The truth will set you free. Just not if you’re John Boehner trying to explain the need to raise the U.S. debt ceiling to the Tea Party. Less than three weeks after declaring “there’s no daylight between the Tea Party and me,” Boehner told shocked Ohio Tea Partiers that the federal government will have to repeatedly increase the debt ceiling in the years to come. That these most ardent Republican voters can’t handle the truth may explain Boehner’s inability to speak it in public. As Reuters detailed, Speaker Boehner told a gathering of Buckeye state Tea Partiers last month that the $14.3 trillion debt ceiling must be raised now – and not for the last time: The private April 25 meeting was convened by the Speaker of the House of Representatives at the request of Tea Party leaders, who were seething over recent Republican compromises, most notably on the 2011 budget. One of the 25 or so leaders, all from Boehner’s district, asked him if Republicans would raise America’s $14.3 trillion debt limit. According to half a dozen attendees interviewed by Reuters, the most powerful Republican in Washington said “yes.” “And we’re going to have to raise it again in the future,” he added. With the mass retirement of America’s Baby Boomers, he explained, it would take 20 years to balance the U.S. budget and 30 years after that to erase the nation’s huge fiscal deficit. Of course, Boehner’s claim is indisputably true. With $1.5 trillion deficits projected for this year and next (ballooned in part by the $800 billion, two-year extension of the Bush tax cuts so beloved by the GOP), this summer’s debt ceiling increase will have to be quickly followed by another. And despite the Republican posturing on the subject, every budget proposal now on the table will add trillions more in red ink over the next decade. That includes the Ryan 2012 budget plan supported by 235 House Republicans, which will add another $6 trillion in debt in 10 years. Nevertheless, Boehner’s concession to reality wasn’t well received by the tea bagging faithful: That answer incensed many of the Tea Party activists, for whom raising the debt limit is anathema. “You could have knocked me out of my chair,” said Denise Robertson, a computer programmer who belongs to the Preble County Liberty Group. “Fifty years?” She said “my fantasy now” is someone will challenge Boehner in the 2012 Republican primaries. “If we could find someone good to run against him, I’d campaign for them every day,” Robertson said. “I am sick of the tears,” she added, a sarcastic reference to Boehner’s famous propensity to cry. “I want results.” If that reaction is any indication, Americans can expect more tears – and double-dealing bordering on schizophrenia – from John Boehner on the debt ceiling. At times, Boehner has provided a voice of reason for a party almost completely bereft of them. As the Wall Street Journal reported on November 18 (“Boehner Warns GOP on Debt Ceiling”), Boehner pressed his newly enlarged Republican caucus on the need to raise the debt ceiling and so protect the full faith and credit of the United States. “I’ve made it pretty clear to them that as we get into next year, it’s pretty clear that Congress is going to have to deal with this,” Mr. Boehner, who is slated to become House speaker in January, told reporters. “We’re going to have to deal with it as adults,” he said, in what apparently are his most explicit comments to date. “Whether we like it or not, the federal government has obligations and we have obligations on our part.” If an increase in the current debt limit of $14.3 trillion does not pass, it would suggest the country may not meet its obligations and would shake the financial system. It could rock the bond market, rattle the dollar and scare away foreign buyers of U.S. debt. Which is exactly right. The specter of a global financial cataclysm caused by the default of the United States caused most sentient mammals to denounce that prospect as “insanity” (Obama economic adviser Austan Goolsbee ), resulting in “severe harm” (McCain economic adviser Mark Zandi ), “financial collapse and calamity throughout the world” (Senator Lindsey Graham ) and “you can’t not raise the debt ceiling” (House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan ). In January, Boehner acknowledged as much : “That would be a financial disaster, not only for our country but for the worldwide economy. Remember, the American people on election day said, ‘we want to cut spending and we want to create jobs.’ And you can’t create jobs if you default on the federal debt.” But under constant pressure from Tea Party Republicans, the man who promised an ” adult conversation ” on spending chose political power over the national interest. Boehner quickly backed down on his proposed $35 billion in spending cuts , yielding to Tea Party demands for the $61 billion package of reductions which later passed the House. And by January , Boehner was insisting President Obama would have to make concessions to Republicans on the debt ceiling that George W. Bush, needless to say, never faced: The American people will not stand for such an increase unless it is accompanied by meaningful action by the President and Congress to cut spending and end the job-killing spending binge in Washington. While America cannot default on its debt, we also cannot continue to borrow recklessly, dig ourselves deeper into this hole, and mortgage the future of our children and grandchildren. Spending cuts – and reforming a broken budget process – are top priorities for the American people and for the new majority in the House this year, and it is essential that the President and Democrats in Congress work with us in that effort. Fresh off his budget battle in April, a newly confident Speaker Boehner made abundantly clear he would join the hardliners in the House and Senate holding the $14.3 trillion debt ceiling hostage. As Politico reported, Boehner set out to prove ” there’s no daylight between the tea party and me “: House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), fresh off the budget talks, told donors this weekend that if Obama wants an up or down vote on the debt ceiling he’s not going to get it. “The president says I want you to send me a clean bill,” Boehner said. “Well guess what, Mr. President, not a chance you’re going to get a clean bill.” “There will not be an increase in the debt limit without something really, really big attached to it,” he continued in a clip of his remarks at a fundraiser that was played during “Face the Nation.” In his address last week to the Economic Club of New York , Speaker Boehner made clear what those “big things” would be. Despite having just voted for the Paul Ryan budget which would add $6 trillion in federal debt over the next decade, John Boehner demanded spending cuts at least as large as the increase in the debt ceiling. As Boehner trumpeted Sunday : “Medicare, Medicaid – everything should be on the table, except raising taxes.” It’s no wonder the Washington Post’s Matt Miller deemed Boehner’s “awe-inspiring hypocrisy on the debt limit” one of those moments of “political behavior that can only be dubbed Super-Duper Hypocrisy So Brazen They Must Really Think We’re Idiots.” After all, despite their current posturing, John Boehner and GOP Congressional majorities voted seven times to raise the debt ceiling under George W. Bush . During his tenure, the U.S. national debt doubled, fueled by the Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003, the Medicare prescription drug plan and the unfunded wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. John Boehner voted for all of it. But now that a Democrat is in the White House , he proclaims that this debt ceiling vote is “the opportunity for America to get its fiscal house in order.” Ultimately, of course, the U.S. debt ceiling will be raised and not just once. John Boehner knows this, even if his party’s Tea Party activists don’t – or won’t – believe it. But Speaker Boehner can’t have it both ways for much longer. He will have to choose between the national interest and his own political future. All of which means the Tea Partiers and the rest of us alike haven’t seen the last of John Boehner’s tears. (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)
Continue reading …Via ThinkProgress , this is priceless: I want to make sure every House Republican is protected from some kind of dishonest Democratic ad. So let me say on the record, any ad which quotes what I said on Sunday is a falsehood. Because I have said publicly those words were inaccurate and unfortunate and I’m prepared to stand up… When I make a mistake — and I’m going to on occassion — I want to share… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Daily Kos Discovery Date : 18/05/2011 14:50 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …BUTTERFLY!!!! Len Kagamine speedpaint [dancingkitty101 request? XD] Butterfly 3D! Butterfly & Bird Exhibit to Open in Riverhead Summer 2011 | News … Purple Butterfly Girl. This photo belongs to. Pink Sherbet Photography’s (3362) · Hopscotch Kids Jumper · Boy Sitting on Picnic Table · Purple Butterfly Gir. If a Butterfly Flaps Its Wings, Will The Cloud Go Down? Why A … Microsoft BPOS customers were without email last week due to a cloud failure. Two months ago, Google had it’s own cloud outage and problems losing Gmail data. vvb32 reads: Butterfly Swords by Jeannie Lin Miles from home, with only her delicate butterfly swords for defense, she enlists the reluctant protection of a blue-eyed warrior… Romantic quote: Mine, he thought as the blood rushed through his skull. For as long as she would have him … Butterflies of Singapore: Butterfly Portraits – Grass Demon The day started with me hoping the weather would be decent for butterfly photography and that I could head out for an outing after a tiring week at school. I completed my homework in the morning and I wanted to go for a butterfly outing … Biggest Discount 5″ Black Armor Piercing Butterfly Bear & Son Cutlery – Tanto Blade Butterfly Knife with Black Handles: Model BC-114AB. 5 closed. Stainless steel bead blast tanto blade. Black die cast metal. veehands says: Life is short. If you doubt me, ask a butterfly . Their average life span is a mere five to fourteen days — Ellen DeGeneres
Continue reading …Megan Fox Covered Angelic Topless For Sexy Passion Play (VIDEO) Megan Fox Topless in ‘Passion Play’ (VIDEO) Megan Fox – Sexy Topless in ‘Passion Play’ Movie (VIDEO) Download Passion Play Movie | Watch Free | Free Articles Directory It’s true that thousands of websites are offering options to download Passion Play movie, and then, what would drive one to go with us? Hey people, we are not a part of crowd since our website is known for quality services. complete … Download Passion Play movie watch and enjoy | Article Territory When it comes to download Passion Play and any other movie, people always find themselves entrapped in a cobweb of websites. With every passing day, technology. Download Passion Play movie with finest picture & sound quality … When it comes to download Passion Play and any other movie, people always find themselves entrapped in a cobweb of websites. With every passing day, technology is advancing in terms of speed and quality, therefore the no. of websites, … Passion Play (2011) 720p BRRip x264-Feel-Free | 2011 World Dates Passion Play (2011) 720p BRRip x264 Feel-FreeLanguage: EnglishMP4 | h264 3281 Kbps | 1280 x 536 24fps | AAC-48Khz 448 Kbps | 1hr 34min | 2.16 GBGenre: Drama | ThrillerIMDB InfoAn angel under the thumb of a ruthless gangster is saved by … Passion Play (2011) BRRip XviD – DTRG+SAFCuk009 » Download The … Passion Play (2011) BRRip XviD DTRG+SAFCuk009 Language: English 01:34:13 | 672
Continue reading …Pete Townshend memoir finds publisher | Los Angeles People Pete Townshend memoir finds publisher. LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Harper Collins has acquired legendary WHO guitarist Pete Townshend’s memoir , to be titled “Pete Townshend: Who He?” for publication in Fall 2012. … Pete Townshend Memoir to Be Published by Harper Collins | FEED NEWS Pete Townshend Memoir to Be Published by Harper Collins. Posted by feed on May 17th, 2011. Easy AdSense by Unreal. Harper Collins has acquired mythological WHO guitarist Pete Townshend’s memoir, to be titled Pete Townshend: Who He?, … Pete Townshend memoir finds publisher (Reuters) | WorldNews LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Harper Collins has acquired legendary WHO guitarist Pete Townshend’s memoir , to be titled “Pete Townshend: Who He?” for publication in Fall 2012. In a statement released Tuesday, Townshend called the … Pete Townshend memoir finds publisher | Entertainment Release LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Harper Collins has acquired legendary WHO guitarist Pete Townshend’s memoir , to be titled “Pete Townshend: Who He?” for publication in Fall 2012. View full post on Hollywood News Headlines | Hollywood … My Blog!: Pete Townshend Memoir to Be Published by Harper Collins Harper Collins has acquired legendary WHO guitarist Pete Townshend’s memoir , to be titled Pete Townshend: Who He?, for publication in Fall 2012. In a statement released Tuesday, Townshend called the book an “essential rite of passage … MindyKarth says: RT @thewho : NY Times article with a quote from Pete T about his memoirs http://nyti.ms/jxb4JX http://fb.me/tiiGJYkL
Continue reading …Walmart continues to turn a profit. But it’s doing so in spite of American consumers, not because of them. And the world’s largest retailer is only one of America’s big-box retailers that has seen domestic sales drop and foot traffic decrease. With consumers across the country grappling with rising prices and and high unemployment, diminished demand shows few signs of a quick turnaround, regardless of revamped low-price guarantees. Walmart earned $3.4 billion in profit last quarter, but it came largely on the back of strong overseas sales, which rose 11.5 percent, Reuters reported on Tuesday. That international success only highlights the steady decline of Walmart’s domestic business, as the retail giant posted its eighth consecutive decline in same-store sales, or sales at stores that have been open over a year. And while the 1.1 percent decline is slightly less severe than that expected by analysts polled by Thomson Reuters, it’s now been two years since domestic sales have been a source of growth for the company. Despite that dwindling source of revenue, Walmart’s sales rose 4.4 percent overall, to $103.42 billion, due to the growing importance of the company’s overseas consumers. It’s not that those shopping at Walmart are buying less. On the contrary, the average Walmart shopper actually bought more last quarter. The real problem, instead, is the dwindling number of people even stepping foot inside the stores at all. The decline highlights the plight of working Americans, who have borne the brunt of a recession that has left the country with 9.0 percent unemployment, as many corporations have remained competitive by increasing productivity, rather than hiring additional workers. Compounding the pressures of the jobs crisis are skyrocketing food and gas prices that the Federal Reserve continue to insist aren’t indications of inflation. And that’s before taking into account the debt: 28.4 percent of all single-family homes with mortgages are now “underwater,” meaning the borrowers owe more than the house is worth, according to Zillow. Walmart’s trends are reflected across the retail industry. Home Depot on Tuesday reported sales dropped by 0.2 percent, despite Spring typically being one of the company’s strongest seasons, the Wall Street Journal reports. The company raised profits from one year ago, nevertheless. Like Walmart, Home Depot saw the number of total customers fall by 1.9 percent, but the amount spent by the average customer rise 1.5 percent. Home Depot’s largest home improvement competitor, Lowe’s, was hit even harder by the dual effects of recession and weather, as number of visits to older stores fell by 3.4 percent, Bloomberg reports. In the sales department, where the company saw a 1.6 decline, the largest problem for Lowe’s seems to be that the projects being pursued by customers are smaller than usual. The company expects 84 percent of customers projects within the next six months will cost less than $500, CEO Robert Niblock said in a conference call, Bloomberg noted.
Continue reading …Mildred Patricia Baena, 50, has been identified as the mother of Arnold Schwarzenegger’s love child, RadarOnline.com reported Tuesday night. Baena, who goes by Patty, was a housekeeper for the Schwarzenegger family for 20 years before retiring in January. According to TMZ, the former housekeeper–who lives several hours outside of Los Angeles with Schwarzenegger’s son and her three other children–began to “pursue Arnold” in the late 1990s. She reportedly told friends that she and Schwarzenegger had unprotected sex during the day at his house, though she didn’t tell him that he was the father of her child until the boy was a toddler. Schwarzenegger announced Monday night that he had fathered a child with a household staffer over a decade ago, before he was elected as California governor. “After leaving the governor’s office I told my wife about this event, which occurred over a decade ago,” he said in a statement issued to the Los Angeles Times. “I understand and deserve the feelings of anger and disappointment among my friends and family. There are no excuses and I take full responsibility for the hurt I have caused. I have apologized to Maria, my children and my family.” When questioned by the paper Monday before Schwarzenegger issued his statement, the former household staffer–now revealed to be Baena–said another man was the child’s father. She declined to comment after the Los Angeles Times notified her of Schwarzenegger’s statement. Shriver, who–with Schwarzenegger–announced the couple’s separation after 25 years of marriage on May 9, issued a statement Tuesday responding to the revelation. “This is a painful and heartbreaking time,” Shriver said. “As a mother, my concern is for the children. I ask for compassion, respect and privacy as my children and I try to rebuild our lives and heal. I will have no further comment.” Arnold Schwarzenegger Admits He Fathered a Child
Continue reading …Tomorrow marks Katie Couric’s last night at the anchor desk of the CBS Evening News . Five years ago, CBS executives were so excited about the Today show star taking over, her September 5, 2006 debut was preceded by a massive publicity campaign. Outgoing interim anchor Bob Schieffer vouched for his replacement: “She’s tough, she’s fair, she’s a straight shooter….Just watch.”
Continue reading …In stance that directly opposes Andrew Lansley’s, Clegg says NHS regulator should protect interests of patients and push collaboration rather than promote competition Nick Clegg, the deputy prime minister, has set himself on a collision course with the health secretary, Andrew Lansley, by signalling his determination to veto a key plank of the government’s controversial NHS reforms. Clegg has singled out the role of Monitor, the NHS regulator, as the area of the embattled NHS bill that needs the “most substantial changes” and has said descriptions of the body as an economic regulator should be removed on the grounds that the NHS cannot be regulated as if it were just a utility “like electricity or telephones”. In the blueprint of his health and social care bill, Lansley proposed that Monitor, which currently scrutinises hospital finances, is also given the duty of promoting competition in the provision of health services. However, in a stance which directly opposes the one taken by Lansley, Clegg believes Monitor should instead promote and protect the interests of the patient, and push NHS collaboration. Simon Burns, a Conservative health minister, sought to play down the impact of Clegg’s opposition to the idea of an NHS regulatory body, insisting that it would not derail NHS reforms. “No it doesn’t at all,” he told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme. “As you know, we have a pause at the moment, we are listening, we have set up an independent future forum that is going and talking to and talking to people in the NHS, to the Royal Colleges, others who have an interest and involvement in the National Health Service seeking constructive ideas in which we can continue to improve and strengthen the bill.” Burns said that the idea was one of many put forward as part of the listening exercise designed to improve the bill. “The deputy prime minister had a meeting, I understand, with his members of parliament last night, discussed this, they have come up with some ideas, like a load of other people throughout the NHS, and all those ideas will be considered when listening process is over, and the decision will be taken that will be aimed at improving, strengthening the bill, and making sure that patient care is first class.” Evan Harris, a former Lib Dem MP and vice chairman of the party’s federal policy committee, said Burns was “wrong” to say Clegg’s comments were simply a contribution to the listening exercise. “We have made very clear that there will be no government majority for things not in the coalition agreement, like this mass marketisation of the health service, without Liberal Democrat MPs and peers,” he told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme. “They will not vote for Monitor to be an economic regulator so this is a veto.” In a presentation by the deputy prime minister to the weekly meeting of his parliamentary party and leaked to the Guardian, a page-long policy document signed by Clegg set out how he believes the regulator should be reconceived. “Instead of having a duty to promote competition, Monitor’s main duty should be explicitly to protect and promote the interests of patients,” Clegg wrote. A new role for Monitor has long been a running sore in the health secretary’s plans. Last week Steve Field, the man appointed by David Cameron to oversee the “pause” in the health legislation, said he also thought the proposed new role for Monitor should be scrapped. Instead, it should promote co-operation and collaboration and the integration of health services. Addressing fellow Liberal Democrat MPs and peers at a meeting last night, Clegg said he would “never let the profit motive get in the way of the essential purposes of the NHS”. The policy document said: “We cannot treat the NHS as if it were a utility, and the decision to establish Monitor as an ‘economic regulator’ was clearly a misjudgment, failing to recognise all the unique characteristics of a public health service, and opening us up to accusations that we are trying to subject the NHS to the full rigours of UK and EU competition law. Tory backbencher Peter Bone accused the Lib Dems of trying to exploit the issue for political reasons, having previously backed the reforms in cabinet and the House of Commons. Bone told Sky news that Clegg’s position as deputy prime minister meant he should be supporting government policy. If a Conservative minister had opposed the NHS reforms as Clegg had done, “he would have been fired by now”, said Bone. “Every minister must support it. If you can’t support the decision, you must resign from the government. Having voted for it in parliament, the only thing that seems to have happened is that the Liberal Democrats lost very badly in the local elections, lost the AV referendum and this seems to be more about shoring up Nick Clegg’s position as party leader rather than anything to do with improving the health bill.” The deputy prime minister should “row in” behind reforms which he said were in the interest of not only the country but of the patient as well. “It is right that we should listen and scrutinise the bill, but the idea that competition does not improve the health service is ridiculous. It drives up efficiency and makes NHS hospitals more effective. “Getting better value for money in the health service, and people getting treated better and quicker must be right. You have a prime minister who loves the NHS who made his first priority the NHS. “You have a health secretary with more experience than any other politician. Those are the people who should be listened to, not someone who is trying to do it for party political reasons, such as the deputy prime minister.” As Clegg seeks to establish a more distinct identity on issues like NHS reform after their dismal poll results earlier this month, former cabinet minister David Laws cautioned his Lib Dem colleagues not to put the coalition at risk by sniping at their Conservative partners. Laws’ comments, in his first interview since being barred from the Commons for seven days on Monday, will be seen as a warning to ministers like Chris Huhne and Vince Cable who have gone public with criticisms of Tory colleagues. Laws, who was suspended after the parliamentary standards commissioner found he breached expenses rules by claiming the rent he paid his male partner of nine years, said: “Our continued effective delivery of policies depends not just on shouting and our public profile, but on a trusting relationship between the key people in the coalition. “We could get our way over one or two key issues by storming off, voting against them, briefing against them, whatever. But when the next key issue is on the table and we need the co-operation of everybody in the coalition, will we get it? Maybe we won’t.” And he added: “The opportunity to make a difference in national politics is a very special one and we shouldn’t be sitting around in the corner of the political room sulking about the fact that we are in government and looking forward to the opportunity when we can return to the splendid irrelevance of opposition.” Health policy Health Public services policy NHS Nick Clegg Andrew Lansley Liberal Democrats Hélène Mulholland Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …In stance that directly opposes Andrew Lansley’s, Clegg says NHS regulator should protect interests of patients and push collaboration rather than promote competition Nick Clegg, the deputy prime minister, has set himself on a collision course with the health secretary, Andrew Lansley, by signalling his determination to veto a key plank of the government’s controversial NHS reforms. Clegg has singled out the role of Monitor, the NHS regulator, as the area of the embattled NHS bill that needs the “most substantial changes” and has said descriptions of the body as an economic regulator should be removed on the grounds that the NHS cannot be regulated as if it were just a utility “like electricity or telephones”. In the blueprint of his health and social care bill, Lansley proposed that Monitor, which currently scrutinises hospital finances, is also given the duty of promoting competition in the provision of health services. However, in a stance which directly opposes the one taken by Lansley, Clegg believes Monitor should instead promote and protect the interests of the patient, and push NHS collaboration. Simon Burns, a Conservative health minister, sought to play down the impact of Clegg’s opposition to the idea of an NHS regulatory body, insisting that it would not derail NHS reforms. “No it doesn’t at all,” he told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme. “As you know, we have a pause at the moment, we are listening, we have set up an independent future forum that is going and talking to and talking to people in the NHS, to the Royal Colleges, others who have an interest and involvement in the National Health Service seeking constructive ideas in which we can continue to improve and strengthen the bill.” Burns said that the idea was one of many put forward as part of the listening exercise designed to improve the bill. “The deputy prime minister had a meeting, I understand, with his members of parliament last night, discussed this, they have come up with some ideas, like a load of other people throughout the NHS, and all those ideas will be considered when listening process is over, and the decision will be taken that will be aimed at improving, strengthening the bill, and making sure that patient care is first class.” Evan Harris, a former Lib Dem MP and vice chairman of the party’s federal policy committee, said Burns was “wrong” to say Clegg’s comments were simply a contribution to the listening exercise. “We have made very clear that there will be no government majority for things not in the coalition agreement, like this mass marketisation of the health service, without Liberal Democrat MPs and peers,” he told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme. “They will not vote for Monitor to be an economic regulator so this is a veto.” In a presentation by the deputy prime minister to the weekly meeting of his parliamentary party and leaked to the Guardian, a page-long policy document signed by Clegg set out how he believes the regulator should be reconceived. “Instead of having a duty to promote competition, Monitor’s main duty should be explicitly to protect and promote the interests of patients,” Clegg wrote. A new role for Monitor has long been a running sore in the health secretary’s plans. Last week Steve Field, the man appointed by David Cameron to oversee the “pause” in the health legislation, said he also thought the proposed new role for Monitor should be scrapped. Instead, it should promote co-operation and collaboration and the integration of health services. Addressing fellow Liberal Democrat MPs and peers at a meeting last night, Clegg said he would “never let the profit motive get in the way of the essential purposes of the NHS”. The policy document said: “We cannot treat the NHS as if it were a utility, and the decision to establish Monitor as an ‘economic regulator’ was clearly a misjudgment, failing to recognise all the unique characteristics of a public health service, and opening us up to accusations that we are trying to subject the NHS to the full rigours of UK and EU competition law. Tory backbencher Peter Bone accused the Lib Dems of trying to exploit the issue for political reasons, having previously backed the reforms in cabinet and the House of Commons. Bone told Sky news that Clegg’s position as deputy prime minister meant he should be supporting government policy. If a Conservative minister had opposed the NHS reforms as Clegg had done, “he would have been fired by now”, said Bone. “Every minister must support it. If you can’t support the decision, you must resign from the government. Having voted for it in parliament, the only thing that seems to have happened is that the Liberal Democrats lost very badly in the local elections, lost the AV referendum and this seems to be more about shoring up Nick Clegg’s position as party leader rather than anything to do with improving the health bill.” The deputy prime minister should “row in” behind reforms which he said were in the interest of not only the country but of the patient as well. “It is right that we should listen and scrutinise the bill, but the idea that competition does not improve the health service is ridiculous. It drives up efficiency and makes NHS hospitals more effective. “Getting better value for money in the health service, and people getting treated better and quicker must be right. You have a prime minister who loves the NHS who made his first priority the NHS. “You have a health secretary with more experience than any other politician. Those are the people who should be listened to, not someone who is trying to do it for party political reasons, such as the deputy prime minister.” As Clegg seeks to establish a more distinct identity on issues like NHS reform after their dismal poll results earlier this month, former cabinet minister David Laws cautioned his Lib Dem colleagues not to put the coalition at risk by sniping at their Conservative partners. Laws’ comments, in his first interview since being barred from the Commons for seven days on Monday, will be seen as a warning to ministers like Chris Huhne and Vince Cable who have gone public with criticisms of Tory colleagues. Laws, who was suspended after the parliamentary standards commissioner found he breached expenses rules by claiming the rent he paid his male partner of nine years, said: “Our continued effective delivery of policies depends not just on shouting and our public profile, but on a trusting relationship between the key people in the coalition. “We could get our way over one or two key issues by storming off, voting against them, briefing against them, whatever. But when the next key issue is on the table and we need the co-operation of everybody in the coalition, will we get it? Maybe we won’t.” And he added: “The opportunity to make a difference in national politics is a very special one and we shouldn’t be sitting around in the corner of the political room sulking about the fact that we are in government and looking forward to the opportunity when we can return to the splendid irrelevance of opposition.” Health policy Health Public services policy NHS Nick Clegg Andrew Lansley Liberal Democrats Hélène Mulholland Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …