The leader of the British opposition Labor Party, Ed Miliband, held his first pre-election rally today in Birmingham with a speech on the position of the working class, less than two months from the parliamentary elections in Great Britain.
"Today we have shown that we can replace a failed and tired government, which has a handful of supporters, with a new government that will really work for the working class," Miliband told around 1.500 of his supporters.
The Labor leader, who hopes to defeat Conservative Party leader and current Prime Minister David Cameron in the parliamentary elections in May, detailed his program called "Better Project, Better Future".
Miliband has promised to end "Zero Hour" contracts, which see employees work indefinitely without a guaranteed minimum wage or fixed salary.
The Labor leader and former energy minister has promised to strengthen immigration control, which is a particular issue in the country after the rise of the anti-immigration party UKIP, which won last year's European Parliament elections.
According to the latest polls, the Labor Party and the Conservatives are tied, but there is no chance that one of them will get an absolute majority even with a third party.
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