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FC Porto v Sporting Braga – live! | Paul Doyle

• Hit F5 for the latest or select the auto-refresh button below • Email your thoughts to paul.doyle@guardian.co.uk 22 min: Custodio tries to nick a ball through to Lima, but Helton hurtles off his line to clutch it like a birthday present. Five’s commentator comes up with the stat of the day: Custodio is the 10th player to play in a European final on his birthday. Brian Kidd and Francis Lee also did so, apparently. 20 min: Braga break. But not in numbers. Unless two is a number, which it obviously is … but not a very useful one when they’re up against six Porto players. So nothing comes of the attack. 18 min: Falcao makes his presence felt for the first time … by venturing offside to meet Hulk’s freekick. His header went over anyway. 17 min: Braga have got more of a grip on this game now, and they’re strangling it. And Porto aren’t putting up much resistance. It’s gone all dull. “Re: that betting money burning a hole in your pocket, I’d suggest keeping your powder dry and maxing it out going overs on goals and cards come Sunday,” counsel Gary Naylor. “Half the players are desperate to avoid relegation, get a new contract, settle a score prove the manager wrong etc etc etc and the other half have a cigar on. Cue 6-3 with three red cards and 2-5 with twelve yellows.” 15 min: Nifty play by Vandinho in midfield to make space. Alan then tries to pick out Lima with a long, curling cross, but he overhit it. “You want a tip, yeah?” chirps Paul Taylor. “Portugal is famous, of course, for Port, that wonderful fortified wine that isn’t just for breakfast any more. Put your tenner on a bottle of decent stuff and you will definitely enjoy the result.” 13 min: Scrappy. 11 min: Corner to Porto, who continue to dominate, which is bad news for my betting: I keep trying to back them in-running but because the odds are tumbling so fast my wager can’t get through. Nor did that corner, as Artur surged from goal to clasp it. 9 min: Braga are looking nervous and careless at the back. Hulk and Varela are rampaging down the wings but so far their shooting has been inaccurate. 6 min: Hulk takes advantage of more slack defending, barging his way past Silvio and then scampering into the box and unleashing a fine shot from an acute angle. It flashed inches wide. “I’m supporting Braga as I saw Denmark v Bulgaria in Euro 2004 at their rock face of a stadium,” announces mark Judd. The local people were so friendly, showing us the best place to get high up photos, and giving us bottles of water as it was so hot. Also saw a match in Porto but can’t remember much about that.” Anywhere that has local people showing you a place to get high sounds alright … 4 min: Chance for Braga! A long throw-in was only partially cleared, allowing Vandinho to have a crack from the edge of the area. it was charged down but Braga lofted the ball back into the box and suddenly Custodio finds himself unmarked 18 yards out. He lets fly first time but fails to hit the target. Shoddy defending, shoddy finishing. 3 min: Already the game has settled into the expected pattern, with Porto monopolising the ball and Braga sitting in deep clusters to bar their path to goal. Pace is quite pedestrian so far. 1 min: Porto get the game going, to a tremendous din. Portugal may be broke right now, but not so much that their citizens can’t afford flights to Dublin (which were probably cheaper than the tickets to the match). 7:44pm: Right, I’ve got some money in my online bookie account and I want to invest it wisely: not having seen much of these sides this season, I need tips for this match. Anyone? 7:43pm: Out trot the teams … to kitsch music that sounds strangely like the old Lassie theme tune. Preamble: These teams are from the same country and tonight they seek the same prize – but that’s about all they have in common. On one hand we have Porto, long one of the top clubs in Europe, a side who have just finished their domestic league unbeaten and 21 points clear of their nearest pursuers, and who have a fearsome forward line in the form of Falcao and Hulk as well as the most acclaimed young manager in the continent, 33-year-old André Villa Boas. And on the other hand we have Braga, a humble club whose only major is the 1966 Portuguese Cup (what it about 1966 and minnows winning cups?), who finished fourth in their domestic league this season, and in the process suffered two defeats by Porto. Indeed, that tends to be how their meetings go: Porto have won 92 of the 131 previous encounters between these clubs, Braga have triumphed in just 17. It would be a minor revolution if the underdogs were to prevail tonight. Facts or varying relevance: 1) If Braga win tonight, Domingos Pacienca will become the first manager in Uefa Cup/Europa League history to win in the final against a team he used to play for. He was Porto’s top scorer in the 1995/96 season 2) Porto goalkeeper Helton is 33 today. So is Ricardo Carvahlo. Lady Gaga is not, but I thought I’d mention her just to boost Google click-throughs. 3) Free porn. Oh, and here are the teams: Porto: Helton; Sapunaru, Rolando, Otamendi, Alvaro Pereira; Guarin, Fernando, Moutinho; Hulk, Falcao, Varela Subs: Beto, Maicon, Belluschi, Walter, Rodriguez, Souza, Ruben Michel Braga: Artur; Miguel Garcia, Paulao, Alberto Rodriguez, Silvio; Custodio, Hugo Viana, Vandinho; Alan, Lima, Paulo Cesar Subs: Cristiano, Kaka, Mossoro, Barbos, Meyong, Elderson, Salino Ref: C V Carballo (Spain) Europa League FC Porto Sporting Braga Paul Doyle guardian.co.uk

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Public sector unions to ballot over pensions and job cuts as talks stall

Up to 750,000 workers could walk out in June, while action in autumn would bring parts of UK to standstill Civil servants have voted to ballot on strike action in protest against job cuts and changes to their pensions, paving the way for a 750,000-strong walkout from schools, universities, courts and Whitehall on 30 June. The decision at the PCS civil service union’s annual conference in Brighton on Wednesday comes as talks set up to avoid strikes spreading across the public sector are threatening to grind to a halt. Ministers and unions have failed to agree on even the basic starting point for negotiations. Sources close to the discussions – between public-sector unions, the chief secretary to the Treasury, Danny Alexander, and the Cabinet Office minister, Francis Maude – said they still disagreed on the starting principles of the talks after the government announced that an increase in contributions and a change in the way pensions are measured was introduced as a fait accompli. If the talks fail, strikes will hit the public sector in the autumn, with co-ordinated action potentially bringing large parts of the country to a standstill. On Wednesday the PCS union, representing 250,000 civil servants, voted to ballot for strike action. It means that a breakaway group of unions representing up to 750,000 public servants are now balloting for strike action to move towards a strike on 30 June affecting schools, courts, ports and job centres if the talks have not succeeded. The National Union of Teachers and the Association of Teachers and Lecturers launched ballots this week. The University and College Union already has a mandate for rolling strike action. Whitehall civil servants in the FDA union are also voting on Thursday, further raising the stakes for government. Jonathan Baume, the general secretary of FDA, will tell his conference that the negotiations with ministers are “serious and united”. But he will warn: “The government can impose change. But ministers also know that they will pay a heavy price if they do. Those affected would include everyone from the Jobcentre Plus worker in Rotherham to a high-court judge in the Strand. “There would inevitably be widespread industrial action, and damage to morale and motivation for millions of key public sector workers, with a potentially significant electoral price to pay in 2015.” Leaked details suggest the negotiators are struggling to agree the basics. Unions are opposing plans to increase pension contributions by an average of three percentage points from next year – reducing workers’ monthly take-home pay. Protecting the lowest paid will mean that the higher paid will have to pay more than the average increase, presenting a potential rift in the talks. Unions are particularly incensed that the Treasury has set a target of reducing public sector payments by £2.8bn, which they say amounts to an extra tax. Some unions flatly oppose the proposed method of calculating the new career average scheme, set out in the most recent meeting last week, which would replace the more generous final salary schemes some public sector workers receive. Mark Serwotka, general secretary of the PCS, said: “Frankly, I think the talks are a charade. When the government insists on increasing contributions without negotiation we can’t see scope for any change. The government’s starting position is drastic and severe. We are all agreed we should carry on talking, but their proposals are truly shocking.” The government will make a formal offer on pensions in June. A source said: “Both sides are doing what they can to head off industrial action. Government can’t concede on getting the schemes on to a sustainable basis. We don’t want to be in the position in five to 10 years’ time, like Ireland, where you have to cut existing pensions. Contributions have got to rise, we’ve been sure of that from the beginning.” Trade unions Public sector pensions Public sector cuts Public services policy Civil service Polly Curtis guardian.co.uk

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Dmitry Medvedev promises to break silence on election bid

Amid speculation Putin may stand for Russian presidency again, some claim ‘rift’ staged to hide lack of real opposition Dmitry Medvedev, the president of Russia, has promised to reveal soon whether he will run for a second term, saying at his first major press conference that “silence cannot last forever” on the subject. There had been intense speculation that Medvedev would use the conference on Wednesday to give a strong signal on whether he or his ally, Vladimir Putin, the prime minister, will stand in elections to the presidency next March. Moscow is thick with rumours that there is friction between the two men over who should stand, although some analysts think the ruling elite is promoting talk of a rift to hide the lack of true political competition in Russia. Medvedev, 45, refused to say which of the pair would be a candidate, but indicated he would make his intentions known in the near future. “You can expect an announcement soon,” he told more than 800 journalists in an auditorium at the Skolkovo business school near Moscow. In a wide-ranging question-and-answer session, which seemed tailored to boost his ratings in an election campaign, Medvedev said Putin, 57, was his close ally. However, he made remarks which set him apart from his mentor. Asked if the release of the jailed oil tycoon, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, would present a danger to society, he replied: “Absolutely no danger at all,” in marked contrast to Putin’s statement about the businessman in December that “a thief should sit in jail”. When he came to power in 2008, Medvedev said that he preferred meetings with small numbers of journalists. Then he abruptly announced last month that he would hold his first large-scale televised news conference, something that Putin did annually as president. The decision came after Putin gave a bravura performance in his annual prime-ministerial speech to parliament on 20 April, which contained a raft of social measures and was seen as a pitch for his own return to the presidency. Medvedev’s two-and-a-quarter-hour conference followed the Putin mould: Hundreds of Russian journalists waved signs with the names of their regions and pleaded to pose a question. One woman held up a sheet of paper with a red love heart drawn on it. Several reporters prefaced their queries with adulatory waffle about the president, and a correspondent from the Arctic in a traditional felt jacket asked about the prospects for reindeer herders. Asked about Moscow’s relations with Nato, Medvedev said they were “not the worst” and “a lot of water has flowed under the bridge” since the two clashed over the war in Georgia in 2008. However, he sent a warning to the US not to push ahead with a missile defence system in eastern Europe without including Russia as a partner. “If we don’t work out a model of co-operation on missile defence then we [Russia] will have to take measures in response and then we’re talking about speeding up the development of nuclear strike potential,” he said. ‘That would be a very bad scenario that would throw us back to the cold war epoch.” Medvedev seemed assured as he answered questions and repeatedly stressed his passion for Russia’s modernisation, but he lacked Putin’s salty phrases and demagogic touch. Putin sent a subtle reminder of his superior image with the publication of an interview in Outdoor Life, a US magazine, in which he discussed his macho photo shoots. He dismissed suggestions that a US leader would not pose with a bare chest or a weapon. He said Theodore Roosevelt had been pictured with a lion he shot, and Barack Obama was filmed bathing in the Pacific last year when he was “not wearing a tie, to put it mildly”. Dmitry Medvedev Russia Europe Vladimir Putin Tom Parfitt guardian.co.uk

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US to freeze assets of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad and senior officials

Sanctions announced by Washington are sign of increased international pressure on regime over crackdown on protesters The US is to impose sanctions on the Syrian president Bashar al-Assad for human rights abuses in an escalation of international pressure on his regime. The penalties announced by the US treasury mark the first time that Assad has been targeted personally by the international community for his government’s crackdown on protesters. The move freezes any assets of Assad and six senior Syrian officials that are in the United States or otherwise fall within US jurisdiction, and generally bars US citizens and companies from dealing with them. “The actions the administration has taken today send an unequivocal message to President Assad, the Syrian leadership, and regime insiders that they will be held accountable for the ongoing violence and repression in Syria,” said David S Cohen, the acting undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence. “President al-Assad and his regime must immediately end the use of violence, answer the calls of the Syrian people for a more representative government, and embark upon the path of meaningful democratic reform,” he added. The six officials targeted with the Syrian president are vice president Farouq al-Shara, prime minister Adel Safar, interior minister Mohammad Ibrahim al-Shaar, defence minister Ali Habib, Abdul Fatah Qudsiya, the head of Syrian military intelligence, and Mohammed Dib Zaitoun, director of the political security directorate. Barack Obama, who last month imposed sanctions for alleged human rights abuses on Assad’s brother Maher, his cousin and an intelligence chief, will on Thursday deliver a major speech on the uprisings throughout the Arab world, with prominent mentions of Syria. Assad has said his security forces made mistakes during the two-month uprising and blamed poorly-trained police at least in part for the crackdown that has killed more than 850 people. The protests seeking an end to Assad’s 11-year rule began after demonstrations toppled authoritarian regimes in Tunisia and Egypt. European governments agreed on Tuesday to tighten sanctions against the Syrian leadership, but said they would decide next week about whether to include Assad personally on the list. Bashar Al-Assad Syria Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest US foreign policy guardian.co.uk

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Lee Kwan Yew, Singapore’s founding father, retires from cabinet

Former PM, who led country from independence in 1959 to 1990, says it is time to make way for a younger team of ministers Surprises do not come often in the city-state of Singapore, a place so staid that locals and foreigners alike deridingly call it “Singabore”. But after a groundbreaking election in which the ruling party had its first major shakeup after 50 years in power, Singapore’s “founding father”, Lee Kwan Yew, has announced his full retirement from cabinet. The 87-year-old former prime minister cited this year’s “watershed” election as his inspiration, in which the People’s Action party (PAP), which he helped create at independence from Malaysia in 1959, won its lowest ratings yet with just 60% of the popular vote. A decade ago it won 75%. Calling for “a fresh clean slate”, Lee noted that his age distanced him from younger voters and that a “younger team of ministers [should] connect to and engage with this younger generation in shaping the future of Singapore”. Lee is largely credited with turning the small colonial outpost into the financial dynamo it is today. While older generations revere the man for his hard-talking comments and no-nonsense policies, the younger generation – most of whom cannot and do not care to remember Singapore as a hodge-podge community of ramshackle neighbourhoods – has proven less impressed. Critics, many of them voters in their 20s, largely used social media during this election to speak out against Singapore’s high living costs, low wages and lax immigration laws that pit locals against foreigners, who comprise about 40% of the island’s population, for jobs. For them, Lee’s stepping down heralds a breath of fresh air and “is a pretty big deal”, says Nansi Panjar, 27, who voted for the opposition Reform party in the 7 May election. “This shows that the PAP is listening to its voters and that change could finally be in the air.” Once the raison d’etre for the PAP, Lee became somewhat of a liability, alienating voters with comments about ethnic Malays not adapting well to Singapore and the “usefulness” of opposition parties. A much younger cabinet, with an average age of 52, was unveiled on Wednesday. Lee was Singapore’s first prime minister, leading the country from independence in 1959 to 1990. He is the longest-serving prime minister in the Commonwealth and the longest-serving head of government in Asia. He has remained in the cabinet since stepping down as prime minister, first serving as senior minister from 1990 to 2004 and later, from 2004 to 2011, as minister mentor, a post made for him by his son, Lee Hsien Loong, the current prime minister. He has also stepped down as the chairman of the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC) , which he has ceded to his son. Lee the elder will stay on as senior adviser to the state investment firm, among the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds at $300bn (£149bn). He will also remain MP of Tanjong Pagar ward, a constituency that he won uncontested in this year’s election. Just how far removed from politics he will really become, however, is anyone’s guess. In 1988 he was quoted as saying, that “even from my sickbed, even if you are going to lower me into the grave and I feel that something is going wrong, I will get up. Those who believe that after I have left the government as prime minister, I will go into a permanent retirement, really should have their heads examined.” Perhaps that is why many voters are saying that, while his stepping down is somewhat of a coup, the real change is still to come. “To be honest, we’ll only see true freedom when Lee dies,” said Panjar. “That’s when Singapore will finally be able to take a long look at itself and question where it really wants to go.” Singapore guardian.co.uk

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Egypt in flux: sober realities and optimism 100 days after Mubarak’s fall

Energised by the Tahrir Square revolt, Egyptians are now struggling to cast a new political mould for the country Overlooking the Nile in the heart of Cairo, a few hundred metres from Tahrir Square, stands the charred headquarters of the now defunct National Democratic party. Its smashed windows and blackened facade symbolise the fall of Hosni Mubarak’s regime on 11 February. It is eerily deserted, apart from a lone sentry slumped by the gate at night. The square itself, centre of the political earthquake, has become a tourist attraction where revolutionary T-shirts, stickers and other memorabilia vie with the model sphinxes, pyramids and papyrus on sale in the souvenir shops. It’s as if the extraordinary events of the recent past already belong to ancient history. But Egypt’s revolution is unfinished business, its immediate prospects clouded by insecurity, economic worries and sectarian violence. The generals who so dramatically ditched their commander-in-chief remain in charge of the interim civilian government. Sunday marks the 100th day since Mubarak was ousted, but there are still many question marks about the future. Parliamentary elections are due in September, before a new constitution defining the powers of the president and other key issues is written, and Mubarak’s successor may not be chosen before next spring. But apathy, bred by decades of autocracy, has been replaced by an electrifying sense of new possibilities. As the Arab spring fades into a bloody summer in Libya, Syria and Yemen, Egypt’s relatively peaceful achievement – thought it still cost at least 846 deaths – looks stupendous but fragile. “Mubarak is facing trial, his sons are both in jail and the Muslim Brotherhood are appearing on TV,” laughed Amr Khafagi, editor of the liberal al-Shourouk newspaper. “That’s all magic. But this is the new reality here.” Egyptians from all walks of life look back with passion and disbelief to the 18 days of revolt in Tahrir Square, yet there is real alarm at the problems piling up. “High expectations and many dangers,” frets Osama Ghazali Harb, leader of the Democratic Front party. A senior civil servant said: “The euphoria has taken its course. Now the questions are, ‘will the trains run on time, will the factories produce goods, will the workers be disciplined?’ Egyptians go from one extreme to the other. People like tranquillity and stability.” Signs of disorder are rife. Naguib, a middle-aged engineer, watched pro- and anti-Mubarak demonstrators chanting abuse at each other outside the state TV building, nervous black-uniformed troops separating them. “I salute those who made the revolution. But now it’s total chaos. We can’t go on like this. We can’t have these excessive freedoms.” Cairo’s notorious traffic seems worse than before. The absence of police, together with the contempt in which they are now held, means that minibuses triple-park, and tuc-tuc rickshaws buzz along the already choked main roads instead of the back alleys where they are supposed to stay. Lawlessness is routine. Police stations are attacked to free detainees, and hospital staff are abused and beaten if they seem slow to treat patients. Even more alarming is the notion that a counter-revolution is at work. It is widely believed that “remnants” of the National Democratic party are orchestrating acts of thuggery and encouraging hardline fundamentalist Salafis to stir up trouble – in incidents such as the armed attack on a Coptic church last week in which 12 people died in the working-class Cairo neighbourhood of Imbaba. The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, led by Field-Marshal Mohamed Tantawi, had been criticised for breaking up student protests while soft-pedalling on the Salafis, but it won praise for a belated tough response to Imbaba. “People are pleased the army cracked down,” said Mansour Taha, a 20-something office worker. “We’ve been waiting for this. Egypt needs strong leaders.” Optimists say they believe the council will keep its promise and hand over power at the earliest opportunity. “The military can run the country but they can’t rule it,” said the media entrepreneur Hisham Kassem. “These are professional soldiers, not Nasser and the rebels of 1952. And Mubarak made sure his top brass didn’t have political aspirations.” Still, there is much talk of a secret deal or understanding with the Muslim Brotherhood and speculation that the military may in the end field its own presidential candidate, perhaps a recently retired general. It is a worry that the hated emergency laws have not yet been repealed. “Tantawi and the others are still loyal to the Mubarak mindset to some degree,” said Mamoun Fandy, a columnist. Pragmatists retort that there is no choice but to trust the generals. “It’s easy for revolutionaries to attack the military,” said Hani Shukrallah, the veteran al-Ahram commentator. “But the fact is that any confrontation with them will fail. Look at Syria and Libya. Even if you split the military you will have civil war.” For George Ishaak, a founder of the grassroots movement Kefaya, which captured the spirit of Tahrir back in 2005, the answer is to keep up the pressure on the army – as happened in mid-April when momentum flagged but new rallies in the square prompted the sensational arrest of Mubarak and his sons, Alaa and Gamal. Last week there were cheers when people heard that Mubarak’s wife, Suzanne, had been detained. The trials of regime loyalists, especially the hated former interior minister Habib al-Adly, are good for morale and reinforce the sense that whatever difficulties lie ahead, epoch-making changes have already taken place. Shukrallah describes a fitful process of “one step back and two steps forward”. It is clear, however, that casting a new Egyptian political mould will not be easy. Old and new, secular and liberal, parties are struggling to get their act together in time for September’s parliamentary elections, at which, many predict, there will be a strong showing for the well-organised Muslim Brotherhood, banned under the old regime. The referendum in March on a new constitution, the 77% yes vote creating a fast timetable for change, was seen as giving a significant advantage to the Islamists. But it may also have reflected a widespread desire for stability – perhaps the most popular word in the Egyptian political lexicon. The 44% turnout, which was vast compared with any Mubarak-era election, was a healthy sign of an unfamiliar sense of civic duty and belief in the possibilities of reform. Overall, Egypt’s mood is one of optimism tempered by a sober realisation of the scale of the challenges ahead for the largest country in the Arab world, which is now inspiring others in the region for the first time since Nasser. It is true there is no clear answer to the much debated question of exactly what constitutes a revolution, but there is no doubt that illiteracy, lack of opportunities, corruption, poverty and inequality all remain formidably difficult issues for any government in Cairo. “The situation is very tense because there is a mixture of fear and concern … or worry that this might turn out a nightmare,” said Mona Makram-Ebeid, an academic and former MP. “But at the same time there is a lot of hope. Before I was too optimistic. I thought things could settle down sooner. But this was not a tea party. It was a revolution after all.” Egypt Arab and Middle East unrest Hosni Mubarak Ian Black guardian.co.uk

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Feel the Michelle-mentum: Fox is talking up Bachmann’s presidential bid now

Click here to view this media Well, while more sensible thinkers like Mike Huckabee and Donald Trump have been dropping like flies from the Republican presidential-candidate field, this has of course left room for the complete nutcases like Michele Bachmann to step to the fore : Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, a Tea Party favorite and something of a surrogate for Sarah Palin, is getting ready to jump into the presidential contest. Her advisers put out the word on Monday that a run was “very likely” and a D.C.-based consultant tells Power Play that Bachmann associates have been shopping for services. “This is now beyond speculation. They are doing this,” the consultant said. While Bachmann is a polarizing figure in the party, her candidacy is quite logical. With Mike Huckabee bowing out of the race, Palin showing no outward signs of launching a campaign and Newt Gingrich seeming to burn up on entry into the race, that leaves former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum with an almost unobstructed view of the social conservative voters who dominate Iowa’s caucuses. Bachmann’s candidacy is also helped by the fact that Donald Trump has renewed his contract with NBC and ended the most successful publicity stunt of his career. His appeal had been based on blunt, pungent attacks on President Obama, stock in trade for Bachmann. Plus, she gets similar attention from establishment media outlets that like to bring her on for bearbaiting sessions and then mock her afterwards. As Bachmann has expanded her national profile and become more outspoken, her chances for reelection to her congressional seat have somewhat dimmed. Redistricting, a prospective romp by President Obama at the top of the ticket and the aversion to confrontation inherent in Minnesotans leaves Bachmann vulnerable to what would surely be a serious effort by Democrats to unseat her. As you can see, Bachmann continues to play coy on Fox News, but it is starting to look like we’ll get our comic relief in the Republican primaries after all. I’m popping up a big batch of popcorn.

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Gingrich Punts When Asked About $500K Tiffany’s Bill — ‘I’m Not Going to Play Trivial Pursuit’

Click here to view this media Man oh man. I was wondering not long ago how long it would take for Newt Gingrich’s campaign to go down in flames, but I didn’t expect for it to be this soon. How bad is it when you’re getting grilled in what should be friendly territory at Fox from the likes of Greta Van Susteren and you’re getting hit from all sides from your own party for saying something negative about Paul Ryan’s budget as he did on last weekend’s Meet the Press ? Here he is on Greta’s show, deciding that he’s not going to comment if anyone decides to ask him — as Greta did here — about their Tiffany’s bill : GINGRICH: Now later on, I want you to watch this particular segment Greta. VAN SUSTEREN: Okay. GINGRICH: And notice I talked about jobs. I talked about the price of gasoline. I talked about all sorts of real problems for real Americans… VAN SUSTEREN: And I brought this one up. GINGRICH: …that in a presidential campaign we could talk, we could bring up and I think it sort of fit in perfectly and my answer to you is I’m not commenting on stuff like that. I am perfectly happy to talk about what we need to do for America and what we need to do to help Americans, but I frankly don’t want to play the gotcha’ games in Washington and I’m just not going to participate. Part of running for president is that everything you ever did, every person you ever knew… name it… sooner or later somebody somewhere is going to run across it, you know and… it will show up. And I’ve just decided if it doesn’t relate to a better future for America; if it doesn’t relate to helping the American people; if it doesn’t relate to solving our problems, from here on out, my answer’s going to be I’m not commenting on it and then people can decide. If you want to play Trivial Pursuit, that’s fine. But I’m not going to play Trivial Pursuit. I’m going to try to help this country get back on track. I assume he’ll use the same tactic when asked about those pesky little items like his adultery and divorces as well. Heaven forbid we can’t have the media playing “Trivial Pursuit” with asking him if he’s a huge flaming hypocrite when espousing “family values” and whether his supposed religious beliefs square with how he’s lived his life. I’m sure he thinks that would be terribly unfair and has put those kind of “gotcha” questions off limits as well.

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UK’s eight-year military presence in Iraq to end on Sunday

Defence secretary says departure of 170 navy training personnel will mark conclusion of Operation Telic Britain’s eight years of military commitment in Iraq will finally and formally come to an end on Sunday, when the remaining forces in the south of the country will withdraw. The announcement to bring to an end one of the most controversial military campaigns in recent history was made on Wednesday in a statement to the Commons by the defence secretary, Liam Fox. In total, the UK still has about 170 mostly naval personnel in Iraq, helping to train the fledgling Iraqi navy from the port of Umm Qasr. The contingent includes a few Royal Marines. That compares with the 46,000 British troops and other military personnel that were committed to the first phase of Operation Telic, the name given to the campaign to remove Saddam Hussein. In all, 178 UK service personnel, and one Ministry of Defence civilian, died in Iraq between 2003 and 2009. UK combat forces, primarily based in the southern city of Basra, withdrew in July 2009 but since then the Royal Navy has continued working alongside US forces to train 1,800 Iraqis. In his statement, Fox said that the UK-Iraq training and maritime support agreement “will conclude on 22 May”. He added: “British forces have been involved in this important task since 2003 and, under the agreement signed in 2009, Royal Navy trainers have developed the capacity of the Iraqi maritime security forces to protect their territorial waters and offshore oil platforms, which are vital to Iraq’s economic revival. “Having successfully completed their mission UK personnel deployed to Iraq under this agreement will now leave the country. This will mark the formal conclusion of Operation Telic.” Fox said that the UK would continue to train members of the Iraqi security forces in the UK, and contribute to the Nato training mission which remains in Iraq. “I pay tribute to all UK service personnel who have served in Iraq over the last eight years and to the sacrifices made by so many for the benefit of the people of Iraq and our national security,” the statement said. Fox said that this was “also an opportunity to reflect on the wider contribution of Britain’s armed forces to Iraq since 2003. Thanks to the sacrifice, commitment, and professionalism of thousands of British service men and women Southern Iraq is an area transformed”. The MoD issued two further statements on the withdrawal. Brigadier Max Marriner, commander British forces Iraq, said: “The UK armed forces can look back with pride at what they have achieved in Iraq since 2003 – security has fundamentally improved and as a consequence the social and economic development of the south has dramatically changed for the better, as too have people’s lives. “The Iraqi navy are ready, so now is the time for the UK to dress back and let them complete the mission they were created for.” Brigadier Tim Chicken, director, Iraq training assistance mission (naval), added: “Although conducted out of the limelight, the work of British forces in Iraq since the end of the combat mission two years ago, spearheaded by the Royal Navy, has achieved significant results. “I am confident that our work with the Iraqi navy has set the agenda for a fruitful, long-term defence relationship between our two countries and everyone here is very proud of the role they have played.” Iraq Middle East Military Liam Fox Nick Hopkins guardian.co.uk

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Reality Check: Katie Couric’s Five Years at CBS Marked by Liberal Agenda and Low Ratings

Tomorrow marks Katie Couric’s last night at the anchor desk of the CBS Evening News . Five years ago, CBS executives were so excited about the Today show star taking over, her September 5, 2006 debut was preceded by a massive publicity campaign. Outgoing interim anchor Bob Schieffer vouched for his replacement: “She’s tough, she’s fair, she’s a straight shooter….Just watch.”

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