Miliband Says Labour Fiscally Sound, Tories Irresponsible
Labour’s Ed Miliband tries to turn the way Britain’s two largest political parties are seen on its head.
Labour’s Ed Miliband tries to turn the way Britain’s two largest political parties are seen on its head.
Most Britons on zero-hours contracts are happy with their flexible jobs.
Socialists split on whether to be for or against business.
Britain’s Labour Party wants to roll back liberalizations in health care, ignoring the good they’ve done.
Labour’s leader exceeds expectations while Prime Minister David Cameron is caught off guard.
The Scottish nationalists and Nigel Farage’s Euroskeptics stake out positions to the far left and right.
Prime Minister David Cameron’s party has pulled ahead of Labour in recent surveys.
The Scottish National Party would make it impossible for Labour to beat the Conservatives.
The Labour Party leader calls for energy price cuts and higher taxes on the rich.
Labour proposes to pay for extra nurses in Scotland by raising taxes on homes in South England.
The Conservative and Labour conferences were both aimed at shoring up traditional party bases.
The Labour leader’s recriminations say more about his own delusions than the ruling Conservatives he attacks.
Labour rejects David Cameron’s proposal to give England and Scotland more autonomy at the same time.
The government doesn’t privatize companies to raise money. It privatizes companies to make them more efficient.
The Conservative says his opponent’s proposals remind him of Labour’s 1983 “suicide note.”