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Times Online (Free subscription) | 10/08/2008
George Osborne, shadow chancellor: “We must make sure that any support from the taxpayer is used to help save small businesses from closure and enable families to stay afloat, not to pay the bonuses of bankers.”
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Manchester Evening News (Free subscription) | 10/08/2008
... but he urged politicians to get behind businesses to help them cope with these `challenging' times.Paul Kenny, general secretary of the GMB union, said: "This report confirms that things will get worse. "It is clear that we need a cut in interest rates to at least slow down the recession."
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Daily Star (Free subscription) | 10/08/2008
... would have cost just £1.5 billion - a fraction of the banking bail-out, said general secretary Paul Kenny. "Business as usual is now over for the City elite that organised this disaster. "They will have to get used to living on normal incomes and paying their taxes now that the taxpayer is propping them up and calling the tune as a result," he said. Mr Kenny said the Government...
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icWales (Free subscription) | 10/08/2008
... would have cost just £1.5 billion - a fraction of the banking bail-out, said general secretary Paul Kenny."Business as usual is now over for the City elite that organised this disaster."They will have to get used to living on normal incomes and paying their taxes now that the taxpayer is propping them up and calling the tune as a result," he said.Mr Kenny said the Government...
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Liverpool Daily Post.co.uk - UK & world news (Free subscription) | 10/08/2008
... would have cost just £1.5 billion - a fraction of the banking bail-out, said general secretary Paul Kenny."Business as usual is now over for the City elite that organised this disaster."They will have to get used to living on normal incomes and paying their taxes now that the taxpayer is propping them up and calling the tune as a result," he said.Mr Kenny said the Government...
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Liverpool Echo.co.uk (Free subscription) | 10/08/2008
... would have cost just £1.5 billion - a fraction of the banking bail-out, said general secretary Paul Kenny."Business as usual is now over for the City elite that organised this disaster."They will have to get used to living on normal incomes and paying their taxes now that the taxpayer is propping them up and calling the tune as a result," he said.Mr Kenny said the Government...