Originally posted by mudskipper
					
						
						
							
							
							
							
								
								
								
								
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				In 2012 he spoke of how “having struggled for life itself, [my parents] instilled in us a sense of duty to ease the struggles of others. And this came not just from my parents’ wartime experience it came from the daily fabric of our childhood”. In 2011 it was how his parents “fled the Nazis. And came to Britain. They embraced its values. Outsiders. Who built a life for us”. In his very first speech as Labour leader he said: “I suppose not everyone has a dad who wrote a book saying he didn't believe in the parliamentary road to socialism. But you know, it wasn't a cold house. It was warm, full of the spirit of argument and conviction, the conviction that leads me to stand before you today, the conviction that people of courage and principle can make a huge difference to their world.”
			
		
	
			
			
				 In one of the first party political broadcasts after Ed Miliband was elected, his father featured prominently – though there was a cack-handed attempt to airbrush out the Marxist philosopher bit of his biography. Instead he was reframed as a war veteran who had run his own removal company.
			
		
	

							
						
							
						
				
				
				
				
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