Ed Miliband supports the philosophy of St. Pauls protesters "

Labour leader Ed Miliband has accused the city of London, the leaders of being "out of order" with the values ​​of the rest of the country, and thrown their weight behind the protest spirit of the deal.

Writing in The Observer Miliband said: "The challenge is that they reflect a crisis of concern for millions of people about the biggest problem of our time. The difference between their values ​​and way of governing our country"

He criticizes the development of the political coalition in the economy, saying: .. "Conservatives are discussing how to make it easier for companies to fire people we are developing policies to enable them to hire people we like to start by creating thousands of new jobs paid for by a tax on bank bonuses. It is rewarding to the correct values, not the wrong values ​​in our economy. "

Reply by the Government, First Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Danny said protesters were calling attention to important issues, adding: "I am not concerned about capitalism, what I feel discomfort, such things as a government we have been performing in front is the lack of regulation of the City of London, the lack of control. Those are the things we're trying to change. "

However, press reports on Sunday were less forgiving of the demonstrators in St. Paul, with the Sunday Times (£) reports that people have used the steps of the cathedral as an outdoor bath.

The document says that the cathedral authorities, do not blame the demonstrators themselves, simply "parasites."

Tory MP Margot James suggests that you should remove the demonstrators outside the cathedral before the service Sunday in memory.

"I do not think the right to protest is necessarily occupy the same land was one of our greatest national treasures indefinitely. That does not mean that people do not have a point ... a point that is felt by many millions people. However, it would be allowed to remain there indefinitely, I personally do not think it should. "

Meanwhile, the Independent on Sunday reports that banks may be starting to come to the notion that they are in excess. The document has seen the figures from a survey by ComRes on Monday, where city workers seem to accept that their pay is out of order with professional requirements, particularly teachers and nurses.