Sunday, February 17, 2013

former Conservative leader graduates critical "too good" to stack shelves, refusing to back down after regimes "workfare" outlaws

Iain Duncan Smith criticized graduates who are "too good" to stack supermarket shelves as he promised not to go back after almost all return to work plans were out of government law.

Tuesday, eight hours after the surprise decision of the Court of Appeal, labor and pension regulation Emergency Secretary presented to Parliament for the so-called "employment programs for emergency "back up.

Duncan Smith gave a direct reproach college geology graduate Cait Reilly, 24, of Birmingham, who challenged have to work a free discount store Poundland face losing unemployment benefits.

"You must learn quickly if you agree to something that you do not miss of that," said Andrew Marr Show BBC1.

deny requests for "slave labor", said: "She was paid the allowance job search by the taxpayer to most young people love this show and I'm sorry but there is a group of people there. they think they are too good for this sort of thing. "

former Tesco, Sir Terry Leahy began his career in the store stacking shelves, said.


If the Department for Work and Pensions will not be granted an appeal by the Supreme Court, the lawyers say that the department will be forced to pay millions of pounds to pay 130,000 job seekers who have had their benefits after being docked illegally punished.
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