Labour’s
emphasis on living standards has certainly resonated with local people in
Derby. Labour’s policy agenda would generate jobs, make it easier for
people to balance work and home and tackle Britain’s social needs
Families and
businesses need help, and Labour is setting out plans to help them. Ed Miliband announced that Labour will cut
business rates in 2015 and freeze them again in 2016 – prioritising a tax cut
for 1.5 million small businesses over a tax cut for 80,000 large businesses.
We will build
the homes that people need and ensure that developers don’t sit on land. They will be forced to build on it or lose
it. Labour’s house building programme will
also generate hundreds of thousands of new jobs in construction and the
suppliers that provide the materials for the building industry.
We will
support working parents, by expanding free childcare for 3 and 4-year-olds from
15 to 25 hours a week for working parents, paid for by an £800 million rise in
the bank levy. We will increase the
number of apprenticeships, by insisting that every medium-sized or large
company that hires a skilled worker from outside the EU must do their bit to
train the next generation, by taking on an apprentice.
One of the
biggest problems families and businesses face right now is rising bills. Energy
bills have gone up by an average £300 since David Cameron became Prime Minister,
while energy companies’ profits have shot up. Businesses say that energy bills
are the second biggest cost they face. When wholesale prices rise, the energy
companies pass the costs on to consumers – but when they fall, bills stay high.
That’s why Ed
Miliband set out bold plans to reset the energy market and make prices more
competitive, forcing them to introduce a simple new tariff structure and
creating a tough new energy regulator. And in the time it takes to make these
reforms, Labour will freeze your energy bills from the next election until
January 2017 – saving a typical household £120 and the average business £1,800.
You can see how much you could save by visiting www.freezethatbill.com.
David Cameron
and the Conservatives have realised they've got a problem, but have no new
ideas to deal with the cost of living crisis that's happening on their watch.
Since David
Cameron became Prime Minister in 2010, life has got tougher for too many
people.
·
We've
seen the slowest recovery from recession in 100 years.
·
Nearly
a million young people are unemployed.
· Prices
have risen faster than wages in a staggering 38 out of 39 months while David
Cameron has been in Downing Street.
·
And
working people are an average of nearly £1,500 worse off.
The truth is
that year after year, people have been working harder, for longer, for less. Yet at the same time, bankers' bonuses went
up by 82 per cent this April, and David Cameron's tax priority has been to give
a tax cut to people earning over £150,000 – wages most people here in Derby can only dream of.
Help for a
privileged few, nothing for ordinary families. No wonder people think that our
Prime Minister is completely out of touch.
We can only
tackle the cost of living crisis with an economy that works for working people.
The more David Cameron boasts about
saving the economy, the more out of touch he looks.
Britain can do better than this, with a Labour
Government that fights for you.
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