• Tories down four points to 36% in latest Guardian/ICM poll • Labour up one point on 37%, Lib Dems down two on 14% • Majority of respondents (52%) want NHS bill dropped David Cameron has squandered the Conservatives’ new year lead as voters turn against his health reforms, according to a Guardian/ICM poll. The Tories are down by four percentage points in a single month, slipping from 40% to 36% since January. Labour is one point ahead, on 37%, with Ed Miliband’s party up from 35% last month. The Liberal Democrats slip back two to stand at 14%, and the combined total of the smaller parties has climbed by four points, to 13%. As the prime minister hosted a special NHS summit , which excluded the professional bodies most opposed to his health and social care bill , the public is siding with those royal medical colleges who want the legislation ditched. An outright majority of respondents, 52%, say that the bill – which would overhaul NHS management, increase competition and give family doctors more financial responsibility – should be dropped. That is against 33% who believe it is better to stick with the plans at this stage. The 19-point overall margin in favour of abandoning the legislation is mirrored in strong leads for killing the bill across all social classes and regions, as well as among male and female voters. Only the very youngest respondents aged 18 to 24, the least likely to vote, favour sticking with the plans, by 46% to 39%. Opposition hardens with age, and is at its most marked among the over-65s – who favour dropping the bill by a 56% to 29% margin. A third of Conservatives (31%) and a significant majority of Lib Dem voters (57%) also want the proposed law to be ditched. With crunch votes on the drive to extend medical competition likely to take place in the House of Lords next week, the role of the private sector in the health service is becoming more controversial. Even though respondents were reminded that private companies already provide some NHS treatments, a clear majority, 53%, believe that such competition undermines the health service, compared with just 39% who believe it forces the NHS to raise its service standards. When ICM asked a slightly different question on private involvement in September 2005, at the height of the controversy about Tony Blair’s NHS reforms, opinion was evenly split – with 48% in favour of more private involvement, and 49% against. There are signs that the Conservatives’ failure to persuade the public about its NHS reforms could contribute to a “retoxification” of the Tory brand. Cameron – who once said his priorities could be summed up in the three letters “NHS” – initially invested a great deal of effort in overcoming the Conservatives’ historic difficulties on the terrain of health. One year into his leadership, ICM found he had made progress – in October 2006 only 31% said they did not trust the Tories at all to run the health service, as against 32% who said the same of Labour. In the latest poll, however, 40% of respondents said they did not trust the Conservatives at all, against 25% who say the same about Labour. Only a minority of voters trust either of the main parties “a lot” on the health service – 23% for Labour, and a mere 13% for the Conservatives. Labour is trusted “a little” by 46% of respondents, while 42% say the same of the Conservatives. Lib Dems will be especially interested in the results of the poll. The party’s peers could provide the decisive swing votes to amend the health bill in the Lords, and – with many of the party’s activists anxious about the reforms – the NHS is expected to loom large at its spring conference next month. The junior coalition partner can point to a series of concessions it has wrung out of the Conservatives since last year’s “pause” in the legislation’s progress, but the public does not seem to have noticed. Just 9% trust the Lib Dems a lot on health, against 45% who trust them a little and 39% who do not trust them at all, figures that are strikingly similar to those for the Tories. By 50% to 46%, remaining Lib Dem supporters are inclined to believe that competition can spur the NHS to raise its game. But among the larger group who backed the party in the 2010 election, the predominant view is that competition will instead undermine the health service, by a two-to-one margin of 60% to 32%. Dropping the bill would be especially popular among 2010 Lib Dem voters, with 67% of them backing that option, as against just 21% of this group who want the government to stick with its plans. ICM Research interviewed a random sample of 1,013 adults aged 18+ by telephone on 17-19 February 2012. Interviews were conducted across the country and the results have been weighted to the profile of all adults. ICM is a member of the British Polling Council and abides by its rules. Opinion polls NHS Health Health policy Public services policy Conservatives Labour Liberal Democrats Tom Clark guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The 9th Circuit Court in California struck down as unconstitutional the state’s voter-passed ban on gay marriage Tuesday, ruling 2-1 that it violates the rights of gay Californians. [View a slideshow of demonstrations around Prop. 8 here] “Proposition 8 serves no purpose, and has no effect, other than to lessen the status and human dignity
Continue reading …Federal and state officials announced Thursday the largest agreement yet to address the effects of the housing crisis, in which five of the nation’s largest banks will pay $26 billion to help current and former homeowners. The deal aims to hold banks accountable for abusive foreclosure practices and to give a boost to the still-struggling housing
Continue reading …With the majority of smartphone devices, and many regular cellphones, turning toward flat touchscreen technology, you can imagine the challenge these devices could pose for those who are blind. But, several apps and technologies are emerging to make use of these devices easier on those who rely on braille to read or type. One such app, still in its prototype phase, was developed by researchers at Georgia… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Blaze Discovery Date : 15/02/2012 21:42 Number of articles : 6
Continue reading …How serious is Congress about ending insider trading among members? On Thursday, the House passed legislation intended to crack down on the practice. And that turned out to be the very day the congressman in charge of regulating the nation’s banking and financial-services industries acknowledged he’s being investigated for possible insider trading. Since late last
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Continue reading …Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton (D) specifically called out the American Legislative Exchange Council in a recent speech, taking on one of the key operatives on the right wing in a way that few other Democrats have done in recent years, despite ALEC’s rising power in state legislatures across the country. ALEC has repeatedly attempted to push pro-corporate, anti-working family legislation in numerous states and has managed to largely fly under the radar in the media and with the public. The more high profile politicians like Dayton call them out, the more pressure the organization will face from working families and their allies. Minnesota’s Governor, Mark Dayton, is doing a really good job. As we have reported in the past months, he is trying to stimulate the state’s economy via expanded infrastructure and local hire and he has vowed to fight the newly radicalized Minnesota GOP by reaching across the aisle for bipartisan support. But what is going to really get progressive panties in a bunch is Dayton’s latest move: calling out the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) by name. Referring to four now-vetoed tort reform laws as “partisan political ploys,” Dayton told the press that, “The real impact would be to reduce the rights of law abiding citizens and businesses to seek justice from the wrongdoing of others.” At one point during his remarks (video below), he held up the ALEC manual that the tort reform laws came from: “So exactly who did the Republicans in the legislature listen to?” Dayton asked, as he held up a thick document. “Three of the four bills come right from this manual. Tort Reform Boot Camp, published by the American Legislative exchange council, or ALEC.” The organization often holds seminars for conservative state legislators across the nation, and provides model legislation that reflects a public policy agenda. “It is an extremely conservative group funded largely by large corporations, big business associations, insurance companies and very wealthy individuals,” Dayton remarked… “I’ve found that Minnesotans do not want their laws written by the lobbyists of big corporations.”
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