Home » Posts tagged with » media (Page 611)
US government in budget deadlock

Obama and Republican House Speaker fail to agree details on how £33bn cuts to government spending can be made The US federal government faces a shutdown from Saturday after the White House and the Republican-led House failed to reach an agreement on Tuesday on budget spending cuts. Barack Obama met the House Speaker, John Boehner, at the White House but the two were unable to bridge differences. Obama, speaking afterwards at a press conference, said the two were closer than ever before over the amount of cuts, but he blamed politics and ideology for the continued differences. If there is no deal by Friday, the shutdown in federal services will start the following day. The armed forces and emergency services will not be affected, but there will be disruption to such things as payments to military veterans, passport applications, visits to national parks and monuments and loans to small businesses, Obama said. The Democrats and Republicans are locked in a battle over last year’s budget. Obama told the press conference that he had agreed to the $33bn (£20bn) in cuts originally sought by Boehner, but that the speaker was quibbling about the details. The main disagreement is not over the figure but where the cuts should be made: the Republicans want reductions that would hit both Obama’s healthcare plans and the environmental protection agency. Obama and Boehner both held press conferences, intent on trying to avoid the blame for a shutdown. “The American people do not like these games,” Obama said, calling on his Republican opponents to behave like grown-ups and reach a compromise. Boehner said there was no agreement because the $33bn cuts proposed by the White House were smoke and mirrors. “There was no agreement reached so those conversations will continue,” Boehner said. Boehner is under pressure from a new Republican intake in the House who owe their victories to the Tea Party movement which campaigned for deep cuts in federal spending. Obama offered to hold further meetings on Wednesday and Thursday with Boehner. It has been 15 years since the last US shutdown, during the Clinton administration. In a separate development, the Republicans introduced their spending plan for the future, one that would cut the federal deficit by $5.8tn over the next decade, compared with the $1tn Obama is proposing. The Republican budget has no chance of being implemented, with Obama in the White House and the Democrats in charge of the Senate. The Republican cuts would come from healthcare and tax reforms. US politics Barack Obama Republicans Democrats Tea Party movement United States US economy Economics Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Clegg admits parental job boost

Deputy prime minister owns up to securing his first internship through his father’s influence in a Finnish bank Nick Clegg was forced to admit it was “wrong” that his own career had been boosted by parental connections when he was starting out, getting him time at a bank and his first job in politics. The revelation that the deputy prime minister had been helped by his father’s influence cast a shadow over the government’s announcement of a drive to end unpaid internships. As the government put more accessible internships in desirable professions at the centre of a drive to give poorer children better opportunities, it also emerged that eight coalition MPs were continuing the practice of employing unpaid interns. An anonymous intern also said he had worked for Nick Clegg in opposition. A new national internship scheme is intended to get young people into professions otherwise closed to all but those who know people in the field or “your father’s friends”, in Nick Clegg’s words. Clegg also wants to encourage people to use national minimum wage legislation to shop employers who are taking advantage of free and eager young workers. The government pointed to an announcement by the Tory chairman, Lady Warsi, that they were leading by example in closing down the civil service to all informally arranged slots of work experience from 2012. In the morning when launching the policy, the deputy prime minister was asked by Labour MP John Spellar in the Commons whether he could confirm he had secured his first internship through his father’s influence in a Finnish bank. Clegg told the house: “Yes, I can. As a teenager, yes, I did receive an internship, as, I suspect, did many people around the chamber. “Good for you if you did not. All of us should be honest and acknowledge that the way that internships have been administered in the private sector, the public sector, political parties and – I discovered when we came into government – in Whitehall as well, under 13 years of Labour, left a lot to be desired. “I was a recipient of that, as, I suspect, many others here were as well. That is what we need to change if we want to secure greater social mobility in the future.” Afterwards, at the press conference to launch the document, Clegg was asked whether it was true his father had secured him a job at the European commission through a conversation with his neighbour, former foreign secretary Lord Carrington. Clegg said: “The whole system was wrong. I’m not the slightest bit ashamed of saying that we all inhabited a system which was wrong.” Included as part of the policies is a “business compact” being signed with large companies – including the Guardian – that they seek to provide fairer access to their workplaces. Clegg asked employers to pay at least the appropriate national minimum wage or payment of reasonable out-of-pocket expenses. They should encourage schools and blind applications in the hope the best qualified will be accepted. The government also launched its child poverty strategy, putting on a statutory footing a new child poverty and social mobility commission which will enshrine in law a body to monitor the progress made by this government and future ones towards eliminating child poverty by 2020. Seven indicators at different stages of the life cycle will be monitored by different Whitehall departments to see if they help or hinder social mobility. Asked about his own party’s policy on internships, Clegg said he had just set out a new set of rules. Lib Dem interns will now receive travel expenses and up to £5 for lunch, though many questioned whether that was feasible. Eight coalition MPs and three constituency parties were advertising for unpaid interns as Clegg announced the policy. The website working4anMP currently lists unpaid intern vacancies with the Conservative MPs Aidan Burley, David Davis, David Amess, Mark Menzies and Dominic Raab, and the West Thurrock constituency Conservative party. Lib Dem MPs advertising for an unpaid intern included David Ward and John Leech, along with the Bristol and Lewes constituency Lib Dem parties. A former unpaid intern for Nick Clegg, Jonny Medland from Oxford told the group Intern Aware he had “worked on all sorts of projects – drafting articles to appear in the local and national press, researching policy announcements from the then Labour government and making notes for speeches in the Commons. It definitely wasn’t ‘work experience’ but was exactly the sort of work which the coalition is now, rightly, insisting you should be paid for”. A survey conducted this year by the parliamentary branch of Unite revealed that half of MPs from the main parties are offering work experience without paying expenses. Nick Clegg Unemployment Apprenticeships Allegra Stratton Graham Snowdon guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
House Republicans Preparing for Government Shutdown

Click here to view this media GOP Preps Emergency Bill With Deep Cuts If Shutdown Becomes Inevitable : While the GOP preps House members with guidance in the event of a government shutdown, they’re also readying a one-week stop-gap funding bill, including $12 billion in domestic discretionary cuts, and six month’s worth of Pentagon funding. The purpose is simple. If negotiations over a six-month spending package don’t yield an agreement in the next day or two, the Congress will be armed with the proper protocols for operating during shutdown. But the House of Representatives will also pass a politically tough temporary funding package — with cuts too deep for many Democrats to accept — and leave the question of a shutdown in their hand. If the Senate can pass it, and the President signs it, it buys congressional leaders and the White House another week to hash out a longer plan — but at the cost of steep, steep cuts. On an annualized basis, it would amount to well over half a trillion dollars. Ed Schultz talked to Rep. Karen Bass about the Republicans preparing for a government shutdown and she had a bit of additional news not already reported to MSNBC. Apparently the stopgap spending measure only funds the government for a week, but it funds the Pentagon for the rest of the year. And so much for Eric Cantor saying this would be the last of these CR’s to keep the government funded. The Republicans look like they’re playing an extremely dangerous game here. Let the hostage taking begin. Here’s more from Josh– Hostage Drama : With negotiations still at a standoff, House Republicans are preparing a one-week stop gapping spending measure to keep the government open for a single week. But the price is roughly half a trillion dollars of program cuts on an annualized basis . So the aim is present Democrats and the White House with cuts they can’t accept and force them to be the ones who ‘shut down the government.’ This is being presented as a clever ploy. And perhaps it is. But if my memory serves me right this is actually pretty similar to the ploy they used in 1995 and which worked so well for them. And as Think Progress reminded us this week, it’s the Republicans who have been clamoring for shutting down the government — Caught On Tape: Republicans Touting Support For Government Shutdown .

Continue reading …

Spring is in the air and The Archers has pupped with Ambridge Extra – an everyday story of rural folk, for young people The big thing this month – apart from the passionate coupling of Jolene and Kenton – is that The Archers has pupped. As The Archers is 60 years old, Ambridge Extra is a happy, if embarrassing, event. It will be transmitted twice a week on digital radio (off you go to Argos) and, according to the scriptwriter, will just zip along, whereas its elderly parent moves with almost vegetable sloth, like a mighty marrow. I fear it is intended to appeal to the younger element. Hands up anyone who wants to know more about Jamie’s mates Marty and Steve or Alice’s chums Chaz and Paulie. (Does no one have real names any more?) Yesterday they turned up, all pimples and alcopops, though curiously well spoken. Jamie, who is going through a bumpy adolescence, was being urged to steal from The Bull (“What’s the point of living in a pub if you can’t help yourself to the booze?”) while Alice, off her head on tequila at a rave (“Oops-a-daisy! Whoo!”), was rescued from the lascivious Sean (“Oh, what are you doing?”) by Chaz. In spite of the added alcohol, nothing much happened, which is what normally happens in Ambridge. Meanwhile, back in the marrow patch, Kenton and Jolene are inextricably entwined (“Kenton! I’m ready!”). Elizabeth is poaching Roy from Grey Gables to run Lower Loxley. Which, it turns out, is actually Higher Loxley, as the length of Nigel’s dying scream as he plummeted from the roof (allowing for acceleration and discounting wind resistance) indicates it must be as tall as York minster. This didn’t come up at the inquest as the tender-hearted coroner was distracted by David’s tears. David has become disturbingly morose recently: “We have to collect a sample of dung from every cow. It’s just One Thing After Another.” Happily, the heroic Ruth, though up to her neck in muck and bullocks, stays upbeat:”Standing around being miserable is not going to get the yard scraped.” Don’t you just love these old country saws? Radio 4 Radio Nancy Banks-Smith guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Spring is in the air and The Archers has pupped with Ambridge Extra – an everyday story of rural folk, for young people The big thing this month – apart from the passionate coupling of Jolene and Kenton – is that The Archers has pupped. As The Archers is 60 years old, Ambridge Extra is a happy, if embarrassing, event. It will be transmitted twice a week on digital radio (off you go to Argos) and, according to the scriptwriter, will just zip along, whereas its elderly parent moves with almost vegetable sloth, like a mighty marrow. I fear it is intended to appeal to the younger element. Hands up anyone who wants to know more about Jamie’s mates Marty and Steve or Alice’s chums Chaz and Paulie. (Does no one have real names any more?) Yesterday they turned up, all pimples and alcopops, though curiously well spoken. Jamie, who is going through a bumpy adolescence, was being urged to steal from The Bull (“What’s the point of living in a pub if you can’t help yourself to the booze?”) while Alice, off her head on tequila at a rave (“Oops-a-daisy! Whoo!”), was rescued from the lascivious Sean (“Oh, what are you doing?”) by Chaz. In spite of the added alcohol, nothing much happened, which is what normally happens in Ambridge. Meanwhile, back in the marrow patch, Kenton and Jolene are inextricably entwined (“Kenton! I’m ready!”). Elizabeth is poaching Roy from Grey Gables to run Lower Loxley. Which, it turns out, is actually Higher Loxley, as the length of Nigel’s dying scream as he plummeted from the roof (allowing for acceleration and discounting wind resistance) indicates it must be as tall as York minster. This didn’t come up at the inquest as the tender-hearted coroner was distracted by David’s tears. David has become disturbingly morose recently: “We have to collect a sample of dung from every cow. It’s just One Thing After Another.” Happily, the heroic Ruth, though up to her neck in muck and bullocks, stays upbeat:”Standing around being miserable is not going to get the yard scraped.” Don’t you just love these old country saws? Radio 4 Radio Nancy Banks-Smith guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Spring is in the air and The Archers has pupped with Ambridge Extra – an everyday story of rural folk, for young people The big thing this month – apart from the passionate coupling of Jolene and Kenton – is that The Archers has pupped. As The Archers is 60 years old, Ambridge Extra is a happy, if embarrassing, event. It will be transmitted twice a week on digital radio (off you go to Argos) and, according to the scriptwriter, will just zip along, whereas its elderly parent moves with almost vegetable sloth, like a mighty marrow. I fear it is intended to appeal to the younger element. Hands up anyone who wants to know more about Jamie’s mates Marty and Steve or Alice’s chums Chaz and Paulie. (Does no one have real names any more?) Yesterday they turned up, all pimples and alcopops, though curiously well spoken. Jamie, who is going through a bumpy adolescence, was being urged to steal from The Bull (“What’s the point of living in a pub if you can’t help yourself to the booze?”) while Alice, off her head on tequila at a rave (“Oops-a-daisy! Whoo!”), was rescued from the lascivious Sean (“Oh, what are you doing?”) by Chaz. In spite of the added alcohol, nothing much happened, which is what normally happens in Ambridge. Meanwhile, back in the marrow patch, Kenton and Jolene are inextricably entwined (“Kenton! I’m ready!”). Elizabeth is poaching Roy from Grey Gables to run Lower Loxley. Which, it turns out, is actually Higher Loxley, as the length of Nigel’s dying scream as he plummeted from the roof (allowing for acceleration and discounting wind resistance) indicates it must be as tall as York minster. This didn’t come up at the inquest as the tender-hearted coroner was distracted by David’s tears. David has become disturbingly morose recently: “We have to collect a sample of dung from every cow. It’s just One Thing After Another.” Happily, the heroic Ruth, though up to her neck in muck and bullocks, stays upbeat:”Standing around being miserable is not going to get the yard scraped.” Don’t you just love these old country saws? Radio 4 Radio Nancy Banks-Smith guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Spring is in the air and The Archers has pupped with Ambridge Extra – an everyday story of rural folk, for young people The big thing this month – apart from the passionate coupling of Jolene and Kenton – is that The Archers has pupped. As The Archers is 60 years old, Ambridge Extra is a happy, if embarrassing, event. It will be transmitted twice a week on digital radio (off you go to Argos) and, according to the scriptwriter, will just zip along, whereas its elderly parent moves with almost vegetable sloth, like a mighty marrow. I fear it is intended to appeal to the younger element. Hands up anyone who wants to know more about Jamie’s mates Marty and Steve or Alice’s chums Chaz and Paulie. (Does no one have real names any more?) Yesterday they turned up, all pimples and alcopops, though curiously well spoken. Jamie, who is going through a bumpy adolescence, was being urged to steal from The Bull (“What’s the point of living in a pub if you can’t help yourself to the booze?”) while Alice, off her head on tequila at a rave (“Oops-a-daisy! Whoo!”), was rescued from the lascivious Sean (“Oh, what are you doing?”) by Chaz. In spite of the added alcohol, nothing much happened, which is what normally happens in Ambridge. Meanwhile, back in the marrow patch, Kenton and Jolene are inextricably entwined (“Kenton! I’m ready!”). Elizabeth is poaching Roy from Grey Gables to run Lower Loxley. Which, it turns out, is actually Higher Loxley, as the length of Nigel’s dying scream as he plummeted from the roof (allowing for acceleration and discounting wind resistance) indicates it must be as tall as York minster. This didn’t come up at the inquest as the tender-hearted coroner was distracted by David’s tears. David has become disturbingly morose recently: “We have to collect a sample of dung from every cow. It’s just One Thing After Another.” Happily, the heroic Ruth, though up to her neck in muck and bullocks, stays upbeat:”Standing around being miserable is not going to get the yard scraped.” Don’t you just love these old country saws? Radio 4 Radio Nancy Banks-Smith guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Spring is in the air and The Archers has pupped with Ambridge Extra – an everyday story of rural folk, for young people The big thing this month – apart from the passionate coupling of Jolene and Kenton – is that The Archers has pupped. As The Archers is 60 years old, Ambridge Extra is a happy, if embarrassing, event. It will be transmitted twice a week on digital radio (off you go to Argos) and, according to the scriptwriter, will just zip along, whereas its elderly parent moves with almost vegetable sloth, like a mighty marrow. I fear it is intended to appeal to the younger element. Hands up anyone who wants to know more about Jamie’s mates Marty and Steve or Alice’s chums Chaz and Paulie. (Does no one have real names any more?) Yesterday they turned up, all pimples and alcopops, though curiously well spoken. Jamie, who is going through a bumpy adolescence, was being urged to steal from The Bull (“What’s the point of living in a pub if you can’t help yourself to the booze?”) while Alice, off her head on tequila at a rave (“Oops-a-daisy! Whoo!”), was rescued from the lascivious Sean (“Oh, what are you doing?”) by Chaz. In spite of the added alcohol, nothing much happened, which is what normally happens in Ambridge. Meanwhile, back in the marrow patch, Kenton and Jolene are inextricably entwined (“Kenton! I’m ready!”). Elizabeth is poaching Roy from Grey Gables to run Lower Loxley. Which, it turns out, is actually Higher Loxley, as the length of Nigel’s dying scream as he plummeted from the roof (allowing for acceleration and discounting wind resistance) indicates it must be as tall as York minster. This didn’t come up at the inquest as the tender-hearted coroner was distracted by David’s tears. David has become disturbingly morose recently: “We have to collect a sample of dung from every cow. It’s just One Thing After Another.” Happily, the heroic Ruth, though up to her neck in muck and bullocks, stays upbeat:”Standing around being miserable is not going to get the yard scraped.” Don’t you just love these old country saws? Radio 4 Radio Nancy Banks-Smith guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
The tragic fate of Godden-Edwards

Woman identified by police investigating Sian O’Callaghan murder was killed shortly after estrangement from family They had not seen her for around eight years, but they clung to the hope that one day they would be reunited with her. Now relatives of Rebecca Godden-Edwards are trying to come to terms with the shattering news, delivered on what would have been her 29th birthday, that she was murdered shortly after she vanished from their lives. Godden-Edwards’s body was finally identified nine days after being found in a shallow grave in a farmer’s field by detectives investigating the killing of another young woman, Sian O’Callaghan, who vanished after leaving a nightclub in Swindon last month. Officers are waiting to question Swindon taxi driver Chris Halliwell, who has been charged with 22-year-old O’Callaghan’s murder, over Godden-Edwards’s death. Meanwhile, a tragic story of how a young girl who became estranged from her family, and then simply disappeared, began to emerge. Police sources were at pains to make it clear that Becky, as she was known to her friends, was from a good, hardworking Swindon family. By all accounts, she was a bright, bubbly schoolgirl. When she was in her mid-teens, however, family and friends say she fell in with the “wrong crowd” and began using drugs. In May 2002, when she was 19, she broke into a pub, the historic Trout Inn in Lechlade, 12 miles from Swindon – and, coincidentally, close to where her body was found – and stole cigarettes and cash. Her lawyer told Swindon magistrates that she had been taking class A drugs since she was 15, having been introduced to them by a boyfriend. Another boyfriend had demanded that she break into the pub with him after holding a knife to her throat. Home was a comfortable house in a leafy road on the edge of Swindon. But her life was becoming increasingly chaotic. Around a year after the burglary, Godden-Edwards vanished. Her family say they thought she had gone to Bristol, but police sources say that by this time she was “disconnected” from them. The family attempted to find her. In 2007 they contacted the missing persons helpline and asked for help. A “vague” report was made to a police station in Wiltshire, but she was not put on the missing person’s list. The family discussed hiring a private detective. And there was one red herring – a grandparent thought he had seen her two years ago. But it must have been a false sighting: she had already been dead for years. Only last year, her mother tried to find out what had happened to her daughter by posting a message on the Missing You website : “Karen Edwards is trying to trace the location of Becky she has been missing for 8 years, and I need to contact her urgent or just to know that she is ok! can anyone help?” The family finally came to know at least something of what happened to the young woman when a DNA match established the identity of the remains found in a field at Eastleach, Gloucestershire. Many questions remain. A postmortem has yet to establish the cause of death and police are appealing for people who knew Godden-Edwards from 2002 onwards to come forward. They are asking people to think back in case – perhaps without realising it – they saw her being abducted or attacked. Her family have asked to be left in peace by the media. A note pinned to the gate of the family home read: “Please respect our privacy and let us grieve in peace.” Halliwell, 47, who is being held at Long Lartin jail in Worcestershire, is due to appear at Bristol crown court for a preliminary hearing relating to O’Callaghan’s murder on Friday. Wiltshire police sources said detectives working on the murders of O’Callaghan and Godden-Edwards were continuing to liaise with other forces over unsolved killings. Wiltshire detectives are known to have met with Avon and Somerset officers to discuss possible links with the murder of Melanie Hall, 25, who went missing after leaving a nightclub in Bath in 1996. Crime Steven Morris guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Real Madrid v Tottenham Hotspur – live!

• Hit the auto-update button for the latest posts • Send your thoughts to paul.doyle@guardian.co.uk • Follow minute-by-minute coverage of Inter v Schalke •  And keep up to speed with all of tonight’s live scores 7:42pm: “My god, I thought the San Siro was the best football stadium on the planet but having walked out here a moment ago – my god, this is the best football stadium on the planet,” exults Ray Wilkins on Sky. 7:35pm: Either the noise in the Bernabeu is incredibly loud, or Sky are using some canned cheers to drown out the analysis of Glenn Hoddle … Mr ‘Arry Redknapp, live from the tunnel: “The plan is to make sure we stay in the game tonight. We’re going to make sure we use the pace we have in the wide positions and attack them at every opportunity.” The Special One on Spurs: “They are the team that has improved the most since I left England. I like the way they play, they can mix an English style and a continental style.” 7:25pm: “Hey Paul, why do you have a press photo from Two and a Half Men at the top of this report?” jabbers Phil West. “Charlie Sheen looks remarkably well but Jon Cryer doesn’t appear to have taken the cancellation so well. and how about 3-2 to Spurs for a prediction? OK, the first bit was funnier ….” Preamble: Tonight we go some way to finding out who Spurs are: are they this season’s Monaco or Valencia, the unheralded side who win the admiration of neutrals by striding fearlessly all the way to the Champions League final? Or are they basically streakers, a band of amusing interlopers who briefly entertain the crowd before being put back in their place with a colossal kick up their scrawny backsides? Spurs are sure to attack tonight, or at least try to. But how effectively can they do that? Their forwards have let them down in the Premier League this season, which is why Everton, Bolton, Newcastle and Blackpool have all scored more goals than them, but in Europe they have tended to be more clinical: they may have mustered fewer shots and corners than any of the other quarter-finalists, yet they are the tournament’s joint top-scorers … along with Real. The home side will certainly go for the kill tonight – and the stony-paced Corluka is in for a severe trial at the hands of Cristiano Ronaldo and Marcelo – but the presence of Lennon and Bale means they have the wherewithal to punish Real rampaging full-backs on the counter, especially Sergio Ramos. If Peter Crouch and Rafa Van der Vaart have their shooting boots on, Spurs could get an away goal or two to set up a gigantic return match at White Hart Lane. Prediction? How about 3-1 to Real, with Bale to pull up injured after 20 minutes, Van der Vaart to do likewise after about 50 minutes, Gallas and Adebayor to be red-carded for an almighty strop-off, and Jose Mourinho to hijack the headlines by cartwheeling across the pitch around the 88-minute mark and/or jumping into the stands to nut Joe Jordan. Teams: Real: Casillas; Sergio Ramos, Pepe, Carvahlo, Marcelo; Di Maria, Xabi Alonso, Ozil, Khedira; Adebayor, Cristiano Ronaldo Subs: Adan, Kaka, Diarra, Granero, Arbeloa, Garay, Higuain Spurs: Gomes; Corluka, Gallas, Dawson, Assou-Ekotto; Lennon, Sandro, Modric, Bale; Van der Vaart; Crouch Subs: Cudicini, Huddlestone, Jenas, Pavlyuchenko, Defoe, Bassong, Kranjcar Referee (and also a banker, so altogether a very popular man, no doubt): F Brych (Germany) Champions League Real Madrid Tottenham Hotspur Paul Doyle guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …