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Victoria <![CDATA[&]]> David Beckham Welcome Baby Girl, Harper Seven

Victoria and David Beckham welcomed a baby girl on Sunday, People Magazine reports. In the evening, David took to Facebook to announce his newborn’s name: Harper Seven. (7 was David’s soccer jersey number when he played for Manchester United and captained the English National Team.) Little Harper weighed in at 7 lbs., 10 oz. The designer and soccer stud already have three boys — Brooklyn, 11, Romeo, 8, and Cruz, 5. “Brooklyn, Romeo and Cruz are excited to welcome their new baby sister to the family,” Beckham family spokesperson Jo Milloy said. David announced his wife’s pregnancy on Facebook back in January, writing, “I’ve got some great news to tell you all. Victoria and I are expecting our fourth child this summer. The boys are very excited about the arrival of a new brother or sister.” David kept talking, appearing on “Jimmy Kimmel” in April, where he told the host that, at first, they believed it was a boy (“…and Victoria was like, ‘Uh, another penis in the house.’ She thinks there’s too many in the house already”), but found out to Posh Spice’s delight that it would be a mini Victoria. He also revealed that big brother Romeo suggested “Justine Bieber Beckham” as a possible name. Victoria, for her part, has continued working and even launched her Victoria by Victoria Beckham dress collection earlier this week. She previously joked with Glamour UK that she wouldn’t be taking time off once the little one arrived, saying, “Maternity leave — what’s that?…My husband and children will always be my priority. But for me, what I do professionally doesn’t feel like a job.” Congrats to the happy family.

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With the final edition of News Of The World bidding farewell to UK readers, juicy secrets about the company were promised on twitter by an “ex-NOTW writer(s)”. Unfortunately, forces have appeared to silence the ex-journo : The @ExNOTWjourno account, which had been threatening to release damning new information about News International, had all but three tweets deleted just after 10am and all of its 20,000 followers were dropped. Another account, @NOTWjourno, fell silent earlier this morning and more than 50 tweets were deleted, including a message posted late last night which read: “FOLLOW FOR THE INSIDE STORY! -ALL COMES OUT AT 00:00 #NOTW.” The earliest tweets on that Twitter feed now talk about the account being abandoned. The account holder is now systematically blocking new followers. Unless an account is hacked, the only person that can delete Tweets or block followers is the person who holds that Twitter account. Just before the @ExNOTWjourno account went quiet the account holder told Telegraph.co.uk “they are attacking me from all sides”. Hmmm….curious, that. But never fear, Rupert Murdoch has hopped the pond to do damage control. Politicians have been notoriously afraid of the power of the poison pen of Murdoch’s empire, but that may be changing : In the House of Commons, a parade of lawmakers took turns at the microphone to thunder their disapproval of Murdoch, and the way they feel he has debased public life here through media properties that purvey sex scandals and celebrity tittle-tattle, and stoke fear of violent crime. But there were moments of self-criticism as well, from members of Parliament who acknowledged having been too craven to speak out against Murdoch and against abuses at his newspapers. Even David Cameron, the prime minister, now ruefully admits to being hesitant to take Murdoch on. Bryant, the Labor MP, said in a telephone interview that Murdoch had successfully cowed lawmakers to the benefit of his business empire. “He’s used his newspapers to make people frightened of attacking his media interests, and he has favored some people in all sorts of different ways, in particular political parties, and that has kept his financial interests very secure,” Bryant said. “I’m not exempting anybody. I’m not exempting myself, to be honest,” he said. “None of us has shot the legs off from under him.” Murdoch’s latest commercial gambit has been to take control of BSkyB, Britain’s biggest satellite broadcaster, a bid that is now sure to be delayed because of the phone-hacking scandal. The debacle has frightened investors of both BSkyB and News Corp., which lost billions of dollars on the stock market by the end of last week. (In the U.S., News Corp. owns Fox News, the Wall Street Journal and the New York Post, among other properties.) But as he faces the music in the UK, the question yet to be asked is how do we know these same egregious and irresponsible practices were not being done here in the US? Keep in mind that the Executive Editor of NOTW at the time all this started was Les Hinton. Where is Les Hinton now? He was promoted out of that position and now is the CEO of the Dow Jones with editorial influence on the Wall Street Journal . Under Hinton’s leadership, the initial NOTW investigation was basically whitewashed and swept under the rug, with some of his statements to the investigating subcommittee looking very “misleading”. That alone merits some scrutiny here in the US . After his assurances to the parliamentary committee in 2007, Hinton answered further questions in September 2009. Speaking over a video link from New York, the Murdoch lieutenant again sought to convince the members of parliament that all was now right at the British tabloid newspaper. “There was never any evidence delivered to me that suggested that the conduct of (the single reporter) Clive Goodman spread beyond him … We went, I promise you, to extraordinary lengths within the News of the World,” he said. Though there were times during the hearing when Hinton’s certainty appeared to be cracking — he used the phrases “I do not recall” or “I do not know” or variations on them at least 55 times — his faith in the newspaper’s internal checks seemed resolute. Asked whether he should have pushed his editors on “the extent of the inquiry and more details about what had actually been looked into,” he replied that he “was happy when I gave evidence to you all two and a half years ago that the answers I gave were sincere and that the efforts made to discover any other wrongdoing had been conscientious and thorough, and I think people worked very hard in very difficult circumstances to both investigate what might have happened and to make sure that it did not happen again.” Those answers could come back to haunt him. And well they should. We’ve seen many irregularities in the way News Corp. does business here in the US, from Roger Ailes using News Corps bodyguards to follow employees of small town publications he personally owned to the stockholder lawsuit over the purchase of Rupert’s daughter Elisabeth’s production company and her elevation to the board . Whose to say that in their over-arching editorial focus on promoting Republican policies and politicians that they haven’t crossed from lack of journalistic integrity straight into criminality ? This is anything but an isolated incident. News of the World spent years invading peoples’ privacy: it was how they did business. The younger Murdoch personally approved an enormous settlement related to phone hacking, and alleged abuses are still being uncovered. The most recent of those include the families of the victims of the terrorist bombings of the London Underground, who have come forward to say their phone messages were hacked too. Despite charges that Brooks knew about the hacking, Murdoch has stated unequivocally that she will remain in leadership. Brooks says it is “inconceivable” that she knew of Milly Dowler’s phone hacking, but it strains credibility that executives could be blind to the fact that the paper was invading people’s privacy for years. At best, it’s an inexcusable lack of oversight; at worst, it’s a conspiracy to spy on private citizens to sell papers. Either way, it requires action and accountability from the top, and Murdoch’s continued support of his long-time lieutenant is one more indication that he puts his personal and political agenda above good business and the common good. Which brings us back to the United States, where Murdoch’s News Corp. owns Fox News , the New York Post and the Wall Street Journal . When asked point-blank this spring whether his company was hacking people’s phone messages here, Murdoch flatly refused to answer. US shareholders are suing News Corp. for nepotism over the purchase of Murdoch’s daughter’s company at a highly inflated price and her subsequent promotion to the News Corp. board. One of the largest News Corp. holdings, Fox News, routinely peddles misinformation about climate change, uses racially charged rhetoric and openly promotes Republican positions and candidates, all while pretending to present “fair and balanced” news. Fox News’s Washington managing editor Bill Sammon was even found pushing his staff to tie President Obama to socialism on air, even as he admitted the claim was “rather far-fetched.” And advertisers wary of sponsoring dubious content have been fleeing Fox News here just as they are fleeing News of the World in Britain due to indecent, if not illegal, activity. UPDATE: It didn’t take long for it to carry over to this side of the Atlantic : Mr Murdoch arrived in London yesterday, wearing a Panama hat and clutching a final copy of the News of the World, in a bid to save his crumbling organisation after the phone-hacking scandal saw the 168-year-old paper axed. But he flew straight into another storm as it was claimed 9/11 victims may have had their mobiles tapped by News of the World reporters. And there was more bad news when it was revealed nine reporters ­allegedly at the centre of the phone scandal and claims of police corruption could face jail, along with three officers. After he spent time at News International’s Wapping HQ in East London, 80-year-old Mr Murdoch held crisis talks with Mrs Brooks, 43 – who denies any knowledge of the Milly phone tapping – at his home in Mayfair. The pair chatted behind closed doors as a former New York cop made the 9/11 hacking claim. He alleged he was contacted by News of the World journalists who said they would pay him to retrieve the private phone records of the dead. Now working as a private ­investigator, the ex-officer claimed reporters wanted the victim’s phone numbers and details of the calls they had made and received in the days leading up to the atrocity. A source said: ‘This investigator is used by a lot of journalists in America and he recently told me that he was asked to hack into the 9/11 victims’ private phone data. He said that the journalists asked him to access records showing the calls that had been made to and from the mobile phones belonging to the victims and their ­relatives.

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Katrina Vanden Heuvel: Real Crisis is Not Deficit and Debt, it’s Jobs

Click here to view this media We’ve had way too few voices calling out this kabuki theater on the debt ceiling for what it is, a manufactured political crisis, when the real crisis is the lack of jobs in the United States. Katrina Vanden Heuvel did just that on Reliable Sources today. KATRINA VANDEN HEUVEL: Yes. So I think in the last weeks, we’ve seen more attention paid for the fact you no longer have a Republican Party Richard Nixon would recognize. This is an extremist Republican Party willing to blow up the global economy by tethering draconian, cruel deficit cuts to the debt ceiling — a debt ceiling, by the way, Republicans seven times voted for to lift under George W. Bush. But I think the largest crisis the media — the media malpractice, Howard, is the fact that you have the idea, the concept that America is bankrupt. It is not bankrupt. What is bankrupt is the inside the Beltway consensus that the real crisis in this country is about deficits and debt. When you look at the front pages in the last days, the last few years, Howard, what is it? It is a jobs crisis. So, when you listen to Bill Daley on “Meet the Press” this morning and he said President Obama came to Washington to do something big, what we need is coverage of what a grand bargain on jobs could be, and the consequences of what we’re seeing inside the beltway for millions of Americans. Naturally no progressive can come on CNN without a conservative being put on as well for “balance”, so we got treated to Tony Blankley giving the usual Republican talking points on their refusal to raise taxes when we’ve got some of the greatest income disparity since the Gilded Age and painting Democrats who don’t like this deal as being unreasonable for not wanting to see our social safety nets cut instead of raising taxes on the rich. Full transcript below the fold. KURTZ: The clock is ticking as President Obama and Hill leaders meet again tonight to try to hammer out a deal to avoid a government default, even as House Speaker John Boehner warning last night that he wants a much smaller deal than the $4 trillion President Obama has been pushing. This high-stakes game of budgetary poker poses an unusual challenge for journalists. Democrats have been saying they’re negotiating in good faith by offering major spending cuts and modest tax increases, while the Republicans are holding the economy hostage by refusing to talk about raising revenue. The Republicans reject this, saying they’re protecting the economy by focusing on out of control spending. So, who’s right? Well, David Brooks, the conservative “New York Times” columnist called out the GOP this week in a way that most mainstream journalists have not. He writes, “If the Republican Party were a normal party, it would take advantage of this amazing moment. It is being offered the deal of the century: trillions of dollars in exchange for a few hundred billion dollars of revenue increases. The Republican Party may no longer be a normal party. Over the past few years, it has been infected by a faction that is more of a psychological protest than a practical, governing alternative.” Joining us now to talk about the coverage of the budget showdown, in New York, Katrina Vanden Heuvel, editor and publisher of “The Nation” magazine. And here in Washington, Tony Blankley, executive vice president of Edelman Public Relations and a former press secretary for Newt Gingrich. Katrina Vanden Heuvel, here’s David Brooks saying the republicans are not a normal party. Have most of the media been unwilling to point a picture and say the Republicans are largely responsible for blocking any deal here? KATRINA VANDEN HEUVEL, THE NATION: Yes. So I think in the last weeks, we’ve seen more attention paid for the fact you no longer have a Republican Party Richard Nixon would recognize. This is an extremist Republican Party willing to blow up the global economy by tethering draconian, cruel deficit cuts to the debt ceiling — a debt ceiling, by the way, Republicans seven times voted for to lift under George W. Bush. But I think the largest crisis the media — the media malpractice, Howard, is the fact that you have the idea, the concept that America is bankrupt. It is not bankrupt. What is bankrupt is the inside the Beltway consensus that the real crisis in this country is about deficits and debt. When you look at the front pages in the last days, the last few years, Howard, what is it? It is a jobs crisis. So, when you listen to Bill Daley on “Meet the Press” this morning and he said President Obama came to Washington to do something big, what we need is coverage of what a grand bargain on jobs could be, and the consequences of what we’re seeing inside the beltway for millions of Americans. KURTZ: I would agree that 14 million unemployed often get lost in this debate. Tony Blankley, I’m not taking sides here. The Republicans have — they’re standing on principles. But journalists could easily write that by saying we’ll negotiate anything, except tax increases, which is, of course, have the debate, Republicans are blocking progress toward a deal. TONY BLANKLEY, COLUMNIST FOR TOWNHALL.COM: Look, I’m in favor actually of objective journalism. KURTZ: OK. BLANKLEY: When I was Newt’s press secretary, I would seek out the journalists who knew the substance and were trying as hard as they could to report objectively. There’s not as many of those reporters and those news organizations around now as there used to be. If you have the choice between a transcription service, where the media just reports what each side says, and cheerleading, which I think is sometimes we ultimately we get, I’ll take transcription over cheerleading, but I prefer journalism over transcription. Let me give you just one example, and he’s a good friend of mine. Major Garrett of today’s “National Journal.” He’s one of the best reporters, he’s got a story on this budget, where he leads in the first two paragraphs characterizing Boehner’s position to Watergate, because he’s standing firm on no taxes. You have to get down to the 13th paragraph of a 15-paragraph story, before he says the Democrats are just as much to blame for refusing to deal with entitlements as the Republicans are for taxes. So, is that — Major is one of the best reporters in the business. Is that objective journalism? KURTZ: But on that point, Katrina, Democrats have their own sacred cows. Medicare is one of them. It’s a great issue for the Democratic Party. But President Obama has put nearly $500 billion in Medicare cuts on the table, saying the Republicans now should give something on revenue. But, again, I don’t see the press — I think the press is so worried about appearing to take sides that they don’t want to say, well, the Democrats took another step here and the Republicans, and, look, Boehner is under a lot of pressure from his Republican Caucus, are still digging in. VANDEN HEUVEL: But let me reframe it if I might. There’s too much covering this debate in terms of political gamesmanship, brinkmanship. What we need is not the grid of negotiation but the sensible policy, context and history. Senator Moynihan once said people have a right to their own opinions but not to their own facts. I think we need more reporting on stories, for example, like what “The New York Times” did in March of this year showing that G.E. profited $14 billion in 2010 and paid zero — nada — in federal taxes. These are the stories that should provide the context for understanding that there should be no moral, political, or policy equivalents between raising taxes on the very richest in corporations and taking away lifelines for millions of Americans who have already borne the brunt of these cuts. I come back to the fact that sourcing, Howard, sourcing journalistic issue. Where are the stories? We need more stories about the consequences of what is going on inside the beltway around this country. KURTZ: I understand that you want to broaden the media’s economic debate, but there is, of course, the August 2nd deadline, after which the United States government will be in default. VANDEN HEUVEL: It relates to that. KURTZ: Let me — let me bring Tony back in, because this whole argument about tax increases is an interesting challenge for the press. Obama says close what he calls tax loopholes — corporate jets, the oil industry, hedge fund managers, you know, great populist targets. Republicans — and that’s a modest amount of money, let’s face it — Republicans say that’s a tax hike. We don’t want to raise taxes. Shouldn’t journalists say most people wouldn’t think of ending ethanol subsidies as a tax hike? It’s the closing of a tax preference that a lot of people think can’t be justified. BLANKLEY: Well, it’s not a question really of what most people think, but what an objective journalist who’s informed judges to be the reality. And so, one man’s tax break is another man’s interest deduction, which is not a tax break but necessary to support — KURTZ: That’s a tax preference that lot of people love because they have housing (ph). But still costs the treasury money. (CROSSTALK) BLANKLEY: Yes. Well, the phrase “costs the treasury money” suggest it was the treasury’s money in the first place. KURTZ: Foregone. All right. BLANKLEY: But, look, I’m in favor of the journalism reporting in detail what each party is proposing and the history of those proposals. For instance, obviously, from the Republican point of view, in 1982, I was with Reagan and the White House. We had the (INAUDIBLE) taxing deal where Reagan was promised $3 of spending cuts for $1 of tax increase. The history was that he didn’t get all of the spending cuts. He got all the taxes. So, when you analyze what’s the likelihood of proposed spending cuts coming online, I’d like to see journalism report on the history of promised spending cuts and how many of them actually came out. That would be a useful — KURTZ: Sometimes they have. Do you think the coverage, Tony, has been fair or biased? BLANKLEY: Oh, I think it’s been in a broad zone of fairness right now, because it’s largely been transcription. It’s largely been they say — the Republicans say this about themselves, the — KURTZ: Right, which doesn’t help viewers that much. And, Katrina, I asked Eric Cantor, the House majority leader, well, what are you willing to give up since the Democrats have put an awful lot in the trillions of dollars of spending cuts on table, which they’re not necessarily in favor of? And he said, well, look, we don’t want to raise the debt ceiling. We’re raising the debt ceiling, that’s our sacrifice in exchange for spending cuts. Do you think the press has accepted that frame of the issue? VANDEN HEUVEL: Yes. I think, well, first of all, Howard, you know this better than I do — there’s no more one press in this country. There are two, three, four different medias. And Eric Cantor can’t. I mean, here’s a guy who has said, if you don’t play my game, I’m going to walk away. I mean, that is not politics. And though I think President Obama has too often led with compromise, there’s no question that if you look at the compromise that the Democratic Party has made rightly or wrongly in my view over these last six months, a year, there is a sense of shared sacrifice. I come back. I agree with Tony Blankley, by the way. Maybe our journalism can accommodate history or context, but we need to look back at the last 30 years and see how the tax burden on the very much rich is today at the lowest point in decades. That should play a rule in the conversations, Howard, about the debt ceiling, about deficit reduction. And, finally, the discredited supply-side economics that has infiltrated the media, call it bias or whatever, that is leading the way our coverage is framed. The idea that spending cuts lead to recovery or prosperity — no. KURTZ: OK. Well, there’s a great debate about that. Let me close with this, Tony Blankley. Each side has its talking points. You talk about transcription journalism. You don’t seem that uncomfortable with it, but I think it’s almost a surrender to just say one side says this, one side says that. Where is, you know — BLANKLEY: I completely agree. I think there’s a rich, recent political economic history to be reported on by the media and they’re not doing enough of it. I agree. I wouldn’t be — as a conservative Republican, I’d be very comfortable with a deep historic analysis and reporting by journalism regarding the history of tax cuts, budgets, revenue raises, whether you raise the rates, do you increase revenue. There’s a lot of good stuff there. KURTZ: Well, we still have an opportunity with the debate just really heating up and the deadline facing us. Let the record show, I got Tony Blankley and Katrina Vanden Heuvel to agree on at least one point here this morning. VANDEN HEUVEL: History. KURTZ: Thanks very much for joining us.

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Hunt sends BSkyB takeover back to Ofcom over phone hacking

Shares in TV network crash as culture secretary asks regulators whether News Corp remains ‘fit and proper’ owner The culture secretary, Jeremy Hunt, is writing to Ofcom and the Office of Fair Trading seeking advice over News Corporation’s bid for BSkyB in the light of phone-hacking revelations and the closure of the News of the World. The news came as BSkyB shares crashed to £7 in early trading, down 6.7% and back to the level of the original News Corp bid. Hunt will ask Ofcom and the OFT, which have been advising him on the bid, whether the spate of revelations that led last week to the closure of the News of the World meant they would take a different view on the deal – and if so, whether they believed the Competition Commission should examine it. Hunt would ask them to look at three aspects, the BBC said , most notably whether News Corporation’s guarantees made in January about the TV network’s independence and future could be trusted in view of the new phone-hacking developments. Additionally, Hunt will ask Ofcom, the media regulator, if the company remains a “fit and proper” owner of BSkyB and whether the closure of the News of the World means the media plurality landscape needs re-examination. The move could be a huge blow to Rupert Murdoch’s empire, suggesting that even the shock closure of the newspaper at the centre of the hacking scandal has not been sufficient to safeguard the BSkyB deal. The bid also looks in potential jeopardy from a Labour House of Commons motion on Wednesday calling for it to be delayed. The motion looks set to receive strong Liberal Democrat support. The Lib Dem party president, the Cumbria MP Tim Farron, told BBC Radio 4 this seemed very likely. “If a legally worded motion comes to the House opposing a further Murdoch takeover of BSkyB I can’t see how Liberal Democrats would vote against that. It is no secret that Liberal Democrats have always opposed the lack of plurality in our media market, and in particular have felt that Rupert Murdoch’s influence on British politics through the media has been nefarious. We’ve thought that for decades.” In yet more bad news for News Corporation’s newspaper arm, News International, police are reportedly seeking to interview its chief executive, Rebekah Brooks, a former News of the World editor. Brooks, whose continued tenure as CEO has prompted widespread criticism, will be interviewed as a potential witness rather than a suspect. Les Hinton, Murdoch’s lifelong lieutenant and closest adviser, also faces questions over whether he saw a 2007 internal News International report that found evidence of phone hacking was more widespread than admitted by the company before he testified to a parliamentary committee that the practice was limited to a single rogue reporter. Last week’s dramatic events were sparked by a Guardian report that News of the World journalists hacked into the mobile phone messages of the murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler after she disappeared – even deleting some messages, making her family believe she was alive. On Monday the deputy prime minister, Nick Clegg, is meeting Milly’s mother and sister at an event organised by the Media Standards Trust. BSkyB BSkyB News Corporation Phone hacking Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Media business Les Hinton Peter Walker guardian.co.uk

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Hunt sends BSkyB takeover back to Ofcom over phone hacking

Shares in TV network crash as culture secretary asks regulators whether News Corp remains ‘fit and proper’ owner The culture secretary, Jeremy Hunt, is writing to Ofcom and the Office of Fair Trading seeking advice over News Corporation’s bid for BSkyB in the light of phone-hacking revelations and the closure of the News of the World. The news came as BSkyB shares crashed to £7 in early trading, down 6.7% and back to the level of the original News Corp bid. Hunt will ask Ofcom and the OFT, which have been advising him on the bid, whether the spate of revelations that led last week to the closure of the News of the World meant they would take a different view on the deal – and if so, whether they believed the Competition Commission should examine it. Hunt would ask them to look at three aspects, the BBC said , most notably whether News Corporation’s guarantees made in January about the TV network’s independence and future could be trusted in view of the new phone-hacking developments. Additionally, Hunt will ask Ofcom, the media regulator, if the company remains a “fit and proper” owner of BSkyB and whether the closure of the News of the World means the media plurality landscape needs re-examination. The move could be a huge blow to Rupert Murdoch’s empire, suggesting that even the shock closure of the newspaper at the centre of the hacking scandal has not been sufficient to safeguard the BSkyB deal. The bid also looks in potential jeopardy from a Labour House of Commons motion on Wednesday calling for it to be delayed. The motion looks set to receive strong Liberal Democrat support. The Lib Dem party president, the Cumbria MP Tim Farron, told BBC Radio 4 this seemed very likely. “If a legally worded motion comes to the House opposing a further Murdoch takeover of BSkyB I can’t see how Liberal Democrats would vote against that. It is no secret that Liberal Democrats have always opposed the lack of plurality in our media market, and in particular have felt that Rupert Murdoch’s influence on British politics through the media has been nefarious. We’ve thought that for decades.” In yet more bad news for News Corporation’s newspaper arm, News International, police are reportedly seeking to interview its chief executive, Rebekah Brooks, a former News of the World editor. Brooks, whose continued tenure as CEO has prompted widespread criticism, will be interviewed as a potential witness rather than a suspect. Les Hinton, Murdoch’s lifelong lieutenant and closest adviser, also faces questions over whether he saw a 2007 internal News International report that found evidence of phone hacking was more widespread than admitted by the company before he testified to a parliamentary committee that the practice was limited to a single rogue reporter. Last week’s dramatic events were sparked by a Guardian report that News of the World journalists hacked into the mobile phone messages of the murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler after she disappeared – even deleting some messages, making her family believe she was alive. On Monday the deputy prime minister, Nick Clegg, is meeting Milly’s mother and sister at an event organised by the Media Standards Trust. BSkyB BSkyB News Corporation Phone hacking Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Media business Les Hinton Peter Walker guardian.co.uk

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Obama, lawmakers still divided over debt deal

JIM KUHNHENN and LAURIE KELLMAN The Associated Press WASHINGTON – Grasping for a deal on the nation’s debt, President Barack Obama and congressional leaders remained divided Sunday over the size and the components of a plan to reduce long term deficits. Noting the need to work out an agreement over the next 10 days, the president and lawmakers agreed to meet again Monday. Obama also sought to use the power of his office to sway public opinion, scheduling a news conference for Monday morning, his second one in less than two weeks devoted primarily to the debt talks. Officials familiar with the meeting said Obama pressed the eight House and Senate leaders Sunday evening to continue aiming for…

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DeMint: Geithner ‘playing Chicken Little’ on the debt ceiling

Click here to view this media Tea party favorite Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC) said Sunday that there was no risk of “major economic consequences” if the debt limit was not raised by Aug. 2. “I think the president has been gaming Republicans,” DeMint told Fox News’ Bret Baier. “He has been talking about this for six months. The only proposal he sent us is his budget to raise the debt $10 trillion. So it’s hard to take him seriously here.” “Thousands of Americans and many Republicans in Congress are uniting around the idea that we will give the president his increase in the debt limit in return for some reasonable cuts in spending this year, some caps on spending over the next ten years, his agreement to send balanced budget amendment to the Constitution, to the states for them to ratify,” he added. “Do you believe, Senator, that the country risks default or major economic consequences if the debt ceiling is not raised on August 2nd — by August 2nd?” Baier asked. “No, I don’t,” DeMint insisted. “I think [Treasury] Secretary Geithner has been irresponsible. He’s playing Chicken Little here.” “We will pay the debts if it’s the last dollar we have. There are enough assets in Social Security and Medicare to pay the benefits of those programs for several years. Other programs can be funded from tax revenue. There would certainly be disruption, Bret, but this is not a deadline we should rush and make a bad deal and do something that cuts benefits from seniors without giving them better choices.” Baier pressed the South Carolina Republican on House Speaker John Boehner’s (R-OH) claim that the economy would be in ” jeopardy ” if the debt ceiling wasn’t raised by Aug. 2. “Well, if the president and Secretary Geithner have not planned for contingencies — and we have sent them letters to tell them they needed to — there would certainly be disruption. But the president is required by law to pay our debts. He is required to pay Social Security and Medicare,” DeMint said.

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DeMint: Geithner ‘playing Chicken Little’ on the debt ceiling

Click here to view this media Tea party favorite Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC) said Sunday that there was no risk of “major economic consequences” if the debt limit was not raised by Aug. 2. “I think the president has been gaming Republicans,” DeMint told Fox News’ Bret Baier. “He has been talking about this for six months. The only proposal he sent us is his budget to raise the debt $10 trillion. So it’s hard to take him seriously here.” “Thousands of Americans and many Republicans in Congress are uniting around the idea that we will give the president his increase in the debt limit in return for some reasonable cuts in spending this year, some caps on spending over the next ten years, his agreement to send balanced budget amendment to the Constitution, to the states for them to ratify,” he added. “Do you believe, Senator, that the country risks default or major economic consequences if the debt ceiling is not raised on August 2nd — by August 2nd?” Baier asked. “No, I don’t,” DeMint insisted. “I think [Treasury] Secretary Geithner has been irresponsible. He’s playing Chicken Little here.” “We will pay the debts if it’s the last dollar we have. There are enough assets in Social Security and Medicare to pay the benefits of those programs for several years. Other programs can be funded from tax revenue. There would certainly be disruption, Bret, but this is not a deadline we should rush and make a bad deal and do something that cuts benefits from seniors without giving them better choices.” Baier pressed the South Carolina Republican on House Speaker John Boehner’s (R-OH) claim that the economy would be in ” jeopardy ” if the debt ceiling wasn’t raised by Aug. 2. “Well, if the president and Secretary Geithner have not planned for contingencies — and we have sent them letters to tell them they needed to — there would certainly be disruption. But the president is required by law to pay our debts. He is required to pay Social Security and Medicare,” DeMint said.

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My Husband Came Back, Now What?

There comes a point for every world traveler, however adventurous, when you wake up in your hut (or tent or yurt), and think, “Gosh, I would love to make waffles.” Then, you catalogue all the stuff you’d need to pull off waffles–the iron, the mix, the whisk, the plate, the grade B maple syrup–and then you look down at your pathetic kit of eye drops, lip balm and Bactroban, and say, “I want to go home.” When my husband walked out on our fifteen-year marriage, only to return a month later, the truth of the matter is that he came home, not for me, but for waffles. Given the bitter man who showed up at my door, life on the outside must not have been all that and a bag of chips. After the heady rush of abandoning his tired harpy wife subsided, the brutal reality of his middle-aged, non-007 life surely hit him like a sucker punch. Maybe the hot divorcee from the gym, who told him his hair was cute, when push came to shove, didn’t want to move into his overpriced bachelor pad after all? Or maybe the twenty-year-old twigs dragged back from the all-night raves seemed less edgy and bedazzling over coffee? Or maybe time with our kids whittled down to half cut too deeply? Or maybe, when he needed to blow his nose, there just wasn’t an appropriate place to put his snot? Perhaps that sounds like woman-scorned conjecture. Perhaps my husband looked into our children’s wet eyes, saw my DNA refracted back, and determined that our covetable family of four was something precious worth fighting for. After all, history doesn’t come cheap. After a year of ego-breaking joint-counseling, it’s still maddeningly unclear what myth-busting constellation propelled my Icarus back home, but it became painfully obvious that what drove him out of our marriage in the first place would not, and could not, go away: I was still me. No amount of reflective listening or positive spin or self-medication was going to change it: after forty-plus years, I’m pretty much a formed human being. I wasn’t going to get any smarter or more charming. Without surgical intervention, I wasn’t going to get any prettier. I wasn’t going to become less outspoken (my New Year’s post certainly didn’t help). And while I could try to be less inconsiderate or put out more, it would be a conscious and temporary effort. Plus, given the wounds of my public/private humiliation, my economy-size lifetime emotional U-Haul had ballooned into a crazy caravan; surely I was even less lovable now. In the end, I could make a beautiful home, and raise beautiful children, but fundamentally, my best friend no longer believed me to be his faithful Kimosabe, and likely never would again, not really. Without his unconditional love, hearth and home felt altogether bankrupt. And that’s why, after we both spent an exhausting year trying our damnedest, I worked up the courage to leave everything that formed my grown-up reality. As we put on a brave face and slogged through mediation, the kids sensed that our family had fallen into hospice. The party line, “Mommy and Daddy are working on becoming friends,” held them until the tension in the house became unbearable. After school one snowy day, over Rick Bayless’ dulce de leche cocoa, the kids pressed me hard, and unexpectedly, I veered dangerously off script. “Yes!” I blurted. “Mommy and Daddy are getting divorced, but we are always your parents, and we will always love you, and…” In slow-mo, my two angels careened into a deep, dark hole, like the skin-suit pit from Silence of the Lambs. Because of my failings, no ladder made by God or man could ever pull them back into childhood. And even more, I’d ruined hot chocolate, forever. This moment–from a woman who has suffered miscarriages, climbed glaciers, battled lupus and addiction, learned to walk again, and survived two decades of Chicago winters–has been, by far, the hardest thing I have ever endured. As legal maneuverings ground me into dust, I heard my über-zen pal Tracy whisper: “You have your kids seventy percent of the time; everything else is just stuff. Wish Eeyore well, and let it go.” So, impulsively, I traded my fine house for better running shoes and an open door. Since my income as a writer/artist/activist/mom is virtually non-existent, my soon-to-be ex reluctantly agreed to co-sign a lease on a nearby apartment (FYI: by the time Comcast deems you a credit risk, there’s no place to go but up). The very next day, taking only the chandelier and my clothes stuffed into garbage bags, I teetered down the street to my new place, like some kind of kooky Lake Shore Drive refugee. When I’d tell some well-meaning person the news of my move and impending divorce, their face would scrunch into tortured concern, until I learned to quickly follow it with, “But no worries; it’s all okay.” And then, they’d smile, and chime, “Congratulations!” Inevitably, some overly intimate conversation would follow in which they’d reveal the details of their own torrid affair, hushed-impotence, or prolonged Springeresque misery. Not that I’d mind; it was soothing to know that my own marriage was, by all accounts, very good (until suddenly, it wasn’t). Here’s the little secret I don’t tell them: Forty days and forty nights into my new life, I’m deliriously proud of myself for leaving my marriage without some Ibsen rescue at play. Up until last year, I didn’t know the difference between a 401K and 5K (forgive me Suze Orman), and I’m still not sure how I’m going hang on to my pie-in-the-sky dreams and simultaneously put real food on those imaginary tables, but I’ll figure it out. Hopefully, after the machinery of the state has run its ugly course, my husband and I will become friends again. For the kids’ sake, fingers crossed. In the meantime, as he navigates his new, more authentic self, I’ve managed to rediscover my long-lost Charlie girl. In my Chapter II apartment, one block and a world away, I heeded my daughter’s advice, and ditched my stale designer beige for Jonathan Adler fabulousity of electric blues, chocolate brown, and an orange so vibrant it almost pulsates. Writing here, under my salvaged chandelier, amidst funky thrift store finds, and jaw-dropping art on loan from my gallery pal Jennifer Norback; I can finally breathe. The place has a good vibe. But it’s not about the stuff, although the unchallenged self-expression helps: in these groovy rooms of my own, I hear Sandburg’s voice: “Nothing can harm you. Unless you turn yourself into a thing of harm, nothing can harm you.” Although my sage friend Lisa promised that we’d get to the other side, I never would have believed it: from my bedroom window, each morning I wake to the dog licking my face, and the sun rising over lake Michigan. I’m alone, but less alone than I was before. On “mom’s weeks,” my kids, still blistered and angry, jump into my giant, pristine white bed, with sleepy eyes, and, in spite of it all, kisses. We are healing. Slowly. And then, like clockwork, the three of us stumble into our Lemon Meringue kitchen, under the shimmering glitter of a disco ball, and make waffles.

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NHS waiting time increases may cost lives, doctors warn

Delays could mean illnesses reach stage where surgery or drugs cannot treat them, chair of BMA’s consultants committee says Patients could die because of rising NHS waiting lists for tests and treatment, the leader of Britain’s hospital doctors has warned. Delays in identifying conditions such as cancer may mean that a patient’s illness reaches the stage where surgery or drugs cannot save them, Dr Mark Porter told the Guardian. Porter, chairman of the British Medical Association’s consultants committee, said the growing delays were “inhumane” because the ensuing uncertainty added to patients’ fear and suffering. His remarks will add to the pressure on David Cameron, who has offered several recent personal guarantees that patients will not have to endure long waits to be treated. A Guardian analysis of official NHS data on England’s six main waiting time targets shows that five are increasingly being breached. The number of patients waiting more than six weeks for a diagnostic test such as an MRI scan has quadrupled in the last year, an extra 2,400 people a month are not being treated within 18 weeks, and 200,000 patients waited longer than four hours in A&E this year compared with the same period in 2010, the data reveals. The growing number not being tested or treated within the required time limits was of particular concern, Porter said. “If patients are now exceeding those times, then those patients’ treatment options are being limited, and if that happens then there’s a potential for patients suffering harm. “It may be that someone’s disease progresses beyond the point where surgery might usually give a cancer patient a potential cure, but the patient then receives palliative care only,” he said. Previous success in ensuring patients did not experience long waits was at risk from the government’s changes to the service and its £20bn efficiency drive, Porter said. “There’s definitely a potential for patient harm from these growing waiting time problems. Patients will be waiting with anxiety and pain longer than they should be. That’s inhumane.” Other medical leaders also expressed alarm. Professor Tim Evans, a vice-president of the Royal College of Physicians, said he was concerned about the small but growing number of cancer patients having to wait more than one or two months for treatment. “If you’ve just had a diagnosis of cancer, you want treatment as soon as possible, obviously. Therefore the fact that more patients are waiting longer, even small numbers, is a matter of great concern to clinicians. If you need treatment for cancer, the earlier you get it the better,” said Evans. “Patients having to wait more than 31 or 62 days for their first treatment would feel anxious and concerned and require reassurance that this isn’t going to affect their prognosis.” Doctors are also concerned that the number of patients waiting more than six weeks for a diagnostic test has risen from 3,378 to 15,667 in the last year. While only 2.7% of patients wait this long, the figure is 8.6% for those awaiting a colonoscopy and 8% for flexible sigmoidoscopy, another test for cancer. “Waiting times for diagnostic imaging tests are showing a worrying trend upward,” said the Royal College of Radiologists. “Radiologists and radiographers are trying their best to address the rise in waiting times for diagnostic imaging by working extended hours and weekends, but it is difficult to keep pace with increasing demand.” Professor Jon Rhodes, president of the British Society of Gastroenterology, said the rise in waits for procedures such as colonoscopy was “alarming”. He added: “No one should have to wait more than four weeks for a diagnostic colonoscopy, since delayed diagnosis is a major factor underlying the country’s relatively poor survival rates for colorectal cancer.” The NHS had too few endoscopists to cope with demand, he added. NHS data shows that while in May 2010, 337 patients had waited beyond six weeks for a colonoscopy, that had risen to 2,313 in May this year. Similarly, the number waiting past six weeks for flexible sigmoidoscopy has jumped from 87 to 1,199, and those waiting for echocardiography from 574 to 2,034 over the same period. Dr Peter Carter, general secretary of the Royal College of Nursing, warned that the government’s health policies were worsening the situation. Abolishing primary care trusts, the NHS bodies charged with ensuring patients are treated within time limits, had weakened patients’ rights, he said. Making more patients wait longer would prove to be “a false economy” for the NHS, as some would require more extensive treatment as a result, he said. The NHS’s deputy chief executive, David Flory, wrote to NHS providers last month warning them to improve “unacceptable” performance on the 18-week limit, after 47 trusts missed one or both targets involved and 32 did not meet the requirement to treat 95% of emergency patients within four hours of their arriving at A&E. New NHS data out later this week, and the latest quarterly NHS performance monitoring report from the King’s Fund thinktank, are expected to cast further doubt on promises – also made by the health secretary, Andrew Lansley – to keep waiting times low. The Department of Health denied that waiting times were becoming a problem. “Waiting times are low and have been broadly stable since 2008. The latest figures show that 90.5% of admitted patients and 97.5% of non-admitted patients started treatment in under 18 weeks,” said a spokeswoman. NHS Health Health policy Public services policy Denis Campbell James Ball guardian.co.uk

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