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Sceptics question 'new jobs for 85,000'

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Published Date: 03 September 2009
THE government has come under attack after unveiling measures it said would create an extra 85,000 jobs and training opportunities for young people.
The Prime Minister said more than 150 employers, including Royal Mail, Microsoft, Pfizer, Phones4U, Centrica and Morrisons, would provide apprenticeships, work or training, adding the government and business could create thousands of opportunities.

But the Tories said Gordon Brown needed to "come clean" on the figures and the Lib Dems described the announcement as "characteristically timid and lacking in ambition".

A group campaigning on behalf of young people said no real jobs were being created.

Mr Brown and Work and Pensions Secretary Yvette Cooper, pictured, met employers and young people at a jobs summit in Birmingham to launch the Backing Young Britain initiative.

Shadow work and pensions secretary Theresa May said: "Gordon Brown needs to come clean on the numbers.

"How many of these job and training opportunities are being offered to unemployed young people and how many are being offered to those already in work?"





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  • Last Updated: 02 September 2009 8:56 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

DunCraig,

Brisbane 03/09/2009 07:40:43
And there's no way that the figures can be proved! Same rubbish being spouted by our "dear leader" and state counterparts! Politicians = liars
2

For Scotlands Future,

Vote For The SNP 03/09/2009 12:04:25
I'm surprised the Royal Mail is included in the list. I take it that they won't be producing any of these jobs in Scotland then.
3

Joe McT,

03/09/2009 12:17:49
Given that most new jobs created in the last 5 years have gone to Immigrants, how many of these Jobs now will go to people born in this Country?

Anyone still remember Brown's speech about "British jobs for British workers"?

The Brown creature now believes that the stuff churned out by his Spinmeisters reflects the real world.
4

Anthony,

Glasgow 03/09/2009 14:29:41
I agree with all the above comments. Also, let's stop pretending that anything innovative or goundbreaking is happening here. There is no way the huge public sector/quango operations which control (or rather constrain) training in this Country would ever allow any remotely innovative training project which threatened their dominance to emerge.

Notwithstanding that, it's a bit rich hearing the Tories trying to lecture anyone on this subject. Their years of short-sighted Mickey Mouse training courses did huge damage to this Country, and we are still suffering as a result.

 

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