Sentences with phrase «not real labour»

I always interpreted the phrase progress, like militant tendency, to imply they were botht the same, not real labour should be expelled, except here nothing alike.

Not exact matches

I believe that the re-orientation of British politics under Corbyn and in particular of the Labour Party is highly beneficial, not only to the large strata within British society that have been discarded in the last 20 to 30 years, but interestingly also for British business that produces real stuff as opposed to the City of London and various other service sectors that produce precarious jobs and nothing much of substance.
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.
The financial sector wins at the point where you don't see that the prices that the banks are inflating are asset prices — real estate prices, bond and stock prices — and that the role of commercial banks is to increase the power of wealth over the rest of society, over labour, over industry, to create a new ruling - class of bankers that are even more heavy than the landlords that were criticised in the last part of the 19th century.
Doubling employment would mean an extremely big increase in real wages to get twice as many people willing to work, and it would be a very strange (though not theoretically impossible) halving of average labour productivity that would be compatible with a very large increase in equilibrium real wages.
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.
Since once again, Lord — though this time not in the forests of the Aisne but in the steppes of Asia — I have neither bread, nor wine, nor altar, I will raise myself beyond these symbols, up to the pure majesty of the real itself; I, your priest, will make the whole earth my altar and on it will offer you all the labours and sufferings of the world.
The evidence that is available about food production and processing, but not included in the Green Paper, is that the sector's businesses are in the main under considerable financial pressure as a result of falling real commodity prices, rising input costs, increased government regulations, rising labour costs, and lower retail margins.
If anything the only thing you can really blame Wenger for is labouring under the heavy weight of the still current financial restrictions, while they will tell you its different the board are REALLY NOT willing to spend to make a real difference
If the new Labour leader can't build up a real period of polling success, they may be in for a long, hard struggle.
He did not refer to what she actually said and proposed no real action to tackle the wider problem of antisemitism within Labour.
While an MP might owe his or her place in parliament, or even cabinet, not due to patronage from above, but because he was an NUM MP, or had backing from the public sector unions, or the London Labour Party etc, s / he could enter into those discussions pre-vote from a position of real stregnth.
Labour, which will have been in power for 12 years by this May, can not sell itself on a concept of «change»: right now, it's only real narrative is that the last thing Britain needs to do is change its government.
Rubbish most of the real left not the new Labour kind, do not mind if two men two women want to get married, have children, live a life together, it makes no difference.
Thank god after 43 year in labour I've walked away, because the people out side in the real world does not see many of the people within Labour as anything else as money seeking expenses grabbing pillabour I've walked away, because the people out side in the real world does not see many of the people within Labour as anything else as money seeking expenses grabbing pilLabour as anything else as money seeking expenses grabbing pillocks.
Instead the party struggled in vain with what then seemed to be the real issue of the day, the relationship between the state and «austerity» — that was not in any way the central concern of Blue Labour thinkers.
The Tory tactic of focusing all of their resources on defending their most vulnerable seats worked because Labour did not inspire the working class vote with a real alternative.
This can not be done in the same way as it is for the Conservative, Labour, or Liberal Democrat vote for the simple reason that the data does not exist — UKIP was not a real feature of local elections until very recently.
New Labour's police funding brought about real results in cutting crime, but public perceptions didn't improve.
At the debate on the issue I attended, most of the panellists and delegates were almost entirely dismissive of the problem of antisemitism, with several suggesting that it didn't even exist in any real way within the movement and others suggesting the whole issue had been fabricated out of thin air by Labour MPs and the right wing press.
Labour members now face an unenviable dilemma: do they dethrone the leader they put in place so emphatically (through all sections of the Party, not just the new registered supporters) and thereby accept that the PLP are the real decision - makers?
And yes it does mean looking at tax again but also, a freer labour market, the hiring and firing proposals to make sure that young people aren't turned away from jobs because of the very onerous social employment protection legislation in this country, so we should say to the Liberals on things like that which they are blocking, «Listen we are in a real hole now.
Ok I am biased as a Green Party member but I am not convinced that the Labour Party is democratic enough for members to have any real say and I certainly feel that the Labour left has wilted.
Add to this the understandable dejection and bitterness many Labour members and supporters would feel, if Smith were to win the Labour Right would be greatly strengthened, to the detriment of Labour offering a real alternative to the Tories (not to mention the fatal harm done to Labour's prospects of becoming a social movement).
Not to mention the real question of the 2015 Labour campaign.
As Labour plummeted in the polls and in real elections, his followers pretended that he was the solution not the cause.
Labour's hostility towards the EU softened in the 1980s only because Margaret Thatcher became so furious with it, not because of any real shift in the party.
The real problem we are not talking about the EU, where is the BBC on the EU, they are quick to work with Labour on welfare cheats finding six of them, how about a few programs telling the people what is coming what is happening.
Veteran Labour MP Dennis Skinner said of the miner: «John was made for the job; that he did not throw in the towel once the fight was lost shows that this tower of strength was the real John Lowe.
Mr Rowley wrote: «I sincerely hold the view that you continuing as leader whilst not in the Scottish Parliament, and not in an elected position holding a democratic mandate, means you will become an unhelpful distraction from the real issues that Scottish Labour must focus on.»
If Labour wants to show that it can select candidates who have experienced real hardship and have personal experience of the effects of violence against women, it could not have made a better choice.
The idea of four New Labour ministers engaging in a turgid, managerial debate in public for a number of months, would not have offered the real debate the party needed, and filled me with dread.
«But it doesn't end there, there is a need for Nigeria labour to continuously use the power workforce to enforce the real change of the current administration.
Real Labour people would back her up while she is on mat leave, not try to intimidate her.»
He called on the party to rediscover its «political passion», clarifying this was not a call for a return to old Labour, but rather for «real Labour renewed».
The Labour leadership hustings are not fit for purpose and the real answers are elsewhere, says Dan Hodges in his latest column for TP.
The Labour leadership hustings are not fit for purpose and the real answers are elsewhere, says Dan...
There is a real possibility of further Shadow Cabinet departures: Clive Lewis has left himself very little room to manoeuvre after he promised to vote against the bill if Labour's changes were not accepted, while all eyes will be on Diane Abbott after her no - show last week.
His full findings will be published in a report over the summer, but for now he's clear his party faces a real challenge, «referendum or not», to win round voters who feel Labour no longer understands them.
While he admits the party has a lot to do to re-engage with voters who feel the party does not represent them, he also fears that ultimately a «narrow» debate focused on Englishness risks misdiagnosing — and underestimating — Labour's real problem.
I particularly enjoyed Jowell's comment that «Labour has cited Aneurin Bevan's injunction that «the purpose of getting power is to give it away» rather more frequently than we have practiced it,» as though New Labour had not after all been in many respects (devolution excepted) about the redistribution of power to unaccountable bodies and about the substitution of real individual power within the grasp of the citizen by its tawdry imitation.
I think he needs to get into the real world mate after a long time in the Labour party I've left so have my mates and friends, New labour or the Tories who can tell the difference, I cLabour party I've left so have my mates and friends, New labour or the Tories who can tell the difference, I clabour or the Tories who can tell the difference, I can not
Simply saying «Jobs and Growth» repeatedly does not make Labours vague debt addicted spendaholic «plan» any less of a suicidal gamble with the lives and futures of real people.
SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon criticises Labour leader Ed Miliband for not being «bold enough on his own» to offer a «real alternative to austerity», in a pre-election debate.
«Is not the real reason why it takes so long for the west coast main line to recover from disruptive incidents the fact that when Labour created Network Rail, Ministers left it accountable to nobody — not to the regulator, not to the train operators and certainly not to the passenger?
Ed Miliband made no real attempt to deal with Labour's big negatives — that they are the party of welfare and can not be trusted with the public finances.
«Labour must be the party that stands up for the real interests of working people on Europe and which is not afraid to call out the liars of Brexit and Lexit for what they are.
But when journalists ask whether Labour actually plans to reverse real - terms cuts to NHS pay, they admit they won't.
He notes that UKIP support stands at only 1.5 % in recent Populus surveys and that the «the real danger for the Tories is among former Labour and LibDem supporters who might return to their earlier party loyalties if they conclude that Mr Cameron is not providing a strong enough lead or clear enough direction.»
The real question is not whether the Tories will win the next election but what are labour offering which would make me want to vote for them, or not vote at all.
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