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Eight newspapers pay libel damages to Christopher Jefferies

Eight national newspapers have made public apologies today to Christopher Jefferies for the libellous allegations made against him following the murder of Joanna Yeates, The titles – The Sun, Daily Mirror, Sunday Mirror, Daily Record, Daily Mail, Daily Star, The Scotsman and Daily Express – have also agreed to pay him substantial libel damages, thought to total six figures. The solicitor for Mr Jefferies, Louis Charalambous, told Mr Justice Tugendhat in the high court hearing that the newspapers had acknowledged the falsity of the allegations, which were published in more than 40 articles. Ms Yeates, a Bristol architect, was killed in December last year. After her body was discovered, Mr Jefferies, who was her landlord, was arrested by police. In subsequent days, into early January, the newspapers ran a series of articles about Mr Jefferies that were inaccurate and defamatory. Charalambous, of Simons Muirhead and Burton, said after today’s hearing: “Christopher Jefferies is the latest victim of the regular witch hunts and character assassination conducted by the worst elements of the British tabloid media. Many of the stories published in these newspapers are designed to ‘monster’ the individual, in flagrant disregard for his reputation, privacy and rights to a fair trial. These newspapers have now apologised to him and paid substantial damages.” Bambos Tsiattalou, the solicitor who advised Mr Jefferies after he was taken into police custody, said that the media were given a fair warning to be careful about what they published. He said: “We warned the media by letter, immediately following Mr Jefferies’ arrest, in the strongest possible terms to desist from publishing stories which were damaging or defamatory. “We were dismayed that our warnings went unheeded and are pleased that the newspapers in settling Mr Jefferies’ claims have acknowledged the extent of the damage to his reputation.” The papers’ publishers – News International, Trinity Mirror, Daily Mail & General Trust, Express Newspapers and Johnston Press – will now have to fork out substantial sums in damages and legal fees. But Charalambous pointed out that once the rules over conditional fee (no win, no fee) agreements change next year, “the victims of tabloid witch hunts will no longer have the same access to justice.” Joanna Yeates National newspapers Newspapers Daily Mirror Media law Roy Greenslade guardian.co.uk

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European debt crisis: Spain downgrade threat unsettles markets

Dragged down by banking stocks, Spain’s Ibex index lost over 130 points to 9526.5, a fall of 1.36%, while Italy’s FTSE MIB dipped 1.5%. Germany’s Dax and France’s CAC both fell 1.1% Financial markets face more turmoil after Moody’s put Spain’s Aa2 credit rating on review for possible downgrade while US debt talks are still deadlocked. The news sent the euro falling and stock markets in London and the eurozone down. The euro fell 0.5% to $1.4265. Dragged down by banking stocks, Spain’s Ibex index lost over 130 points to 9526.5, a fall of 1.36%, while Italy’s FTSE MIB dipped 1.5%. Germany’s Dax and France’s CAC both fell 1.1%. In London, the FTSE 100 index opened more than 50 points lower at 5819, fall of 0.9%. The US debt crisis is escalating: US lawmakers postponed a crucial vote on a budget deficit plan last night, heightening concerns over a likely debt default. After chaotic scenes in the House of Representatives , the Republicans who control the House called it a night and scheduled an emergency meeting for Friday morning. “I am no longer sure if this is reality or I am watching a Hollywood summer blockbuster,” said Gary Jenkins, head of fixed income research at Evolution Securities. “With no resolution with regard to the US debt ceiling and with continuing contagion in the European government debt market it is clearly time for the safe haven trade.” He joked: “I will be away for a few days watching the markets from a safe distance and no doubt by the time I return Captain America will have sorted the debt ceiling and the EU will be making plans for ‘Mamma Mia 2 – back to Greece’.” The dollar came under pressure on Friday morning, dropping to a four-month low against the yen. “This is a very serious situation. As long as the wrangling over the US debt ceiling continues, the dollar/yen will be vulnerable to further falls,” Osamu Takashima, chief forex strategist at Citibank in Tokyo told Reuters. In Europe, concern is growing that Spain, the eurozone’s fourth-largest economy, hamstrung by meagre growth and high unemployment, will fail to put its finances in order and need a Greek-style bailout. Nervousness among international investors has sent Spanish government bond yields to their highest level in over a decade. Having fallen below 6% a week ago on relief about the Greek bailout, the yield on 10-year bonds rose again this week to hit 6.158% on Friday morning. Italian yields climbed to 5.934%. Moody’s said last week’s Greek package set a precedent for private sector participation in future debt restructurings in the eurozone. The credit rating agency added that a downgrade is likely to be limited to one notch. It explained: “Firstly, the continued funding pressures facing the Spanish government, which the precedent set for future euro area support arrangements by the official package for Greece is likely to exacerbate, and the resulting increase in risks to bondholders. “Secondly, the challenges posed to the government’s fiscal consolidation efforts by the weak growth environment and the continued fiscal slippage among several regional governments.” The Spanish government has set a deficit target of 1.3% of GDP for the country’s 17 regions for this year and next, but some of their new governors say this will be impossible due to their predecessors’ fiscal mismanagement. Moody’s Aa2 rating for Spain is in line with S&P’s AA setting, while Fitch has the country one notch higher at AA+. All have negative outlooks. European debt crisis Europe US economy United States Spain Market turmoil Stock markets Ratings agencies Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk

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Libyan rebels fear rift after death of Abdel Fatah Younis

Questions raised over circumstances of Younis’s death amid speculation he may have been killed by gunmen on his own side The death of the Libyan rebels’ chief of army staff, Abdel Fatah Younis, has raised fears of a rift within opposition forces amid speculation that he may have been killed by gunmen on his own side. The president of the National Transition Council (NTC), Abdul Mustafa Jalil, announced on Thursday night that Younis had been assassinated by pro-Gaddafi agents but the lack of detail, and the fact that earlier that day he had been arrested on the orders of Jalil, has led raised questions about the circumstances of his death. Jalil said that rebels had arrested the head of the group behind the attack but the bodies of Younis, Muammar Gaddafi’s former interior minister, and two colonels also killed in the alleged ambush, have not been found. The rebels said earlier on Thursday that Younis had been arrested on suspicion that his family might still have ties to the Gaddafi regime and rumours swirled that he was involved in unauthorised contact with the administration he dramatically abandoned in February or had even helped to supply Gaddafi troops with weapons . Before the announcement of his death, armed men declaring their support for Younis appeared on the streets of Benghazi, claiming they would use force to free him from NTC custody. Minutes after Jalil’s statement at a chaotic late-night press conference at a hotel in Benghazi, gunfire broke out in the street outside with members of Younis’s tribe, the Obeidi, one of the largest in the east, firing machine guns, smashing windows and forcing security guards and hotel guests to duck for cover. The discord comes just a day after the foreign secretary, William Hague, said that Britain would recognise the NTC as the legitimate government of Libya and painted a rosy picture of the opposition forces in Libya, praising their “increasing legitimacy, competence and success” . Adding to the confusion, a security officer, Fadlallah Haroun, told the Associated Press before Jalil’s announcement that security had found three badly burned bodies. Two of them were dead and one was unconscious, Fadlallah said, adding that one was known to be Younis, though they didn’t know which one. Jalil said Younis had been “summoned” for questioning on “a military matter”, but that he had not yet been questioned when he was killed. He said it was “with regret” he had to announce the death of general Younis. Jalil called him “one of the heroes of the 17th of February revolution” but he was not universally trusted within opposition ranks. Many were suspicious of his past links to the Gaddafi regime and troops in the besieged city of Misrata have conspicuously refused to accept orders from him, to the extent of insisting that their fighters are not part of the Benghazi-controlled national army. Younis reportedly nearly came to blows with his rival for the army command, Klalifa Hefter, during a meeting in late March. For much of that month both men claimed to be in command of the ragtag rebel forces as they raced west towards Tripoli, only to be thrown back towards Benghazi in chaos and confusion. By April, Younis had won the political battle inside the NTC and was confirmed as chief of staff but he failed to use his new position to bring victory on the battlefield. Since April, the frontline has remained largely in stalemate, despite heavy Nato bombing of government forces around the key oil town of Brega. Younis was one of Gaddafi’s most trusted officials and confidants. The general’s friendship with Gaddafi dated from 1969 when he joined a group of fresh-faced army officers in deposing Libya’s king. But when riots came to the streets of Benghazi in February, he dramatically switched sides, joining the rebels and bringing the city’s interior ministry military brigade with him. Libya Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Muammar Gaddafi Africa Haroon Siddique Chris Stephen guardian.co.uk

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US debt crisis: Republicans abandon vote as deadline looms

New delay in US debt crisis as John Boehner, the Republican leader in the House, fails to persuade enough hardline conservatives to support his bill Hopes of the US debt crisis being resolved soon began to recede on Thursday night when the Republicans humiliatingly failed to get even their own bill through the House, exposing deep divisions within their own party. The Republican leader in the House, John Boehner, had to abandon the attempt on Thursday night after failing to persuade enough hardline conservatives to support his bill. He may try again on Friday. The incident demonstrated the power of these hardline conservatives, many of them elected last November with the backing of the Tea Party movement. The vote fiasco added to the sense of chaos and confusion as time was running out for a deal to resolve the debt crisis. With Boehner unable to control his own members, the chances of compromise with the Democrats could be harder to achieve. The episode may unnerve global markets still hoping for an eventual compromise. The White House is beginning to make emergency plans for the 2 August deadline to avoid the US defaulting on its borrowing for the first time in its history, a move that could throw the US and world economy into turmoil. Boehner had promised earlier in the day there would be a vote on Thursday on a bill to raise the $14.3 trillion($8.7tn) debt ceiling and cutting billions in spending. But Boehner found he could not win over enough of the conservatives to secure the 216 votes needed to get his new bill through the Republican-controlled House. Boehner, scheduled a vote for 6pm in the evening on a new bill. To the embarrassment of Boehner, he had to postpone the vote for hours as he tried to persuade enough Republicans to pass his bill. Eventually, at 10pm, the House majority Kevin McCarthy told reporters that the vote had been abandoned for the night. Even if the bill had been passed, Democrats in the Senate said they would kill it, as did the White House. Fifty-one Democratic members of the Senate, a majority, published a letter pledging to vote against the House bill. Democrats in the Senate are preparing a bill of their own but the chances are Republicans in the House would vote that down too. Global markets, initially sanguine about the crisis and confident of an eventual compromise, were increasingly jittery yesterday. There were early market falls but US stocks gained and the dollar rose during the day, buoyed by unexpectedly good unemployment figures. The Democratic leader in the Senate, Harry Reid, warned: “Default will rock our financial system to its core.” He expressed hope that there could still be a deal. “Magic things can happen here in Congress in a very short period of time under the right circumstances,” he said. The White House, too, expressed optimism that a compromise could be reached. Negotiations are continuing in private between the White House and senior Republicans and Democrats on a possible short-term emergency deal. But the White House spokesman Jay Carney admitted that, in the event there is no deal, the treasury would explain its plans in detail before 2 August. Carney said: “As we get closer to that date, the treasury will explain how it will manage a situation that is impossible.” He acknowledged for the first time that the uncertainty was already causing harm to the US economy. The White House will almost certainly make its priority paying interest on its debts so that the US does not default for the first time in its history. But the consequence could be delaying monthly payments to federal workers, soldiers and other employees, and millions of cheques to social security recipients, veterans and others. The treasury said it would release details in the coming days regarding which payments will take priority over others. It makes an average of 80m payments a month. It also said it would go ahead with its regular weekly auction of three-month and six-month treasury bills on Monday – a day before the deadline. The money raised from that auction will go towards redeeming $87m in securities that will mature on 4 August. The treasury said this operation would not breach the current borrowing limit. Treasury secretary Timothy Geithner has said that after Tuesday he will have exhausted all the manoeuvres he can use to clear room under the current $14.3tn borrowing limit. The government reached its borrowing limit in May. The US needs to borrow $125bn in new debt each month, in addition to $500bn in maturing debt that it must refinance each month. The debt debate is creating bitter divisions inside the Republican party, between the newer members of Congress elected last November with the support of the Tea Party movement, which campaigned for deep spending cuts, and older members used to reaching compromises with their Democratic counterparts. Senator John McCain, the party’s presidential candidate against Obama in 2008, labelled as “bizarro” the hardline colleagues in the House who had been in Congress for only seven months. But one of the hardliners, Congressman Joe Walsh, who is aligned with the Tea Party movement, hit back that McCain had “been in this town too long” and had helped get the US into a mess. In the Senate, another conservative, Jim DeMint, who is closely allied to the Tea Party movement, warned that he would filibuster any Senate bill that offered only a short-term solution without significant spending cuts. A White House adviser, David Plouffe, in an interview with MSNBC, suggested one way out of the impasse would be to amalgamate the House and Senate bills. “What you’re going to have to do is reconcile what’s in Reid and Boehner, which is a lot of the things the president has talked about in terms of spending cuts he’d be willing to accept. And that’s where the compromise is,” Plouffe said. United States US Congress US politics Republicans Democrats Obama administration US economy Financial crisis Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

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Rupertgate Thursday – "A New Low".

enlarge Rebekah Brooks with Sara Payne – appears to be no bottom – just a series of trap doors. Click here to view this media It was only a matter of days before some new and harrowing discovery was made with connection to the News Of The World/Newscorp/News International/Rupert Murdoch debacle. And here it is. It was just reported (as of 9:00 am PDT) that Police made a discovery that the phone of Sara Payne had been hacked, or was on a list alleged to have been hacked, by News Of The World. In case the name rings no bells, Sara Payne is the mother of Sarah Payne, the 8-year old girl abducted and murdered by convicted pedophile Roy Whiting in 2000. The murder was so heinous and caused such outrage that it prompted adoption of a new law making it public the whereabouts of convicted pedophiles to serve as a warning for parents with children living within a given area of the pedophile. The campaign to get this law on the books was News Of the World, championed by then-editor Rebekah Brooks. The law was eventually enacted and became known as Sarah’s Law in honor of the slain girl. Sara Payne became quite close, not only with Rebekah Brooks but with The News Of The World and they maintained close personal ties over the years. The discovery today that the very same News Of The World was in fact hacking Sara Payne’s phone brought a wave of freshly harvested revulsion throughout the UK today. Payne is in a state of horrified shock and reaction has been swift and dismayed. Brooks has vehemently denied the charges and many former colleagues have come to her defense. At first it was reported the phone in question was a personal gift from Brooks, but it has been retracted and said to have been a gift of News Of The World, not Brooks personally. In all due likelihood it would seem Brooks may be telling the truth. With such a close personal relationship with Payne, why would she need to hack into her phone? But it doesn’t dismiss the notion that this sort of thing was a standard operating procedure for many years at News Of the World (and Newscorp) and the climate was such that it wasn’t given much thought to raise an eyebrow. That, I think is the real issue here. Your complacency is your defacto complicity. Does Brooks warrant every accusation thrown at her? I don’t think so. Why? Remember she was brought into the organization very young (read: malleable). Learning your trade as an apprentice by the side of the master will often introduce you to methods and techniques you may question early on. But after twenty years those gut-level questions cease being relevant. I’m still of the opinion the fish rots from the head. Just saying. Here is the breaking news via BBC Radio 4′s PM with Eddie Mair and an update from The Six O’Clock news that followed right after. As is everything connected with this story, the game changes almost hourly.

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Rupertgate Thursday – "A New Low".

enlarge Rebekah Brooks with Sara Payne – appears to be no bottom – just a series of trap doors. Click here to view this media It was only a matter of days before some new and harrowing discovery was made with connection to the News Of The World/Newscorp/News International/Rupert Murdoch debacle. And here it is. It was just reported (as of 9:00 am PDT) that Police made a discovery that the phone of Sara Payne had been hacked, or was on a list alleged to have been hacked, by News Of The World. In case the name rings no bells, Sara Payne is the mother of Sarah Payne, the 8-year old girl abducted and murdered by convicted pedophile Roy Whiting in 2000. The murder was so heinous and caused such outrage that it prompted adoption of a new law making it public the whereabouts of convicted pedophiles to serve as a warning for parents with children living within a given area of the pedophile. The campaign to get this law on the books was News Of the World, championed by then-editor Rebekah Brooks. The law was eventually enacted and became known as Sarah’s Law in honor of the slain girl. Sara Payne became quite close, not only with Rebekah Brooks but with The News Of The World and they maintained close personal ties over the years. The discovery today that the very same News Of The World was in fact hacking Sara Payne’s phone brought a wave of freshly harvested revulsion throughout the UK today. Payne is in a state of horrified shock and reaction has been swift and dismayed. Brooks has vehemently denied the charges and many former colleagues have come to her defense. At first it was reported the phone in question was a personal gift from Brooks, but it has been retracted and said to have been a gift of News Of The World, not Brooks personally. In all due likelihood it would seem Brooks may be telling the truth. With such a close personal relationship with Payne, why would she need to hack into her phone? But it doesn’t dismiss the notion that this sort of thing was a standard operating procedure for many years at News Of the World (and Newscorp) and the climate was such that it wasn’t given much thought to raise an eyebrow. That, I think is the real issue here. Your complacency is your defacto complicity. Does Brooks warrant every accusation thrown at her? I don’t think so. Why? Remember she was brought into the organization very young (read: malleable). Learning your trade as an apprentice by the side of the master will often introduce you to methods and techniques you may question early on. But after twenty years those gut-level questions cease being relevant. I’m still of the opinion the fish rots from the head. Just saying. Here is the breaking news via BBC Radio 4′s PM with Eddie Mair and an update from The Six O’Clock news that followed right after. As is everything connected with this story, the game changes almost hourly.

Continue reading …
Rupertgate Thursday – "A New Low".

enlarge Rebekah Brooks with Sara Payne – appears to be no bottom – just a series of trap doors. Click here to view this media It was only a matter of days before some new and harrowing discovery was made with connection to the News Of The World/Newscorp/News International/Rupert Murdoch debacle. And here it is. It was just reported (as of 9:00 am PDT) that Police made a discovery that the phone of Sara Payne had been hacked, or was on a list alleged to have been hacked, by News Of The World. In case the name rings no bells, Sara Payne is the mother of Sarah Payne, the 8-year old girl abducted and murdered by convicted pedophile Roy Whiting in 2000. The murder was so heinous and caused such outrage that it prompted adoption of a new law making it public the whereabouts of convicted pedophiles to serve as a warning for parents with children living within a given area of the pedophile. The campaign to get this law on the books was News Of the World, championed by then-editor Rebekah Brooks. The law was eventually enacted and became known as Sarah’s Law in honor of the slain girl. Sara Payne became quite close, not only with Rebekah Brooks but with The News Of The World and they maintained close personal ties over the years. The discovery today that the very same News Of The World was in fact hacking Sara Payne’s phone brought a wave of freshly harvested revulsion throughout the UK today. Payne is in a state of horrified shock and reaction has been swift and dismayed. Brooks has vehemently denied the charges and many former colleagues have come to her defense. At first it was reported the phone in question was a personal gift from Brooks, but it has been retracted and said to have been a gift of News Of The World, not Brooks personally. In all due likelihood it would seem Brooks may be telling the truth. With such a close personal relationship with Payne, why would she need to hack into her phone? But it doesn’t dismiss the notion that this sort of thing was a standard operating procedure for many years at News Of the World (and Newscorp) and the climate was such that it wasn’t given much thought to raise an eyebrow. That, I think is the real issue here. Your complacency is your defacto complicity. Does Brooks warrant every accusation thrown at her? I don’t think so. Why? Remember she was brought into the organization very young (read: malleable). Learning your trade as an apprentice by the side of the master will often introduce you to methods and techniques you may question early on. But after twenty years those gut-level questions cease being relevant. I’m still of the opinion the fish rots from the head. Just saying. Here is the breaking news via BBC Radio 4′s PM with Eddie Mair and an update from The Six O’Clock news that followed right after. As is everything connected with this story, the game changes almost hourly.

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Abdul Fatah Younis ambush killing blamed on pro-Gaddafi forces

Libyan rebel army leader’s death announced at chaotic late-night press conference in Benghazi The Libyan rebels’ chief of army staff, Abdel Fatah Younis, has been killed in an assassination by pro-Gaddafi agents, according to the rebel authorities. The president of the ruling National Transitional Council, Abdul Mustafa Jalil, made the dramatic announcement of the death of Younis at a chaotic late-night press conference at a hotel in Benghazi. He told reporters that Younis had been called back from the frontline near Brega to Benghazi for questioning on the progress of the campaign, and suggested he had been killed by “pro-Gaddafi” forces on the route early in the morning. But questions remain over the lack of detail over how Younis died or who killed him. The general usually travels inside an armoured car in a multi-vehicle convoy with 30 armed guards, posing problems for any potential assassination team. Jalil said two senior rebel officers were killed alongside Younis, and demanded that what he called pro-Gaddafi elements he said were operating in Benghazi surrender or join the rebel forces. The shock announcement came after a day of heated speculation that Younis had been arrested on the orders of Jalil. Younis was Gaddafi’s former interior minister until he dramatically changed sides to join the revolution in February. The rumours were still swirling late on Thursday night, with armed men declaring their support for Younis appearing on the streets of Benghazi, claiming they would use force to free him from NTC custody. Soldiers loyal to Jalil from the 17 Brigade, Benghazi’s elite unit, had surrounded Younis’s house in the late afternoon. Then in the evening, Jalil said at the press conference that “with regret” he had to announce the death of general Younis. Jalil called him “one of the heroes of the 17th of February revolution”. Minutes later, gunfire broke out in the street outside the Benghazi hotel where the announcement was made, with machine gun bullets smashing windows. The press conference, which ended abruptly with the NTC president refusing to take questions, failed to explain how the general could have been ambushed in a highly guarded convoy. Younis has been a controversial figure as head of the rebel forces because – until the uprising – he was Muammar Gaddafi’s Interior Minister, one of his most trusted officials and confidants. The general’s friendship with Gaddafi dated from 1969 when he joined a group of fresh-faced army officers in deposing Libya’s king. But when riots came to the streets of Benghazi in February, he dramatically switched sides, joining the rebels and bringing the city’s interior ministry military brigade with him. That brigade was crucial in helping the under-armed rebels fight off the attacks by regime forces in the first days of the fighting, and command of this unit is believed to have been the key to the decision of rebel leaders in appointing him army commander. But his tenure as commander was stormy: he reportedly nearly came to blows with his rival for the army command, Klalifa Hefter, during a meeting in late March. For much of that month both men claimed to be in command of the ragtag rebel forces as they raced west towards Tripoli, only to be thrown back towards Benghazi in chaos and confusion. By April, Younis had won the political battle inside the National Transitional Council and was confirmed as chief of staff but he failed to use his new position to bring victory on the battlefield. Since April, the frontline has remained largely in stalemate, despite heavy Nato bombing of government forces around the key oil town of Brega. Younis launched an attack on Brega in June, only to see it beaten back. Two weeks ago, aided by some of the heaviest Nato tactical bombing of the war, he tried again, with a three-pronged attack on the town. Rebel military spokesmen repeatedly insisted that Brega was on the point of falling but, after a fortnight of fighting, the town remains in government hands. The rebels in the besieged city of Misrata have conspicuously refused to accept orders from Younis, to the extent of insisting that their fighters are not part of the Benghazi-controlled National Army. Many rebels were shocked by the news of the killing. “We respect him because he left Gaddafi; when he left a lot of colonels saw what Younis did and they defected also,” said Farouk Ben Ahmeda, a rebel fighter in Misrata. But few think that his military skills will be irreplaceable. “I don’t think that he was really a professional soldier; he didn’t command the soldiers well,” said Ben Ahmeda. The assassination will cause embarrassment and concern for the Foreign Office in the UK, as it comes just a day after the foreign secretary, William Hague, said that Britain would recognise the NTC as the legitimate government of Libya and expelling Gaddafi’s diplomats. London had hoped that after months of work, the NTC was now fit to govern. Unless Jalil can provide a full and public account of the assassination and the circumstances around it, that opinion may need to be revised. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Africa Chris Stephen guardian.co.uk

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White House plans emergency cuts as debt deadline looms

Uncertainty still rules as US political parties fail to compromise on a strategy to tackle economic crisis The White House is drawing up emergency plans for next week’s debt crisis deadline in the event that Congress fails to reach a last-gasp compromise. With only six days left, the White House dismissed as “political theatre” a new bill before the Republican-controlled House that would cut spending in return for raising the $14.3tn (£8.7tn) debt ceiling. The White House spokesman, Jay Carney, addressing the daily press conference today, said the bill was hated by the Democratic-controlled Senate and the White House and was “dead on arrival”. The Senate will not vote for it and, even if it did, Barack Obama would veto it. Fifty-one Democratic members of the Senate, a majority, published a letter pledging to vote against the House bill. Democrats in the Senate are preparing a bill of their own but the chances are Republicans in the House would vote that down too. Global markets, initially sanguine about the crisis and confident of an eventual compromise, were increasingly jittery on Thursday. There were early market falls but US stocks gained and the dollar rose during the day, buoyed by unexpectedly good unemployment figures. The Democratic leader in the Senate, Harry Reid, warned: “Default will rock our financial system to its core.” He expressed hope that there could still be a deal. “Magic things can happen here in Congress in a very short period of time under the right circumstances,” he said. The White House, too, expressed optimism that a compromise could be reached. Negotiations are continuing in private between the White House and senior Republicans and Democrats on a possible short-term emergency deal. But Carney admitted that, in the event there is no deal, the treasury would explain its plans in detail before 2 August. Carney said: “As we get closer to that date, the treasury will explain how it will manage a situation that is impossible.” He acknowledged for the first time that the uncertainty was already causing harm to the US economy. The White House will almost certainly make its priority paying interest on its debts so that the US does not default for the first time in its history. But the consequence could be delaying monthly payments to federal workers, soldiers and other employees, and millions of cheques to social security recipients, veterans and

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Bachmann: Questions about gay therapy are out of bounds

Click here to view this media Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann Thursday refused to say if she thought reparative therapy could “change gay people into being straight” because it was not relevant to her campaign. “Recent reporting has revealed the clinic you co-own with your husband engages in a kind of therapy that helps people get over their homosexuality,” National Press Club president Mark Hamrick told Bachmann. “Do you believe that reparative therapy can change gay people into being straight and has any federal funding gone for your clinic?” “Well, I’m extremely proud of my husband and I have tremendous respect and admiration for him and we’ll celebrate our 33rd wedding anniversary this coming September,” Bachmann began. “But I am running for the presidency of the United States.” “My husband is not running for the presidency. Neither are my children, neither is our business, neither is our foster children,” she said. “I am more than happy to stand for questions on running for the presidency of the United States.” “To be clear, you don’t believe your personal finances are something that should be questioned by the American people?” Hamrick asked. “I am running for the presidency of the United States and I have no doubt that every jot and tittle of my life will be looked at and inspected prior to November 2012,” Bachmann replied.

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