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Many people try to fly up and look down for life and home..only few can have thier own property and real family..but still flying to search...some try to look around this world..hope that the better life must be outside thier countries or old families..Tough to find the right person to jion together as partner or solmate or business joint venture company...
บ้านเดี่ยว ถนนเลียบคลองเสาธงหิน กม ที่สอง นนทบุรี บางใหญ่ ข้างรถไฟฟ้า
อสังหาริมทรัพย์, แลกเปลี่ยนที่อยู่อาศัย ใน ไทย, กรุงเทพและปริมณทล, กรุงเทพ. วันที่ ก.ย. 14
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Author: | Dall, Caroline Wells Healey, 1822-1912. |
Title: | "Woman's right to labor," or, Low wages and hard work: in three lectures, delivered in Boston, November, 1859 / by Caroline H. Dall. |
Publication Info: | Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Library 2005 |
Availability: | These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Please go to http://www.umdl.umich.edu/ for more information. |
Print source: | "Woman's right to labor," or, Low wages and hard work: in three lectures, delivered in Boston, November, 1859 / by Caroline H. Dall. Dall, Caroline Wells Healey, 1822-1912. Boston: Walker, Wise, and Co., 1860. |
Subject terms: | Women -- Employment |
URL: | http://name.umdl.umich.edu/AEC0756.0001.001 |
The Societarian supports the great work that John Prescott is doing to highlight the threat posed to the basic rights that Labour has handed down over the Last 12 years, such as the National Minimum Wage. Chuka Umunna (Labour PPC for Streatham) brought up the issue first on Labourlist back in February about the Private Members Bill to abolish the National Minimum Wage (NMW) by once Tory frontbencher Christopher Chope MP.
Some believe that as it’s a Private Members Bills it is meaningless to kick up such a fuss about this issue. Although I accept that this PMB wont pass due to the fact that there is a Labour majority in the Commons, it nevertheless means that we have to shout our loudest now so that the Tory leadership knows to leave this area well alone in case they do win the next election. We have to make it clear that the National Minimum Wage is as precious to the British public as the NHS and that NO government should ever dream of even considering to abolish it.
For those of you who still think that the Tory high command wont touch our National Minimum Wage, even though this Bill as I mentioned is being proposed by a former Cameron luvvie, then just look at how those in the current Shadow Cabinet have acted towards our National Minimum Wage.
Ignore the fact that not one Tory signed the recent EDM commemorating the 10 year anniversary of the National Minimum Wage or that only one, Bob Spink, signed the EDM to have carers recognised within the NMW.
The original bill which brought the NMW into being on 16th December 1997 was opposed by 15 out of 32 members of the current Tory Shadow. They voted against it every other time it has gone through the Commons. One is a mistake but three times is surely intent. It is very scary when you think that the only people in the current Conservative cabinet not to vote against it are those who have not either been elected to the Commons like yet like Sayeeda Warsi or those who were not elected untill after its introduction like Cameron and Osborne or those who reside in the House of Lords like Pauline Neville-Jones. Therefore we have a canbinet dominated by a group of people vehemently opposed to the National Minimum Wage and containing others who have never bothered to even express an opinion on it.
If we blogging on the left don’t defend this then it certainly wont be done by right wing nutters like Donal Blaney or Iain Dale. Let alone those like Gimpo Fawkes whose silence speaks volumes concerning his belief in freedom does not extend to the poorest workers in society.
List of all those Tory front benchers who have voted against our National Minimum Wage:
William Hague
Kenneth Clarke
Alan Duncan
Liam Fox
Cheryl Gillan
Dominic Grieve
Phillip Hammond
Andrew Lansley
Oiliver Letwin
Francie Maude
Theresa May
Patrick Mcloughlin
Owen Paterson
Caroline Spelman
David Willets
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This entry was posted on May 12, 2009 at 12:48 am and is filed under Equality, National Minimum Wage with tags Conservative MPs, Fairness, National Minimum Wage, Typical Tories, Wage Concern. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
As of this spring, the real (that is, inflation-adjusted) value of the United States minimum wage has reached a new historic low. The following graph shows the minimum wage, in nominal dollars and 2005 dollars, from 1950 to 2005:
(Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics)
That’s right: as of this spring, the real value of the minimum wage is lower than it’s been in fifty-five years. As inflation continues to exert its eroding effect, the real value of the minimum wage will continue to fall into deeper historical depths. Senator Debbie Stabenow of Michigan has introduced a bill, S. 14, to bring the minimum wage back up to a more typical historical level. Not one Republican has cosponsored it, and it is languishing in the Senate. In the House of Representatives, no one has even bothered to introduce a bill to increase the minimum wage.