That can only mean the cost of living will soar as
ordinary families pay the price for food from abroad.
Labour leader Ed Miliband said that Mr Osborne's policies had been a «terrible failure» which were «bad for Britain... and I'm afraid what we're going to see is
ordinary families paying the price of that».
Not exact matches
«A tax increase for many
ordinary families to
pay for a tax cut for the rich» is what Democrats will say.
Without significant increases in corporate taxes and taxes on the wealthy, it is now a virtual certainty that
ordinary Canadian
families will never enjoy the generous social programs enjoyed by most European
families: enhanced maternity leave benefits, livable minimum wages, legislated
paid vacation time of up to six weeks a year, genuine unemployment insurance, home care, pharmacare and more.
«Whether it is unaffordable housing, cuts to school classrooms, leaving seniors to suffer in understaffed care homes, long waits for basic healthcare, the lack of
family doctors, or hallway medicine —
ordinary individuals and
families have
paid the price for Christy Clark's tax cuts to the rich,» said Horgan.
Ordinary people —
families, small businesses and communities — are being forced to
pay for a crisis they didn't cause.
For
ordinary working
families - the aspirational majority — who work hard,
pay their taxes, who want to get on and not just get by, but who are working harder for less as the cost of living keeps on rising.
The truth, of course, is that the main impact of this bill will be to make life much more difficult for millions of
ordinary families, whether they are surviving on meagre benefits or relying on tax credits to make work
pay.
Ordinary families will
pay thousands of dollars more each year when serious carbon reductions kick in.
«In the EU, hundreds of billions are being
paid by
ordinary families and small and medium - sized businesses in what is undoubtedly one of the biggest wealth transfers from poor to rich in modern European history,» says Dr. Peiser.
There is nothing in Rooke's description of the philosophy of OPCA's — which seem to be detached from actually achieving any legal outcome, since they do not recognize the legitimacy of the court or the legal system — that resembles the struggles of
ordinary men and women who can not afford, or who have run out of funds, to
pay a lawyer to act as their agent in
family or civil matters.