News International chief stops short of full apology, saying she no longer wants to be ‘focal point of the debate’ Rebekah Brooks, the News International chief executive, has resigned after 11 days of mounting political pressure over the phone-hacking scandal. Brooks announced her decision to News International staff in Wapping just before 10am on Friday, saying her resignation had been accepted by Rupert Murdoch and James Murdoch. She said she no longer wanted to be a “focal point of the debate” surrounding the company’s future and reputation. She stopped short of issuing a personal apology. “As chief executive of the company, I feel a deep sense of responsibility for the people we have hurt and I want to reiterate how sorry I am for what we now know to have taken place,” Brooks said in a statement. “I have believed that the right and responsible action has been to lead us through the heat of the crisis. However my desire to remain on the bridge has made me a focal point of the debate. “This is now detracting attention from all our honest endeavours to fix the problems of the past.” Brooks praised Rupert and James Murdoch and said she leaves “with the happiest memories and an abundance of friends”. Brooks is to be replaced by the chief executive of Sky Italia, Tom Mockridge, who will take over at Wapping immediately. It is not yet clear exactly why Brooks’s resignation after 22 years at the company was accepted by the Murdochs, who had so far steadfastly stood by her during the crisis. This despite calls for her to go from the leaders of all the main political parties, including prime minister David Cameron, and the family of murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler, whose mobile phone was allegedly hacked by a private investigator working for the News of the World. However, the last straw may well have been Thursday night’s Newsnight interview with News International parent company News Corporation’s second largest shareholder, Saudi prince Alwaleed bin Talal al-Saud, in which he called for her to stand down amid questions over her “integrity”. Al-Saud, who controls a 7% stake in News Corp: said: “For sure she has to go, you bet she has to go.” Brooks also faced an uncomfortable appearance before MPs on the Commons culture, media and sport select committee on Tuesday along with Rupert and James Murdoch to answer questions about the phone-hacking scandal. In her resignation statement she indicated that she would still appear before the committee. In her statement Brooks said she wanted to clear her name as well as the company’s. “The reputation of the company we love so much, as well as the press freedoms we value so highly, are all at risk,” she added. “As you can imagine recent times have been tough. I now need to concentrate on correcting the distortions and rebutting the allegations about my record as a journalist, an editor and executive. “My resignation makes it possible for me to have the freedom and the time to give my full co-operation to all the current and future inquiries, the police investigations and the CMS appearance. I am so grateful for all the messages of support. I have nothing but overwhelming respect for you and our millions of readers.” Al-Saud, known as the “Arab Warren Buffet” and the nephew of the Saudi king, also told Newsnight: “The indications are that her involvement in this matter is explicit. For sure she has to go, you bet she has to go. Ethics to me is very important. I will not tolerate to deal with a company that has a lady or a man that has any sliver of doubts on her or his integrity. From my dealings with Mr James Murdoch and Rupert Murdoch it’s almost impossible for James and Rupert to know what’s going on at News of the World level. “The problems have been at the News of the World newspaper and not at News Corp level. I’d like to differentiate between News Corporation conglomerate and the News of the World that got shut down. These tactics used by tabloid newspapers in the UK were done not only by News of the World but by other tabloid newspapers also. “I hope that this matter doesn’t get over-politicised. Clearly some politicians in the UK and US right now would like to set the record clear and take revenge on Mr Murdoch’s conglomerate that wasn’t really on their side some time ago.” •
Continue reading …Average rents in London through £1,000 barrier, with properties snapped up within a day of being advertised Rents in England and Wales rose by 0.7% in June to reach a new record high of £701 per month in June, pushing annual rent inflation to 4.1%. In London, rents broke through the £1,000 a month barrier for the first time, rising by 1% to reach a new high of £1,006 per month. The latest LSL Property Services Buy-to-Let index shows that rental properties in London can be snapped up within a day of being advertised and there isn’t enough rental property to match the soaring demand. During the past year London rents climbed faster – 6.9% – than any other region of England and Wales, while steep increases were also experienced in the North East and the West Midlands, where rents increased by 5.1% and 4.6% respectively. In the past year, the only region in which rents fell was the east of England – by a marginal 0.3%. Month on month, rents increased fastest in the West Midlands and the east (2% and 1.6%) and fell in only three regions: the east Midlands (-0.5%), the south-east (-0.2%) and Yorkshire and the Humber (-0.1%). David Newnes, estate agency managing director of LSL Property Services, which owns the Your Move and Reeds Rains chains, said: “Tenant demand continues to reach ever higher peaks – and there simply isn’t enough rental property coming on to the market to match it. In areas like London where competition for rental property is most intense, it’s not unheard of for rental properties to be let within a day of coming on to the market. “We’ve had five successive months of rent rises, but there is no sign of a let-up anytime soon. Despite several new deals on the market, securing a big enough mortgage remains a tall order for the average buyer. The climbing cost of living and renting is impacting how much renters can save for their deposit, and demand will remain high in short-term. “In the long term, there is an even smaller chance of a significant slowdown. Just 102,570 new homes were completed last year – at a time when the UK’s population increased by nearly half a million. This trend shows no signs of slowing. Excess demand will be driven into the private rental sector driving rents up further. Landlords thinking long-term will do well.” The average rent is now £28 a month higher than June 2010, while the total annual return on a rental property was 1.3% in June, as the rental income received by landlords is offset against an annual decline in property prices. LSL said the total annual return is the equivalent of £2,203 – £7,486 in rent, with a capital loss of £5,283. If property values continue on their current trend, a property investor could expect to make a total annual return of 2.3% over the next 12 months – equivalent to an average of £3,776 per property. Tenant arrears decreased for the second consecutive month, with 9.3% of all UK rent unpaid or late by the end of June – down from the 11.5% of rent unpaid or late in May. Unpaid rent totalled £257m across the UK in June, down 18% from the £315m unpaid in the previous month. But Newnes warned: “We’ve yet to see the full effects of public sector job losses, and as inflation remains high, many tenants’ finances will face mounting pressure over the medium-term.” Renting property Property Housing Communities Buying to let Mark King guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Analysts expect between five and 15 European banks to fail stress tests as Italy prepares to vote on austerity budget European stock markets opened lower and the euro fell on Friday morning amid anxiety about the outcome of the stress tests on European banks, which will end a tumultuous week for the eurozone. Spain’s Ibex was down 0.4% while Italy’s FTSE MIB opened 0.5% lower. In London, the FTSE 100 index dropped 26 points in early trading to 5820, a fall of 0.4%. Germany’s Dax traded 0.4% lower while France’s CAC lost 0.5%. The euro briefly hit a one-month low against the pound, falling to 87.475p, the lowest since 16 June. The annual healthcheck on 90 European banks will be announced after the markets close on Friday, at 5pm London time. Up to six Spanish banks are expected to fail along with several Greek banks. Analysts polled by Reuters expect between five and 15 banks overall to fail. “What a great end to a turbulent week,” said Gary Jenkins, head of fixed income research at Evolution Securities. “The sovereign crisis may overshadow the actual results of the tests, but the market will look closely at disclosures on peripheral exposures and draw its own conclusions from those.” The lower house of Italy’s parliament is expected to vote through austerity plans worth €48bn. “European asset price volatility continues and whether it calms down will depend a lot on what happens to Italy,” said Paul Robinson at Barclays Capital. “Italian developments have been particularly important over the past week and are likely to remain at the centre of attention ahead of the publication of the stress tests today and vote in the camera (lower house of parliament) on the austerity measures. “There is little to suggest that Italian banks will emerge from the stress tests needing a large injection of capital. But a large stock of government debt means that Italy is vulnerable.” Italy is forecast to have a debt-to-GDP ratio of 120% this year, while that for Spain is seen at 70%. Amid growing concern that Europe’s policymakers have allowed the debt crisis to spread to the major economies of monetary union, the healthcheck announcement will provide details of the exposure of individual banks to debt writedowns or defaults. While UK banks are expected to pass the stress tests, there are fears the tests will show some banks in Europe have insufficient capital to cope with bad debts. Although the tests have been toughened since last year, they do not include the possibility of a Greek default, seen as increasingly likely by the markets. Italy had to pay record interest rates of 5.9% to persuade investors to buy its bonds on Thursday, while borrowing costs for Spain also rose. Estimates of how many banks will need extra capital range from nearly a third of the 90, according to the ratings agency Moody’s, to nine needing €29bn, according to the average opinion in a poll of investors by Goldman Sachs last month. Marie Diron, senior economic adviser to the Ernst & Young eurozone forecast, said: “The stress tests are unlikely to bring much relief to the current tensions that plague the eurozone. They will probably show a small minority of banks failing, mainly in the eurozone periphery, with possibly a few in core eurozone countries failing, too. But the credibility of the stress tests has been undermined by what is perceived to be too lenient assumptions.” The tests, discredited last year when Ireland’s banks collapsed four months after being given a clean bill of health by the regulators, are already causing controversy. The number of banks was originally 91, but German bank Helaba pulled out on Wednesday in a dispute with the European Banking Authority, which is overseeing tests by domestic regulators, and will announce its results separately. The UK’s banks, two of which have been bailed out, are believed to have passed. The head of the European parliament’s economic and monetary policy committee, Sharon Bowles, will say on Friday that German banks were manipulating the results of tests which show they are in urgent need of recapitalisation: “In their latest round of crisis denial, German banks are lining up to try and hide what any decent analyst already knows, that there are significant cases of undercapitalisation.” The tests are carried out by national regulators across Europe but compiled by the European authority, which requires banks’ core tier one capital to remain above 5% after worst-case scenarios, which include a drop in GDP over two years of 4%, compared with 3% for last year’s tests. Tamara Burnell of M&G Investments said: “It is like taking a driving test: you can pass and yet be a terrible driver. The real test is whether people are prepared to get in the car with you. So whether or not banks pass the 5% hurdle, the real test is whether investors and depositors trust them with money over the long term. And there’s a long way to go before the European banks rebuild their reputation after a series of offences.” While an outright default by a European nation is not included in the test (despite officials now being prepared for a Greek default), Christopher Wheeler, analyst at Mediobanca, notes that only 20% of the government bonds held by banks are being stress tested, because they sit in their trading books, rather than the banking books where bonds are held to maturity. Making assumptions about the “haircuts” (losses on government bonds across Europe), Mediobanca estimates €81bn could be knocked off banks’ capital, 9% of the sector, in 2012. It is not just banks’ holdings of government bonds that are important, but also the way governments have stepped in to support banks, making their healths inextricably linked. Burnell said: “What we need to test is the ability of sovereigns to separate themselves from their banks.” European debt crisis Banking Euro European Union Economics Europe Italy Europe Julia Kollewe Jill Treanor guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …News Corp chairman uses interview in his own Wall Street Journal to defend handling of News of the World scandal Rupert Murdoch has mounted a robust defence of New Corporation’s management of the phone-hacking scandal , insisting that the company has handled the crisis “extremely well in every possible way”, making only “minor mistakes”. As the FBI launched an investigation into allegations that News of the World journalists also tried to hack into the phones of victims of the 9/11 attacks in New York, Murdoch told the Wall Street Journal , which is owned by News Corp: “When I hear something going wrong I insist on it being put right.” He said that he would use his appearance before the Commons culture, media and sport committee next Tuesday to challenge “some of the things that have been said in parliament, some of which are total lies”. “We think it’s important to absolutely establish our integrity in the eyes of the public … I felt that it’s best just to be as transparent as possible.” Asked whether his son James – who is News Corps deputy chief operating officer – had been too slow in reacting to the crisis, Murdoch said: “I think he acted as fast as he could, the moment he could.” He said the company would establish an independent committee headed by a “distinguished non-employee” to investigate all charges of improper conduct. Murdoch used the interview to take Gordon Brown to task for his claims that News International papers including the Sunday Times had illegally obtained information about him and his family. He said the former prime minister had “got it entirely wrong”, adding that “the Browns were always friends of ours” until the Sun withdrew its support for Labour before the last election. He dismissed claims that News Corp was considering selling or separating off its newspaper assets as “pure and total rubbish”. Asked if he was aggravated by all the negative publicity it had attracted in recent days, he said he was “just getting annoyed … I’ll get over it. I’m tired.” Rupert and James Murdoch last night gave in to demands to appear before the Culture, Media and Sport Committee after MPs issued summonses ordering them to appear. The leader of the House, Sir George Young, had warned that in theory at least they could be fined or even imprisoned if they refused. News International’s chief executive, Rebekah Brooks, will also appear. The launch of the FBI inquiry amounts to the first official investigation within the US into News Corporation activities. It brings the scandal within Rupert Murdoch’s British newspaper division closer to his American home and to News Corp’s headquarters in Manhattan. Amid calls from US politicians and relatives of 9/11 victims for a review of the allegations. Peter King, the Republican chairman of the homeland security committee in the House of Representatives, on Wednesday wrote to the director of the FBI, Robert Mueller, asking him to open an investigation of the 9/11 allegations. In his letter King said he represented a district of New York that lost more than 150 constituents in the terror attacks. “If these allegations are proven true the conduct would merit felony charges and any person found guilty should receive the harshest sanctions available under law.” The claim that Murdoch journalists attempted to get hold of victims’ phone details was made by the Mirror newspaper , which sourced the story to an unnamed former New York police officer working as a private detective, who was said to have been approached by News of the World reporters asking him to retrieve the private phone records of the dead. The detective was reported to have declined. It is unclear whether there is any substance to the Mirror’s allegations. But relatives of 9/11 victims have expressed delight and relief that the FBI is stepping in. Sally Regenhard, whose firefighter son Christian died in the World Trade Centre attacks, said: “I’m very happy. The FBI is being very responsive in acting on our call for a full investigation.” Jim McCaffrey, a New York firefighter who lost his brother-in-law Orio Palmer, also a firefighter, on 9/11, said: “If these claims are found to be true I think it’s a terrible revelation and very, very upsetting to 9/11 family members.” Even if the Mirror article is accurate, there might be a problem with moving forward with an investigation because the events were so long ago. Several legal experts including a former top lawyer for the FBI have said there is a five-year statute of limitations on prosecution under US federal wiretapping laws. Rupert Murdoch Phone hacking Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Wall Street Journal US press and publishing News of the World United States Sam Jones Ed Pilkington Andrew Gumbel guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Share bonus thought to be largest windfall for shop workers in Britain Sports Direct’s 2,200 permanent staff will receive a share bonus averaging £44,000 after the sportswear retailer, controlled by Newcastle owner Mike Ashley, hit its profit targets for the second year in a row. It is thought to be the largest windfall handed out to shop staff in Britain. Full-time workers will get shares worth more than twice their salaries, which average £20,000. Britain’s biggest sporting goods retailer, which owns the Sports World and Lillywhites stores, reported underlying profits of £200.4m for the year to 24 April, which included a World Cup boost and beat its target of £195m. This comes after the group made a £171.2m profit the previous year, ahead of its £165m target. Based on Thursday’s share price of 256.5p, Sports Direct’s bonus share scheme pot of £88m will pay out shares worth an average of about £44,000 each to 2,200 permanent staff working in its shops, warehouses and the head office. But they will have to wait until the summer of 2013 for the lion’s share (about £31,000). The only other major retailer that pays out big staff bonuses is the John Lewis Partnership, which awarded an average £2,500 in cash to its 76,500 staff in March. The number of staff eligible for the 34m share payout for 2011 and the next three years has risen to 3,000, but targets for all four years have to be met. Sports Direct’s 14,000 employees on part-time or flexible contracts will go empty-handed again. City analysts welcomed the results. Sports Direct has benefited from the woes of its rival JJB Sports, which faces a five-year road to recovery , according to its chairman, Mike McTighe, a restructuring expert who was parachuted in at the end of last year. “These [Sports Direct] figures are at the top end of expectations and are excellent considering the economic backdrop,” said Freddie George, retail analyst at Seymour Pierce. He believes Sports Direct’s Lonsdale, Slazenger, Dunlop and Everlast brands could be marketed more widely overseas. He also reckons the retailer stands to benefit from the keep-fit trend and the London Olympics and Euro 2012 football championship next year. In an attempt to rid itself of its discount image and target the luxury market, Sports Direct recently acquired majority stakes in the USC and Cruise Clothing fashion chains controlled by Scottish retail tycoon Sir Tom Hunter. Their financial contributions are small at the moment, though, with the 38-strong USC chain making sales of £70m last year, while Cruise has 10 UK stores and an annual turnover of £20m. Sports Direct plans to open or relocate 15 to 20 shops over the coming year in the UK, including one in Stratford close to the Olympic site. It has already opened seven in the first quarter. Sports Direct International Retail industry Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Thousands of residents evacuated from slopes of Mount Lokon in Sulawesi province A volcano in central Indonesia has sent thousands of residents fleeing from their homes as it spit lava and ash high into the air. One woman died of a heart attack, but no other casualties were reported. Mount Lokon, located in northern Sulawesi province, unleashed its first powerful eruption at 10:46pm on Thursday, said Brian Rulrone, a disaster management agency official. That eruption was followed by a second just after midnight and a third at 1:10am on Friday. Lava cascaded from the mouth of the crater, triggering forest fires along its western slope, according to Ferry Rusmawan, an official at the nearest monitoring post, who said activity remained high and another eruption appeared imminent. The 1,750m (5,741ft) mountain continued to rumble late on Friday morning. Soldiers and police helped rescuers evacuate residents living along the mountain’s fertile slopes, said Jimmy Eman, the acting mayor in the nearby town of Tomohon. He said the only victim so far was the 56-year-old woman who died of a heart attack. More than 6,000 people were crammed into schools, churches and other temporary shelters. Authorities said 27,000 others living within two miles (3.5km) of the crater also would be moved. “This is the largest eruption I’ve ever experienced,” said Nelson Uada, who was among those evacuated overnight. “It was very scary. Glowing lava flowed like flames in the darkness and it sounded like we were in a war.” Flights to the nearest international airport in Manado, the provincial capital, were not disrupted, said Lucky Podaag, an airport spokesman. Indonesia’s vast archipelago of 240 million people is prone to earthquakes and volcanoes because it sits along the Pacific Ring of Fire, a horseshoe-shaped string of faults that lines the Pacific Ocean. Mount Lokon, which has been on high alert for nearly a week, is one of the country’s 129 active volcanos. Its last major eruption in 1991 killed a Swiss hiker and forced thousands of people to flee their homes. Indonesia Natural disasters and extreme weather guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Monarch will honour men and women codebreakers and their role in the second world war The Queen is paying a visit to Bletchley Park, Milton Keynes, Britain’s most historic site of secret code-breaking activities and the birthplace of the modern computer. The monarch will unveil a memorial to the men and women codebreakers, honouring the vital role they played in the second world war. She will be joined by the Duke of Edinburgh on her visit. During the second world war the site was home to the government’s Code and Cypher School, which obtained signals intelligence by breaking high-level encrypted enemy radio and teleprinter communications. The Queen and the Duke will first visit the Colossus hut, where they will view an ongoing restoration project. Colossus machines were the first programmable electronic computers, designed by engineer Tommy Flowers to help codebreakers read German messages. The royal couple will see an Enigma display during their visit and be shown how the machine, used for the encryption and decryption of secret messages, worked. They will also view the Turing Bombe Machine, an electromechanical device used by British cryptologists to help decipher Enigma-encrypted signals which was created by English mathematician, logician, cryptanalyst and computer scientist Alan Turing. Bletchley Park veterans will meet the royal couple before they move outside the main building to unveil a public memorial and view the roll of honour. The Queen Monarchy Second world war guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …LONDON (Reuters) – Rupert Murdoch on Thursday caved in to pressure from Britain’s parliament to answer questions over alleged crimes at one of his newspapers and denied that News Corp was drawing up plans to separate its newspaper holdings. Murdoch said News Corp had handled the crisis engulfing his media empire “extremely well in every way possible” making just “minor mistakes” and called reports he would split off his newspaper assets “pure rubbish.” Speaking to his Wall Street Journal newspaper, Murdoch said his son had acted “as fast as he could, the moment he could” to deal with the scandal. The Australian-born media mogul’s comments came as he faced investigations on both sides of the…
Continue reading …enlarge Could be interesting – could be inflammatory – can’t be boring. Click here to view this media As it was reported less than an hour ago (at 9:00 am PDT), both James and Rupert Murdoch will be appearing before the Home Affairs Select Committee regarding the scandal, the fallout and the firestorm. While momentum has been building and speculation increasing over what possible or probable repercussions are to be had here in the U.S. still remain to be seen, news and events surrounding this scandal are not going away in the UK anytime soon. If anything, the Hearings, starting with Rebekah Brooks next Tuesday, should be interesting. Whether they will shed any light on what has been a long-running method of operation and a style of doing business is still a big question mark. Here is the latest news as reported on the BBC 4 program PM, including an extended interview with Vince Cable , another figure who entanglements with Newscorp/News International cost him considerably. The day ain’t over and anything can still happen. And true to form, it just may. Stay tuned.
Continue reading …Lately, there would seem to be a whole lot more people who have a direct channel to the Big Guy Upstairs than one could have humanly thought possible. It is oft-said that “God works in mysterious ways”. But when Michele Bachmann hears voices telling her to run for president, am I the only who thinks the most likely explanation is a batch of bad clams or one-too-many nights role playing The Book of Eli with her equally demented husband Marcus? Perhaps, these are the very same voices that have shared with her the important role “Founding Father John Quincy Adams” played in ending slavery as he battled the oncoming scourge of puberty? I don’t know, just a stab in the dark. Regardless, whether it is gay marriage or spotting the Virgin Mary in your gordita, our re-embrace of culture-by-theology in the United States (not unlike much of the rest of the world) has led supposedly “serious people” to say things that not so long ago would have landed them a starring role in Girl, Interrupted. In our current age, in fact, possessing a direct cerebral channel to Deus (or at least claiming you do) would seem to be a requirement for receiving an invitation to a GOP presidential debate. It equally pervades the rest of right-wing political culture in the US, as twisted scripture both provides ready justification for those who hate everything about the this country post-1930, and renders more difficult the job of the media to effectively criticise any crackpot theory-lest they lose their “objectivity” for a moment and offend some True Believers. For example, in light of the recent law passed by the New York state legislature providing full marriage rights to gay and lesbian couples, dingy-old-Hammerhead-Bat Pat Robertson offered his expert testimony that “there’s never been a civilisation ever in history that has embraced homosexuality and turned away from traditional fidelity, traditional marriage, traditional child-rearing, and has survived.” He went on to compare the United States to Sodom and pleasantly predict we’d suffer the same fate – complete annihilation. In case you’re keeping score, Jesus is apparently cool with Rev Robertson’s having befriended the al-Qaeda-harboring, genocidal thug Charles Taylor, in order to fatten his wallet from a steady diet of Liberian blood diamonds. When it comes to loving couples of the same sex tying the knot, however, not so much. Thankfully, for the rest of us, Robertson’s many past predictions of our collective demise were so inane they might as well have been announced on an aircraft carrier with a “Mission Accomplished” banner in the background. So to pick up the slack, Missouri GOP Congressman and apparent Mary-Shelley-creation Todd Akin also jumped into the God interpretation game last week – likely as a strategy to forward his US Senate campaign. Akin, in an obvious moment of clarity, puked out that “at the heart of liberalism really is a hatred for God.” Because, as we all know, nothing is closer to the teachings of the Bible than Akin’s record of lying about his address for voting purposes and cutting taxes for 8-figure earning CEOs while gutting health care for impoverished children. Sadly, however, our God Culture isn’t limited to just the political game, but also allows some of those clever cats, professional athletes, to get in on the action. I must admit to finding it rather amusing – as in completely ridiculous – whenever an overpaid ballplayer hits a three-point shot or bashes a fastball over the center field wall, only to respond by pointing up to the Heavens as if it were Divinely ordained. Because we all know any Higher Power has nothing better to do – like ending conflict in the Sudan or curing cancer – than taking in some sport and using his/her powers to ensure Arsenal wins the FA Cup. Somewhere Jacob is trying to best that blood-sucker Edward and win the affections of Bella, and God is going to worry about the Stanley Cup? How arrogant. It is this hubris that must explain why one of the heroes of the 2007 Super-Bowl-winning New York Giants, David Tyree, thought it his place to tell us what His God would think of gay marriage in New York – much like Brother Robertson. As you can imagine, according to Tyree, it just up and freaked God out. I guess he missed the part where he’s the guy we trust to catch the ball on the field, not make public policy according to his translation of the will of his Deity off of it. For, in the end, it doesn’t matter if you’re a Believer or not. Most of us to the north of birdbrain can agree that no matter what Bachmann, Akin, Robertson or Tyree have to say on the matter, it is in fact societies ruled by faux-pious numbskulls that, to quote the elegant and articulate Robertson, have “never, ever survived.” Perhaps he and his Republican buddies can ponder–and share on Google+ with their circles of friends, family, and even acquaintances, for the rest of our sakes–the words of the founder of their party, Abraham Lincoln, who once counseled that it is “better to remain silent and be thought a fool, than to speak out and remove all doubt.” Follow Me On Twitter: @Cliffschecter A similar version of this column first appeared at Al Jazeera English
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