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Labour and Charter
The Fascist regime first created a Ministry of Corporations that organized the Italian economy into 22 sectoral corporations, banned workers ' strikes and lock-outs, and in 1927 created the Charter of Labour, which established workers ' rights and duties and created labour tribunals to arbitrate employer-employee disputes.
The League promoted the Socialist Charter initiative of various Tribunite left-wing Labour MPs and was consequently nicknamed The Chartists.
Lady Kennedy rebels against her party whip in the House of Lords more frequently than any other Labour Peer, having a dissent rate of 33. 3 % She was Chair of Charter 88 ( 1992 – 97 ) and is closely affiliated to the educational charity Common Purpose.
It was following repeated defeat of the Labour Party and repeated election of Margaret Thatcher that Charter 88 was born.
: The Labour Charter ( Promulgated by the Grand Council for Fascism on April 21, 1927 )—( published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale, April 3, 1927 ) ( p. 133 )
Wilson's Supreme Court rulings include: R. v. Morgentaler in 1988 ( abortion procedures ), R. v Lavallée in 1990 ( battered-wife syndrome as self-defense ), Operation Dismantle v. The Queen in 1985 ( judicial review ), the minority decision in R. v. Stevens ( 1988 ) which was adopted later in R. v. Hess ; R. v. Nguyen in 1990 ( mens rea and statutory rape ), Kosmopolous v. Constitution Insurance Co. of Canada ( piercing " corporate veil "), the dissenting opinion in McKinney v. University of Guelph in 1990 ( mandatory retirement ), Andrews v. Law Society of British Columbia in 1989 ( equality rights test ), and Sobeys Stores v. Yeomans and Labour Standards Tribunal ( NS ) in 1989 ( interpretive authority of tribunals ), among many other foundational cases interpreting the Charter of Rights and Freedoms that was enacted the year she was appointed to the Supreme Court.
He has taught courses in Constitutional Law, Criminal Law, Labour Law, Evidence and Canada's Charter of Rights.
If adopted, it would have had the effect of amending the Official Languages Act, the Canada Labour Code, and the Canada Business Corporations Act, to cause them to conform to the Charter of the French Language, “ effectively making the federal government French-only in the province ,” according to Maclean ’ s.
The Labour Charter of 1927 confirmed the importance of private initiative in organising the economy, while still reserving the right for state intervention-most notably in the supposedly complete fascist control of worker hiring.

Labour and 1927
The Trades Disputes Act 1927 was repealed, and a Dock Labour Scheme was introduced in 1947 to put an end to the casual system of hiring labour in the docks, Wages for members of the police force were significantly increased.
The Trade Disputes and Trade Unions Act 1927 made general strikes illegal and ended the automatic payment of union members to the Labour Party.
* May 4 – Gregor Mackenzie, British Labour Party politician ( b. 1927 )
) As a consequence the Labour party was able to jettison its support for socialism in 1927 ( a policy made official in 1951 ), as it expanded its reach into middle class constituencies.
* Order of the Red Banner of Labour, twice ( 1927, 1933 )
Between 1925 and 1927 he edited Lansbury's Labour Weekly, which included columns by Ellen Wilkinson and Raymond Postgate and artwork by Reginald Brill.
Lansbury's standing within the Labour party grew and in 1927 he was elected Chairman of the Parliamentary Labour Party for 1927-28.
( born 3 November 1927 ) is a Norwegian politician from the Labour Party.
* John Gilbert, Baron Gilbert ( born 1927 ), British Labour Party politician
The party was a member of the Labour and Socialist International between 1927 and 1940.
He began in politics as a member of the Glasgow University Labour Club, before deciding to help form the Glasgow University Scottish Nationalist Association ( GUSNA ) in 1927.
In 1927, the Social Democrats were reunited with Labour.
From 1922 until Fianna Fáil TDs took their seats in 1927, the Labour Party was the major opposition party in the Dáil.
It lost its first elections as a re-unified Party in 1927 to the " Compact ", an electoral alliance between the Constitutional Party and Labour.
* Stan Cohen ( politician ) ( 1927 – 2004 ), British Labour politician
However, since the 1927 Cheltenham Agreement, the party has had an electoral agreement with the Labour Party, which allows for a limited number of Labour Co-operative candidates.
Thomas Johnson ( 17 May 1872 – 17 January 1963 ) was an Irish nationalist politician, trade unionist and leader of the Irish Labour Party, who served as a Teachta Dála ( TD ) for Dublin County from 1922 to 1927.
He was subsequently elected a TD for Dublin County to the Third Dáil at the 1922 general election and remained leader of the Labour Party until 1927.
File: CantoAlTrabajo002. JPG | Ode to Labour ( Rogelio Yrurtia, 1927 )
* John Ryan ( Irish politician ) ( born 1927 ), Irish Labour Party politician
Indeed the British Fascists had protested against public meetings being addressed by Mosley as early as 1927 when they denounced the then Labour MP as a dangerous socialist.

Labour and promulgated
The basic labour laws are the Labour Law of People's Republic of China ( promulgated on 5 July 1994 ) and the Law of the People's Republic of China on Employment Contracts ( Adopted at the 28th Session of the Standing Committee of the 10th National People's Congress on June 29, 2007, Effective from January 1, 2008 ).

Labour and by
Since the 1951 general election, the party system has been dominated by the personalist Antigua Labour Party ( ALP ), dominated by the Bird family, particularly Prime Ministers Vere and Lester Bird.
The ALP was founded as a federal party prior to the first sitting of the Australian Parliament in 1901, but is descended from Labour parties founded in the various Australian colonies by the emerging labour movement in Australia, formally beginning in 1891.
* 1955 – The Canadian Labour Congress is formed by the merger of the Trades and Labour Congress of Canada and the Canadian Congress of Labour.
In the British general election the following year, Michael Howard promised to work towards having the prohibition removed if the Conservative Party gained a majority of seats in the House of Commons, but the election was won by Blair's Labour Party.
With the exception of the first term, it has been held by the Labour Party, and for seven years was held by Ramsay MacDonald, the Prime Minister in 1924 and from 1929 to 1935.
After nearly becoming extinct in the 1940s and 50s, the Liberal Party revived its fortunes somewhat under the leadership of Jo Grimond in the 1960s, by positioning itself as a radical centrist non-socialist alternative to the Conservative and Labour Party governments of the time.
Share of the vote received by Conservatives ( blue ), Whigs / Liberals / Liberal Democrats ( orange ), Labour ( red ) and others ( grey ) in general elections since 1832.
The agreement lasted from 1977 to 1978, but proved mostly fruitless, for two reasons: the Liberals ' key demand of proportional representation was rejected by most Labour MPs, whilst the contacts between Liberal spokespersons and Labour ministers often proved detrimental, such as between finance spokesperson John Pardoe and Chancellor of the Exchequer Denis Healey, who were mutually antagonistic.
In 1981, defectors from the moderate wing of the Labour Party, led by former Cabinet ministers Roy Jenkins, David Owen and Shirley Williams, founded the Social Democratic Party.
However, they were later overtaken in the polls by the Conservatives and at the 1983 general election the Conservatives triumphed by a landslide, with Labour once again forming the opposition, while the SDP-Liberal Alliance came close to Labour in terms of votes ( a share of more than 25 %) although it only had 23 MPs compared to Labour's 209.
It was founded by four senior Labour Party ' moderates ', dubbed the ' Gang of Four ': Roy Jenkins, David Owen, Bill Rodgers and Shirley Williams.
They also believed that Labour had become too left-wing, and had been infiltrated at constituency level by Trotskyist factions whose views and behaviour they considered to be at odds with the Parliamentary Labour Party and Labour voters.
The origin of the party can be traced back to the ideological divisions in the Labour Party in the 1950s ( with its forerunner being the Campaign for Democratic Socialism established to support the Gaitskellites ), but publicly lies in the 1979 Dimbleby Lecture given by Roy Jenkins as he neared the end of his presidency of the European Commission.
There were long-running claims of corruption and administrative decay within Labour at local level ( the North-East of England was to become a cause célèbre ), and concerns that experienced and able Labour MPs could be deselected ( i. e., lose the Labour Party nomination ) by those wanting to put into a safe seat their friends, family or members of their own Labour faction.

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