I have no doubt that Labour will oppose the coalition's cuts from the left, but I don't see how there can be any hope that Labour takes a more liberal
position than the coalition, which will disappoint Sunny.
Not exact matches
How can they participate in a
coalition that is largely poorer, less educated, and darker - skinned
than they are, while maintaining their comfortable
position (both economically and socially)?
That has led us to a
position where I think more
than scraps have been delivered (where you give tnem less credit) but I agree with you that a
coalition can not be rebuilt without clarity about what Labour stands for.
The
Coalition thus formed would have been significantly more authoritarian and less liberal
than the Lib Dem preferred
position.
You could feasibly write about how the
coalition government looks unlikely to tackle it (ie, Tories dropped their IHT threshold raise and raised CGT, but it seems very unlikely that they'll go further on either
position; tax reform overall remains to be seen, but I don't hold out much hope while it consists of «crackdowns» rather
than actual proposals for changing the law).
New York State Allies for Public Education (NYSAPE), a
coalition of more
than fifty parent and educator advocacy groups throughout the state, released a scorecard http://www.scribd.com/doc/238348598/NYSAPE-Gubernatorial-Candidate-Scorecard-2014 comparing the key education
positions of the candidates running for Governor.
Cameron may of course not be in a
position to lead a
coalition after 2015, any more
than he may be in one to form a majority or minority government.
There would have been no question of a lab - Lib Dem,
coalition; the Lib Dems bargaining
position with the Tories would have been weaker - maybe David Cameron would now lead a minority Conservative government rather
than a
coalition?
Rather
than engaging in an arms race on education funding, the
Coalition has so far stood firm in its
position that it will not engage in a «fistful of dollars» election campaign.
With the same broad
coalition that stood up against this pipeline and took to the streets during the People's Climate March, we're better
positioned than ever before to make real climate policy a top priority for the U.S. government and achieve meaningful progress in this year's climate talks.
In its brief in
Coalition for Responsible Regulation v. EPA, EPA states that for more
than thirty years, it has consistently taken the
position that PSD applies to any regulated air pollutant.