Labour Party Manifestos 2001(Leader:Tony Blair, Result:Labour Win) 1997(Leader:Tony Blair, Result:Labour Win) 1992(Leader:Neil Kinnock, Result:Conservative Win) 1987(Leader:Neil Kinnock, Result:Conservative Win) 1983(Leader:Michael Foot, Result:Conservative Win) ...
ELECTION 2005: Main Points of the Labour Party ManifestoThe Birmingham Post (England)
Labour Party, British political party whose historic links with trade unions have led it to promote an active role for the state in the creation of economic prosperity and in the provision of social services. It has been the major democratic socialist pa
Labour's manifesto was a repudiation of the Post-war consensus from the left. It alienated so many moderates, skilled workers and the general public that it was ridiculed as the "longest suicide note in history." Some top leaders quit the Labour Party and formed a new Social Democratic ...
Details of the case emerged as the Labour party launched their manifesto ahead of May’s council elections, when Morton, 35, was expected to stand again. Insiders told how Morton, the party’s Moray spokesman on youth services and education, is a rising star in party ranks. ...
The Labour Partyis one of the established UK mainstream political parties. From 2015 to theGeneral Election of 2019the Party was the fastest growing political party in theUnited Kingdomwith a membership exceeding 515,000 and a leader,Jeremy Corbyn, who appeared to be more or less independent of...
“And so when I went into that Budget last week I had to put our public finances back onto a firm trajectory because we saw in the previous parliament what happens when government loses control of the public finances, and the first commitment we made in our manifesto was to bring stability...
Which party was the most credible on the affordability of its manifesto pledges, and which had the clearest vision to keeping the NHS sustainable? The ... L Laszt,B Neyman - 《Experientia》 被引量: 1发表: 1951年 Devolution, "new politics" and election pledge fulfilment in Scotland, 1999–...
Without it the General Election of 2005 is exposing them cruelly and vividly. And cruelly and vividly exposed is what the First Minister must have felt on Thursday when presenting the Scottish Labour party's manifesto. On health, it pledged a 36-week waiting period for treatment for patients...
“The proximate cause of defeat was not complicated or hard to see, but simple and in plain sight. We put forward a leader and a manifesto that voters thought unacceptable to such a degree that many were repelled. Too extreme economically. Anti-western. Lacking in patriotism. And therefore ...