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Reading While Eating for September 30: Truth to Power

Friday’s links talk powerful spouses, legendary icons and just how to be remembered through history. Super Spouses: Sure, you’ve heard a lot about the GOP presidential candidates. But what about their better halves? Check out their political assets — and drawbacks. (The Atlantic Wire) Paltry Sum: India’s government says that people who spend more than

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City’s influence over Conservatives laid bare by research into donations

Donations from finance account for half of payments to Tories since 2010 general election The influence of the City over the Conservatives is laid bare by new research showing that more than half of the Tory party’s donations since the general election have come from individuals and businesses working in finance. Hedge funds, financiers and private equity firms contributed more than a quarter of all the Tories’ private donations – which this year poured in at a rate equal to £1m a month – the study by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism has found. The figures show an increase in the proportion of party funds coming from the financial sector, raising fears that the City’s financial influence over the Tories is on the rise as key pieces of legislation are discussed by the coalition government. They come amid growing concerns that some parts of the financial sector, described by Labour leader Ed Miliband this week as “asset strippers” or “predator financiers”, are profiting from financial instability. The senior Labour shadow minister Peter Hain said the figures confirmed that the Tories remain wedded to the few who do well out of the financial and political system. The Liberal Democrats used the research to step up their campaign for changes to party funding. The Bureau of Investigative Journalism has mapped, for the first time, donations to the Tories from business to the year ending 30 June. Using analysis from the Electoral Commission and Companies House databases, the researchers found City donations in the 12 months to July accounted for 51.4% of the £12.2m of funds received by Central Office. Hedge funds, financiers and private equity firms contributed £3.3m – some 27% – while 50 City donors paid over £50,000. All donors contributing this amount or more become members of the Leader’s Group and qualify for a face-to-face meeting with the prime minister. The largest contributor across all the business sectors studied by the bureau was hedge funds which donated £1.38m (11.4%). Three of the City’s biggest name hedge fund bosses – Michael Farmer, Lord Stanley Fink and Andrew Law – together contributed £636,300. Fink is the party treasurer. The top financier donor was David Rowland, who contributed £1.1m. Rowland has a colourful City career and was forced to resign as party treasurer before he even took up the job because of links to tax havens. He now controls Banque Havilland – which used to be the crashed Icelandic Kaupthing bank business – in Luxembourg and the hedge fund Blackfish Capital Management. Outside the City, the sector that donated most was industry, including manufacturing and defence. This sector contributed £913,411 (7.5%). A company controlled by Michael Spencer, another former Conservative party treasurer, donated £163,350. He is campaigning against the EU’s attempts to introduce a transaction tax on financial trades and threatened on Fridayto shift some of his company’s operations from London “extremely rapidly” if the tax is introduced. Peter Cruddas, the multimillionaire currency trader who grew up on a Hackney housing estate and left school with no qualifications, handed over £123,600, while his business, CMC Markets UK, donated £100,000. He is co-treasurer of the Conservative party, alongside Fink. But while Spencer and others are now campaigning against potential tax changes, since the coalition came to power several key measures have been introduced that could benefit the Conservative’s City backers. Among them is a commitment to reduce corporation tax to 23% by April 2014 and exempting UK resident companies from corporation tax on all profits for their foreign branches. The figures show the insurance sector has donated £189,400 as the government discusses radical plans to slash the legal aid budget – a measure which critics claim will benefit insurers. Construction companies have donated more than £220,000 amid a lobbying campaign to relax planning rules covering the green belt. In a separate survey, the Labour MP John Mann disclosed figures that show that the top three donors – Rowland, Farmer and Fink – have donated almost £10m since 2005. Stuart Wilks-Heeg, executive director of Democratic Audit, said: “What this study tellingly reveals is the scale of the Conservative party’s reliance on a variety of City interests at a time when the Conservative-led government is attempting to kick banking reform into the long grass,” he said. Hain said: “The Conservative party has long since been over reliant on donor income from people at the top of the income scale. “No wonder David Cameron and George Osborne are straining at the leash to cut tax for people earning at least £150,000 a year while asking everyone else to pay the bill for a financial crisis caused by the banks,” he said. The Liberal Democrat peer Lord Oakeshott said: “Big financiers are still the Tories’ big backers with hedge fund gamblers and private equity asset strippers leading the way. Labour is being bankrolled by the union bosses. The coalition must act now to clean up party funding.” Who gave what? From the celebrity hairstylist to the Oscar-winning screenwriter, Haroon Siddique profiles a

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What if #occupywallstreet was blocked by your local internet provider? It’s closer than you think. It’s really important that we push back against this under-the-radar move by the Republicans to restrict internet freedom. ( Sign the petition here .) Tim Karr of Free Press: As democracy movements worldwide struggle to speak out via the Internet, many here in the U.S. may have overlooked an effort in Congress to undermine this basic freedom. It takes the form of an arcane ” resolution of disapproval ” now wending its way through the Senate. If it passes, the resolution would void a recent Federal Communications Commission rule that seeks to preserve long-held Internet standards that protect users against blocking and censorship.The resolution would remove these protections. It was put forth by industry-funded members of Congress who don’t mind letting the few corporations who sell Internet access in America decide what we get to see, hear and read on the Internet. These senators are also hoping the resolution will appease the most paranoid among the Tea Party faithful, who equate any consumer safeguard put in place during the Obama era with myriad and shadowy government plots. Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), who pushed a similar measure through the House earlier this year, stoked these fears when she said, “the FCC is in essence building an Internet Iron Curtain that will restrict more of our freedom. “Blackburn’s rhetoric puts her and other supporters of the resolution far outside of the mainstream of Americans , who believe that neither the government nor corporations should be able to censor lawful content online. If Congress succeeds in passing this measure, it will go well beyond deciding whether the FCC’s recent rules are appropriate. The resolution will prohibit the agency from engaging in any effort to protect Internet freedom. The move opens the path for corporations eager to take a wrecking ball to the open architecture that has made the Internet a great equalizer for all users.

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Occupy Wall Street Protest Gets Support from Labor Groups — and Hip-Hop Legends

As the Thursday sun began to drop over the Hudson River in New York, one of the protesters at the Occupy Wall Street gathering jumped up onto a concrete benches on the north side of Zuccotti Park and yelled, “Mike check! General Assembly in 5 minutes.” The people camped out in the park assembled in

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You guys are amazing ! Amato said we’d raise a bunch of money to feed these guys marching for the plight of the 99 percent. I was skeptical. I was wrong. We raised over $1000 in the first two hours. Tons of small donations – $2 or $3 to buy someone they’ve never met a slice. It’s humbling. I’m impressed. So we’ve expanded our pizza giving parameters. I talked with the nice folks at Escape from New York Pizza in San Francisco. They’re giving us a 15 percent discount on all pizzas delivered to the Bay Area Occupiers. You can call in an order: (415) 421-0700 And then there’s Boston. They told me they are camping out in Dewey Park starting tonight at 6pm eastern and they’re expecting 1500. The lovely folks at Regina Pizzeria are giving us a special: a cheese pizza with a 2-liter of soda (tax and tip included) $18. You can call in an order there at: (617) 261-6600 Or you can donate to our PayPal all amounts appreciated! I’ve called all these places and they have no problems getting the food to the protesters: Regina Pizzeria in Boston: (617) 261-6600 Escape from New York Pizza in San Francisco (415) 421-0700 Liberatos Pizza in New York: (212) 344-3464 Rocket Pizza in LA: (213) 687-4992 If there are other cities with sizable protests that need pizza – please email me tinacrooksandliars at gmail.com.

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You guys are amazing ! Amato said we’d raise a bunch of money to feed these guys marching for the plight of the 99 percent. I was skeptical. I was wrong. We raised over $1000 in the first two hours. Tons of small donations – $2 or $3 to buy someone they’ve never met a slice. It’s humbling. I’m impressed. So we’ve expanded our pizza giving parameters. I talked with the nice folks at Escape from New York Pizza in San Francisco. They’re giving us a 15 percent discount on all pizzas delivered to the Bay Area Occupiers. You can call in an order: (415) 421-0700 And then there’s Boston. They told me they are camping out in Dewey Park starting tonight at 6pm eastern and they’re expecting 1500. The lovely folks at Regina Pizzeria are giving us a special: a cheese pizza with a 2-liter of soda (tax and tip included) $18. You can call in an order there at: (617) 261-6600 Or you can donate to our PayPal all amounts appreciated! I’ve called all these places and they have no problems getting the food to the protesters: Regina Pizzeria in Boston: (617) 261-6600 Escape from New York Pizza in San Francisco (415) 421-0700 Liberatos Pizza in New York: (212) 344-3464 Rocket Pizza in LA: (213) 687-4992 If there are other cities with sizable protests that need pizza – please email me tinacrooksandliars at gmail.com.

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Martin Bashir Blames GOP for Cantaloupe Food Poisoning Deaths

In an outrageous rant during his 3 p.m. ET hour show on MSNBC on Friday, host Martin Bashir actually attempted to blame budget cutting by Republican lawmakers for a deadly outbreak of listeria in cantaloupe: “John Boehner and his Republican majority decided to gut the food safety and inspection service….Cut, cut, cut. Now the results are in. 16 people have lost their lives.” Bashir went on to blame free market principles in general for the outbreak: “Republicans in Congress talk proudly of their commitment of laissez-faire economics, where government gets out of the way and everything works perfectly. You try telling that to those who ate melon with a side of listeria.” View video after the jump At the same time, Bashir portrayed President Obama as the would-be hero of the story, foiled by the villainous GOP: “Earlier this year, he signed the Food Safety Modernization Act into law….he actually tried to do something….But guess what actually happened? The proposal died on the vine.” [ Keeping the liberal media in check is hard work. Support NewsBusters by helping us reach our $5,000 fundraising goal. We have $1,500 left to go! To show our appreciation, we'll send you fun items like "I Don't Believe the Liberal Media" buttons and bumber stickers, or a Chris Matthews floormat. Donate now . ] Here is a full transcript of the September 30 segment: 3:23PM ET MARTIN BASHIR: Federal authorities now say that 16 people have died after eating cantaloupe infected with listeria. Among them, William Beach from Mustang, Oklahoma, seen here, who died at the age of 87. His wife found him collapsed on the living room floor struggling to breathe. At least 72 others have been sickened and authorities say those numbers, sadly, are expected to rise. And while the source of the outbreak has been identified, that doesn't resolve the root cause of the problem. For far too many years the safety of food in this country has been the subject of conjecture and each outbreak of E-coli or salmonella is always followed by cries for tougher safety standards. And the President heard those cries. Earlier this year, he signed the Food Safety Modernization Act into law, bringing about the largest change to this nation's food safety laws since the 1930s. Yes, he actually tried to do something about it. The President also called for an additional $120 million in funding in order to employ more inspectors so that cantaloupe for brunch would not mean admission to hospital by lunch. But guess what actually happened? The proposal died on the vine. Worse still, John Boehner and his Republican majority decided to gut the FDA's food safety and inspection service. First, slashing $87 million from its budget and then another $35 million from the USDA for good measure. Cut, cut, cut. And now the results are in. 16 people have lost their lives. Close to 100 are sick. Republicans in Congress talk proudly of their commitment of laissez-faire economics, where government gets out of the way and everything works perfectly. You try telling that to those who ate melon with a side of listeria. Throughout the weekend, you can get the latest from the show on Twitter at Twitter.com/BashirLive and Facebook at Facebook.com/Martin Bashir. Don't bother reaching for the stars. When we come back, the other programs Republicans want to cut.

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FTSE has worst quarter since dotcom crash

Eurozone debt crisis wipes £212bn off leading index and markets across Europe see shares plummet by $1.2tn The FTSE 100 has suffered its worst quarterly loss since the dotcom bubble burst in the summer of 2002. The blue-chip index of leading shares has lost 13.7% of its value over the past three months as traders and investors grew increasingly anxious about the eurozone debt crisis. The fourth-worst quarterly fall since the FTSE 100 index was formed in 1983 has wiped more than £212bn off the value of the UK’s biggest companies since the start of July. Yesterday the index lost 1.3%, or approximately £18bn, to close at 5128.5 points. While UK investors and pension funds will be nursing heavy losses, other European countries have been hit even harder, with $1.2tn (£1tn) wiped off the value off Europe’s leading shares. The Euro Stox 50 index, which comprises Europe’s biggest companies, dropped 25% – the biggest fall since the height of the credit crisis in the wake of the collapse of Lehman Brothers in the fourth quarter of 2008. Germany’s Dax index lost 25% of its value over the past three months – its biggest fall since 2002. Europe’s biggest economy has suffered from growing fears about the future of Greece because it is on the hook for the biggest losses if Athens defaults. There also signs that the country’s economy has slowed sharply in recent months. Italy’s MIB has lost 26.5% and Spain’s Ibex 35 is off 17.5%. In France, the CAC 40 has lost 25.1% between July and September, with Société Générale losing 51%, its biggest quarterly loss ever. Banks have been the biggest fallers, with Germany’s Deutsche Bank and Commerzbank both down by more than 30%. The French bank BNP Paribas has dropped more than 40%. The crisis of investor confidence has spread around the world, with the FTSE All World Index suffering a 13.4% fall, the worst since the height of the credit crisis in the fourth quarter of 2008. All three of the American stock indices were on track to record double-digit quarterly drops for the first time since 2008. Ronan Carr, a European equity strategist at Morgan Stanley, warned that conditions would probably get worse before they got better. “You don’t get a sustainable rally until either the growth outlook improves or you get substantial progress on the sovereign debt crisis,” he said. “In the absence of either of those things, investors should remain cautious and defensive positioned.” Ed Woolfitt, head of trading at Galvan Research, said: “I think if we break below that 4950 to 5000 mark, we’re into what I would describe as no-man’s land and vulnerable to freefall.” However, RBS analysts said that both the FTSE 100 and Dax falls looked overcooked. The falls have also hit some of the world’s leading hedge funds, which are often blamed for profiting from falling markets. The average fund has dropped by 4.5% in the third quarter, according to Hedge Fund Research. John Paulson, the American billionaire hedge-fund manager who is betting on a global economic recovery by the end of next year, is reported to have suffered a disastrous month. In August, his flagship Advantage Plus fund plummeted 15%. Man Group, the world’s biggest listed hedge fund, has doubled the number of planned job cuts by April next year to 400 as part of a cost-cutting drive. The move by the London-based fund comes after it announced a surprise $6bn drop in assets under management this week. Man had previously intended to cut about 200 jobs as part of an efficiency drive following its takeover of the rival hedge fund GLG Partners last October. Its shares have dropped 30% since its disappointing trading update on Wednesday. Kenneth Heinz, president of Hedge Fund Research, told the Guardian that he expected the world’s leading funds to report falls of about 2.5% in September, the biggest slide since May 2010. European debt crisis Stock markets FTSE Financial crisis Global recession Banking Europe Europe Rupert Neate Nick Fletcher guardian.co.uk

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Michael Gove proposes teaching foreign languages from age five

Education secretary outlines plans ahead of Tory conference, including extension of school day and tougher truancy fines Read the full interview with Michael Gove The education secretary, Michael Gove, today proposes that every child aged five or over should be learning a foreign language, and promises to “pull every lever”, including encouraging longer school days, to make it happen. In a pre-Conservative conference interview, he says “there is a slam-dunk case for extending foreign language teaching to children aged five”. He adds: “Just as some people have taken a perverse pride in not understanding mathematics, so we have taken a perverse pride in the fact that we do not speak foreign languages, and we just need to speak louder in English. It is literally the case that learning languages makes you smarter. The neural networks in the brain strengthen as a result of language learning.” In the interview he also: • Urges more schools to follow the example of academies by extending the school day, for example by adding five hours’ extra learning a week – or six weeks a year. • Calls for tougher, less means-tested, fines for parents of persistent school truants so that parental income needed “for satellite TVs, cigarette consumption or alcohol” is no longer taken into account in setting the fine. He also proposes schools or local authorities being entitled to bring prosecutions against parents of truants. • Says he is prepared for the political flak when A-level results fall, probably next year, as a result of introducing a tougher exam, including fewer bite-sized chunks. • Urges his party not to respond to the constraints of the coalition with the Liberal Democrats “by doing the things that make the most atavistic parts of our party cheer up”. He insisted the Conservative relationship with the Lib Dems “should be beyond businesslike, and instead be understanding and be appreciative of what they bring”. Arguing that the whole education system needs to be reorientated towards language teaching, Gove says he expects the national curriculum review to look at whether there should be more subject-specialist teaching in primary schools. He says that almost every other advanced country teaches children a foreign language from the age of five, adding Britain “has to set itself the same ambitious, but not impossible target”. “One of the problems we have had in education, and as a country, is that we have been too insular for too long.” Gove says the reform will require changes to teacher training, as well as encouraging teaching schools that take over chains of schools to promote languages. Gove pointed out that schools in some deprived areas, such as parts of Nottingham, were already teaching Spanish at the age of five, and if it was possible for these schools, it should be possible nationwide. “If we pull all the levers, change teacher training, help training schools to support others to go down this path, get schools that have language potential to take over under-performing schools, and we move the curriculum review in the right direction, then we can move towards the goal. The number of pupils sitting a language GCSE plummeted from 444,700 in the summer of 1998 to 273,000 in 2010. Learning a foreign language, and the culture that goes with it, is one of the most useful things we can do to broaden the empathy and imaginative sympathy and cultural outlook of children.” Gove also says: “One of the problems we have is children are not in school long enough in the day and during the

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Wall Street Mocks Protesters By Drinking Champagne

Click here to view this media YouTube version Wall Street has shown Americans how they feel about protests. This video shows unidentified occupants watching protests from the balconies of Wall Street in amusement while sipping champagne. EDITOR’S NOTE: We’re taking donations to buy the protesters some pizzas this weekend.

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