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Título: marc by marc jacobs bag P0z209 cnnhkids 985sem
Publicado por: rubo9940 en Septiembre 28, 2013, 06:18:06 am
(See 1.59pm.) Ministers should have a consultation and then a debate. In that debate backbench contributions would then be "time limited" he says (in a dig at Dorries's time-hogging).2.10pm: Julian Huppert, the Lib Dem MP who tabled his own amendments to the bill, is speaking now. He says it is quite something for Dorries to unite Abortion Rights and the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, who are now both urging MPs to reject the Dorries amendments.2.12pm: Nadine Dorries is winding up the debate now.She says Anne Milton is her friend. Milton has gone out of her way to understand the issues.She says she heard Field. But she wants a vote on her lead amendment. (As Polly Curtis explained on Reality Check, Dorries tabled several amendments on this issue.
How?Because when she left college and went down to the Job Centre to sign on for Job Seeker's Allowance, she found out that if she moved out of her parents' place, she was automatically entitled to Housing Benefit……so that's exactly what she did. There is a "welfare gap" between those living in the system and those outside it, he says.What these examples show is that we have, in some ways, created a welfare gap in this country……between those living long-term in the welfare system and those outside it.Those within it grow up with a series of expectations: you can have a home of your own, the state will support you whatever decisions you make, you will always be able to take out no matter what you put in.
? Chris Huhne,marc by marc jacobs bag (http://www.ytcgzx.net/), the energy secretary, suggests in an interview in the Times (paywall) that consumers are too lazy to shop around for the best energy deals.They do not bother," he said. "They frankly spend less time shopping around for a bill that's on average more than £1,000 a year than they would shop around for a £25 toaster."If they got that in perspective and said, 'OK, we are going to spend a little bit of time shopping around' [they] could save very substantial amounts of money.He also says that he's in favour of people making "lots of money".I'm absolutely in favour of people making lots of money in a fair and competitive market," he said. "I'm absolutely against people making money by abusing a dominant position.
 To me,cnnhkids (http://www.cnnhkids.com/), this is part of life in a modern democracy and I think we should try to keep these things as far as possible out of the courts.? Cameron has urged George Galloway not to exploit the issue of Afghanistan for political purposes. Galloway, who took his seat yesterday as the new Respect MP for Bradford West, used a question at PMQs to urge Cameron to withdraw from the "bloody maw" of the Afghan war. Cameron said British troops were there "at the invitation of an Islamic government and under a United Nations resolution".You know the dangers in the past of walking away from Afghanistan and leaving that country to become the terrorist-supporting haven it did under the Taliban. We mustn't make that mistake again and I would urge you not play to the gallery on this issue but to speak up for the work our forces are doing to make Afghanistan a safer country.
Another questioner tackled the Lib Dem leader on the coalition government's manifesto-busting decision to raise tuition fees for universities to up to £9,000 per student. Clegg said that to avoid putting potential students from disadvantaged backgrounds off applying to university it was important to "dispel some myths" about the new system. Unlike under the previous Labour government, no student now had to pay any up-front fees, students from poorer homes were now eligible for more grants (not just loans),ytcgzx (http://www.ytcgzx.net/), and new repayment terms meant all graduates would pay out less every week when they reached a minimum income threshold to start repaying the loans - "in effect a progressive graduate tax".
 There is also a new record high for the number of people working part-time who are unable to find full time work: the highest since records began in 1992.From Will Straw at Left Foot ForwardFor the first time since the Great Recession began in the second quarter of 2008, the UK has a higher unemployment rate than the United States.From Len McCluskey, the Unite general secretaryHow bad do things have to get before this government wakes up to the human tragedy it is creating? Rather than a head-long dash to austerity, the government needs a Plan B for jobs and growth. From Dave Prentis, the Unison general secretaryThe Tories' economic policies aren't working. With the number of women out of work at a 16-year high, and one in three unemployed people out of work for more than a year, Cameron's claims that we're all in it together sound increasingly hollow.
12.31pm: Clegg says he is proud of the coalition.We have shown that two parties, two very different parties, can govern together. Never again will the political Luddites be able to say that coalitions don't work. Coalition is working, it is has been tested and it has passed the test.And he turns to health.Take NHS reform. Controversial, yes. Difficult, yes. But the value of coalition has been proven because this is a coalition Government. The health bill was stopped in its tracks and rewritten because this is a coalition Government. Competition will be the servant of health care, not the master because this is a coalition government.This is a bill for patients not profits. It is not a Liberal Democrat health bill but it is a better bill because of the Liberal Democrats, a better bill because of you.
 Far from revolutionising choice over who provides state-funded services, we learn that the process of public procurement within the public sector is actually being centralised around the Cabinet Office. ? Steve Richards in the Independent says David Cameron's speech on the NHS this week "signals the end of a particular dream envisaged by the political romantics in his entourage".Cameron is surrounded by a surprisingly large number of Tory romantics. They include his senior advisers, Steve Hilton and Rohan Silva, and influential ministers such as Oliver Letwin. I do not describe them as romantic to be disparaging. On the contrary politics desperately need more like them on the left and the right, original thinkers driven by ideas, vision and with the courageous guile to follow through with policy implementation.