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Anthony Weiner Resignation Calls Mount From Both Sides In Wake Of Photo Scandal

WASHINGTON — Embattled New York Rep. Anthony Weiner’s prospects for political survival dimmed precipitously on Wednesday with the appearance on the Internet of an X-rated photo said to be of the congressman – and the first calls from fellow Democrats for him to step down. “In light of Anthony Weiner’s offensive behavior online, he should resign,” Pennsylvania Rep. Allyson Schwartz, a member of the party campaign committee’s leadership, said in a statement that was quickly followed by similar expressions from other Democrats. Separately, as the political scandal increasingly roiled the Democratic Party, several officials said that Weiner’s wife, Huma Abedin, was pregnant. An official at the State Department, where Abedin serves as deputy chief of staff to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, had no comment. Abedin was traveling with Clinton on an official trip to the Mideast and Africa. Weiner, 46, has admitted sending explicit photos and messages via the Internet to about a half-dozen women over the past three years. He vowed at a news conference on Monday to remain in office, and one lawmaker who spoke to him on Wednesday said Weiner indicated he still hopes to ride out the furor and remain in Congress. That lawmaker spoke on condition of anonymity, saying it was a private conversation. But the appearance of a photo of a man’s genitals added yet another aspect to what appears to be a sex scandal without actual sex in the age of social media. According to conservative blogger Andrew Breitbart, Weiner sent the picture of himself to one of the women with whom he corresponded online. The Associated Press has not been able to independently confirm that the photo is of Weiner. On Wednesday, spokeswoman Risa B. Heller noted in a statement that Weiner had said at a news conference on Monday that he “has sent explicit photos. To reiterate, he has never met any of these women or had physical contact with them.” The photo made its way to the website Gawker by a circuitous route, after Breitbart showed it to the hosts of Sirius XM radio’s “Opie and Anthony Show.” By day’s end Wednesday, at least six House Democrats had called for Weiner to step down. Schwartz was the first, and politically the most significant because of her position as a senior leader on the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. Weiner’s predicament has rocked the Democratic Party, particularly the women who hold leadership posts and have faced a choice between calling for a resignation or hoping that refraining from doing so would lead him to quit without being told. In the interim, few pass up the chance to signal to Weiner that he should step down. The head of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, Sen. Patty Murray, told reporters during the day that Weiner’s troubles “of course” complicate the party’s efforts ahead of in the 2012 elections. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif. said, “I just view it with great surprise and dismay. That’s all I can say.” Feinstein and Murray were first elected to the Senate in 1992, the so-called Year of the Women that was a watershed in Democratic political history. The party’s leader in the House, Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California has called for an ethics committee investigation to see whether Weiner’s actions violated any House rules. Pelosi and the party’s chairwoman, Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida, declined to respond directly on Tuesday when the Republican chairman, Reince Priebus, urged them to say whether they believe Weiner should step down. The Democratic National Committee has adamantly refused to comment, while a spokesman in Wasserman Schultz’s congressional office has said only that she supports Pelosi’s call for an ethics investigation. By contrast, the former Democratic Party chairman, Tim Kaine, has urged Weiner to quit. Kaine is running for the Senate in Virginia. While declining to make any public comments since Monday, Weiner has been on something of an apology tour by telephone. He has contacted fellow House members and former President Bill Clinton, who officiated at the congressman’s wedding to Abedin nearly a year ago. The officials who spoke about the telephone calls did so on condition of anonymity, saying they were private matters. ___ Associated Press writers Laurie Kellman in Washington and Beth Fouhy in New York contributed to this report.

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Whether it's deliberate obfuscation or just plain laziness is up for debate, but the media have a penchant for misleading news consumers with the meme that Blue Dog Democrats are politically “conservative.” While the Blue Dog caucus is decidedly more moderate than Democrats as a whole — you could individual members are “conservative for a Democrat” — they rarely if ever qualify as conservatives when you look at the entirety of their voting records. Take Rep. Dan Boren (D-Okla.), who on Tuesday announced he will not seek reelection in 2012. Noting that “Another Blue Dog bites the dust,” Politico staffers Alex Isenstadt and David Catanese noted that “one more conservative House Democrat is packing it in,” which is just “the latest blow to the party’s moderate-conservative wing, a faction that is beginning to look like the nearly extinct Gypsy moth Republicans of the Northeast.” But a look at Boren's American Conservative Union scores shows he's moderate at best, with a lifetime average ACU score of 49.83 percent (100% being pure conservative and 0% being pure liberal). What's more, in the first two years of Obama's terms, Boren has trended more liberal than his lifetime average, with 44 and 38-percent scores for 2009 and 2010 respectively. It's also instructive that other Blue Dogs that Isenstadt and Catanese quoted — former Reps. John Tanner (D-Tenn.) and Earl Pomeroy (D-N.D.) — also had dismally-low ACU scores. Tanner's lifetime score was 39.40 conservative but his 2009 and 2010 scores were below that average at 20 and 17 respectively. Pomeroy had single-digit scores in the Obama era, eight and four in 2009 and 2010 respectively, well below his already liberal 21.18 percent lifetime average. Tanner and Boren both voted against final passage of ObamaCare , whereas Pomeroy voted for it.

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A growing number of House Democrats are making it clear that they want their Weiner problem to go away. Pennsylvania’s Allyson Schwartz, an ally of Nancy Pelosi, was the first to openly call for his resignation, and she was soon followed by others, reports the New York Times . “Having the…

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Politics live blog – Thursday 9 June

Rolling coverage of all the day’s political developments as they happen 12.16pm: For the record, here is what the Hutton inquiry said about the death of David Kelly. I am satisfied that Dr Kelly took his own life and that the principal cause of death was bleeding from incised wounds to his left wrist which Dr Kelly had inflicted on himself with the knife found beside his body. It is probable that the ingestion of an excess amount of Coproxamol tablets coupled with apparently clinically silent coronary artery disease would have played a part in bringing about death more certainly and more rapidly than it would have otherwise been the case. I am further satisfied that no other person was involved in the death of Dr Kelly and that Dr Kelly was not suffering from any significant mental illness at the time he took his own life. 11.58am: Dominic Grieve, the attorney general, will soon by making a statement in the Commons shortly about the call for a full inquest into the death of David Kelly. We don’t know exactly what he’s going to say, but given that David Cameron told PMQs recently that he thought an inquest was unnecessary – the result of the Hutton inquiry was “fairly clear”, Cameron said – it would be very surprising if Grieve were to call for a full inquest. There has not been an inquest into the death of Kelly, the government scientist who killed himself after being identified as the source of the BBC report claiming that Tony Blair’s government “sexed up” the dossier about Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction, because the Hutton inquiry took over the role of considering the cause of his death. But some doctors, the doctors, led by Stephen Frost, have complained that Hutton only spent half a day considering the cause of Kelly’s death. They claim that the Hutton’s conclusion that Kelly committed suicide was “unsafe”. In a letter to Cameron, they said refusing an inquest would amount to a conspiracy to pervert the course of justice. Lord Hutton’s finding of suicide is clearly unsafe and may, especially given the extraordinary context of Dr Kelly’s death, represent one of the gravest miscarriages of justice to occur in this country. If an inquest is denied, despite all the evidence carefully provided to the attorney general, there is a real and grave risk that your government will be seen as continuing, and being complicit in, an enormous conspiracy to pervert the course of justice. Further, any ‘no’ decision will be vigorously contested in the courts via judicial review by the doctors’ lawyers. 11.20am: You can read all today’s Guardian politics stories here. And all the politics stories filed yesterday, including some in today’s paper, are here. As for the rest of the papers, I’ve already mentioned the Times interview with Tony Blair (see 8.37am) and the Rowan Williams’ editorial in the New Statesman (see 9.35am). Here are some other articles and stories that are particularly interesting. • Douglas Carswell and Daniel Hannan, the Tory authors of the devolution manifesto, The Plan, say in an article in the Daily Telegraph that the government’s plans to transfer power away from Whitehall are being “frustrated by the mandarinate”. Councils are being told by Whitehall how often they must empty bins. Universities are told whom to admit. Local authorities are told how much council tax they can raise. National plans to protect designated wildlife sites are being formulated. Decisions over sea defences continue to be made with almost no regard to the communities who live along the coast. Food hygiene quangos centrally determine the price they might extract from farmers for laboriously inspecting them. There is to be a massive house-building programme on public sector land. The much heralded White Paper on public service reform, which we were promised would “signal the decisive end of the old-fashioned, top-down, take-what-you’re-given model of public services” seems to have been abandoned. Far from revolutionising choice over who provides state-funded services, we learn that the process of public procurement within the public sector is actually being centralised around the Cabinet Office. • Steve Richards in the Independent says David Cameron’s speech on the NHS this week “signals the end of a particular dream envisaged by the political romantics in his entourage”. Cameron is surrounded by a surprisingly large number of Tory romantics. They include his senior advisers, Steve Hilton and Rohan Silva, and influential ministers such as Oliver Letwin. I do not describe them as romantic to be disparaging. On the contrary politics desperately need more like them on the left and the right, original thinkers driven by ideas, vision and with the courageous guile to follow through with policy implementation. Several senior Labour figures tell me they lack the equivalent now. In the case of this trio, and a few others, they transformed traditional Tory values and placed them in a modern setting. They did so much more effectively than New Labour on the centre left, where some values went missing in its modernisation project … There is still enough to excite the romantics in the coalition’s agenda, or so some of them tell me. I am pleased. Politics is managerial enough already without them all leaving in a state of wretched disillusionment. They still hope to implement parts of their programme with more political skill and media preparation in the future. But their day in the sun has passed. • The Sun has splashed on a picture of Kenneth Clarke dressed as a Telly Tubby. Angry Tories last night urged the PM to sack tubby Ken Clarke over his soft sentencing fiasco. MP Philip Davies led calls for the Justice Secretary’s head, saying: “Ken’s been living in Laa-Laa Land.” 11.17am: I missed the fact that there’s a byelection going on in West Belfast today. Henry McDonald has more details. Sinn Fein’s Paul Maskey is expected to win comfortably, replacing Gerry Adams. 10.36am: Here’s a round-up to some of the reaction to the archbishop of Canterbury’s article. (See 9.35am.) I’ve taken the quotes from the Press Association and PoliticsHome. From Vince Cable , the Lib Dem business secretary The two parties of the coalition got substantially more than half the total vote at the last election and the public knew that we were going to have to embark on very difficult changes, connected with sorting out the massive budget deficit problem … The point which he seemed to be making was that there wasn’t enough debate around health reform, for example, which I don’t understand because there’s a very big debate. My party has triggered it, we’re having a pause, rethinking the reforms. So he’s obviously had his views and it’s welcome that he pitches into political debate but I think he’s actually wrong on the specifics. From Downing Street This government was elected to tackle the UK’s deep-rooted problems. Its clear policies on education, welfare, health and the economy are necessary to ensure we’re on the right track. From the Conservative MP Roger Gale For him, as an unelected member of the upper house and as an appointed and unelected primate, to criticise the coalition government as undemocratic and not elected to carry through its programme is unacceptable. Dr Williams clearly does not understand the democratic process. If he did, he would appreciate that elected members of the House of Commons are not mandated. We are sent to Westminster by our constituents to face and address the situation as we find it, to use our brains and to endeavour to act and to legislate in the best interests of those that we represent. From the Conservative MP Matthew Hancock This is one member of the Anglican church. When I go to my church in Suffolk there are people of all political persuasions, so I think we’re talking about the views of one man, rather than representing the Anglican church. From the Conservative MP Gary Streeter I think the people are with us on this and the archbishop, sadly and unusually for him, has ill-judged his attack. I would just guess that most people would be slightly baffled by the archbishop’s comments. From Lord Tebbit , the former Conservative chairman No one would dispute the right of the archbishop to make comments of a political kind in this area – it is part of his job, I think, to do so – and he is quite right that there are policies of the coalition for which nobody seemed to vote and policies for which people voted which are not being carried forward by the coalition, but that is the problem of coalition. 10.31am: For the record, here are the latest YouGov GB polling figures. Labour: 42% (up 12 points since the general election) Conservatives: 37% (no change) Lib Dems: 9% (down 15) Labour lead: 5 points Government approval: -21 9.35am: Listening to the news this morning, you could be forgiven for thinking that Rowan Williams, the archbishop of Canterbury, is auditing for the job of leader of the opposition. He has criticised the government in an editorial in the New Statesman, which has described his intervention as “the most significant by a church figure since Faith In The City, an excoriating critique of the Thatcher government”. The Daily Telegraph has called it ” the most outspoken political intervention by an archbishop of Canterbury for a generation”. Several Tory MPs have already taken to the airwaves to denounce him. The editorial isn’t available online, but I’ve now had the chance to read it the old-fashioned way. It’s interesting, and certainly very newsworthy. But it doesn’t bear comparision with Faith in the City, a report that is still being talked about almost 30 years after it was written. (No one will remember this in 30 years’ time; people have already forgotten that Williams launched a reasonably strong attack on the government’s welfare policies only last year.) It is also written in Williams’s characteristic woolly, discursive manner, which makes it hard to rate it as a masterpiece of polemic. But it is thoughtful. Here are the main complaints Williams is making about the coalition. • Williams accuses the government of pursing policies that do not have public support. “With remarkable speed, we are being committed to radical, long-term policies for which no one voted,” he says. He cites education reform as an example of this. • He says the government does not appreciate how much “fear” its policies are generating. The anxiety and anger [that people feel] have to do with the feeling that not enough has been exposed to proper public argument … Government badly needs to hear just how much plain fear there is around … To acknowledge the reality of fear is not necessarily to collude with it. But not to recognise how pervasive it is risks making it worse. Williams also says that it is not enough just for the government to blame everything on the last Labour government. • He says he is concerned about “a quiet resurgence of the seductive language of ‘deserving’ and ‘undeserving’ poor”. • He says the localism agenda is confused. He says he does not think that localism is just an excuse for Whitehall cost-cutting. But he goes on: “There is a confusion about the means that have to be willed in order to achieve the end.” But there are two other important points to be made about the article. Firstly, Williams praises the government for not cutting the aid budget. Secondly – and more importantly – Williams is also quite critical of Labour. This has not been reflected in any of the coverage so far – the full text of the editorial wasn’t available last night – but Williams is not just having a go at David Cameron. He is also complaining that Ed Miliband has not set out an alternative. In his first paragraph, he says that he wants to encourage a debate – “and perhaps even to discover what the left’s big idea currently is”. He goes on to say that the debate in the UK has become “pretty stuck”. We are still waiting for a full and robust account of what the left would do differently and what a left-inspired version of localism might look like … The task of opposition is not to collude in it [the fear felt about government policies], either, but to define some achievable alternatives. And, for that to happen, we need sharp-edged statements of where the disagreements lie. 8.37am: The Times has published a wide-ranging interview with Tony Blair this morning (paywall), and the former prime minister has also been on BBC News and the Today programme. Here’s a full summary of his key points. I’ve taken some of the quotes from PoliticsHome. • Blair says the EU should have a directly-elected president. He was an unofficial candidate when the EU chose its first president, but the job went to the low-profile Belgian, Herman Van Rompuy. Van Rompuy was chosen by EU leaders, who had an interest in ensuring that they did not choose someone who was going to overshadow national presidents and prime ministers. Blair says a directly-elected president would give Europe the clout to compete with powers like China. If you want to have a debate about the direction of Europe it seems to me very hard to have that on a European-wide basis unless you have some means by which people elect something that is Europe-wide in nature … For Europe, the crucial thing is to understand that the only way that you will get support for Europe today is not on the basis of a sort of postwar view that the EU is necessary for peace. For my children’s generation, that is just a bizarre argument. They don’t see that as a real threat, that European nations will go to war with each other. But what they can understand completely is that in a world in particular in which China is going to become the dominant power of the 21st century, it is sensible for Europe to combine together, to use its collective weight in order to achieve influence. And the rationale for Europe today therefore is about power, not peace. But Blair also concedes that his proposal for a directly-elected president “has no chance of being accepted at the present time”. He also identifies five areas where the EU should forger links to “make us more powerful as a unit”. They are tax policy and reform of the social model; completion of the single market; a common energy policy; a common defence policy; and a common policy on immigration and organised crime. • Blair says he supports Ed Miliband. “Let me say by the way, just for the avoidance of any doubt, I will give him 100 per cent support, and I will always do that for the leader of the Labour party,” he says. • But Blair also criticises the “Blue Labour” philosophy that appeals to Miliband. I’d be worried about indulging a nostalgia which suggests a great emotional empathy with someone when you don’t have a policy to deal with it, and so you end up in a small ‘c’ conservative position. The attraction of a concept like Blue Labour is it allows you to say that there’s a group of voters out there we can’t reach at the moment, so what we should do is really empathise with their plight. But I think you should always offer a way forward for the future. The way the Labour Party wins, is if it’s at the cutting edge of the future, is if it’s modernising. It won’t win by a Labour equivalent of warm beer and old maids bicycling. • Blair reaffirms his opposition to the decision to raise the top rate of tax to 50p. “I wouldn’t have done it,” he says. Miliband has said that scrapping the 50p rate will not be a priority for Labour. • Blair says he supports elements of what the coalition is doing. There are elements of the reform programme that we were doing in government that the present Conservative government are continuing, in other areas they’re not. So it would be bizarre if I were to say, you know I don’t agree with them doing the academy programme — why would I want to say that? • But he also suggests that the coalition is, in the long term, unsustainable. “The only coalitions that work in the end are ones where there’s a genuine coalescence of ideas,” he says. The problem is that the Lib Dems are essentially a leftwing party, he suggests. It’s very hard to fight three elections to the left of Labour and then end up in a Tory government. You can slice and dice that any way you want, but you have a bit of a problem with it, and I don’t really have an answer to it. • He welcomes AC Grayling’s decision to set up a private university charging £18,000 a year. Asked if he is in favour of the initiative, he replies: Yes! Let a thousand flowers bloom. I haven’t studied it in detail, but should it be right that people come forward with new ideas and new concepts? Of course. • Blair says that the west must support evolutionary change in countries in North Africa and the Middle East. What we should be doing is, where countries are prepared to make steady evolutionary change we should back that because the problem with revolution is not how they begin but how they end .and we know enough about chaos and instability in that region to realise where that can lead to … We’ve got to realise, one – we are involved, like it or not. Two – our plan for involvement has got to be one that it’s about, not just about changing the politics of those countries, but changing the economic and social reform programmes of those countries also. • He says there should be a Mashall Plan-style aid package for Egypt. I would focus on Egypt very clearly at the moment and say we really do need a type of Marshall Plan, a huge plan of economic and social reconstruction to help that country get to where its people really want it to get to. • He rejects the suggestion that there is any need for a new inquest into the death of David Kelly. (Dominic Grieve, the attorney general, will make an announcement about this later.) There was an inquiry which went for six months headed by a senior Law Lord … I think what he will focus on is whether there really is anything left from the inquiry that went over six months and was one of the most detailed inquiries that has taken place. • Blair says that he does not know if his phone was hacked. 8.26am: Rowan Williams, the archbishop of Canterbury, has taken a swipe at the coalition today in an editorial in the New Statesman . And we’ve also had an intervention from one of Britain’s other great godly figures, Tony Blair. In a new foreword to the paperback edition of his autobiography, he has said the west needs a wider plan to respond to the Arab spring . Blair has also given a wide-ranging interview to the Times, and he has been giving interviews this morning to BBC News and Today. I’ll provide a full summary shortly. Otherwise, it’s a fairly routine day. David Cameron is visiting Northern Ireland, where he will address the Northern Ireland assembly . There’s a written ministerial statement on royal air travel, which could be interesting. And here are the items in the diary. 10am: William Hague , the foreign secretary, hosts a UK/South Africa bilateral forum. 10.30am: Damian Green , the immigration minister, publishes a “work routes to settlement” consultation. Around 12pm: Dominic Grieve , the attorney general, announces his decision about whether or not to hold a full inquest into the death of David Kelly. Today as usual, I’ll be covering all the breaking political news, as well as looking at the papers and bringing you the best politics from the web. I’ll post a lunchtime summary at around 1pm, and another one in the afternoon. Andrew Sparrow guardian.co.uk

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You can’t go home again—especially if it was never really your house. An 18-year-old man, his 15-year-old girlfriend, and her family were found in a stranger’s multi-million dollar lake house in upstate New York. Todd Blauvelt Jr. apparently convinced everyone that he inherited the house from his late grandfather,…

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From Think Progress — How The Bush Tax Cuts Blew Up The Deficit And Debt : Today marks the 10th anniversary of the first of President George W. Bush’s two tax cuts, which have played a disproportionate role in blowing up the deficit and debt. As the Center for American Progress’ Michael Ettlinger and Michael Linden found, the federal debt would be at a sustainable level today — even with the wars and the financial crisis — were it not for the Bush tax cuts . ThinkProgress has assembled this short animation showing how the Bush tax cuts drove the deficit and debt up and are still ruining the budget picture today.

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From Think Progress — How The Bush Tax Cuts Blew Up The Deficit And Debt : Today marks the 10th anniversary of the first of President George W. Bush’s two tax cuts, which have played a disproportionate role in blowing up the deficit and debt. As the Center for American Progress’ Michael Ettlinger and Michael Linden found, the federal debt would be at a sustainable level today — even with the wars and the financial crisis — were it not for the Bush tax cuts . ThinkProgress has assembled this short animation showing how the Bush tax cuts drove the deficit and debt up and are still ruining the budget picture today.

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See what happens when you turn your back on Republican state legislators? They wreak havoc all over the place. In a strange way, this is good news . Because the Republicans are admitting that, without tricks, traps and lies, voters are much less likely to vote for Republicans! But what delicious irony: They voted in a straight party-line vote to prevent voters from doing the same thing. Yesterday in Raleigh, state Senate lawmakers advanced another bill aimed at making voting harder for North Carolinians who actually make it into the voting booth after clearing the other hurdles the GOP-led legislature has proposed. Reporter Laura Leslie put it succinctly [emphasis mine], The state Senate voted on straight party lines tonight to forbid NC voters from doing the same thing. Senate Bill 411 would repeal the law that allows voters entering the ballot box to choose to vote for all the candidates in one party or the other. About 40% of voters in NC use this option. Those mischievous scamps, what will they think of next? That’s SB411 , also described as the “ Elect Pat McCrory ” bill. Since taking over the North Carolina state legislature, the NCGOP has voted to… Shorten the early voting period by a week [HB 658 -- passed the House] Require registered voters to show a photo ID before voting [HB 351 -- passed out of committee in the House, on the House calendar for action today ] Eliminate a voter’s choice to vote a straight ticket [SB 411 -- passed the Senate] There’s more besides, as lawmakers rush through bills ahead of a key procedural deadline. Passage of a bill through either house by Thursday means they can be considered again next year.

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See what happens when you turn your back on Republican state legislators? They wreak havoc all over the place. In a strange way, this is good news . Because the Republicans are admitting that, without tricks, traps and lies, voters are much less likely to vote for Republicans! But what delicious irony: They voted in a straight party-line vote to prevent voters from doing the same thing. Yesterday in Raleigh, state Senate lawmakers advanced another bill aimed at making voting harder for North Carolinians who actually make it into the voting booth after clearing the other hurdles the GOP-led legislature has proposed. Reporter Laura Leslie put it succinctly [emphasis mine], The state Senate voted on straight party lines tonight to forbid NC voters from doing the same thing. Senate Bill 411 would repeal the law that allows voters entering the ballot box to choose to vote for all the candidates in one party or the other. About 40% of voters in NC use this option. Those mischievous scamps, what will they think of next? That’s SB411 , also described as the “ Elect Pat McCrory ” bill. Since taking over the North Carolina state legislature, the NCGOP has voted to… Shorten the early voting period by a week [HB 658 -- passed the House] Require registered voters to show a photo ID before voting [HB 351 -- passed out of committee in the House, on the House calendar for action today ] Eliminate a voter’s choice to vote a straight ticket [SB 411 -- passed the Senate] There’s more besides, as lawmakers rush through bills ahead of a key procedural deadline. Passage of a bill through either house by Thursday means they can be considered again next year.

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Phone-hacking scandal widens to include Kate Middleton and Tony Blair

MP calls for expanded investigation as list grows of those allegedly hacked by Jonathan Rees for News International Pressure is building on the Metropolitan police to expand their phone-hacking inquiry to include a notorious private investigator who was accused in the House of Commons on Wednesday of targeting politicians, members of the royal family and high-level terrorist informers on behalf of Rupert Murdoch’s News International. Guardian inquiries reveal that the former prime minister Tony Blair is among the suspected victims of Jonathan Rees , who was involved in the theft of confidential data, the hacking of computers and, it is alleged, burglary. According to close associates of Rees, he also targeted: • Jack Straw when he was home secretary, Peter Mandelson when he was trade secretary and Blair’s media adviser Alastair Campbell; • Prince Edward and the Countess of Wessex, and the Duke and Duchess of Kent, all of whom are said to have had their bank accounts penetrated, and Kate Middleton when she was Prince William’s girlfriend; • The former commissioner of the Metropolitan police, Sir John Stevens, and the current assistant commissioner, John Yates , who later supervised the failed phone-hacking inquiry for 19 months; • The governor and deputy governor of the Bank of England, whose mortgage account details were obtained and sold. Rees, who worked for the Mirror Group as well as the New of the World, is also accused of using a specialist computer hacker in July 2006 to steal information about MI6 agents who had infiltrated the Provisional IRA. According to a BBC Panorama programme in March, Rees was commissioned by Alex Marunchak , then the News of the World’s executive editor, to hack the information from the computer of Ian Hurst, a former British intelligence officer in Northern Ireland who had stayed in contact with several highly vulnerable agents. Marunchak has denied the allegations. The Guardian has previously identified other suspected targets of Rees, including Eric Clapton, Mick Jagger, George Michael, Linford Christie, Gary Lineker, Richard Madeley and Judy Finnigan, and the family of the Yorkshire Ripper, Peter Sutcliffe. None of these cases has been officially confirmed or even investigated. With many of them, it is not yet clear precisely what form of surveillance Rees and his agency, Southern Investigations, were using. Answers may lie in the “boxloads” of paperwork the Metropolitan police are believed to have seized from Rees. But the Labour MP Tom Watson told the prime minister on Wednesday the head of the Operation Weeting inquiry into the News of the World’s investigator, Glenn Mulcaire , had told him that it may be beyond its terms of reference to investigate this evidence. “Prime minister, powerful forces are attempting a cover-up,” Watson said. “Please tell me what you intend to do, to make sure this doesn’t happen.” While Glenn Mulcaire worked for the News of the World as a full-time employee from 2001, Rees worked freelance for the Mirror Group and the News of the World from the mid 1990s. His agency was earning up to £150,000 a year from the News of the World alone. In 1999, he was arrested and sentenced to seven years for conspiring to plant cocaine on a woman so that her husband would get custody of their children. After his release in May 2004, the News of the World continued to hire him under the editorship of Andy Coulson, who went on to become David Cameron’s media adviser. Rees’s targets during this period included Prince William’s then girlfriend, Kate Middleton. Scotland Yard is believed to have collected hundreds of thousands of documents during a series of investigations into Rees over his links with corrupt officers, and over the 1987 murder of his former business partner, Daniel Morgan . Charges of murder against Rees were dismissed earlier this year. Daniel Morgan’s brother, Alastair, who has been gathering information for a book, told the Guardian he was aware from his own investigations and from material revealed in court hearings that the Metropolitan police was holding “boxloads” of evidence on Rees’s activities. Guardian inquiries suggest that this paperwork could include explosive new evidence of illegal news-gathering by the News of the World and other papers. According to journalists and investigators who worked with him, Rees exploited his position as a freemason to make links with masonic police officers who illegally sold him information on targets chosen by the News of the World, the Sunday Mirror and the Daily Mirror. One close contact, Det Sgt Sid Fillery, left the Metropolitan police to become Rees’s business partner and added more officers to their network. Fillery was subsequently convicted of possession of indecent images of children . Some police contacts are said to have been blackmailed into providing confidential information. One of Rees’s former associates claims that Rees had compromising photographs of serving officers, including one who was caught in a drunken coma with a couple of prostitutes and with a toilet seat around his neck. Rees claimed to be in touch with corrupt Customs officers, a corrupt VAT inspector and two corrupt bank employees. An investigator who worked for Rees claims he was commissioning burglaries of public figures to steal material for newspapers. Southern Investigations has previously been implicated in handling paperwork which was stolen by a professional burglar from the safe of Paddy Ashdown’s lawyer, when Ashdown was leader of the Liberal Democrats. The paperwork, which was eventually obtained by the News of the World, recorded Ashdown discussing his fears that newspapers might expose an affair with his secretary. The Guardian has confirmed that Rees also used two specialist “blaggers” who would telephone the Inland Revenue, the DVLA, banks and phone companies and trick them into handing over private data to be sold to Fleet Street. One of the blaggers who regularly worked for him, John Gunning, was responsible for obtaining details of bank accounts belonging to Prince Edward and the Countess of Wessex, which were then sold to the Sunday Mirror. Gunning was later convicted of illegally obtaining confidential data from British Telecom. Rees also obtained details of accounts at Coutts bank belonging to the Duke and Duchess of Kent. The bank accounts of Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York, are also thought to have been compromised. The Guardian has been told that Rees spoke openly about obtaining confidential data belonging to senior politicians and recorded their names in his paperwork. One source close to Rees claims that apart from Tony Blair, Straw, Mandelson and Campbell, he also targeted Gaynor Regan, who became the second wife of the foreign secretary, Robin Cook, the former shadow home secretary, Gerald Kaufman; and the former Tory minister David Mellor. It is not yet known precisley what Rees was doing with these political targets, although in the case of Peter Mandelson, it appears that Rees obtained confidential details of two bank accounts which he held at Coutts, and his building society account at Britannia. Rees is also said to have targeted his brother, Miles Mandelson. Separately, for the News of the World, Glenn Mulcaire was hacking the voicemail of the deputy prime minister, John Prescott, Straw’s successor as home secretary, David Blunkett, the media secretary, Tessa Jowell, and the Europe minister, Chris Bryant. Scotland Yard has repeatedly refused to reveal how many politicians were victims of phone hacking, although Simon Hughes, Boris Johnson and George Galloway have all been named. The succesful hacking of a computer belonging to the former British intelligence officer Ian Hurst was achieved in July 2006 by sending Hurst an email containing a Trojan program which copied Hurst’s emails and relayed them to the hacker. This included messages he had exchanged with at least two agents who informed on the Provisional IRA – Freddie Scappaticci , codenamed Stakeknife; and a second informant known as Kevin Fulton. Both men were regarded as high-risk targets for assassination. Hurst was one of the very few people who knew their whereabouts. The hacker cannot be named for legal reasons. There would be further security concern if Rees’s paperwork confirmed strong claims by those close to him that he claimed to have targeted the then Metropolitan police commissioner, Sir John Stevens, who would have had regular access to highly sensitive intelligence. Sir John’s successor, Sir Ian Blair, is believed to have been targeted by Glenn Mulcaire, although it has not been confirmed that Mulcaire succeeded in listening to his voicemail. Assistant commissioner John Yates was targeted by Rees when Yates was running inquiries into police corruption in the late 1990s. It appears that Yates did not realise that he himself had been a target when he was responsible for the policing of the phone-hacking affair between July 2009 and January 2011. Targeting the Bank of England, Rees is believed to have earned thousands of pounds by penetrating the past or present mortgage accounts of the then governor, Eddie George, his deputy, Mervyn King, who is now governor, and half-a-dozen other members of the monetary policy committee. According to police information provided to the Guardian in September 2002, an internal Scotland Yard report recorded that Rees and his network were engaged in long-term penetration of police intelligence and that “their thirst for knowledge is driven by profit to be accrued from the media”. Operation Weeting has been investigating phone hacking by the News of the World since January. The paper’s assistant editor, Ian Edmondson , chief reporter, Neville Thurlbeck, and former news editor James Weatherup have been arrested and released on police bail. News International Rupert Murdoch News of the World Phone hacking Tony Blair Peter Mandelson Jack Straw Alastair Campbell Kate Middleton Eric Clapton Prince William Mick Jagger Tom Watson Police Glenn Mulcaire Daily Mirror Trinity Mirror Andy Coulson Paddy Ashdown John Prescott David Blunkett John Yates Nick Davies guardian.co.uk

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