The government now says it will end up spending more than # 24 billion
over the course of the parliament on school capital funding.
Not exact matches
-- Member
of Parliament David Yurdiga «The federal government thinks that it is acceptable to run a $ 30 billion deficit and spending billions
on foreign aid and international climate change projects, as well as
on newcomer settlement programs all the while cutting
over $ 100 million from the three northern territories
over the
course of the next five years.
That ought still to include a promise to force a Commons vote
on it and thus challenge the Lib Dems, a promise to enable and require councils to build houses, a promise to restore the Agricultural Wages Board that the Lib Dems have abolished, a promise to reverse the dismantlement
of England's NHS by Shirley Williams and other Lib Dems, a promise to reverse any privatisation
of the Royal Mail and thus stop it because no buyer would take the risk, and a promise to renationalise the railways for free
over the
course of a
Parliament by simply taking back each franchise as it came up for renewal.
«Justice Atuguba has seniority
over me because instead
of continuing straight from the fourth year as we used to call it,
of law school, to the fifth year which is the professional year or rather the final part
of the professional
course, I broke and went to do my master's so when I came back they — my first classmates — had already been called to the bar so I was called to the bar with Ato Dadzie and that younger generation,» she told
parliament's Appointment Committee
on Friday, 16 June when Minority Leader Haruna Iddrisu asked her to clarify to the committee whether she or Justice Atuguba was senior to the other.
«I am sure
over the
course of a
parliament we would be able to go further,» David Cameron said while
on his election campaign trail.
His claim that unemployment will fall rather than rise in the
course of this
Parliament is based
on the OBR assessment, rapidly rushed out to give ammunition to contest the anticipated Harman attack (incidentally providing the first suspicions about the OBR's objectivity), that whilst 600,000 public sector jobs will be lost by 2015 - 6 and a similar figure (though unspecified) in the private sector as a result
of the public spending cuts, some 2.5 m jobs will be created
over the same period in the private sector.
Similarly, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk's centreright Civic Platform is likely to expand its advantage
over its nationalist opponents with party member Jerzy Buzek
on course to become the first president
of the European
Parliament from a former communist state.
We have therefore agreed that there will need to be: - a significantly accelerated reduction in the structural deficit
over the
course of a
Parliament, with the main burden
of deficit reduction borne by reduced spending rather than increased taxes; - arrangements that will protect those
on low incomes from the effect
of public sector pay constraint and other spending constraints; and - protection
of jobs by stopping Labour's proposed jobs tax.
The unions provide
on average about a third
of Labour's funding
over the
course of a
parliament.
A further 2,500 teachers will be recruited
over the
course of the next
Parliament on top
of existing plans.
According to the analysis, while the Conservatives, Labour and Liberal Democrats are all proposing to spend more
on 16 to 18 education
over the
course of the next
parliament, only Labour's spending plans will result in a real - terms increase (8 per cent in real terms).
The IFS says that, taking those together with pressures «
on other costs», it forecasts school spending per pupil will fall by 8 per cent in real terms
over the
course of this
Parliament.
There was arguably less incentive for local authorities, knowing the DfE would fund decent MAT - led schools, to fulfil their duties to meet the need for bums
on seats; especially with the «500 free schools
over the
course of a
Parliament» target introduced by David Cameron.
This is
on top
of an additional # 4.8 billion in school revenue funding pledged
over the
course of the next
parliament.
The think tank says that although the Conservatives, Labour and Liberal Democrats are all proposing to spend more
on 16 to 18 education
over the
course of the next
parliament, only Labour's spending plans will result in a real - terms increase.