Home » Archives by category » News » Politics (Page 185)
BAE ‘to announce thousands more job losses’

Defence giant says it is ‘reviewing operations across various businesses’ after reports that 3,000 posts will go Defence giant BAE Systems is to announce thousands more job losses, it has been reported. The firm has previously warned that it expected to further cut staffing levels and Sky News said up to 3,000 posts would go. A BAE spokeswoman said: “BAE Systems has informed staff that we are reviewing our operations across various businesses to make sure the company is performing as effectively and efficiently as possible, both in delivering our commitments to existing customers and ensuring the company is best placed to secure future business. “As the outcome of this review becomes clear, we will, as always, communicate to our employees as a priority.” Shadow defence secretary Jim Murphy said the news was “a devastating blow for Lancashire and Yorkshire and a real knock for UK manufacturing”. The facilities expected to be worst affected are BAE’s military aircraft division in Warton, Lancashire, and Brough, East Riding of Yorkshire. “We need a fast response from ministers with a clear plan of action,” Murphy said. “At a time when it is so hard to find a new job this is a dreadful moment to lose the one you have,” he said. “The defence industry is vital to the UK, supporting both our forces on the frontline and the wider UK economy. “Labour’s industrial strategy has been replaced with this government’s deficit reduction plan and as a result both our industrial base and our equipment programme are being hit.” BAE Systems Job losses guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Santorum: Socialists ‘Teaming with Radical Islamists’ to Spread Venom

Click here to view this media Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum borrowed a line from Glenn Beck Friday and accused socialists and “radical Islamists” of working together to “spread their venom throughout the world.” “There are people out there that hate us, not because of what we do, they hate us because who we are,” Santorum told a receptive audience at the Conservative Political Action Conference. “They hate us because we stand for things that they find antithetical to their world point of view. And it’s not just the radical Islamists, it’s the Bolivarian socialists in Central and South America.” “It’s those socialists who are now teaming with the radical Islamists and creating training camps in Central and South America, not because they [don't] like us, not because what we have done to their countries. It’s because they want us off the beat. It’s because they want to dominate the world. They want to spread their venom throughout the world and have it land up on our shores.” He added: “If we do not have a lean-forward Reaganesque policy of fighting these folks where they are instead of waiting for them to come to our shores, ladies and gentlemen, we will be the generation that not only lost this country because of our debt, because of freedom being taken away by big government control, but we will be the country that will have allowed the world to sink into despair, and we will be and island and we will not be an island that will long survive.”

Continue reading …
Santorum: Socialists ‘Teaming with Radical Islamists’ to Spread Venom

Click here to view this media Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum borrowed a line from Glenn Beck Friday and accused socialists and “radical Islamists” of working together to “spread their venom throughout the world.” “There are people out there that hate us, not because of what we do, they hate us because who we are,” Santorum told a receptive audience at the Conservative Political Action Conference. “They hate us because we stand for things that they find antithetical to their world point of view. And it’s not just the radical Islamists, it’s the Bolivarian socialists in Central and South America.” “It’s those socialists who are now teaming with the radical Islamists and creating training camps in Central and South America, not because they [don't] like us, not because what we have done to their countries. It’s because they want us off the beat. It’s because they want to dominate the world. They want to spread their venom throughout the world and have it land up on our shores.” He added: “If we do not have a lean-forward Reaganesque policy of fighting these folks where they are instead of waiting for them to come to our shores, ladies and gentlemen, we will be the generation that not only lost this country because of our debt, because of freedom being taken away by big government control, but we will be the country that will have allowed the world to sink into despair, and we will be and island and we will not be an island that will long survive.”

Continue reading …
MSNBC Uses Liberal Green Jobs Activist to Blame Solyndra on George W. Bush

The lengths MSNBC will go to deflect blame from President Obama for anything bad that can be tied to his administration is simply amazing. On Friday, a liberal green jobs activist was brought on “MSNBC Live” to falsely accuse former President George W. Bush of making that ill-advised loan to failed solar company Solyndra (video follows with transcript and commentary): THOMAS ROBERTS, MSNBC: Dr. Mijin Cha is a senior analyst for Demos Sustainable Progress Initiative and a blogger at Policyshop.net. Dr. Cha, it’s nice to see you this morning. And you point out on your blog that the green is under attack, basically. Take a listen, though to what one Republican lawmaker said just last night. CONGRESSMAN MARIO DIAZ-BALART (R-FLORIDA): What the previous gentleman did not say is that Solyndra received $500 million because they have friends in high places. Despite even people in this administration that said, “Don't do it,” they received $500 million. If that was in a different country, we wouldn't call it waste. We would call it corruption. ROBERTS: So how much damage has Solyndra done, Dr. Cha, when it comes to the greens job movement? Is this something that can't be turned around? J. MIJIN CHA, GREEN JOBS ACTIVIST: No. I definitely don't think it can’t be turned around. I think what you find the hearings will show are two things. One is that the administration actually didn't do any wrongdoing, right? This loan was begun under the Bush administration. Solyndra had raised a billion dollars in private capital and then was invited by the Bush administration to apply for this loan program. Yes, but as ABCNews.com reported September 13, the Bush administration unanimously denied that loan: The results of the Congressional probe shared Tuesday with ABC News show that less than two weeks before President Bush left office, on January 9, 2009, the Energy Department's credit committee made a unanimous decision not to offer a loan commitment to Solyndra. You got that, Doctor? The Bush “Energy Department's credit committee made a unanimous decision not to offer a loan commitment to Solyndra.” At roughly the same time Cha was spewing her nonsense on MSNBC, Brian Ross was reporting the truth at ABCNews.com: The Obama administration had selected Solyndra as the first to receive a loan under a program designed to provide government support to companies that would create jobs while generating energy from cleaner sources, such as solar, wind and nuclear. President Obama personally visited the Solyndra complex, hailing it as a leader in this emerging field. For MSNBC to allow anyone on its network to say anything contrary to the truth without being challenged is a affront to journalism. As NewsBusters reports on a daily basis, this is par for the course at this so-called “news network.”

Continue reading …
Amanda Knox should be sentenced to life, say prosecutors

Prosecutors ask for Knox and former boyfriend to have sentences increased to life for murder of Meredith Kercher Prosecutors seeking to uphold Amanda Knox’s murder conviction have asked for her sentence to be increased to life – and for her to spend six months in daytime solitary confinement. Giancarlo Costagliola said the court should also raise the sentence passed on her former Italian boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, to life with two months in solitary. Exploiting what has always been regarded as a weakness of the case against them, he said the lack of a motive justified their being given the harshest sentence available under Italian law. His colleague, Manuela Comodi, had earlier said that Knox, 24, and the 27-year-old Italian computer sciences student had “killed for nothing”. They were given 26 and 25 years respectively at their trial but with good behaviour could have expected to get out of jail much sooner. Life imprisonment in Italy is intended to keep prisoners inside for at least 26 years, though some are released earlier. . Knox sat motionless as the prosecution request was read out, pressing her lips against her hands. Her father, Curt Knox, said his daughter had been prepared for the development, which the prosecution had earlier signalled in a document submitted to the court. “It’s never easy when you’re on trial for your life,” he said. Knox, who has looked tense and drawn since the final arguments began, was holding up according to her father. “She’s strong and she’ll be ready,” he added. Prosecutors have spent the two-day summing up bristling with indignation over criticism of their evidence and alleged that it reflected a systematic plot to denigrate the Italian judicial system. In June, their case was severely dented when two independent, court-appointed experts found that the key forensic evidence used to convict Knox and Sollecito was unreliable. On Saturday, Comodi attacked the independent experts, noting they were both professors of forensic science, rather than practising investigators. She asked the jury of five women and one man: “Would you entrust the wedding reception of your only daughter to someone who knew all the recipes by heart but had never actually cooked?” Comodi said the independent experts had put up on “embarrassing performance”. She told the two judges and the jurors (technically, lay judges) that the two Rome university professors had been given an assignment “that they did not know how to fulfil, betraying your trust”. A third man, Rudy Guede, whose presence at the scene of the murder was only discovered after their arrest, has also been convicted of murdering Meredith Kercher in 2007. The prosecution maintains that Guede, a small-time drugs peddler from the Ivory Coast, joined the others in a narcotics-fuelled sex game that ended in tragedy after Kercher resisted. Important evidence at the trial of Knox and Sollecito included a trace of his DNA on Kercher’s bra clip and a knife, which the prosecution claimed was the murder weapon, bearing the DNA of both defendants and their alleged victim. The experts found that Sollecito’s DNA could have reached the bra clip, which was only identified and bagged 46 days after the discovery of the body, by a process of contamination. They said the third trace of DNA on the knife, which was in Sollecito’s kitchen, was too faint to be ascribed confidently to Kercher. According to Comodi the original analysis had been carried out by police forensic experts whose competence was internationally recognised and the defence had failed to show how the contamination of the bra clip might have occurred. Amanda Knox Italy Meredith Kercher United States Europe John Hooper guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Vladimir Putin sets sights on another 12 years in Kremlin’s top job

Prime minister bids to return for two more terms as Russia’s president after months of speculation Vladimir Putin is to run for president of Russia next year in a move that could keep the powerful leader at the helm of the country until 2024. Prime minister Putin and head of state Dmitry Medvedev ended months of speculation on Saturday during the ruling United Russia party congress. “I think it’s right that the party congress support the candidacy of the head of the government, Vladimir Putin, in the role of the country’s president,” Medvedev said. Thousands of flag-waving delegates inside Moscow’s Soviet-era Luzhniki stadium gasped before breaking into applause. Russia has been paralysed by months of speculation regarding the decision, though signs had recently emerged that Putin would announce his intention to return to the Kremlin seat. Putin, who has worked hard to prevent a credible opposition from forming, is all but certain of winning the presidential vote that is set for March, raising further concerns over the growth of soft authoritarianism in the country. The announcement is also likely to dismay the combative prime minister’s numerous critics in the west. In a surprise twist, Medvedev said he was ready to serve as prime minister under Putin. Medvedev will head the party list of United Russia as it readies for parliamentary elections in December, paving the way for the premiership. “I’m ready to head this government and work for the good of the country,” he said, adding that such a move was dependent on United Russia sweeping the parliamentary vote, he said. United Russia has seen its popularity decrease sharply since the financial crisis hit, but it remains the country’s most influential party, created with the aim of supporting Putin. The swapping of roles would be the clearest illustration yet of Russia’s so-called “managed democracy”, a term coined by Kremlin ideologues to describe Russia’s political system. Putin, who served as president from 2000 to 2008, remains the country’s most popular leader, albeit with the help of a carefully controlled media. Under constitutional changes adopted by Medvedev upon coming to office as Putin’s hand-picked successor, Putin will serve for another six years. A possible second term after that would keep him in the Kremlin beyond his 71st birthday. The former KGB agent appeared to enjoy the acclaim yesterday. “I want to thank you for the positive reaction to the proposal for me to stand for Russian president,” Putin said. “For me this is a great honour.” He launched into an electoral programme that focused on addressing the stagnant economy. A return to the Kremlin will hand Putin back formal control over foreign policy. Relations with the west plummeted when he was president. Russia’s opposition denounced the move, despite having expected it. “All authoritarian regimes are the same,” said Lyudmila Alekseyeva, the 82-year-old doyenne of Russia’s human rights community. “Either they have to modernise or they come crashing down, as happened with Gaddafi.” Vladimir Putin Dmitry Medvedev Russia Europe Miriam Elder guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Bill O’Reilly has been trying to construct an alternative reality of how the country’s financial sector collapsed and apparently in his construct, if you believe that Bush played any part in it, you’re a “moron.” Rough transcript: O’REILLY: Now Leslie, do you feel that America is in decline Leslie? Do you feel we’re on the downside here? MARSHALL: I actually have to say to be 100% honest, Bill, yes, some of America is on the decline, but I don’t blame the president or any one party for that… No I blame the politicizing on both sides and more so on the Republican side as the polls show the most of the majority of Americans agree with me on. And if we don’t have (crosstalk) O’REILLY: Wait a minute. What poll agrees with you that the Republican Party is responsible for the decline of America? What poll is that? MARSHALL: The Republicans in the House… (crosstalk) O’REILLY: The Al Franken poll? What poll was that? The Michael Moore poll? MARSHALL: No, no…no. (crosstalk) O’REILLY: You’re pulling stuff out of your hat and you know you can’t back it up. MARSHALL: No I’m not… O’REILLY: The majority of Americans are not… MARSHALL: There’s low approval ratings for the Republicans in Congress… O’REILLY: That’s low approval ratings different than blaming Republicans in the House for the decline of America. Leslie, under the Democratic House, okay, they ran up more than a $5 trillion debt in four years, okay? And it didn’t work. The economy is worse. So what moron would blame Republicans for the current epidemic, for the current problems we have in the economic region?

Continue reading …
Labour would cut top university fees to £6,000, says Ed Miliband

Banks will lose tax cuts to pay for lower student costs, while higher-earning graduates will pay more interest on loans The maximum university fee for students will be slashed by a third to £6,000 a year under a Labour government, Ed Miliband has announced. The policy, revealed by the Labour leader in an interview with the Observer , would be paid for by reversing planned tax cuts for the banks and by asking the highest-earning graduates to pay more interest on their loans. The move – one of the biggest policy decisions by Miliband in his first year as leader – is designed to appeal to millions of student voters who turned to the Lib Dems at the last election, and to parents worried about the financial burdens of sending their children to university. Speaking ahead of Labour’s annual conference, which opens in Liverpool on Sunday amid rumblings about the party’s credibility on the economy, Miliband insisted the plan was “fully costed”. He said David Cameron and Nick Clegg would kill off the spirit of ambition and enterprise in the next generation by “loading the costs of paying off the deficit onto our young people”. The unveiling of the new policy comes as the Labour leader’s brother, David, prepares to send a message of support to his brother, whose leadership has been criticised in some circles. The former foreign secretary will use a fringe meeting on Sunday, exactly one year after his traumatic defeat in last year’s leadership election, to publicly back his sibling: “We must never lose our sense of outrage at this shocking government. Ed has led the party with strong purpose and conviction, and that is what Labour needs.” The Labour leader, who had previously favoured a graduate tax over a fees system, said the cut would mean a wider cross-section of young people going to university, and that it would therefore help create a more equal society. “We can’t build a successful economy if our young people come out of university burdened down by £50,000 of debt,” he said. “We can’t build a successful economy if the kids from all backgrounds are put off going to university.” In contrast to the Tory-Lib Dem coalition, Miliband said he wanted to “invest in our young people by using the talents of everyone, not engaging in tax cuts for financial services.” Miliband’s aides said that, if there were an election now and Labour won, it would implement the policy as soon as possible. But they stopped short of promising that the details would feature in three and a half years’ time in a party election manifesto. “This is what we would do now. But in three and a half years’ time we might be able to do even more,” an official said. From September next year, universities will be able to raise their fees from the current maximum of £3,375 to £9,000, following cuts of 80% in their grants from central government. The controversial decision sparked huge student protests when it was announced last November. Although ministers predicted that few universities would charge the full £9,000, recent figures show that more than a third – 47 out of 123 universities – will demand the maximum. And whereas the government forecast last year that the average fee would be around £7,500, the actual average will be £8,393. The money for Labour’s policy will come from reversing a corporation tax cut for banks pre-announced by the chancellor, George Osborne, in March – from 28% in 2010-11 to 23% in 2014-15 – and by asking graduates earning over £65,000 a year to pay higher interest rates on their loans. A debate over Labour’s wider economic policy is bound to dominate the conference agenda. While some leading figures in the party are calling on Miliband to apologise more clearly for Labour’s economic failings in government and to be clearer about what cuts it would make now, Miliband is standing firm. He insisted he would stick to his central message that the coalition is cutting too far and too fast, without providing more detail of where Labour would withhold funding. “We have got to break this government’s addiction to austerity because it is not working,” he said. With competing factions in the party battling to impose their agenda on the leader, former home secretary David Blunkett tells the Observer that Miliband has struggled so far to get his voice heard in the country, urging him to relegate the community politics of “Blue Labour” and focus on defending the previous government’s economic record, while providing solutions to the key issues that matter to families. He said: “There is no question in my mind that the general election will be about how people feel about the future – that’s about insecurity, the austerity programme, what is happening about their jobs, their family. We have got to build our confidence and fight back on the central economic difficulties, so we are not defined as being responsible for the deficit that we are facing at the moment.” While Miliband said his determination to sting the banks to pay for a drop in tuition fees showed he wanted the wealthiest to be more responsible, he emphasised that the same community obligations should apply to those claiming benefits. He said he backed ideas floated recently by Liam Byrne, the shadow work and pensions secretary, who suggested that people who were “doing the right thing, getting a job, paying taxes, being good tenants and neighbours and so on” could be placed at the head of the queue for social housing. After speaking at the Movement For Change fringe meeting, David Miliband will fly to Washington for a conference on China. He will therefore miss his brother’s speech on Tuesday. Today, in a letter to this newspaper, leading Labour figures, including former home secretary Alan Johnson and ex-deputy leader John Prescott, back the creation of a fund to ensure more people from low-income groups can become parliamentary candidates. The letter suggests that money from Labour funds be set aside to ensure that more candidates come from “manual working backgrounds”. At the last election more than 80% of Labour candidates came from professional backgrounds and just 9% from manual working backgrounds. Yesterday Labour’s national executive committee (NEC) agreed that, for the first time ever, a new category of registered party supporters can have a say in electing the leader. Under the plan, registered supporters would get 10% of the vote, so long as at least 50,000 sign up. The NEC also agreed to conclude talks with the unions by the end of March next year on how to reform policymaking to ensure it becomes “more dynamic, open and democratic”. Tuition fees University funding Students Higher education Ed Miliband David Miliband Labour Education policy Banking Toby Helm Andrew Rawnsley Daniel Boffey guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Scott of the Antarctic: the lies that doomed his race to the pole

Far from being a heroic amateur as he’s so often portrayed the explorer championed science and, as Robin McKie reveals, was a victim of cruel luck – and deception On 12 November 1912, a party of British explorers was crossing the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica when one of the team, Charles Wright, noticed “a small object projecting above the surface”. He halted and discovered the tip of a

Continue reading …
EU given six weeks to protect itself against ‘inevitable Greek default’

IMF tells eurozone to address debt crisis once and for all amid mounting frustration over threat of double-dip recession European Union governments will spend the next six weeks putting together a firewall to protect their fragile banking systems against what is now seen as an inevitable Greek default. G20 sources said up to 50% was likely to be wiped off the face value of Greece’s €350bn debt – but not until Europe had put into place a war chest to prevent the contagion spreading. More money will be disbursed by the International Monetary Fund and the EU next month to keep the Greek government afloat, but this is seen as a short-term fix while Europe’s leaders beef up the eurozone bailout fund, the European Financial Stability Facility. Europe came under ferocious pressure at this weekend’s meeting of the IMF in Washington to contain the spiralling sovereign debt crisis, which is blamed for dragging the global economy to the brink of a double-dip recession. The IMF is reportedly willing to continue bailing out Greece for the short-term, provided Europe uses the time to tackle the issue of debt once and for all. The Washington-based lender believes the 18-month delay since Greece was first bailed out last spring has exacerbated the crisis. Tim Geithner, the US treasury secretary, said: “The threat of cascading default, bank runs and catastrophic risk must be taken off the table, otherwise it will undermine all other efforts, both within Europe and globally. Decisions as to how to conclusively address the region’s problems cannot wait until the crisis gets more severe.” The US and Britain believe that Europe needs to deploy massive firepower in order to prevent a domino effect from Greece bringing down the other vulnerable members of the eurozone such as Portugal, Italy and Spain. However, ministers remain reluctant to admit publicly that a Greek default is inevitable. George Osborne said in Washington: “No one here has put forward a plan for that; Greece has got a programme and needs to implement it.” A communique from the finance ministers and central bankers of the IMF’s member states, released after Saturday’s meetings, reiterated the need for urgent action from the eurozone and set a deadline of mid-October for reforming the bailout fund. G20 sources said the meetings had ratcheted up the sense of alarm over the crisis, saying “there’s been a very visible shift in pace, mood and urgency”, but there was a sense of exasperation among non-eurozone members about the lack of concrete action. A clearly exasperated Canadian finance minister, Jim Flaherty, told journalists: “We’ve been talking about Greece since January 2010.” European ministers had to endure an ear-bending from their counterparts in the rest of the world this weekend. George Osborne used his statement to the IMF committee to press Europe to accelerate measures to transform the single currency into a fully fledged fiscal union. “The eurozone should follow the remorseless logic of monetary union through progress on institutional reform, greater fiscal integration and coordination of budget policies,” he said. Ministers from the G20 group of major economies have called for an urgent ratification of the 21 July agreement, brokered by Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy, to beef up the powers of the EFSF. Osborne warned on Friday that Europe has just six weeks to resolve its political crisis. Insiders say there is disarray among Europe’s leaders about the best way to contain the fallout from a Greek default. The European Central Bank would have to play a major role in any rescue package, but so far has intervened only reluctantly. Its president, Jean-Claude Trichet, has repeatedly insisted that a Greek default is unthinkable. European debt crisis European banks IMF Economics Global economy Greece Europe Heather Stewart Larry Elliott guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …