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Cancer research in ‘golden era’, says charity chief

Harpal Kumar believes ‘explosion’ in understanding of the disease could revolutionise treatment and reduce cost of drugs The head of the UK’s leading cancer charity has said understanding of the disease is advancing “exponentially”, as potentially groundbreaking trials to genetically test tumours of 9,000 newly diagnosed patients begin. Describing a “golden era” of research, Harpal Kumar, the chief executive of Cancer Research UK , said there has been “an explosion in our understanding of what cancer is, why it happens, why it doesn’t happen in some people and why it moves around the body”. The trials backed by the Department of Health and Cancer Research are being launched next month in seven hospitals across Britain. Scientists believe the results could revolutionise cancer treatments. They will aim to find out which existing drugs the cancers are susceptible to. They will also potentially pave the way for discoveries of new medicines that are personalised or targeted to the genetic makeup of an individual’s cancer and therefore far more effective. The two-year project is intended to lead to a full roll-out of genetic testing of tumours across the NHS. The government has given its backing to increased genetic testing as part of the national cancer plan, which Cancer Research believes will bring about a significant change in the way cancers are treated. Kumar said: “I’m not trying to present a utopian view that we know everything, because we don’t. But our knowledge is growing exponentially. We are learning vast amounts more as months go by. “It is not hyperbolic to say that this is the future of treatment. This is the future of medicine. This will not just be true in cancer but across medicine more generally.” Most medicines work in some people but not others. In some diseases, such as cancer, they work in only a relatively small proportion of patients. “People have known for years that we give treatment and it is only going to work for 20% of people and we are now on the cusp of finding out what is going on,” said Kumar. Just as each individual’s DNA is different, so is that of cancer tumours. In the trial beginning next month, tumour samples from patients with one of the commonest cancers – breast, bowel, lung, prostate, melanoma and ovarian – will be subjected to a series of tests. Some of these tests – for instance, the test for the HER2 enzyme in breast cancer which indicates that anti-tumour drug Herceptin will work – are already in regular use, but others are not. The trial will test the feasibility of introducing a low-cost panel of genetic tests for all cancer patients. But it will also accumulate an important database for researchers, by following what happens to the patients. The genetic makeup of the cancer influences not only which drugs will work, but how effective surgery and radiotherapy will be. It is also possible, says Kumar, that researchers will find that old or discarded drugs will work on certain patients, long after they were shelved because they had little impact on large populations. “The likelihood is that we have many of the tools already but we don’t know how to use them properly,” Kumar said. “We have lots of great drugs and know they work with lots of people, but not with other people. “There are also lots of drugs undoubtedly that have never made it to market because we couldn’t figure out which patients to use them for.” If pharmaceutical companies would not investigate them, he said, academics would. “Patents expire and molecules become available to everyone,” Kumar added. “This also applies to radiotherapy. It works for some people and not others. The real future will be figuring out which.” New cancer drugs come with huge price tags and can be rejected from the NHS by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (Nice) as too expensive for the benefit they offer. But targeting drugs to specific sub-groups, Kumar said, could bring the price down. “The problem at the moment is that it takes $1bn [£600m] to get a drug to market and 15 years or more. That is the justification for the pharmaceutical industry charging high prices. “If on the other hand by the time you get to phase 2 you know exactly which patients it is going to work on, you only put those patients through and instead of 10% you get an 80% response rate. “You get a licence on the basis of the data and don’t have to go to phase 3 [a trial involving thousands of people]. That saves vast sums of money and years of development. What that does to the business model is it means you can justify charging lower prices because it cost a lot less in the first place. “If we get this right, it changes the entire dynamics of the business model of the pharmaceutical industry.” Cancer Drugs Cancer NHS Health Sarah Boseley guardian.co.uk

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Dominique Strauss-Kahn set for return to French politics

Former presidential candidate in line to rejoin race if – as expected – New York sexual assault charges are dropped French Socialists are paving the way for Dominique Strauss-Kahn to return to politics if – as expected – charges of sexual assault against him in New York are dropped on Tuesday, leaving him free to fly home. Leading members of the Socialist party said a political comeback could be “envisaged” if the 62-year-old former head of the IMF wished to take part in next year’s presidential campaign. Strauss-Kahn was widely tipped to become the next president of France before he was arrested and charged with attacking a maid in a New York hotel four months ago. Over the weekend, lawyers for Strauss-Kahn’s accuser, Nafissatou Diallo, said she had been summoned to a meeting with prosecutors in New York ahead of a court hearing on Tuesday. Diallo’s lawyers said they were expecting prosecutors to tell her they were dropping the case. Although DSK, as he is known in France, missed the July deadline for taking part in the Socialist party’s election to select a candidate, the man who replaced him as favourite – François Hollande – opened the door on Monday for his return to politics. Speaking on French radio, Hollande said Strauss-Kahn’s return to politics “could be envisaged”. He told France-Inter Radio: “Whatever has been said, a man with the abilities of Dominique Strauss-Kahn can be useful to his country in the months and years to come.” . Asked whether Strauss-Kahn could take part in the Socialist primaries, he replied: “That depends on him.” Jean-Christophe Cambadélis, a friend of DSK, said it was too early to say what Strauss-Kahn would do. “It’s possible the charges will be suspended and Dominique Strauss-Kahn will be cleared,” he said. “This will be justice, because I believe he is innocent of the facts of which he is accused. “If he is cleared, let him reconstruct himself after the injustice that has been done to him.” Asked if Strauss-Kahn could hypothetically ask for the July deadline for candidates to be set aside and stand in the primaries, a party spokesman said: “It’s complicated.” He added: “He would need the agreement of all six candidates. It’s a very hypothetical situation.” Several party heavyweights, including Cambadélis and Pierre Moscovici, had previously suggested the deadline for candidates to declare should be delayed to allow DSK a chance to stand if cleared. Just as Strauss-Kahn’s arrest in May threw the French left into a state of shock and chaos, so his eventual return will almost certainly sow doubt and confusion when the Socialists gather for their annual party conference in the seaside resort of La Rochelle on Friday. Many of DSK’s closest supporters have since thrown their weight behind one of the six declared primary candidates. Hollande’s closest rival is Martine Aubry, who had concluded a secret agreement not to run against Strauss-Kahn for the party nomination before his arrest. The word most used in French newspapers and magazines on Monday was “blanchi”, which literally translates as whitened. As if to emphasise the point, Strauss-Kahn was pictured on the front page of France Soir wearing a whiter-than-white summer T-shirt. The newspaper referred to his “nightmare summer”, adding that DSK “intends to leave the United States with his head held high”. Strauss-Kahn’s biographer, Michel Taubmann – who is in regular contact with him – told France Soir: “He doesn’t want to rejoice too quickly. But for the first time we’ve spoken about other things than the case.” Even if he is set free, Strauss-Kahn is still facing a possible investigation in France where journalist and writer Tristane Banon, 32, has accused him of attempted rape . She claims he jumped on her and behaved like a “rutting chimpanzee” when she went to interview him in February 2003. A preliminary inquiry is being carried out by the prosecutor’s office to see if there is a case to answer. Strauss-Kahn’s lawyers have denied the claims and described the allegation as “fantasy”. Concentrating on the New York allegation, France Soir added: “The former presidential favourite is beginning to anticipate his return to home and, one day, to political life.” However, Jérôme Sainte-Marie, deputy director of the Paris-based opinion pollsters CSA, said the French may not be so willing to welcome him back with open arms. He told the Guardian: “Anything can happen, but I think there’s little chance he will be able to return to high level politics. It will be hard to turn back the clock.” According to CSA polls, before 13 May Strauss-Kahn was in a strong position to win next May’s presidential election against Nicolas Sarkozy. His popularity in the country stood at 50%, with 30-35% of those asked saying they would vote for him in the first round of the presidential election and 60-65% saying they would vote for him in the second round, giving him a clear victory. His popularity fell to 26% in June but rallied to 32% in July when doubts about the credibility of his accuser led to him being released from house arrest. His figures then dropped to a new low of 25% this month. There was little difference in the opinions of men and women. Sainte-Marie said: “The fact that 25% of people still have a good opinion of him after all we have learned is surprising, but he was enormously popular to start with. “The moral aspect of this doesn’t matter very much at all. French people don’t care about the sex or sentimental lives of their politicians – what does matter is a lack of credibility, a lack of seriousness, particularly at a time of financial storms.” Sainte-Marie said the French had “learned too much” about DSK, who before the incident in the Sofitel in New York had a reputation as a “chaud lapin” (hot bunny) and womaniser. “French people want someone reliable as president, and however brilliant he is they are not prepared to accept someone who cannot control himself or who puts his personal appetite before affairs of state,” Sainte-Marie said. Dominique Strauss-Kahn France Europe United States Kim Willsher guardian.co.uk

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UK riots were product of consumerism and will hit economy, says City broker

Analyst’s report points to ‘deeply flawed social ethos’ and calls for a shift of emphasis ‘from material to non-material values’ The recent riots in London and other big cities were the product of consumerism and will have profound impacts on the UK economy, a leading City broker has said. Unusually for City analysts, the report by Tullett Prebon focuses on social and political rather than economic issues. It says: “The consumerist ethos, in which a materialist vision is both peddled and, for the vast majority, simultaneously ruled out by exclusion, has extremely damaging consequences, both social and economic.” The report, by Tim Morgan, the firm’s global head of research, is part of a series in which the broker analyses bigger issues for the UK. Last month, Tullett Prebon issued a report on the UK’s economic situation as part of Morgan’s Project Armageddon. The latest report details recommendations to resolve what it sees as a political and economic malaise: new role models, policies to encourage savings, the channelling of private investment into creating rather than inflating assets, and greater public investment. “We conclude that the rioting reflects a deeply flawed economic and social ethos, one which acts as a common skein running through the themes of generational theft, recklessly borrowed consumption, the breakdown both of top-end accountability and of trust in institutions, and severe failings by governments over more than two decades.” The note pinpoints consumerism as the philosophy behind the riots. “Consumerism is the underlying message of the advertising and marketing industries, and huge budgets are devoted to pushing a message which, updated from Déscartes, is: ‘I buy, therefore I am.’ ” The typical internet user is subjected to one hundred advertisements an hour, the report says, and the underlying message received by many is: “Here’s the ideal. You can’t have it.” That has been accompanied by an inflation of government and private debt, a key theme of Dr Morgan’s other work. “The economy has been subjected to repeated ‘boom and bust’ cycles, above all in property. The overall pattern has been that an over-consuming West has borrowed and spent the surpluses of the increasingly productive and under-consuming East. “The dominant ethos of ‘I buy, therefore I am’ needs to be challenged by a shift of emphasis from material to non-material values. David Cameron’s ‘big society’ project may contribute to the inculcation of more socially-oriented values, but much more will need to be done to challenge the out-of-control consumerist ethos. “The government, too, needs to consume less, and invest more. Government spending has increased by more than 50% in real terms over the last decade, but public investment has languished. Saving needs to be encouraged, and private investment needs to be channelled into asset creation, not asset inflation.” Role models need to change, too: “A young person who tries to become the next Alan Sugar or James Dyson is as likely to fall short as if he or she sets out to become the next global football star. But… failure to become the next Alan Sugar can still leave a person well equipped for a career in management, finance or accountancy. Failure to emulate James Dyson will leave the aspirant with useful engineering or technological skills.” Economics UK riots US economic growth and recession Global economy David Cameron Alex Hawkes guardian.co.uk

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Assad should go for the sake of the Syrian people, says Nick Clegg

Deputy prime minister argues Syrian president is as ‘irrelevant’ to the country’s future as Muammar Gaddafi is to Libya’s Follow all the latest developments in the Middle East live blog The deputy prime minister has said Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad, is as “irrelevant” to the country’s future as Colonel Gaddafi is to Libya. In a speech on Monday afternoon setting out how he believed the UK should support developments in the Middle East, Nick Clegg issued tough words for leaders he acknowledged the west had once been wrong to support but should now turn their backs on. Echoing new tough language from the US president, Barack Obama, towards Assad, Clegg said: “For the sake of the Syrian people, it’s time for Assad to go. He is as irrelevant to Syria’s future as Gaddafi is to Libya’s.” He said while some regimes in north Africa and the Middle East had fallen, there remained urgent need for reform in Bahrain, while Yemen suffered a stalemate and Syria was in the grip of a single family which “continues to wage war on an entire nation”. “Different states were always going to move at a different pace, and in different ways. Oppressive regimes were never going to tumble like dominoes. Nor were they going to change their ways overnight,” said the deputy prime minister. “The picture is very mixed and there is uncertainty over where things will go next.” Instead the UK stood “shoulder-to-shoulder” with protesters in all Arab countries: “We believe in the same things these activists are fighting for: freedom, self-determination, human rights, the chance for people who work hard to succeed.” He was speaking as events moved rapidly in Libya with the prime minister returning from his holiday to monitor the rebels’ advances on Tripoli. Clegg suggested the international community would be unlikely to unite to put together another UN resolution that would see military action to remove the Assads from power in Syria but welcomed the progress made through the EU to tighten sanctions on the regime. Clegg was speaking very shortly after David Cameron made his own statement on developments in Libya, in which he refrained from triumphalism and emphasised how fragile he still believed the situation in Libya to be. Clegg said the UK “should learn the lessons from Iraq” and that the rebels’ advance into Tripoli was merely the beginning. “Today’s scenes should give heart to all of those struggling for their freedom … [But] Gaddafi’s departure will not be the end. It will be the beginning and we should not underestimate the challenges ahead,” he said. “The advances made by the Free Libya Forces in Tripoli would have been unthinkable just a few months ago. Unimaginable, even, for the generations of young Libyans who have never known a world without Gaddafi. Now that world is within their reach. “The momentum for change is breathtaking and, for the cynics who said change wasn’t possible, who had written off the Libyan uprising, written off the Arab spring, clearly, they were wrong.” He added: “The decision to support military intervention in Libya was not one the UK took lightly. Particularly not by those of us who opposed the invasion of Iraq. “We went to Libya with a clear humanitarian mandate. And tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of lives have been saved since. But, we also knew that inaction would have threatened the Arab spring as a whole. “And now, as the colonel’s fate closes in on him, what message does that send to other dictators who ignore their people’s demands?” Bashar Al-Assad Syria Middle East Nick Clegg Arab and Middle East unrest Muammar Gaddafi Libya Foreign policy Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk

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Assad should go for the sake of the Syrian people, says Nick Clegg

Deputy prime minister argues Syrian president is as ‘irrelevant’ to the country’s future as Muammar Gaddafi is to Libya’s Follow all the latest developments in the Middle East live blog The deputy prime minister has said Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad, is as “irrelevant” to the country’s future as Colonel Gaddafi is to Libya. In a speech on Monday afternoon setting out how he believed the UK should support developments in the Middle East, Nick Clegg issued tough words for leaders he acknowledged the west had once been wrong to support but should now turn their backs on. Echoing new tough language from the US president, Barack Obama, towards Assad, Clegg said: “For the sake of the Syrian people, it’s time for Assad to go. He is as irrelevant to Syria’s future as Gaddafi is to Libya’s.” He said while some regimes in north Africa and the Middle East had fallen, there remained urgent need for reform in Bahrain, while Yemen suffered a stalemate and Syria was in the grip of a single family which “continues to wage war on an entire nation”. “Different states were always going to move at a different pace, and in different ways. Oppressive regimes were never going to tumble like dominoes. Nor were they going to change their ways overnight,” said the deputy prime minister. “The picture is very mixed and there is uncertainty over where things will go next.” Instead the UK stood “shoulder-to-shoulder” with protesters in all Arab countries: “We believe in the same things these activists are fighting for: freedom, self-determination, human rights, the chance for people who work hard to succeed.” He was speaking as events moved rapidly in Libya with the prime minister returning from his holiday to monitor the rebels’ advances on Tripoli. Clegg suggested the international community would be unlikely to unite to put together another UN resolution that would see military action to remove the Assads from power in Syria but welcomed the progress made through the EU to tighten sanctions on the regime. Clegg was speaking very shortly after David Cameron made his own statement on developments in Libya, in which he refrained from triumphalism and emphasised how fragile he still believed the situation in Libya to be. Clegg said the UK “should learn the lessons from Iraq” and that the rebels’ advance into Tripoli was merely the beginning. “Today’s scenes should give heart to all of those struggling for their freedom … [But] Gaddafi’s departure will not be the end. It will be the beginning and we should not underestimate the challenges ahead,” he said. “The advances made by the Free Libya Forces in Tripoli would have been unthinkable just a few months ago. Unimaginable, even, for the generations of young Libyans who have never known a world without Gaddafi. Now that world is within their reach. “The momentum for change is breathtaking and, for the cynics who said change wasn’t possible, who had written off the Libyan uprising, written off the Arab spring, clearly, they were wrong.” He added: “The decision to support military intervention in Libya was not one the UK took lightly. Particularly not by those of us who opposed the invasion of Iraq. “We went to Libya with a clear humanitarian mandate. And tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of lives have been saved since. But, we also knew that inaction would have threatened the Arab spring as a whole. “And now, as the colonel’s fate closes in on him, what message does that send to other dictators who ignore their people’s demands?” Bashar Al-Assad Syria Middle East Nick Clegg Arab and Middle East unrest Muammar Gaddafi Libya Foreign policy Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk

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While campaigning President Obama promised to create 5 million “green” jobs, and shortly into his term he announced a “task force” to do just that. His stimulus package included tax credits for renewable energy companies, allotted funds for weatherization and more. Now with the economy once again on shaky ground the President may pivot back to jobs in September, specifically of the “green” variety. More than two years later after those initiatives began, the results are dismal. In fact a number of the very companies the Obama administration touted as future job creators have gone bankrupt or had to lay off employees instead. But you won’t hear about this from ABC, CBS and NBC very often. On NBC’s “Nightly News” Feb. 9, 2009, chief environmental affairs correspondent Anne Thompson reported from a solar panel plant in Greenville, Mich. She spoke with United Solar Ovonic’s CEO Mark Morelli and claimed that jobs were on the way. “ Today there are 380 jobs with 500 more coming ,” Thompson said. Thompson praised the green jobs efforts underway in Michigan saying, “New industries providing a green road map to give workers and the planet a better, more secure future.” What none of the three networks have reported is that despite the $37 million in tax incentives it received those Uni-Solar plants “ are running at a fraction of their full capacity and employment is well below projections ,” according to The Grand Rapids Press. As of May 2011, the Greenville plants NBC had praised in 2009 were employing only 285 workers and were facing potential layoffs as the parent company struggled. The Business & Media Institute analyzed the results of a Nexis search for the term “green jobs” and found only 4 stories out of 52 (roughly 8 percent) between Jan. 17, 2009 and Aug. 17, 2011 included any criticism. An additional 10 stories focused on Obama’s former green jobs “czar” Van Jones resignation (because of his 9/11 Truther views) were excluded from the analysis. Networks Praise ‘Green Jobs’ Ignore Inefficiency It came as no surprise that something as feel good as green jobs would earn praise from the networks. “We have gotten the message. Green-collar jobs are the wave of the future,” Diane Sawyer declared on April 15, 2009. Two years later we have seen that future and it is bleak. The national unemployment rate still stands at 9.1 percent. Millions of taxpayer dollars have been wasted and jobs have actually been lost. On Aug. 15, 2011, The Seattle Post-Intelligencer reported that their city’s green jobs program was a “bust.” Seattle had won a $20 million federal grant in 2010 to weatherize homes. The goals of the program were to create 2,000 jobs and retrofit 2,000 homes, according to the Seattle P-I. “But more than a year later, Seattle’s numbers are lackluster . As of last week, only three homes had been retrofitted and just 14 new jobs have emerged from the program,” Seattle P-I wrote. “Many of the jobs are administrative, and not the entry-level pathways once dreamed for low-income workers. Some people wonder if the original goals are now achievable.” Seattle isn’t alone. The Heritage Foundation noted in a blog post as Obama toured a battery plant in Holland, Mich. that another Michigan business touted by the administration for its “green jobs” no longer exists. Fisher Coachworks is out of business “just two years after it drew acclaim for being part of Michigan’s green future, despite millions in state taxpayer funding and a contract to sell buses to be purchased with federal taxpayers dollars,” Heritage’s Mike Brownfield wrote. An editorial from Investor’s Business Daily cited those examples and more: Green Vehicles – Salinas, Calif. Went out of business after spending more than $500,000 in city taxpayer dollars. Evergreen Solar Inc. Filed for bankruptcy Aug. 15, 2011, although the Obama administration touted it as “hoping to hire 90 to 100 people.” They had already shuttered a factory in March and cut 800 jobs. They also plan to shut down a plant in Michigan. Even the battery plant Obama toured on Aug. 11 should have been reported as an example of the inefficiency of taxpayer-subsidized “green jobs.” That Johnson Controls plant produced 150 jobs, with $300 million according to IBD. That breaks down to $2 million per job. While the networks have essentially ignored the disastrous results of Obama’s green jobs policies, print media (local and national) have admitted the failures. Even the Aug. 19, 2011, New York Times published an article by The Bay Citizen (a San Francisco news outlet) that reported: “Federal and state efforts to stimulate creation of green jobs have largely failed, government records show.” That Bay Citizen story cited the flawed weatherization program and pointed out that “Job training programs intended for the clean economy have also failed to generate big numbers.” In California, $59 million spent on training “led to only 719 placements — the equivalent of an $82,000 subsidy for each one.” Green Job Subsidies Don’t Work, Just Look at Spain Fundamentally, there were economic problems with Obama’s green jobs policies because the government picked winners and losers and tried to artificially create demand. When the subsidies stopped coming (and sometimes earlier) a number of businesses collapsed. Other programs took much longer than expected to implement, and have not come close to meeting their targets. The Obama administration and the media should have seen this coming. News networks (and all journalists) in particular had a responsibility to investigate the administration’s grand green jobs promises, question them and challenge them. But they usually didn’t despite evidence that green jobs programs are inefficient and cost jobs. In March 2009, Bloomberg reported the findings of a Spanish study about green jobs. The King Juan Carlos University study found that the green jobs push in Spain actually resulted in job destruction: costing at least 2.2 jobs per government-supported “green” job. The next month, Reuters.com ran an article about the study asking, “Do green jobs cannibalize other jobs?” Reuters quoted the author of the study, Gabriel Calzada, who wrote: “Spain’s experience cited by President Obama as a model reveals with high confidence by two different methods, that the U.S. should expect a loss of at least 2.2 jobs on average, or about 9 jobs lost for every 4 created.”

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Red Arrows crash: widow tells of ‘proud and devastating’ day

Widow Emma Egging says day of her husband’s crash was first time she had seen him take part in full Red Arrows display The widow of a Red Arrows pilot killed in a crash after performing in an air festival has said the day of the tragedy was the first time she had seen him take part in a full display. Flight Lieutenant Jon Egging died on Saturday when his plane plunged into a field on the outskirts of Bournemouth. His widow, Emma, visited a display of floral tributes at Bournemouth town hall and said: “I watched Jon do a full display for the first time and I was really proud. Watching him, I was the proudest I’ve ever been. Everything that happened at the same time was obviously completely devastating.” She paid tribute to her husband and said she had been “bowled over” by the public support. “Jon was an amazing person and pilot and an amazing friend and husband and the tributes that have poured in over the last two days to him have just been astounding,” she said. “He was a completely dedicated husband and friend and he was just there for everybody. He always gave his absolute most whether it was for his job or his home life.” An inquest was opened in Bournemouth and adjourned while investigators carry out an inquiry into the crash. There has been speculation that the plane might have hit a bird before it crashed. The RAF said it was too early to determine a cause. The coroner’s officer, Mike Humphries, said a postmortem examination showed the pilot died from multiple injuries. The 33-year-old pilot, who lived in Rutland, has been praised for apparently directing his plane, Red 4, away from homes. The aircraft ended up in a field with its nose in the river Stour. Egging was thrown from the plane and was found dead in the water. About 2,000 people have signed six books of condolence at the town hall. Plane crashes Military Steven Morris guardian.co.uk

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Red Arrows crash: widow tells of ‘proud and devastating’ day

Widow Emma Egging says day of her husband’s crash was first time she had seen him take part in full Red Arrows display The widow of a Red Arrows pilot killed in a crash after performing in an air festival has said the day of the tragedy was the first time she had seen him take part in a full display. Flight Lieutenant Jon Egging died on Saturday when his plane plunged into a field on the outskirts of Bournemouth. His widow, Emma, visited a display of floral tributes at Bournemouth town hall and said: “I watched Jon do a full display for the first time and I was really proud. Watching him, I was the proudest I’ve ever been. Everything that happened at the same time was obviously completely devastating.” She paid tribute to her husband and said she had been “bowled over” by the public support. “Jon was an amazing person and pilot and an amazing friend and husband and the tributes that have poured in over the last two days to him have just been astounding,” she said. “He was a completely dedicated husband and friend and he was just there for everybody. He always gave his absolute most whether it was for his job or his home life.” An inquest was opened in Bournemouth and adjourned while investigators carry out an inquiry into the crash. There has been speculation that the plane might have hit a bird before it crashed. The RAF said it was too early to determine a cause. The coroner’s officer, Mike Humphries, said a postmortem examination showed the pilot died from multiple injuries. The 33-year-old pilot, who lived in Rutland, has been praised for apparently directing his plane, Red 4, away from homes. The aircraft ended up in a field with its nose in the river Stour. Egging was thrown from the plane and was found dead in the water. About 2,000 people have signed six books of condolence at the town hall. Plane crashes Military Steven Morris guardian.co.uk

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The 50-state blog round-up has existed over the years in various forms. The idea is to take a look at state and local blogs in order to see what important things are going on in state politics and campaigns, to get a preview of what’s coming to the national stage and to recognize the work of great state and local bloggers. -New Hampshire: Blue Hampshire shows Rep. Fank Guinta getting schooled by a constituent. -New Jersey: Blue Jersey notes that Olympic hero Carl Lewis is running for state senate. -New Mexico: Democracy of New Mexico sayd five AFSCME locals in the state are bucking the national to endorse a grassroots candidate. -New York: The Albany Project says that State Sen. Greg Ball is an unlikely hero in the battle against fracking. -North Carolina: BlueNC applauds the courts stopping the state’s attack on Planned Parenthood. -North Dakota: North Decoder calls out state Republicans for focusing on state college nicknames instead of important issues. -Ohio: Plunderbund shoots down John Kasich’s claim that unions are divided in the state. -Oklahoma: Blue Oklahoma notes that the state’s child poverty rate has gone up. -Oregon: BlueOregon applauds Sen. Ron Wyden for his 600th town hall meeting. -Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania Progressive isn’t excited about Sen. Pat Toomey being named to the supercommittee. -Rhode Island: RI Future mourns the passing of state progressive leader Miguel C. Luna. -South Carolina: Haven’t found any progressive blogs for this state yet. -South Dakota: Haven’t found any progressive blogs for this state yet. -Tennessee: KnoxViews asks Gov. Bill Halsem where the jobs are. -Texas: Burnt Orange Report gathers the research on Rick Perry. -Utah: No recent posts to include. -Vermont: Green Mountain Daily thanks Gov. Peter Shumlin for meeting with progressives in the state. -Virginia: VB Dems says Gov. Bob McDonnell is auditioning to be vice president. -Washington: HorsesAss makes the case that unions are more grassroots than corporations and the wealthy. -West Virginia: West Virginia Blue links to a poll that sayd the majority of residents oppose mountain-top removal mining. -Wisconsin: Uppity Wisconsin says that finishing the job of taking control of the State Senate is more important than recalling Scott Walker. -Wyoming: Haven’t found any progressive blogs for this state yet. -Alabama: Left in Alabama notes that the state is in a race to the bottom in terms of getting rid of jobs. -Alaska: Mudflats points out that the state of Alaska is supporting efforts to silence Alaskans. -Arizona: Arizona Netroots asks where the green jobs are. -Arkansas: Blue Arkansas questions who the AFL-CIO supporots in state senate races. -California: Calitics isn’t surprised that Republicans are attacking the Democratic-proposed redistricting maps. -Colorado: Square State introduced progressive legislative candidate Tracy Kraft-Tharp. -Connecticut: CT News Junkie says there is a move to decertify AFSCME in the state. -Delaware: Delaware Liberal gives a rundown of legislative candidates for 2012. -Florida: Beach Peanuts lists the latest horrors from Gov. Rick Scott. -Georgia: Blog For Democracy says that the Georgia Republican Party is planning to purge white Democrats. -Hawaii: Haven’t found any progressive blogs for this state yet. -Idaho: 43rd State Blues notes that Sen. Jim Risch compared Barack Obama to Casey Anthony. -Illinois: Progress Illinois says that unions are calling on Gov. Pat Quinn to keep his word. -Indiana: Blue Indiana Network applauds John Gregg’s run for governor. -Iowa: Bleeding Heartland points to a story of environmental groups going after the Iowa Farm Bureau for harassment and intimidation. -Kansas: The Kansas Free Press says that unions are not happy about Gov. Sam Brownback’s proposed voluntary retirement incentives. -Kentucky: Page One notes Rand Paul’s flip-flopping on military spending cuts. -Louisiana: Daily Kingfish says that taxpayers are on the hook for $81,000 to defend the House redistricting map. -Maine: Dirigo Blue says that Republicans are up to their same old tricks in redistricting the state. -Maryland: Haven’t found any progressive blogs for this state yet. -Massachusetts: Blue Mass Group points out that Elizabeth Warren wants to talk to the voters and that the media isn’t happy about it. -Michigan: Michigan Liberal is skeptical about using volunteers to gather petitions for recall efforts. -Minnesota: The Minnesota Independent notes that same-sex couples are suing to overturn the state’s Defense of Marriage Act. -Mississippi: Haven’t found any progressive blogs for this state yet. -Missouri: Fired Up Missouri says that establishment Republicans are pulling away from scandal-plagued Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder. -Montana: Left in the West links to commentary that Rep. Denny Rehberg (R) is getting himself in trouble with veterans. -Nebraska: New Nebraska Network says that Republican U.S. Senate Candidate Jon Bruning has declared war on the poor and working class. -Nevada: Las Vegas Gleaner wishes prominent candidates would talk about the real issues we face like lesser knwon candidates do. The list used to create the post can be found here . If you know of a progressive state or local blog that isn’t on the list, e-mail me at quinnelk@hotmail.com and I’ll add it.

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The 50-state blog round-up has existed over the years in various forms. The idea is to take a look at state and local blogs in order to see what important things are going on in state politics and campaigns, to get a preview of what’s coming to the national stage and to recognize the work of great state and local bloggers. -New Hampshire: Blue Hampshire shows Rep. Fank Guinta getting schooled by a constituent. -New Jersey: Blue Jersey notes that Olympic hero Carl Lewis is running for state senate. -New Mexico: Democracy of New Mexico sayd five AFSCME locals in the state are bucking the national to endorse a grassroots candidate. -New York: The Albany Project says that State Sen. Greg Ball is an unlikely hero in the battle against fracking. -North Carolina: BlueNC applauds the courts stopping the state’s attack on Planned Parenthood. -North Dakota: North Decoder calls out state Republicans for focusing on state college nicknames instead of important issues. -Ohio: Plunderbund shoots down John Kasich’s claim that unions are divided in the state. -Oklahoma: Blue Oklahoma notes that the state’s child poverty rate has gone up. -Oregon: BlueOregon applauds Sen. Ron Wyden for his 600th town hall meeting. -Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania Progressive isn’t excited about Sen. Pat Toomey being named to the supercommittee. -Rhode Island: RI Future mourns the passing of state progressive leader Miguel C. Luna. -South Carolina: Haven’t found any progressive blogs for this state yet. -South Dakota: Haven’t found any progressive blogs for this state yet. -Tennessee: KnoxViews asks Gov. Bill Halsem where the jobs are. -Texas: Burnt Orange Report gathers the research on Rick Perry. -Utah: No recent posts to include. -Vermont: Green Mountain Daily thanks Gov. Peter Shumlin for meeting with progressives in the state. -Virginia: VB Dems says Gov. Bob McDonnell is auditioning to be vice president. -Washington: HorsesAss makes the case that unions are more grassroots than corporations and the wealthy. -West Virginia: West Virginia Blue links to a poll that sayd the majority of residents oppose mountain-top removal mining. -Wisconsin: Uppity Wisconsin says that finishing the job of taking control of the State Senate is more important than recalling Scott Walker. -Wyoming: Haven’t found any progressive blogs for this state yet. -Alabama: Left in Alabama notes that the state is in a race to the bottom in terms of getting rid of jobs. -Alaska: Mudflats points out that the state of Alaska is supporting efforts to silence Alaskans. -Arizona: Arizona Netroots asks where the green jobs are. -Arkansas: Blue Arkansas questions who the AFL-CIO supporots in state senate races. -California: Calitics isn’t surprised that Republicans are attacking the Democratic-proposed redistricting maps. -Colorado: Square State introduced progressive legislative candidate Tracy Kraft-Tharp. -Connecticut: CT News Junkie says there is a move to decertify AFSCME in the state. -Delaware: Delaware Liberal gives a rundown of legislative candidates for 2012. -Florida: Beach Peanuts lists the latest horrors from Gov. Rick Scott. -Georgia: Blog For Democracy says that the Georgia Republican Party is planning to purge white Democrats. -Hawaii: Haven’t found any progressive blogs for this state yet. -Idaho: 43rd State Blues notes that Sen. Jim Risch compared Barack Obama to Casey Anthony. -Illinois: Progress Illinois says that unions are calling on Gov. Pat Quinn to keep his word. -Indiana: Blue Indiana Network applauds John Gregg’s run for governor. -Iowa: Bleeding Heartland points to a story of environmental groups going after the Iowa Farm Bureau for harassment and intimidation. -Kansas: The Kansas Free Press says that unions are not happy about Gov. Sam Brownback’s proposed voluntary retirement incentives. -Kentucky: Page One notes Rand Paul’s flip-flopping on military spending cuts. -Louisiana: Daily Kingfish says that taxpayers are on the hook for $81,000 to defend the House redistricting map. -Maine: Dirigo Blue says that Republicans are up to their same old tricks in redistricting the state. -Maryland: Haven’t found any progressive blogs for this state yet. -Massachusetts: Blue Mass Group points out that Elizabeth Warren wants to talk to the voters and that the media isn’t happy about it. -Michigan: Michigan Liberal is skeptical about using volunteers to gather petitions for recall efforts. -Minnesota: The Minnesota Independent notes that same-sex couples are suing to overturn the state’s Defense of Marriage Act. -Mississippi: Haven’t found any progressive blogs for this state yet. -Missouri: Fired Up Missouri says that establishment Republicans are pulling away from scandal-plagued Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder. -Montana: Left in the West links to commentary that Rep. Denny Rehberg (R) is getting himself in trouble with veterans. -Nebraska: New Nebraska Network says that Republican U.S. Senate Candidate Jon Bruning has declared war on the poor and working class. -Nevada: Las Vegas Gleaner wishes prominent candidates would talk about the real issues we face like lesser knwon candidates do. The list used to create the post can be found here . If you know of a progressive state or local blog that isn’t on the list, e-mail me at quinnelk@hotmail.com and I’ll add it.

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