U.S.

Theatre company pledges to be a 'home for all'

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Global   来源:Personal Finance  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:"But we don't complain because we recognise that it's part and parcel of living in the area.

"But we don't complain because we recognise that it's part and parcel of living in the area.

"From 2026, the people of Wales will be better represented, and the Welsh government can be more effectively scrutinised."Reform UK, which has no Welsh seats in the Senedd or Westminster, is hoping the new Welsh Parliament will be an opportunity for the party.

Theatre company pledges to be a 'home for all'

“Today’s announcement is an exciting one for Reform UK," chairman Zia Yusuf said, adding the party was building a "local branch structure across the whole of Wales".Chief executive of the commission, Shereen Williams, said: “We strongly encourage everyone to share their views with us, whether they support or oppose the proposals, so that we can go on to further strengthen the map ahead of the next election.”A former mining town will be the worst affected by planned cuts to disability benefits, researchers have claimed.

Theatre company pledges to be a 'home for all'

Plans to restrict eligibility for Personal Independence Payments (Pip) were announced inHealth Equity North used government figures to estimate the reduction in Pip and divided it by the amount of working age people in each of England's parliamentary constituencies. They found Easington in County Durham is likely to be the worst hit to the tune of £409 per working age person per year.

Theatre company pledges to be a 'home for all'

The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) said it was creating a "sustainable welfare system" which would help support sick and disabled people "break down barriers [and] unlock work".

Using the same methodology, Health Equity North reported northern constituencies faced the greatest loss to their local economies, with areas in Merseyside making up six of the top 10.It was a very difficult, painful death that cemented her belief in assisted dying for the terminally ill.

"Nobody in their right mind would be against assisted dying if they had to sit, like I did, and watch my son die."I wish with all my heart and soul that assisted dying had been in then, I really do, because he would have opted for it. He wasn't a stupid boy, he was a very intelligent young man.

"And it'll give an awful lot of people the chance that James didn't have, give an awful lot of people the chance to say, you know, 'enough is enough, let me pass over'."The Isle of Man legislation now looks set to become law, but as politicians in Jersey, Westminster and Holyrood also consider their own proposals, the wider debate about assisted dying is far from over.

copyright © 2016 powered by BroadwayInsider   sitemap