By Jason Farrell, Senior Political Correspondent
Workers on zero-hours contracts will be able to demand a regular contract after 12 weeks under proposals announced by Ed Miliband.
The Labour leader promised to outlaw the "exploitative" contracts in a commitment to be included in Labour's election manifesto saying: "We have got to end the epidemic of zero-hours contracts.
Speaking at an event in Huddersfield, Mr Miliband said: "You shouldn't be left at the beck and call of an employer who can ask the world of you but give you no security in return. It's not fair, it's not good for businesses and we will put a stop to it."
The proposal strengthens Labour's previous policy on the contracts, which sought to give workers the right to a regular contract after 12 months.
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The announcement comes after Prime Minister David Cameron admitted that he could not live on a zero-hours contract during questioning from Jeremy Paxman on Sky News' Battle For Number 10 programme.
Mr Miliband said zero-hours contracts have become a symbol of a low-wage, low-skill economy.
In reference to Mr Paxman's interview with the Prime Minister, the Labour leader said: "If Cameron can't live on it, nor should you - Labour will give workers a legal right to a regular contract, not a zero-hours contract.
"Today I can announce that in our first year of government after the election, Labour will legislate for a new principle: If you are working regularly, you have a legal right to a regular contract."
Mr Miliband first set out the 12-week proposal in 2013 at the Trades Union Congress (TUC) conference, but later backtracked.
A spokesman for the party leader said the change back to 12 weeks would incorporate 92% of people on the controversial employment terms.
The proposal is expected to include exemptions for employees such as so-called bank nurses, who request a zero-hours contract so they can work at another hospital as well as their usual job.
Mr Miliband was asked by a worker at the Huddersfield factory what was to stop employers only providing work for 11 weeks to dodge the provision. He replied a "legal mechanism" would be put in place to prevent it.
The Coalition Government sought to prohibit exclusivity clauses in zero-hours contracts, but the Labour Party argues this does not go far enough.
A Conservative spokesperson accused Labour of "presiding over zero-hours contracts" for 13 years.
"Zero-hours contracts account for just one in 50 jobs in our economy," the spokesperson said.
"This Government has already banned the abusive ones - and all the while Labour presided over zero-hours contracts with no safeguards for three terms and 13 years while they were in power."
Speaking on the campaign trail Boris Johnson, who is running for MP in Uxbridge, said he would rather people were in work than left feeling "ill-used by society, left out, unable to express themselves with their self-esteem sinking and sinking."
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