoring; this is a personal choice and will be supported by the medical team, as long as nothing happens which could threaten the life of the mother or baby; if an emergency situation arises, the doctor may recommend taking medication or having a caesarean section.
The aim is to teach the mother, in a simple way, about what is (and will be) happening to her and her baby's body's throughout pregnancy and labour and why these changes happen.
I still believe there are too many interventions, too many C - sections, and too much of making low risk birth happen in a commoditised (and expensive) environment of green drapes and IVs and monitors and uncomfortable, non-ergonomic labouring and birthing positions; too much pitocin and aesthetics, etc..
At that point they still didn't know what had happened, but a few minutes later the placenta came out and there was a knot in the cord that had pulled tight in the final stages of labour.
Holding the presenting part off the cord and scooping and running to an OR is an option if the prolapse happens earlier in labour, but it is impossible if the baby is crowning, as you know.
The labour and birth unfold slowly and it's such an honour to support not just the woman in the birth of her first baby but also in actually becoming a mother for the first time... I like to see first time couples from very early on in pregnancy and I work closely with them all through their pregnancy helping to dismiss all the nonsense that most people think labour and birth is about and support them in preparing for what will actually happen.
As horrifying as it sounds when you're not in labour, trust us, if it does happen during labour, it will be the last thing on your mind, and the doctors and midwives see it all the time.
I feel that women and their partners do much better with privacy and intimacy during the birth process and that, my role is to sometimes protect that privacy and intimacy first of all by educating them that that might be really important and to talk about you know the effect both positive and negative about um, support during that time can be or even just letting people know hey, we're in labour, the Facebook kind of thing but you know keep it quiet, keep it down, don't fritter the energy away by drawing other people to it or drawing the expectation that something's happening rather than just letting something evolve... I think guarding the space by keeping the space as calm and quiet and private as possible is key and giving people tools to do that during the prenatal time to deal with over eager family members or friends.
I believe that when the first intervention in labour occurs, more and more interventions are likely to keep on happening.
The (UK) Labour party has had a lot of anti-semitism issues in the news recently, including an mural which included caricatures of two Jewish bankers, two separate council candidates posting holocaust denial content, and a former London mayor making repeated revisionist statements about Nazi Germany (though he doesn't deny that the holocaust happened).
He now sees himself as one of the few lobbyists who really knows what is happening in the new - look Labour party.
The average age of Labour candidates in these seats is 34, which also happens to be the average age in London (compared to 39.7 years across the UK).
Questioning the legitimacy of a Labour - SNP government and sketching out the draft of a Tory Queen's Speech: it feels a lot like we're picking up the first clues about what will happen in the critical days after May 7th.
And a united Labour, he adds, is the only way to win power from the Conservatives, because «if we learned lessons in 1981 to 1983, it's if social democracy is in real trouble and you split it still further you merely reinforce the majority of your opponents and that would happen - there is no question about it.»
Because as well as the official Labour conference, Momentum - the driving force behind Jeremy Corbyn — are staging their own «happening» (I've been instructed by James Schneider, a Momentum big wig, that it is NOT a conference... erm... okay) up the road in Liverpool at the same time.
Because Labour happened to be in government when the financial crash hit, the Tories were able to effectively blame the crisis on the main point of difference between the parties: Labour's higher spending on the welfare state.
Finally, we need to question what may happen if Labour's share of the vote stays in the 20s.
It is beholden on all in the labour movement to make stuff happen!
Labour MPs are all over the place on Brexit, but the Lib Dems have triumphed in Richmond with a clear line on what should happen next.
This brings Labour level, the first time this has happened in a Mori since 2008, and will greeted with glee by the party, which still remains without a leader until September 25th, the eve of its conference.
Of those who backed a Labour return to power, only 8 % said it will happen in this year's election, with most (62 %) judging it will happen in the next four to eight years.
Only 25 % of the voting public supported the Tories, which has been conflated as a massive victory over Labour, in reality it means that the majority of people see through Tory duplicity but do not yet understand what is actually happening around them, that is where we need to focus on.
The fate of the Social Democratic Party — which saw centrist MPs defect from Labour to form an ill - fated moderate rival in 1981 — offers a cautionary tale of what can happen to those who leave the safety of an established major party to go it alone in the British electoral system.
Labour tonight claimed Clegg had blundered by prematurely setting out new, detailed conditions on what would happen if there is no clear winner in the general election — claiming he looked arrogant and self - interested.
(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.
In the long term, the Liberal Democrat entry into the coalition may create the conditions for a further realignment on the centre left of British politics, especially if the Liberal Democrats become inextricably identified with a small - state ideology; but Labour has to change significantly before that can happen.
I think, if the LibCon coalition doesn't happen, Labour will not want to share opposition duties with the Libs, and instead will play the «vote Labour to get rid of the Tories» card to death in October, crushing the Libs.
Unless something unexpected happens in the very near future, Jeremy Corbyn is set to become the leader of the Labour Party on September 12.
In the meantime, Labour will ditch Brown and in the second election we either get a clear majority for one party (which I can't see happening), or a coalition that WILL deliver PIn the meantime, Labour will ditch Brown and in the second election we either get a clear majority for one party (which I can't see happening), or a coalition that WILL deliver Pin the second election we either get a clear majority for one party (which I can't see happening), or a coalition that WILL deliver PR.
In Britain it's happened in the heart of traditional politics, in the Labour party which is something we should be extremely proud oIn Britain it's happened in the heart of traditional politics, in the Labour party which is something we should be extremely proud oin the heart of traditional politics, in the Labour party which is something we should be extremely proud oin the Labour party which is something we should be extremely proud of.
In the light of what is happening, the slant of the newspapers, and just by gauging the feel of current public opinion «on the streets» I can not see how Ed Miliband can now shrug off the dire warnings (and fears) of a minority Labour government in hock to the ScotNats, and become Prime MinisteIn the light of what is happening, the slant of the newspapers, and just by gauging the feel of current public opinion «on the streets» I can not see how Ed Miliband can now shrug off the dire warnings (and fears) of a minority Labour government in hock to the ScotNats, and become Prime Ministein hock to the ScotNats, and become Prime Minister.
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