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Autor Tema: www.cnnhkids.com q2l701 ytcgzx 883PmL  (Leído 34 veces)

lehan6144

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« en: Septiembre 28, 2013, 07:15:14 am »
We can note in passing that both LG and Churchill had personal weaknesses: women (LG), and drink (Churchill), plus rackety finances which would have prematurely finished both their careers in more transparent and prudish conditions that now operate in British public life.Unlike those flawed titans it was the more humdrum "cabinet of faithful husbands" (I think the expression was Stanley Baldwin's), which failed to match the challenge of the third great crisis: the collapse of 1929-31 which plunged Britain into the Great Depression. All the imaginative talent, from Oswald Mosley and Harold Macmillan on the right, to Nye Bevan on the left (plus those flawed titans) were on the backbenches.
 That she is well-educated, well-paid and lives in a nice house is an odd criticism from the Tories and their proxies. Even more strange is their attack on the views of Sushil, her husband, discovered by trawling through back issues of Management Today. Whereas in the 80s, candidates and their family members were attacked if they believed in nuclear disarmament or the Cuban revolution,www.cnnhkids.com, Seema's husband is being attacked by the Tories for making a statement which seems to support George Osborne's fiscal strategy. I concede it's an eccentric view, and I will have it out with him next time I see him, but it doesn't represent much of a barrier to his wife becoming a Labour MP.2.40pm: I'm wrapping up early today, not least because I've got to read almost 300 comments before I interview Nigel Farage.
 ? He signalled that Labour would not be able to create social justice through higher spending. The fiscal challenges we face mean we need to find new ways of delivering social justice ...The failure of the Government's austerity plan means that the next Labour government is likely to inherit a deficit that still needs to be reduced.So even then resources will have to be focused significantly on paying down that deficit.Therefore if the next Labour government is to tackle the challenge of social injustice, reform of our economy will be vital.Those were the key messages in the speech. Miliband also attacked the government for not doing enough to promote growth, implied that it was a mistake to sell Northern Rock at a loss and called for the resignation of Sepp Blatter, but these points are not relevant to the main argument he was making.
Cameron says he will look into this.12.25pm: Labour's Kelvin Hopkins asks if George Osborne was right to portray the freezing of age-related allowances as simplication. Cameron cites the positive things the government is doing for pensioners.12.26pm: Cameron agrees to look into a missing child case raised by Caroline Dinenage, a Conservative.12.27pm: Labour's Gordon Marsden asks about the decision to impose VAT on church repairs. Cameron says the government will put money aside to help churches affected by the change.12.28pm: Douglas Carswell, a Conservative, asks why Cameron said Yes Minister was true to life on his trip to Malaysia last week when, in the past,ytcgzx, he said the opposite.Cameron says sometimes Carswell needs a sense of humour.
? Philip Hammond, the defence secretary, has told MPs that there is no "current credible military threat" to the Falkland Islands.Despite media speculation to the contrary, there has been no recent change to force levels. There is no evidence of any current credible military threat to the security of the Falkland Islands and therefore no current plan for significant changes to force deployments. However, her Majesty's government is committed to defending the right of the Falkland islanders to self-determination and plans exist for rapid reinforcement of the land,cnnhkids.com, sea and air forces in and around the islands, should any such threat appear.? David Cameron has joined other European Union leaders in calling on Brussels to address the "crisis of growth" gripping the continent.
 That was clear at the time the Coalition was formed." But he also said there was "some discussion" on the process for future negotiations because coalition government made it "more complicated". He went on: "Clearly, we will have to think about that process and how we do things."? Mary Portas, the retail expert, has published a blueprint for the revival of Britain's high streets, warning that "after many years of erosion, neglect and mismanagement" they will "disappear forever" unless urgent action is taken. She has recommended a range of planning policy incentives along with a new tax on car parks in out-of-town malls, as well as free parking in town centres to lure shoppers back to the high street.

 

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