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apprenticeship. Get a job. But just choose the dole? We've got to offer them something better than that."Afterwards, No.10 aides said details were still being worked up, but insisted the aim was to prevent the young becoming "trapped in a cycle of unemployment and benefit dependency".Carers and the disabled would be exempt and under 25s could now retain housing benefit, provided they did not refuse a job or training.James Wharton, Conservative MP for Stockton South, said: "This is a welcome move. We have to rescue people from the life on welfare that led Labour to abandon a whole generation."But it was attacked by Tom Blenkinsop, Labour MP for Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland, who said: "This paints a bleak picture for many of our young people, who could see essential help stripped away."The idea was the one new policy in a 56 minute speech in which a tired looking Mr Cameron with large bags under his eyes urged voters to trust the Tories to secure economic recovery.The phrase "finish the job" was uttered no fewer than 15 times and Labour mentioned 25 times, as the prime minister tore into Ed Miliband for "bashing business".In a crucial dividing line, Mr Cameron said: "Labour is saying to employers 'we want to put up your taxes, don't come here stick your jobs and take them elsewhere'."I know that bashing business might play to a Labour audience, but it's crazy for our country. So, if Labour's plan for jobs is to attack business, ours is to back business."Mr Miliband's pledge to freeze energy bills was condemned as "all sticking plasters and quick fixes, cobbled together for the TV cameras, Red Ed and his Blue Peter economy".Instead, the prime minister insisted: "To raise living standards in the long term, you need to do some major things."You need to cut the deficit to keep mortgage rates low, you need to grow your economy, get people jobs and yes cut people's taxes."Mr Cameron also sought to stress this would be an economic recovery for the entire country, although he omitted any reference to the North East.Instead, he referenced the Humber for "clean energy", Blackpool for "the shale gas industry" and Manchester for its "brains and research