oh ok, thank you 
finally I was also wondering:
On the same topic, the quote ‘the opportunistic bleeding hearts who have been parading with their compassion all week’ (Referring to the Labour party)
How would i phrase this cause i want to say how by using the word 'parading' to describe how the Left are expressing their compassion, you wouldn't really associate 'parading' with compassion, cause its not like a happy occasion that should be celebrated? and thus readers feel... not sure how it would impact on readers... feels like the Left are not taking the issue seriously... 
'Parading' has little to do with compassion, that's part of the point. Parading connotes putting on a show, an elaborate, contrived production, in this case in an attempt to advertise their compassion. But compassion should need advertising, right? It should be altruistic; doing good for good's own sake, especially for a human rights issue. So we get the sense of the Labour party marching through the streets proclaiming victory for the party, when in fact there is a great deal of suffering behind the farce. It's not that they're not taking the issue seriously, more that they're exploiting human suffering for political purchase/gain.
Rather than trying to cram an interpretation into language, work in the opposite direction. Analyse the word or phrase in isolation (what does it normally make you think of?) then in the context of the issue (not the author's contention, yet.) What does this word/phrase connote? How does this make us view the issue?
THEN: why might the author have chosen this wording/phraseology in particular? How does this choice contribute to our thoughts/feelings towards the issue?
Eventually this process will occur in a much quicker, more fluid, almost automatic way, but for now, go through the process so you know what's required
