Sentences with phrase «welfare rights called»

Not exact matches

It helped that Cox chose the newly martyred John F. Kennedy as the model of his new pragmatic, secular mind, for JFK had audaciously attacked old questions of civil rights, poverty, crime (quaintly called at that time «juvenile delinquency»), and welfare with a new vigor, and stirring a whole new generation to new thoughts.
Christian safeguarding charity CCPAS has backed a call for the EU Withdrawal Bill to consider the impact of Brexit on the rights, safety and welfare of children.
This allowed him to encroach far into enemy territory — triangulation, they called it — attacking the Tories from the right on law and order or welfare and playing merry hell with them.
This week's welfare bill debacle, where 48 MPs wilfully defied the interim leadership's call for abstention, once again highlighted divisions in the ranks which, according to the BBC's assistant political editor, Norman Smith, run: «right up through the party to the shadow cabinet».
He lit into Paladino, again calling him an «extremist» and noting his against abortion rights, wants to take people on welfare «and put them in work camps in retro - fitted prisons... that's not this state, and I'm going to be pointed that out all across this state.»
The right to exercise this power is so manifest in the interest of the public health and welfare, that it is unnecessary to enter upon a discussion of it beyond saying that it is too firmly established to be successfully called in question.
[15] It calls for a «New Socialism of the 21st Century», which guarantees the rights and freedoms of the individual and ensures the proper functioning of a welfare state.
Today the Portland - based animal welfare group, National Animal Interest Alliance (NAIA), is issuing a call to animal rights leaders worldwide to condemn the growing violence in their movement - violence whose perpetrators FBI director Louis Freeh has called, «the most recognizable single issue terrorists of the present time.»
The commission makes 100 recommendations featuring six overarching ones: the National Advice and Legal Support Fund mentioned before; prioritising public legal education in schools, alongside financial literacy, and in «education for life»; calling on government to clampdown down «preventable demand» by getting decisions right the first time including a «polluter pays» scheme for the DWP to pay costs on upheld appeals (on average 35 % of appeals against welfare benefits decisions are upheld); an overhaul of the courts to make them better suited for the needs of litigants in person; a national strategy for 2015 — 20, including a «minister for advice and legal support»; and for local authorities to commission local advice and legal support plans.
The proposals broadly called for the recognition of the rights of Indigenous people, for the implementation of self - determination as the basis of government policy and for governments to redress Indigenous disadvantage as a right and not out of welfare.
[67] As I stated in my report last year, «in calling for a move away from welfare dependency to economic empowerment there is little acknowledgement that integral to this shift is the empowerment of Indigenous Australians through the full recognition and equal enjoyment of their human rights».
The proposals broadly called for the recognition of the rights of Indigenous people, as well as calling on the government to redress Indigenous disadvantage (and highlighting requirements for this to be addressed as a right, not out of welfare).
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