Party to draw up policy in key areas in series of bold strokes • Interactive: What do you think should be in Labour’s policy review? Ed Miliband’s famous blank piece of paper, Labour’s policy prospectus, will start to be coloured in this weekend when the party’s policy forum meets on Saturday in the suburbs of Wrexham. The aim will be to start to achieve something no opposition party has managed in the last 30 years — to bounce back to power in just one term. That goal has led Labour’s leaders to decide they need to act with more haste than previously thought. The concept of a leisurely, academic disordered policy review, if ever true, is being disowned. The era of low-risk leadership is about to end with some bolder strokes on policy, personnel and party reform. Lessons are being drawn from a slew of books on the Tories in opposition. Tim Bale’s Conservative Party: Thatcher to Cameron has reminded Labour of how it took the Tories an extraordinary five years from the loss of power under John Major to the basic admission that it was perceived as the selfish, nasty party. Peter Snowden’s Back from the Brink is another guide to how slow parties can be to respond to crises in public perception. By contrast Labour has rushed to admit error. But Labour is also subtly reworking the policy review process. Figures such as the policy review coordinator Liam Byrne would probably admit the hydra-headed reviews, set up November on a largely ad hoc basis, lacked coherence. No fewer than 19 reviews were announced, on what externally looked like a random basis. The advantage was that it gave every shadow cabinet member something to do, such as – in one review – explore the causes of loneliness. But it hardly provided the overarching narrative that Lord Mandelson, a veteran of policy reviews under Neil Kinnock, said the party needed in his Progress speech this week. The foreign policy review conducted by Douglas Alexander seems only to be looking at Brazil, Russia, India and China, an important, but hardly sufficient foreign policy theme. No exploration of Labour’s increasingly questioned pro-Europeanism is being attempted. By contrast, Harriet Harman, the shadow international development secretary, has appointed no fewer than six sub-reviews. Yet there is no discernible review into the economy. Ominously for those who have memories of how Gordon Brown would often disengage from collective policy making, Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, is not conducting any specific review of economic policy. The official explanation is that he is overseeing other economic related reviews. In an attempt to bring some order to the process, the policy reviews have all now been rearranged under one of four sub-heads – rebuilding the economy to help the squeezed middle, keeping the promise for the next generation, renewing responsibility, and our place in the world. Some groups have met six or so times, drawing in as many outside experts as an unfashionable party four years from power can gather. Progress is uneven. The shadow transport secretary Maria Eagle, currently in Amsterdam looking at their tram system, pretty well knows her policy destination — free travel for young people, reintegrate the mainline rail system, prioritise buses over trains and devolve power to regional transport authorities. Other policy groups seem not have gone beyond clearing the undergrowth. Byrne argues the starting point is understanding why the public rejected Labour. In a speech yesterday he said: “If we want to win back the people’s trust to lead again, we have to understand how the public see us and why. Therein starts the business of renewal. This is perhaps the first great lesson from oppositions which stay in opposition for a long time. Oppositions that stay in opposition are the parties that fail to confront and take on the weaknesses the public see in them.” While this was true of the Tories after 1997, Labour after 1979 was not much better. “It was an incredible eight years before [Neil] Kinnock embarked on a major exercise of his own – talking to the public about the way they saw things. This is not a mistake we are going to repeat,” Byrne says. The aim this weekend is to provide some signposts leading to something more specific at autumn party conference, including something close to definitive on a replacement to tuition fees. On the squeezed middle, Miliband believes the centre-ground of politics has shifted from public service reform to a rebalanced economy, an issue belatedly addressed by Mandelson and now being taken up by the shadow business secretary John Denham. Critical to this squeeze is not just better balanced growth, but also lack of childcare and social care, constraining the amount of time the middle class, especially the second earner, can work. Miliband’s second chosen theme is the promise of Britain, the contract that the next generation should fare as well as the current generation. Social housing is now seen by Labour as the biggest barrier to young people getting on. This allows him to offer optimism, the ingredient he is convinced can win him the election – one the Tories, with the emphasis on the deficit, cannot offer. Byrne argues the Conservatives returned to power after only a term in opposition precisely because Margaret Thatcher engaged in an argument about what her party was for. Miliband has to be equally clear about the future. The review’s final leg will be responsibility, in the benefit queue and the boardroom. The party is going to try to renew social insurance, and to try to leapfrog the Tories on welfare. None of this answers the pressing question of the deficit, Labour’s dire polling on economic competence or Miliband’s own personal ratings. Last week Balls alarmed some by coming close to admitting he has bet the whole farm on his judgment that Osborne’s cuts will seriously kill growth. It may take two years for him to know if he or Osborne is right. In the meantime, to rebuild trust, Balls will look at new credible fiscal rules so an authoritative independent body can warn if Labour was about to head off on an unsustainable spending splurge. There is also dark talk of a mechanism to address waste in public spending. A party elder may be asked to set up an inquiry into the issue. Miliband is attempting something rare – shifting the centre of British politics to the left from the position of opposition, rather than from government. By next year he may remember what the Australian prime minister John Howard once said to William Hague: “You know, William, there’s only one thing harder than the first year in opposition … It’s the second.” • Interactive: What do you think should be in Labour’s policy review? Labour Ed Miliband Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Senior Tory MPs in dialogue with MEPs who are seeking to prevent a toughening of Europe’s climate targets • The bloody fight for the green soul of the Conservative party David Cameron has promised to intervene in the intensifying row over rebel Tory MEPs who are trying to prevent a toughening of Europe’s climate targets. At prime minister’s questions, he told MPs that Downing Street enforcers would be talking to the MEPs who are threatening to revolt in a Brussels vote to raise the EU carbon cutting target from 20% to 30% of emissions by 2020. The rebellion threatens to dent the green credentials of the prime minister and the coalition. Senior Tory ministers told the Guardian they were “in dialogue” with their colleagues in the European parliament. The energy minister, Charles Hendry, said: “It is clearly
Continue reading …Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke holds a press conference on the state of the US economy. Follow it here live 2.10pm ET: You can watch Ben Bernanke in his full glory live via this video stream helpfully provided by the Federal Reserve. 2.01pm ET: And this just in from the Federal Reserve: The Federal Reserve Board and the Federal Open Market Committee on Wednesday released the attached table and charts summarizing the economic projections made by Federal Reserve Board members and Federal Reserve Bank presidents for the June 21-22 meeting of the Committee. Everyone likes large PDF files of charts, right. Well here they are . 1.50pm ET: Just before the Bernanke press conference kicks off, the Federal Open Markets Committee has issued its latest decision on monetary policy – and the news is (as expected) no change in interest rates. The devil is in the detail, as always. In its accompanying statement the FOMC said: Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in April indicates that the economic recovery is continuing at a moderate pace, though somewhat more slowly than the Committee had expected. Also, recent labor market indicators have been weaker than anticipated. The slower pace of the recovery reflects in part factors that are likely to be temporary, including the damping effect of higher food and energy prices on consumer purchasing power and spending as well as supply chain disruptions associated with the tragic events in Japan. Household spending and business investment in equipment and software continue to expand. However, investment in nonresidential structures is still weak, and the housing sector continues to be depressed. Inflation has picked up in recent months, mainly reflecting higher prices for some commodities and imported goods, as well as the recent supply chain disruptions. However, longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable. Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. The unemployment rate remains elevated; however, the Committee expects the pace of recovery to pick up over coming quarters and the unemployment rate to resume its gradual decline toward levels that the Committee judges to be consistent with its dual mandate. Inflation has moved up recently, but the Committee anticipates that inflation will subside to levels at or below those consistent with the Committee’s dual mandate as the effects of past energy and other commodity price increases dissipate. However, the Committee will continue to pay close attention to the evolution of inflation and inflation expectations. To promote the ongoing economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at levels consistent with its mandate, the Committee decided today to keep the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 0.25 per cent. The Committee continues to anticipate that economic conditions – including low rates of resource utilization and a subdued outlook for inflation over the medium run – are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate for an extended period. The Committee will complete its purchases of $600 billion of longer-term Treasury securities by the end of this month and will maintain its existing policy of reinvesting principal payments from its securities holdings. The Committee will regularly review the size and composition of its securities holdings and is prepared to adjust those holdings as appropriate. The Committee will monitor the economic outlook and financial developments and will act as needed to best foster maximum employment and price stability. Now then, what does all that mean in English? Let’s discuss that. For only the second time, Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke will take the microphone for an open press conference today at 2.15pm ET – at a moment when fears that the US economy is sliding back into recession, thanks to anaemic growth, lacklustre job creation and the lasting effects of the financial market and housing meltdown going back three years. The climate for the US economy has certainly got worse since Bernanke debut press conference – and this afternoon appearance before the media should see more probing questions about how the Federal reserve intends to handle monetary policy going forward. Join us here as we watch Bernanke in action in Washington DC – and feel free to leave your comments below. Ben Bernanke US economy US economic growth and recession US Interest rates Economics United States Richard Adams guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Police give chase to boy in pyjamas who reached 50mph in car taken from his mother’s house A barefoot seven-year-old boy wearing pyjamas hit speeds of 50mph while driving a car for 20 miles before Michigan police eventually forced him to stop. The boy was stopped in a 55mph zone in Caseville Township only after two police cars gave chase and forced him to slow down. He had set off from his mother’s house in the Pontiac Sunfire with the intention of driving to his father’s house 15 miles away. “He was crying and just kept saying he wanted to go to his dad’s,” said the Caseville police chief, Jamie Learman. Police began looking for the car at 10.15am on Monday after receiving a call from someone who had spotted an underage driver. The boy was staying with his mother in Huron County’s Sheridan Township, 110 miles north of Detroit. She had worked a night shift and was unaware her son and the car were gone. The boy had hoped to drive to his father’s home in Filion, also in northern Michigan. Police pulled him over about 15 miles to the west. Learman told the Detroit Free Press he feared the boy would crash as the car veered to the right on a rural road and skidded wildly. “When that happened, he seemed to be increasing his speeds,” Learman said. He sped ahead and tried to box in the car with the help of a Huron County sheriff’s deputy, who was behind in another vehicle. “I slowed down, he slowed down and eventually stopped,” Learman said. Huron County sheriff, Kelly Hanson, said the prosecutor’s office and child welfare officials were reviewing the matter. The prosecutor “is going to want to know things like … where did he learn how to drive?” Hanson said. “I’m just glad he didn’t get hurt, and no one else got hurt,” Learman said. “I can just imagine the stop signs and other things he didn’t stop for. I’m just assuming a seven-year-old didn’t follow the traffic laws.” Michigan United States guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …US military fears cutting troop numbers in Afghanistan too quickly could jeopardise entire mission Unless Barack Obama has a sudden change of heart, his address to the nation will privately disappoint many of the senior commanders in Isaf – the International Security and Assistance Force – and provide them with immediate logistical problems. The military had been expecting an initial withdrawal of between 3,000 and 5,000 troops. That can be achieved relatively easily by reducing the number of back-up staff in Afghanistan. The ratio of fighters to support personnel is out of kilter at the moment, so this would help to rationalise the “teeth to tail” numbers. A further 5,000 soldiers out by the end of the year is more of a problem. In military circles this target is described as “challenging”. That means it is going to be a real headache, potentially disrupting plans for this summer’s fighting season, and the strategy for the autumn. Speaking ahead of the speech, Professor Michael Clarke, director of the Royal United Services Institute thinktank, warned the US needed to keep “as many combat units intact for as long as possible” or risk “snatching defeat from the jaws of victory”. But the likelihood now is that the US will have to start withdrawing one of its brigades in the autumn, to meet the first end of year deadline, and then synchronise the withdrawal of others through 2012 to get all 33,000 surge troops out of Afghanistan within the White House timetable. There will not be a second fighting season at full strength, which is what commanders wanted. All talk of a “conditions-based withdrawal”, the phrase used by Downing Street and the White House to provide reassurance to the generals, appears to have been abandoned. The conditions driving this process now are political ones. In early 2013, the US will still have more
Continue reading …Airline finally ends bitter conflict with Unite union that resulted in 22 days of strikes and cost it £150m British Airways and the Unite trade union have ended one of the most rancorous industrial disputes in recent decades after cabin crew at the airline accepted a peace deal. Following 22 days of walkouts and a £150m hit to BA’s balance sheet, both sides have declared an end to nearly two years of hostilities. The agreement includes the return of staff travel perks for the thousands of crew who took part in strikes last year, but not the reversal of staff cuts that triggered the initial dispute in 2009. More than 6,500 crew backed the deal, representing a 92% majority on a 72% turnout. Len McCluskey, Unite general secretary, said: “Thankfully we have reached an honourable agreement with BA. The overwhelming acceptance of this deal by cabin crew means that both parties can now move forward together on securing a bright future for the airline.” BA said: “The skills and professionalism of British Airways cabin crew are second to none, and we are delighted this dispute is behind us.” The travel plans of hundreds of thousands of BA passengers were disrupted by the dispute, while dozens of crew were disciplined by the airline, including the sacking of senior figures at the main Unite cabin crew branch, Bassa. As part of the agreement, crew disciplined during the dispute can refer their cases to binding arbitration by Acas, the conciliation service. McCluskey said: “I hope it sends a message to employers everywhere that working with your workforce is the only way to secure productive change.” Hopes of a peace deal rose when, after a torrid 2010, there was a change of leadership at Unite and BA, with McCluskey replacing Tony Woodley and Derek Simpson, while at BA chief executive Willie Walsh, who took the top job at BA’s parent International Airlines Group, was replaced by Keith Williams. Williams admitted this month that the dispute had damaged the BA brand, having become front-page news last year as the likes of Gordon Brown joined attempts to end the stand-off. “One of the things we need to do is rebuild the brand image, which inevitably suffers during a protracted dispute,” he said. BA is preparing to launch a marketing push ahead of the Olympics, where it is a headline sponsor, emphasising a multibillion-pound investment programme that includes 12 Airbus A380 superjumbos. BA added: “We have made permanent structural savings to our business, which is now ready to invest £5.5bn over the next five years for the benefit of our customers.” British Airways Airline industry Travel & leisure Willie Walsh Unite Dan Milmo guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Culture secretary set to announce approval for deal after receiving Ofcom’s report • David Cameron pays visit to Murdoch HQ The culture secretary, Jeremy Hunt, is expected to give the final go-ahead to News Corporation’s proposed takeover of BSkyB early next week, after receiving a report on the deal from media regulator Ofcom on Wednesday. Hunt has been waiting to receive final reports on the regulatory issues relating to News Corp’s bid to buy the 60.9% of BSkyB it does not already own from Ofcom and the Office of Fair Trading. Hunt is expected to announce the deal will go through next week, although it is understood he is to put the decision out to a further seven-day consultation. He has previously indicated he is minded to approve the merger on condition that News Corporation agrees to spin off Sky News and restrict its shareholding in the channel to 39.1%. Although Ofcom has delivered its report to Hunt, the culture secretary is currently in Brazil with the deputy prime minister, Nick Clegg, as part of an official UK government visit. Hunt gave the deal a provisional green light in March and had been expected to announce his final decision by the end of April after putting it out to consultation. The delay in publishing a final approval for the takeover is due to make negotiations more intense on points of detail of the Sky News spin-off agreement between News Corp and Ofcom and the OFT, which have both been advising Hunt. Regulatory sources say they want to structure the legal agreement “so it cannot be got around” – an attempt to head off a perception that Rupert Murdoch has been successfully able to work around previous legal agreements he has signed designed to secure the editor’s independence at the point when the Times was acquired in 1981 and when the Wall Street Journal was bought in 2007. In both cases the agreements were designed to prevent the editor of both newspapers from easily being removed, but in practice editors at each title have come and gone largely at the behest of the owner. The long delay has frustrated Murdoch’s News Corp, which is keen to conclude the transaction at a time when BSkyB’s share price has been rising due to its strong financial performance. News Corp’s original proposal was 700p a share a year ago, but Sky’s share price was 830.5p on Wednesday. A final bid is thought likely to succeed at around 875p – costing News Corp about £1.8bn more than the original £7.5bn proposal. A string of media organisations, including the parent company of the Guardian, have opposed the proposed Murdoch merger, arguing it would stifle media plurality by bringing together the largest newspaper group, Sun and Times owner News International with a 37% share of all copies sold in the UK, and the largest broadcaster, BSkyB. Last year the fast-growing Sky had a turnover of £5.9bn, taking it comfortably ahead of the BBC. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook . BSkyB Television industry News Corporation Ofcom Rupert Murdoch Jeremy Hunt Dan Sabbagh Jason Deans guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Now, who is David Tyree? If you’re a football fan and watched the Giants play the Patriots in 2008, you might have seen one of the greatest plays in Super Bowl history as the game was winding down. Eli Manning escaped a sack, threw a Hail Mary third down pass deep over the middle of the field and a fourth string receiver named David Tyree miraculously caught the ball pressed up against his helmet with one hand. That play led to the Giants defeating Tom Brady’s 15-0 new England powerhouse team for an improbable win. Tyree was never anything special as a player, but became a local hero and got a book deal out of the legendary play. Unfortunately, he was hurt soon afterwards and was gone from football. Now he’s come out of the woodwork to become a vocal leader against marriage equality as the NY state bill legalizing gay marriage is in its final stages. With the legislative session in overtime and the votes of a handful of Republican state senators up for grabs, the fate of a “gay marriage” bill that would make New York the largest and most influential state to redefine marriage remained uncertain Tuesday. Why is Tyree’s behavior so egregious? He has come out and said that he would have dropped The Catch of the Ages on purpose if it meant that the bill would not pass. That’s right, he’s willing to trade a Giants Super Bowl win in order to be sure gay rights would be defeated. That’s sick. David Tyree, hero of Giants’ Super Bowl upset of Patriots, said he’d trade win to block gay marriage – Giants 2007 Super Bowl hero David Tyree said he’d trade “The Catch” and the team’s unlikely championship to keep marriage between one man and one woman.– Tyree, who called the catch a “gift” he couldn’t repeat if he tried, said “there’s nothing worth more than [maintaining heterosexual marriage] right here for me.” Asked if he’d give up the Super Bowl to stop gay marriage, Tyree said: “Honestly, I probably would.” “Nothing means more to me than that my God would be honored,” he said. “Being the fact that I firmly believe that God created and ordained marriage between a man and a woman, I believe that that’s something that should be fought for at all costs.” “So I’ll lay down everything I am to preserve the honor and integrity of the God that I serve.” He said his new role as a gay marriage opponent sheds deeper meaning on his Super Bowl catch. “Perhaps God orchestrated that play to give me a platform for what I’m doing here today: To urge political leaders all over our nation to reject same-sex marriage,” he said. Tyree said he doesn’t fear his stance will tarnish his image with Giants fans who support gay marriage. To think that Tyree would undermine his teammates, the fans, the league, 97.5 million viewers and his bosses for an ideological homophobic viewpoint is unconscionable. His stance on gay marriage doesn’t bother fans like myself because he has a right to believe what he wants, but to tie that into how he performs on the field is something that should tarnish his image forever. It’s nuts. Many professional athletes are in the religious right camp, but fans watch to enjoy the competition. Many readers know I follow sports and its Media Village because, well I enjoy sports, but also because AM sports talk radio and even ESPN has a lot of influence on local elections. It was critical in electing Scott Brown when Martha Coakley made a huge mistake about Curt Schilling. She ran a terrible campaign, but radio talkers roasted her on Boston sports talk and it definitely had an positive influence for Scott Brown. And Margery Eagan of the Boston Herald said the exact same thing on CNN: EAGAN: Well, she got very good press from “The Boston Globe,” not from my paper, “The Boston Herald.” But you know something? People don’t like — TV journalists and newspaper journalists do not like to talk about the influence of talk radio. Let me tell you something. There was a nonstop hammering of Martha Coakley on the AM stations here, on the huge sports stations here. She was the evil incarnate and Scott Brown was the next coming. And, you know, the New England Patriots in the playoffs lost early on. It was as if there was this transference from Tom “Terrific” Brady, the quarterback of the Patriots, to Scott “Terrific” Brown. You look at the rallies for Scott Brown, they were very white, they were very suburban, they were Gillette Stadium fans, and there was almost this… I could make numerous analogies about this to David Tyree, but as an ex-professional athlete he has spit the bit, jumped the shark and crossed the line. I’ll always remember Super Bowl 42, but Tyree has damaged himself. If Curt Schilling came out in 2008 and publicly said he would have lost game six on purpose against the Yankees in the 2004 playoffs to end the curse just to make sure McCain won in 2008, I wonder how Red Sox fans would feel?
Continue reading …Essex 19-year-old charged with five offences after arrest linked to cyber attacks by LulzSec group A British teenager has been charged with five offences of computer hacking. Ryan Cleary, 19, was charged with offences, including a cyber attack on Monday on Britain’s Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca). Cleary was arrested on Monday evening at his family’s home in Wickford, Essex. His arrest was linked to a series of cyber attacks by a group called LulzSec, which investigators believe had targeted websites including ones belonging to the US government and the electronics giant Sony. Cleary was charged over cyber attacks on targets including the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry and the British Phonographic Industry as well as on Soca. The investigation into whether he is involved in any other attacks is continuing. The Metropolitan police said: “A 19-year-old man has this afternoon been charged with offences under the Criminal Law Act and Computer Misuse Act by officers from the Metropolitan police service’s police central e-crime unit (PCeU).” Scotland Yard cyber crime detectives spent Tuesday and Wednesday questioning Cleary, 19, over the attacks carried out by the LulzSec group, which mostly targeted websites belonging to institutions and companies in the US. Computer equipment seized from his home was examined to see if it contained evidence linking him to the attacks. Cleary will appear at City of Westminster magistrates court on Thursday morning. The events leading to the arrest of Cleary involved an investigation by British police and the US Federal Bureau of Investigation. The FBI’s involvement, plus the nature of the targets, raised the prospect that Washington may seek the teenager’s extradition to the US. LulzSec Hacking Internet Vikram Dodd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Press face curbs on frontline reporting, internet links and translators, as insurgents go on alert for Gaddafi spies Rebel authorities in the besieged Libyan city of Misrata have introduced tough restrictions on foreign media, banning travel to the frontline, cutting internet access and ordering journalists to work only with officially approved translators. Insurgent leaders had previously encouraged journalists to move and speak freely throughout the city and frontlines. Frontline units said they were under instructions not to allow journalists access because of suspicions that some would be working for other interests. “We are afraid of spies from Gaddafi,” said Mohammed Durat, head of the Misrata media centre and a member of
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