MI immigration lawyers are also consulted about on cross-border investments, acquisitions, joint ventures, tax, benefits, insurance, and
other labour issues associated with the movement of individuals across national borders.
The other labour issue here on the left coast is the diminution of profits from the sale of B.C. bud, now that Washington State has thwarted B.C.'s once largest export by legalizing weed.
Not exact matches
Rather the naysayers argue that different demands should be made on
other countries during negotiations — on
issues including intellectual property,
labour standards, dispute resolution or exchange rate manipulation.
We will touch on themes such as
labour migration, diversity accommodation, family reunification, refugee
issues, and
other issues pertinent to ongoing debates on immigration in each case country.
I want to be clear about what I mean by this, because many people believe this
issue relates to current skilled
labour shortages; some think it applies to our need to attract more professionals such as doctors, engineers and scientists; while
others focus on the glass ceiling that many existing immigrants and visible minorities experience.
Wake up America why we are letting Peter King and people like him to waste time and money on non
issues they should be working to solve the real problems facing this country JOBS LOSSES, OUT SOURCEING, BUDGET DEFICIET, BANKS, INSURANCE COMPANIES, UN JUST FOREIGN POLICY, SOCIAL SECURITY,
LABOUR UNION PROBLEMS, JOB SECURITY for those who have any jobs left, bringing our troops home from UNJUST and ILLEGAL WARS, KILLING OF INNOCENT PEOPLE, OIL COMPANIES making billions of unjust Profit and paying millions to their CEO's, INFRA STRUCTURES ROADS and BRIDGES and so many
other Real
issues that they have been elected to solve.
• In favour of some specific approaches to the balance of solidarity and subsidiarity, life
issues, sexual morality, globalization, the redistribution of wealth,
labour unions, financial markets, the environment and
other modern social
issues.
ISEAL member standards are also working to tackle
issues such as child
labour, and to ensure workers receive fair wages and
other benefits.
There are
other reasons to boycott Nestlé, such as concern over its exploitation of water resources (see Council of Canadians boycott call), treatment of dairy and coffee farmers, accusations of child slavery and
labour in its cocoa supply chain and
other issues (see report to the UN Global Compact office, 2009).
Some saw his comments as dog whistle politics, whilst
others saw it as
Labour engaging with the
issues that voters care about.
Other issues were primary
labour costs, logistics (including exports), the attitude of regulators, planning regimes and the strength of the local market.
But surely the collective silence of
Labour sites (
other than Next Left) on the ACPOs
issue, put in the context of the eralier virtual collective silence on the G20 protests policing
issues, is striking.
On the whole, across party, it tends to be very good as a space for internal party politics (especially party organisation
issues like all women shortlists or primaries), for broad political narrative and argument (what should
Labour), personalities and reactive left - right politics around major headline news events, and for some
other specific political
issues (challenging the far right is a good example).
But one
issue divides them more than any
other: the Brexit stance of the
Labour party.
If the forecasters and betting markets are right in their central forecasts then Con + LD+DUP combined will be short of a majority and so a
Labour led government should form if they can secure the support of the SNP and probably
others, including the Liberal Democrats, will be needed too: a potentially messy and unstable situation but also one where there is sufficient similarity in ideological perspective for policy agreement on plenty of
issues.
Because of the
issues raised by David Davis in the by - election, many parties
other than the Conservatives, such as
Labour, Liberal Democrats, United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) and British National Party (BNP) chose not to stand.
One reason is that more Scots view the SNP as best able to deal with the
issues most important to them than any of the
other parties e.g. 23 % of Scots say the SNP can best look after the
issue which matters most to them; only 16 % believe either
Labour or the Tories can do so.
Smith's intransigence on the European question is in remarkable opposition to his dexterity on nearly every
other issue in the
Labour leadership debate.
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.
But
other issues also need to be addressed to enable long - term wealth creation in the region — not least the record number of 75 million illiterate adults, the fatal mismatch within the
labour market and, most importantly, the gender inequality in both education and employment.
The Norwich South MP said
Labour MPs should reach out to colleagues in
other parties on
issues like voting reform.
What is utterly tragic is that there was no debate at
Labour's national policy forum about this or any
other issue.
What this victory will give May (as well as the chance to crush
Labour before it comes to its senses and gets itself a new leader) is a whole bunch of new Tory backbenchers who, whatever their views on Europe and
other issues, will know full well that they owe their place on the green benches mainly to her.
Labour under Corbyn and McDonnell is continuing to score notable successes, on working tax credits, on forcing schools to become academies and
other issues.
Brown questions his stats, and reels off, rather traditionally, a list of
Labour achievements on the
issue, including the fact
Labour has invested more on literacy than any
other British government.
He forgets that the Lib Dems were to the Left of
Labour on the economy and taxation and many
other issues, and still we lost.
As a
Labour Party activist in Oldham I have views on this
issue but I'm not saying anything at this stage and I'm more than disappointed that an on line forum that is closely related to Oldham's
other Labour MP should make these comments.
When
Labour came to power in 1997 they expressed a desire to move these
issues onto the agenda, with a Human Rights Act, a PM opposed to ID cards, and such things as an «Ethical foreign policy» to express a belief that the rights of
others could be placed above our national interest.
He believes the Prime Minister's focus on the economy has left a dangerous void on
other domestic policy
issues, and he predicts that
Labour will lose the general election expected next year unless it develops a wide - ranging, forward - looking agenda.
The new PM could just stick it out with the same reality defying mentality
Labour have used on many
other issues eg regional government, Lisbon, tax, crime etc etc..
The argument made is that it's easier to motivate people on the basis of a single
issue but this ignores
Labour's own inability to fire the imagination of people (and the same if true for
other parties as well).
The only reason I can see for continuous
Labour twisting on a pin on this and
other issues is that they never want to challenge power.
At the same time
Labour is looking to hire a # 66k director of strategy who will have «lead responsibility for analysis of
issues, voter opinions, demographic trends and
other factors the party should take into account in planning its campaigning and communication».
Two
other ministers could resign from their posts in government over the
issue, and as many as 100
Labour MPs could vote against plans to update the UK's nuclear deterrent, it has emerged.
On the economy, law and order, defence and a hundred
other issues Labour had nothing to say that chimed with what people wanted to hear.
Other issues included the Francis report on the Staffordshire hospital scandal, where members hoped for more support for whistle - blowing, and Northern Ireland, where the British
Labour party, the Northern Irish SDLP and the Irish
Labour party are seeking to establish closer working relationships.
For too long and on too many
issues, the party's leadership has set out its stall as a function of what
other parties might find acceptable — the ugliest example being secret courts, where conference was told explicitly that Liberal Democrats shouldn't oppose the illiberal use of secret evidence, because both Tories and
Labour support it.
That's what this is all about - making out that the Tories are so out - of - touch (a key
Labour message which, if you look carefully, finds its way into every
other press release
issued by the opposition) they have to talk to working people as if they're all still wearing flat caps and heading off down the mines.
I feel the Conservatives have an opportunity of outflanking
Labour on this and a number of
other issues affecting men and boys.
Other major
issues with voters were identified such as
Labour being to pro-inmmigration, to pro-benefits, to pro big business and to pro-EU.
There will have been Tory remainers who could have defected in areas like Stoke Bishop, but I suspect the Brexit effect here was quite small, and the election turned on some
other issues where
Labour activated their potential vote.
On Monday, Europhile
Labour MP, Denis MacShane asked Gordon Brown in the House of Commons: «Does he share my dismay that when the
issue [tough stance on Russia] was fought out at the Council of Europe the
other week, the Russians» closest collaborators and fellow travellers in the debate were UK delegates from the Conservative party?»
Labour MPs in traditional, working class seats, say the
issue of immigration is drowning out
other arguments in the referendum campaign, including the remain campaign's central argument that leaving would hit jobs and economic growth.
Murphy said he believes Scotland should have more powers over tax, welfare and
other social
issues, but he stands by
Labour's central position.
When
Labour are consulting the party membership every week, and on multiple
issues,
other parties memberships will very quickly become mighty jealous.
Labour is never going to win on the NHS, on the economy, on the City and the banks, on inequality, on welfare reform and a host of
other issues until it repudiates the awful legacy of the Blair - Brown years that brought it down so low.
Labour's Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell said her campaign had been a disaster, telling the BBC: «Theresa May went with one question about Brexit to the electorate and that was going to be the central question to the whole election, and people said «Actually there are
other issues we want to discuss».»
Some
Labour backbenchers regard Momentum as a party within a party, organising its members to put pressure on MPs from
other wings of the party to fall in behind Corbyn's line on certain
issues, such as rejecting military action in Syria.
I suspect that they will win some of the
Labour seats on their target list (and I listed the top 50 in that blog post last summer), but I'm not convinced that there will be that many: their position on Iraq marked them out from the
other two parties at the last election, leading them to the high water mark they reached - but Iraq will not be an
issue next year and it is hard to see which message they could put out which would resonate with voters in the same way.
The 57 Liberal Democrats will be voting with
Labour, a move that has infuriated Conservatives, and also bled into
other coalition discussions on unrelated
issues such as reform of press regulation and even childcare.