Not exact matches
I
went into pre-
labour on my due date and was having painful Braxton hicks very erratically all Saturday and Sunday and
then established
labour kicked in around 3 am on Monday morning.
You
go into labour, have your baby and
then what?
And the Lib Dems would be out of their minds to
go into coalition before the election — «vote Lib Dem, get
Labour» did for them in 1992, and it wasn't even true
then.
Speaking plainly, Smith told Andrew Marr, «I want us to be part of the European Union»,
then argued
Labour should
go into the General Election in 2020 promising to keep Britain in the EU, if it were still an option.
The more seats a party or grouping has, the more chance it has of forming a government - with 198 seats out of 646 the Conservative Party could only form a government if significant numbers of other MP's decided to back them, as happened in 1924 when there was a situation that the Conservatives didn't want to form a coalition with either other main party and equally the Liberals didn't want a coalition with
Labour and the Liberals and Conservatives saw it as an opportunity to allow
Labour into government but in a situation in which legislation was still reliant on Liberal and Conservative votes and they could be brought down at the most suitable time, supposing the notional gains were accurate and in the improbable event of the next election
going exactly the same way in terms of votes
then 214 out of 650 is 32.93 % of seats compared to at 198 out of 646 seats - 30.65 % of seats and the Conservative Party would
then be 14 seats closer towards a total neccessary to form a government allowing for the greater number of seats, on the one hand the Conservatives need
Labour to fail but equally they need to succeed themselves given that the Liberal Democrats appear likely to oppose anyone forming a government who does not embark on a serious programme to introduce PR, in addition PC & SNP would expect moves towards Independence for Scotland and Wales, the SDLP will be likely to back
Labour and equally UKIP would want a committment to withdraw from Europe and anyway will be likely to be in small numbers if any, pretty much that leaves cutting a deal with the DUP which would only add the backing of an extra 10 - 13 MP's.
Speaking plainly, Smith told Andrew Marr, «I want us to be part of the European Union»,
then argued
Labour should
go into the General Election in 2020 promising to keep Britain -LSB-...]
The whole strategy of the Conservative leadership seems to be to
go for an even more image based version of the one that Tony Blair used in 1997, the pledge by
Labour in the 1990s followed a situation in which the whole economic strategy of the
then Conservative government had fallen apart to the point where things that had happened by accident were being described as policy and Kenneth Clarke commented that he
went into a cabinet meeting in a situation in which the government no longer had an economic policy.
What was discovered of note was that if you changed the voting system to open list, or indeed anything candidate based as a form of voting, UKIP
went down six points and the Tories up five — meaning the Conservatives would
then leapfrog UKIP
into second, just barely behind
Labour.
Among the classics sang
into the early hours was a tune about
going into coalition with Tony Blair's
then Labour, first performed in 1995 before he entered Downing Street.
then the unions need to put their oen candidates forward has most of this party has we now isnt a true
labour party but sadly who do you vote for has its more the same i cant see a way forward but you state the monies from the election 1997
then this must haver been tory money has blair was maggies product put
into lanour to take em to the tory lite whot ever i can not in all my days say to my friends vote for them has untill the tb of this party
go back to their tory party jeff3
I suspect when you state people are
going for the nationalist
then state Plaid your not taking
into account the mess Plaid made
going into coalition with Welsh
Labour, they like the Liberals became the mouth piece for
Labour forgetting everything people had voted for them.
He would probably win as most
Labour MP's have no appetite for a leadership election and
then he would look like a strong leader
going into the election.
If the agreement on party funding isn't also implemented at this point,
then Labour will
go into the next election either: having to ask the unions for enormous discretionary donations to fund the campaign, rendering pointless the process started yesterday, or fighting an election with a fraction of the funds available to the Tories.
Then, as if things were not
going badly enough for Corbyn, there was last Friday's launch of the Shami Chakrabarti report
into anti-Semitism in the
Labour party.