Click here to view this media It may not be clear which candidate won the Republican presidential candidate in Iowa Thursday, but Fox News host Chris Wallace might be the obvious loser. Wallace found himself being booed by a crowd that didn’t appreciate the relatively tough questions he posed to Newt Gingrich. “Speaker Gingrich, one of the ways we judge a candidate is the campaign they run,” Wallace explained. “In June, your entire staff resigned along with your staff here in Iowa. They said you were undisciplined in campaigning and fundraising. Last report you were a million dollars in debt. How do you respond to people who say that your campaign has been a mess so far?” “I wish you would put aside the gotcha questions,” Gingrich shot back as the audience booed Wallace. “I would love to see the rest of tonight’s debate asking us what we would do to lead an America whose president has failed to lead, instead of playing Mickey Mouse games.”
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Mitt Romney just didn’t have a terrific day, no matter how he and Fox try to spin it. Here is his “out of the gate” remark when asked about “the deal” Congress and President Obama agreed to on the debt ceiling during last night’s debate. BAIER: …with Congresswoman Bachmann and Congressman Paul in being against that final compromise deal. So to phrase it another way, if you were President, you would have vetoed that bill? ROMNEY: Look, I’m not going to eat Barack Obama’s dog food, all right? What he served up was not what I would have done if I’d have been President of the United States. Well, let’s look at what they wouldn’t have done, shall we? Here are all eight candidates vowing they would have rejected a deal that was one dollar of tax cuts to every ten dollars of spending. Amazing. The visual should make a great ad. Click here to view this media Oh, and by the way. I’m fairly certain Mitt Romney’s dog wouldn’t eat the dog food he was serving either after being crated and strapped to the top of the family car a few years back. Just another dogfood day.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Mitt Romney just didn’t have a terrific day, no matter how he and Fox try to spin it. Here is his “out of the gate” remark when asked about “the deal” Congress and President Obama agreed to on the debt ceiling during last night’s debate. BAIER: …with Congresswoman Bachmann and Congressman Paul in being against that final compromise deal. So to phrase it another way, if you were President, you would have vetoed that bill? ROMNEY: Look, I’m not going to eat Barack Obama’s dog food, all right? What he served up was not what I would have done if I’d have been President of the United States. Well, let’s look at what they wouldn’t have done, shall we? Here are all eight candidates vowing they would have rejected a deal that was one dollar of tax cuts to every ten dollars of spending. Amazing. The visual should make a great ad. Click here to view this media Oh, and by the way. I’m fairly certain Mitt Romney’s dog wouldn’t eat the dog food he was serving either after being crated and strapped to the top of the family car a few years back. Just another dogfood day.
Continue reading …Increase follows health secretary Andrew Lansley’s abolition of specific targets for NHS waiting times The number of patients waiting more than four hours for treatment in accident and emergency departments has almost doubled in the space of a year, the latest statistics reveal. Figures show 161,422 patients were left waiting over four hours for “major A&E” treatment between April and June 2011 – 91% more than during the same period in 2010. A broader measure including minor injuries units and walk-in centres was also up 90%, to 165,279. The increases come despite a slight fall in the number of patients using A&E services, from 3.6 million to 3.58 million, scotching past Department of Health assertions that the longer waits were down to increased pressure on services. Around 3% of patients (one in 33) using A&E, minor injury units and walk-in centres waited more than four hours, rising to 5.5% (one in 17) of patients in A&E only. A year ago, those figures stood at 1.5% and 2.5% respectively. The increases follow the health secretary Andrew Lansley’s abolition of the specific target for NHS waiting times. NHS Trusts had previously been mandated to ensure no patient waited more than four hours, and were set an “operational” goal of 98% of patients seen within that time. Lansley axed the wider goal and reduced the operational target to 95%. The Department of Health insisted waiting times were stable: “These figures show that the vast majority of patients, 97%, are still being seen at A&E within four hours. We replaced the old four-hour A&E target because doctors said it was not in patients’ best interest. “For the first time, we are measuring the overall quality of care in A&E, as well as the time spent in A&E, which allows doctors to decide what is best for their patients. These figures confirm that, through this change, waiting times remain low and stable.” But the latest statistics seem to show an acceleration of the worsening trend in A&E waits. The previous set of NHS data, released in April, showed a 63% year-on-year rise in patients waiting four hours for treatment. The quarter before was roughly the same level, with long waits up 67% on 12 months earlier.. The latest figures show 91% more four-hour plus wait times than a year before. The trend mirrors growing waiting times across the NHS. Figures released last month showed the number of patients waiting more than 18 weeks for treatment – a target enshrined in the NHS constitution – had increased 33.5% year-on-year, with 27,834 patients waiting longer than that in May alone. This came despite a pledge from David Cameron that the 18-week target would be retained. Figures released on Monday regarding waits for diagnostic treatments such as MRI scans and colonoscopies showed an even stronger trend. In June, more than 12,521 people waited more than six weeks for key diagnostic tests, more than three times the 3,510 left waiting that long a year before. The number of patients waiting more than three months for diagnostic procedures rose still further, up nine-fold year-on-year, to 1,763 from 190. However, the total number of diagnosis procedures carried out was up year-on-year, hitting 1.37m in June 2011, 5% more than the same month a year before. NHS Health Health policy Public services policy James Ball guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Prime minister’s own police reform bill and clampdown on immigration may thwart appointment of former New York top cop David Cameron’s hopes of installing former US police chief Bill Bratton as head of the Metropolitan police may be thwarted by the prime minister’s own police reform bill and clampdown on immigration, the Guardian has learned. The deadline for applications for the job was supposed to be Friday but it has been put back because this week’s riots have consumed the time of Britain’s police leadership. Who succeeds Sir Paul Stephenson in the UK’s most senior police role is part of the wider clash between Cameron and police bosses. The war of words between No 10 and Scotland Yard over the tactics used to deal with this week’s riots continued yesterday and is just the latest in a series of disputes to poison relations between the Conservatives and the police. The unprecedented private and public row, plus the loss of two Met commissioners in two and a half years, is said by police chiefs to be deterring British-born senior officers from applying for the job. It emerged last week that Cameron was interested in appointing Bratton, who headed forces in New York and Los Angeles, As a US citizen he may, however, be blocked by the police and social responsibility bill currently going through parliament. It states that the Met commissioner must hold the office of “constable”. Bratton, who has never served in the British police, is not a constable. He could be sworn in but would then face another obstacle. Those who hold the office of constable who are not British citizens must have been granted immigration status allowing them to remain in the UK indefinitely. The government has said it will restrict the numbers of people being granted permission to stay in Britain indefinitely to restrict immigration. The advert placed for the vacancy by the Home Office states only a British citizen can become Met commissioner, although the prime minister’s keenness for the US police veteran has led to speculation that that clause could be dropped. The worst riots to hit Britain in living memory have again shaken up the field of candidates. It is understood that former Met assistant commissioner Steve House is strongly considering applying. House is seen as having done a good job since leaving London to lead the Strathclyde force. He may choose to apply for the Met job, even though he would be the frontrunner to be the new chief of a single Scottish force, which is being considered. Cameron’s favourite British contender, Sara Thornton, is said to be unsure about applying. She is chief constable of the Thames Valley force which covers the constituencies of the PM and home secretary. Sir Hugh Orde, president of the Association of Chief Police Officers, came second last time round. He would probably be the choice of the police service and has been robust in defending it against the government. But one insider with knowledge of Whitehall thinking said that outspokenness and a perception that he “shoots from the hip” might cost him the job, which is essentially decided by the mayor of London and the home secretary. “He criticises the government almost every day. That does not endear him. In fact he did it again today, and yesterday.” Cameron is impressed by the current acting Met deputy Bernard Hogan-Howe, who was seconded into the force by the home secretary after Stephenson was forced out by his errors of judgment in the phone-hacking scandal. Hogan-Howe is a former head of Merseyside police who even critics say “looks the part”, but some officers worry whether he could handle the politicians and the politics. Tim Godwin, serving his second spell as acting Met commissioner, is seen as able, but the damage of police mishandling earlier this week as riots hit, has not helped his chances, which beforehand even admirers thought were slimmer than they ought to be. A long list of candidates will be drawn up shortly, which may also include Peter Neyroud, formerly of the National Policing Improvement Agency. It will then be whittled down to a list of two. Relations between the Tories and the Met leadership started to nosedive after Boris Johnson was elected London’s mayor in May 2009. His top policing aide, Kit Malthouse, annoyed top officers who claimed he was interfering on their sacred turf, namely operational matters. In September 2009 Malthouse told the Guardian that the Tories “have our hands on the tiller” of Scotland Yard, which infuriated its leadership. He backed down, but last month’s demise of Stephenson means Johnson has seen two commissioners resign in under three years, after none had done so for over a century. Nationally the Tories in opposition angered police chiefs with their plans for elected commissioners which were branded as an attempt to install political control of policing. Friction between the police and government in England and Wales was already high over the imposition of eight different reform reviews, even before senior ministers damaged relations further by appearing to claim credit for forcing the police to take a tougher line with the rioters. The Hutton review is set to force through increases in police contributions to pensions costing £349 to £1,169 a year for constables. The Neyroud review into police leadership is proposing a new professional body for policing responsible for the key national standards, qualification frameworks, and leadership and training. The two parts of the Winsor review are looking at conditions of service and opening up recruitment. Next year the government intends to hold elections for police and crime commissioners to oversee chief constables, a move likely to cost £100m that has already provoked a furious response at what is seen as the politicisation of the police. Other inquiries include the Leveson inquiry into the role of the Met in failing to investigate wrongdoing at News International. Elizabeth Filkin, a former parliamentary commissioner for standards, is inquiring into the ethical considerations that should underpin relationships between police and media and how to ensure maximum transparency. Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary is to consider instances of undue influence, inappropriate contractual arrangements and other abuses of power in police relationships with the media and other parties. The Home Office is also to inquire into whether the Independent Police Complaints Commission should have further powers, including whether it should be given the power to question civilian witnesses during the course of its investigations. The IPCC may also be given a greater role in investigating allegations about institutional failings of a force or forces. At the same time the police are facing cuts in their budgest that HMIC has said will lead to cuts in 16,000 police officers by the end of the four year spending review. At the time of the news international crisis, Cameron made no attempt to hide the breadth of of his police reform programme saying the ” police system is too closed. There is only one point of entry into the force. There are too few-and arguably too similar-candidates for the top jobs. I want to see radical proposals for how we can open up our police force and bring in fresh leadership. We need to see if we can extend that openness to the operational side too. Why should all police officers have to start at the same level? Why should someone with a different skill set not be able to join the police force in a senior role? The emergency debate on Thursday on the riot saw a large number of Conservative MPs wade into police inadequacy. The fiercest criticsm has come from the former shadow home secretary David Davis who acused the Met has stumbled from one blunder to another. The result:its reputation and its confidence has been severely damaged. For a decade we’ve seen the consequences of the Met’s flawed counter terrorism strategy and now London is suffering as a result of its failure to tackle gang culture and control the riots. ” Police UK riots David Cameron Liberal-Conservative coalition Vikram Dodd Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Appearing at the Iowa Republican presidential debate Thursday, Rick Santorum advocated for outlawing abortions even in the case of rape because “one violence is enough.” “Would you allow no exceptions for cases of rape on incest?” Fox News host, Byron York asked. “Polls have shown that large majorities of Americans support some exceptions for abortion. Are your views too much, even for many conservatives to support?” “That child is an innocent victim,” Santorum replied. “To be victimized twice would be a horrible thing. It is an innocent human life, genetically human from the moment of conception. We in America should be big enough to try to surround ourselves and help women in those terrible situations who have been traumatized already. To put them through another trauma of an abortion, I think is too much to ask. So I would absolutely stand and say that one violence is enough.”
Continue reading …Editor's Note: Mr. Bozell will be on Fox News's “Your World with Neil Cavuto” around 4:45 p.m. EDT today to discuss the Wisconsin recall results and may also give his thoughts on last night's Republican presidential debate. “These [Wisconsin] protests were supposed to be the rebirth of the Left going into the 2012 campaign” and yet when the “unions threw everything they had” they came up short of taking the state senate from Repubilcans, NewsBusters publisher Brent Bozell noted on today's “Fox & Friends.” Because the effort completely fizzled, it's no surprise the liberal broadcast media spent very little time reporting the results of Tuesday's recall election. “This was a huge Republican victory that nobody heard about,” the Media Research Center founder added. [video embedded below page break]
Continue reading …Editor's Note: Mr. Bozell will be on Fox News's “Your World with Neil Cavuto” around 4:45 p.m. EDT today to discuss the Wisconsin recall results and may also give his thoughts on last night's Republican presidential debate. “These [Wisconsin] protests were supposed to be the rebirth of the Left going into the 2012 campaign” and yet when the “unions threw everything they had” they came up short of taking the state senate from Repubilcans, NewsBusters publisher Brent Bozell noted on today's “Fox & Friends.” Because the effort completely fizzled, it's no surprise the liberal broadcast media spent very little time reporting the results of Tuesday's recall election. “This was a huge Republican victory that nobody heard about,” the Media Research Center founder added. [video embedded below page break]
Continue reading …Editor's Note: Mr. Bozell will be on Fox News's “Your World with Neil Cavuto” around 4:45 p.m. EDT today to discuss the Wisconsin recall results and may also give his thoughts on last night's Republican presidential debate. “These [Wisconsin] protests were supposed to be the rebirth of the Left going into the 2012 campaign” and yet when the “unions threw everything they had” they came up short of taking the state senate from Repubilcans, NewsBusters publisher Brent Bozell noted on today's “Fox & Friends.” Because the effort completely fizzled, it's no surprise the liberal broadcast media spent very little time reporting the results of Tuesday's recall election. “This was a huge Republican victory that nobody heard about,” the Media Research Center founder added. [video embedded below page break]
Continue reading …Russian PM ‘discovers’ two amphorae in shallow waters on the floor of the Black Sea in latest stage of televised heroics When a scuba-diving Vladimir Putin found two ancient Greek urns on the floor of the Black Sea this week, it seemed a startling discovery. In his latest spurt of televised heroics, the Russian prime minister raised a triumphant thumb as he circled the pair of amphorae in shallow waters off the Taman peninsula near Ukraine. The find came to “everyone’s utter surprise”, claimed the slavishly devotional Russia Today and other state-controlled TV channels. Once on dry land, Putin posed in his wetsuit with a jug in each hand. But independent media and Russia’s lively blogosphere are now ridiculing the incident, in a sign of increasing weariness of Putin’s macho photo ops – such as bare-chested fishing, piloting a “water bomber” over forest fires and diving to the bottom of lake Baikal in a mini-submarine. Critics said Putin’s pots were suspiciously unmossy and were probably planted specially for him to discover. “Diving in the Taman gulf, the Russian prime minister immediately found two amphorae that had been waiting for him since the 6th century AD at a depth of two metres,” wrote the Novaya Gazeta newspaper in an editorial dripping with sarcasm. “He was lucky: in the same place, over the last two years archaeologists and divers of the Russian Academy of Sciences managed to find only a few pottery shards.” Putin’s visit was meant to highlight the work of Russian scientists exploring the remains of an ancient Greek city, Phanagoria, sometimes called “Russia’s Atlantis”. The site is not far from Sochi, the Black Sea resort that will host the 2014 Winter Olympic Games, and authorities hope to develop its tourism potential. Yet critics saw the dive as another farcical stunt designed to boost Putin’s image before elections in December and March. “We have become witnesses of a remake of The Brilliant Hand and the famous fishing scene at the white cliff,” said radio host Anton Orekh, referring to a scene from a Soviet film in which a diver attaches fish to an angler’s hook in order to simulate a plentiful catch. Russia Vladimir Putin Tom Parfitt guardian.co.uk
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