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WaPo Honored Late DNC Chair Ron Brown as…a Political Michael Jordan?

It's one thing for The Washington Post to remember the late

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Omagh bomb: police chief pays tribute to slain officer

Northern Ireland chief constable calls Ronan Kerr, 25, a ‘modern-day hero’ and says his death is a ‘tragedy for Omagh’ The head of Northern Ireland’s police force has described the death of a police constable killed in a car bomb as a “tragedy for Omagh” and paid tribute to the 25-year-old officer. Constable Ronan Kerr died after setting off the bomb, which had been hidden underneath his car, as he left home for work on Saturday. Speaking at a press conference on Sunday, Chief Constable Matt Baggott said: “Tragedy has returned to Omagh with the loss of constable Ronan Kerr.” In 1998, a car bomb killed 29 people in Omagh, one of the worst atrocities carried out by paramilitaries in Northern Ireland. He added: “Ronan was relatively new to the Police Service of Northern Ireland but had proven himself a good and dedicated officer in the short time he was with us. He had joined the police because he was willing to stand up and serve his community. No words could adequately describe the shock and sense of loss being felt by his colleagues and the residents of Omagh.” Kerr, a Catholic, only graduated from police training college three weeks ago. Baggot said his “abhorrence and anger” at the waste of Kerr’s life was shared by people in Omagh and across Northern Ireland and beyond. He also called Kerr “a modern-day hero”. Sinn Féin’s Martin McGuiness, deputy first minister of Northern Ireland and former IRA commander, also condemned the killing and described Kerr as “someone who was prepared to give so much has now given their life in belief of the peace process”. Kerr is the second policeman to have been killed since the PSNI was formed in 2001. Baggott said: “The PSNI has some of the bravest men and women in the world among its number … who put on their uniform and selflessly go out and do their duty for their community despite the ever present threat from misguided terrorist criminals”. Pat Noma, a friend of Kerr’s mother Nuala, said she had recently been widowed and had depended on Kerr, an only child, for support. “I’m calling on all the mothers in Omagh to come out on her behalf. We’ve got to find these people; we’ve got to stop them from doing this,” she said. “Nobody in Omagh wants this to happen and we’ve got to call everybody together to hand them over. We can’t tolerate this. Omagh has suffered enough.” The killing is thought to have been carried out by dissident republicans but no group has yet claimed responsibility for the murder. Northern Ireland UK security and terrorism Omagh bombing Northern Irish politics Jo Adetunji Henry McDonald guardian.co.uk

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Wwe Hall Of Fame

WWE Hall of Fame 2011 Inductee Shawn Michaels WrestleMania XXVII: Shawn Michaels Discusses WWE Hall Of Fame At Media Day Road Warrior Animal SUPPORTS Steroid Use in Moderation Official Lineup For WWE Hall of Fame Ceremony | Ring Rap Here is the official line up for the WWE Hall of Fame Inductees and Inductors. We will have details on the ceremony as they come in during the event. HBK Shawn. WWE Hall Of Fame 2011 Live Ongoing Coverage | WrestleHeat.com Thanks to Ashley B. and Marc E. for the following coverage from tonight’s WWE Hall of Fame ceremony in Atlanta: * Ric Flair and Ricky Steamboat arrived together, Road Warrior Animal is sitting with Sunny. Everyone is making their way in … WWE Hall of Fame 4/2/11: Live Coverage For Tonights Ceremony … Ric Flair and Ricky Steamboat arrived together, Road Warrior Animal is sitting with Sunny. Everyone is making their way in and this is truly an awesome sight. **SPOILERS** Live Coverage Of Tonight's WWE Hall of Fame Ceremony … 2011 WWE Hall of Fame Ceremony Report by: Mike Johnson & PWInsider.com Taped On: 4/2/2011 Airing on: 4/4/2011 We are live at the 2011 WWE Hall of Fame | WWE/TNA News & Rumors. TNA Star Attending WWE Hall of Fame Induction, J.R. Calling … TNA Wrestling Superstar Ric Flair is staying at WWE’s hotel in Atlanta, Georgia. It is said that he will be attending tonight’s WWE Hall of Fame induction. Kingboss214 says: THE #WWE HALL OF FAME AIRS MONDAY

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Matt Howard

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Matt Howard

Butler defeats VCU 70-62 in Final Four going to National Championship Monday Night NCAA Butler Final Four Tour of Hinkle Fieldhouse and areas around campus Matt Howard Carolina Ravens AAU VCU Vs. Butler Score: Matt Howard , Butler Rally Thanks To … Butler’s struggles continued, as Matt Howard rushed a three-pointer on Butler’s next possession, eventually leading to another three-pointer by Burgess from the right corner for a 15-7 VCU lead. But that was when Butler started to rally … Watch Shaun Lomas vs Matt Howard live stream Fighting KF … Matt Howard vs Shaun Lomas live stream online 2011. Shaun Lomas vs Matt Howard live streaming online. Watch Shaun Lomas vs Matt Howard live online 2011 on PC. Watch Matt Howard vs Shaun Lomas live game online 2011 on PC where? … Dermorae All Buzzing Information » Sports: VCU Vs. Butler Score … Butler’s struggles continued, as Matt Howard rushed a three-pointer on Butler’s next possession, eventually leading to another three-pointer by Burgess from the right corner for a 15-7 VCU lead. But that was when Butler started to rally … VCU Vs. Butler Score: Matt Howard , Butler Rally Thanks To … Butler has started to assert itself on the offensive glass, and that has keyed a comeback in its Final Four game against VCU. The Bulldogs are on a 8-0. Final Four, VCU Vs. Butler: Shelvin Mack, Matt Howard Key Players … Yes, the Bulldogs do have two stars in point guard Shelvin Mack and forward Matt Howard , but they also have role players like Andrew Smith, Ronald Nored and Khyle Marshall, among others. They all do a great job of stepping in and simply … bellaxdulce says: @urbanREUP Matt Howard ? What about him?

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Newstalgia Reference Room – Ayn Rand – 1971

enlarge Ayn Rand — Tea Party icon, but not sure why. Click here to view this media Ayn Rand has become something of a resuscitated icon of late, certainly within the ranks of the Tea Party who have embraced her Extreme Capitalist and Anti-Government theories with almost romantic fervor. In 1971, as part of the Comment series on NBC , Rand was asked to deliver an essay on her views regarding the Ecology movement. Ayn Rand: “Ecology is the war on abundance, fought by the same people who are fighting the war on Poverty. The Ecologists claim that local pollution affects the whole world and threatens the survival of all living species. There is no scientific proof of this claim and none has ever been offered, on the grounds of nothing but arbitrary projections and panic mongering slogans, the ecologists are urging mankind to commit suicide by paralyzing industrial production. Their immediate but not ultimate goal is the destruction of the last remnants of freedoms of capitalism in our mixed economy and the establishment of a global dictatorship. In order to protect our natural environment, this means to enslave mankind on order to protect weeds, birds and reptiles.” Her views were, at best, extreme and she has certainly not been without her detractors, nor fans in high places. Alan Greenspan has claimed to be a great follower of her ideals. That she paints everything in the most dire and dystopic of terms probably speaks more to her Russian background than anything else. As was once pointed out, her style was reminiscent of “philosophy as it’s written in the Soviet Union” and has been challenged, debunked and left quietly as an antique of history over the years, until recently. History is forever astonishing and baffling and it’s jammed with contradictions, just like Ayn Rand.

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Russians pounce on Irish assets

At the height of the Celtic Tiger, Irish investors snapped up property at home and abroad. Now they are desperate to sell and Russian buyers are ready to pounce Located in Dublin’s main tourist drag, Temple Bar, it would have fetched up to €250,000 at the height of the “Celtic Tiger” boom. But a studio flat in one of the busiest and best-known parts of the city is now on the market for just €80,000 – a staggering fall in value that encapsulates the dramatic collapse of Ireland’s property market. As the republic’s taxpayers try to make sense of the eye-watering costs of bailing out their country’s banks, with billions more being pumped into the ailing financial institutions last week, the “fire sale” of a luxury apartment on the left bank of the Liffey for such a low price indicates the decline in fortunes of an economy that invested too much too quickly in the building boom. Temple Bar is best known to British tourists as the location of lively, late-night venues – many staging traditional Irish music sessions, busy and often over-priced restaurants, buskers, street artists and an alternative culture scene. During the boom years it reflected the two sides of modern Ireland: creative but sometimes brash; youthful but at times menacing with stag and hen parties from abroad mingling in the streets with beggars and heroin addicts. The vacant €80,000 Temple Bar flat will go on sale at an auction later this month organised by property agency Allsop in what has become a buyers’ market. Other apartments in Dublin 1, the prime central location of the capital, are also up for grabs for between €100,000 to €180,000, all of them described in the auction’s promotion material as “investment” flats and properties. Buying to invest was one of the main reasons why the Irish economy and the nation’s finances are now in such a parlous state. Last Thursday, Ireland’s new Fine Gael–Labour coalition government published the results of stress tests on the republic’s big banks. The results made grim reading for ministers and the taxpaying public. As a result of the Irish banks’ ongoing losses, the state will have to put in an extra €24bn to recapitalise them; its capacity to do so is due in the main to the largesse of the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund. Overall, the final bill for saving these banks from collapse will be around €70bn. To put that into context, this means the expected final cost of re-financing the banks is more than double the entire tax take (including personal taxation, capital tax and VAT) across Ireland in 2010. The figure is also six times the amount the republic spent last year on its health service and eight times more than was allocated to primary, secondary and tertiary education. Patrick Honohan, the chairman of Ireland’s central bank, was clearly not exaggerating last week when he described the total injection of state cash as “one of the costliest banking crises in history”. A key factor in creating that crisis was the excessive and aggressive lending by banks to developers during the boom. Property makes up about 60% of the toxic loans in Ireland’s debt-ridden banks. Ordinary Irish citizens, too, played their part in the collective mania to make money fast by investing in bricks and mortar, and not only at home. It is estimated that as a result of years of economic expansion,, at least one in 10 Irish citizens now owns at least one property abroad. Many of these investors remortgaged, sometimes more than once at home, to obtain holiday apartments, villas and even farmland in locations as far flung as Bulgaria and South America. Earlier this year, one Irish investor walked into the Dublin-based foreign property company Extrasales Consulting hoping to sell an landholding investment he had bought during the Celtic Tiger years in Paraguay. “He had 288 acres of Paraguayan land that he had originally bought for $900,000 [about £560,000],” recalled Extrasales’s director, Ger Nunan. “The land is now worth around $450,000 but he was still desperate to sell.” Nunan’s company is located in one of Dublin’s grand Georgian houses on the south side of the city centre. Today it specialises almost exclusively in helping Irish investors offload their foreign assets. As they face negative equity, going into mortgage arrears and the possible repossession of their houses and businesses in Ireland, there has been a rush to sell off overseas land and homes. A true picture of the Irish over-reach when it comes to property investments can be seen in holiday destinations along Bulgaria’s Black Sea coast or the Turkish Aegean, as well as in traditional tourist areas such as southern Spain. During the good times, Celtic Tiger man and woman colonised the Mediterranean, east and west, rapidly and enthusiastically. “In the Sunny Beach resort in Bulgaria there are reckoned to be about 10,000 Irish-owned properties, while in places in Turkey like Mahmutlar the locals call it ‘Irish town’,” said Nunan’s colleague, Colin Horan. “Nowadays, we see owners with properties there coming in desperate to sell.” Like the luxury Temple Bar flat going for a song, Irish foreign properties are going up for sale in holiday destinations from the Costa del Sol to the Florida coastline. And the buyers’ market for Irish-owned homes has found a new investor – the Russians. “Cash is king in the downturn,” said Nunan. “The Irish owners need cash to pay off their debts at home and the Russians want to take cash out of their own country to buy abroad.” Since the downturn, Extrasales has been receiving up to 10 calls a day from Irish people desperate to sell to save their homes and businesses. In response, the company has tapped into the growing Russian middle class, which trusts neither their government or their own banks. “We have set up 26 agents in six cities across Russia who are selling Irish foreign properties to Russian buyers,” Nunan said. “Our average Russian client is not taking out a 40% to 50% mortgage like Irish investors did in Spain. They buy outright, often with cash. They are buying for life – for them it’s a lifelong investment. It’s not what we all did during the Celtic Tiger years.” Ireland bailout Housing market Ireland Henry McDonald guardian.co.uk

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Bob Champion: National treasure

Jockey who defied cancer to win world’s greatest steeplechase and inspire a movie explains his love of Aintree and the battle to stay healthy 30 years on from his finest hour Idea for a movie. A jockey who is told he will be dead in eight months unless he signs up to treatment with a 35-40% success rate wins the Grand National on a horse who was so badly injured in one of his races that the vet suggested a bullet was the only answer. Too late. Already been done. John Hurt played the rider in a 1983 film. But the tale kept rolling after Bob Champion passed the Aintree finishing post on Aldaniti, 30 years ago this week. It kept going into a new realm of illness, and defiance, and a fund-raising drive against cancer that provided Champion with a second act in life to surpass the first. We are in the kitchen of the yard in Findon, West Sussex, where Aldaniti was trained by Josh Gifford to defy outlandish odds. The 1981 National winner was a talented ex-crock who had restored his Aintree candidacy by trotting up at Ascot in a major trial. Champion had been ravaged by an early form of chemotherapy and was lucky still to be alive, never mind jumping Becher’s Brook. He looks healthy now: nowhere near his 62 years. But to get to Liverpool on Saturday, for the Bob Champion Aintree Legends Charity Race, in which a dozen National-winning ex-jockeys will compete, Aldaniti’s former partner had to survive a second heart attack three weeks ago: 10 years to the day, spookily, after his first. As soft rain falls on the Downs where Nick Gifford took over from his father, Josh, Champion updates his story: “I speak on cruise ships a bit, and I’d come back from Barbados to a really busy week. I went to Stafford that night for the cancer trust, then to a meeting in London, then down to Hove to a dinner, then up to Whitby, then Harrogate. I was knackered when I got home. “A couple of days later I was at home in bed at one o’clock in the morning and had these chest pains. I knew what it was. Thankfully. I had some spray from the first heart attack but I’d never used it. It was 10 years out of date. I sprayed it under my tongue and that saved a lot of damage. “I’ve got a couple of stents [artificial tubes] in there now and the surgeons ballooned the other vessels. It was the same day I had the heart attack 10 years ago – so I’m not going to go to bed in 10 years’ time. I might go and park outside the hospital.” Champion attributes his heart trouble to the effects of his treatment after being diagnosed with testicular cancer in July 1979: “The chemo was very barbaric in those days and it did affect my lungs. There’s no way I can say it gave me the heart attack but some of the vessels were injured by the treatment in those days. I’m alive, that’s the main thing. I wouldn’t have been without the treatment.” Hurt’s character was living the life in a previous golden generation of National Hunt riders. People talk these days of a special crop – AP McCoy, Ruby Walsh and the rest – but Champion’s contemporaries were also vivid figures on winter’s landscape. “I rode with some really good jockeys. People like John Francome, Jonjo O’Neill, Ron Barry, Bob Davies: all great champions,” he says. “Racing’s changed. AP has more than a thousand rides a year. John Francome – fantastic jockey – was lucky if he got 400. They’ve got to be fitter now – or they should be. They’re more professional. We enjoyed life. But they’re at it seven days a week. They’re breathalysed. They can’t really let themselves go on a Saturday night. We’d have a Saturday night out.” But all this crashed with the cancer diagnosis. Jump racing steeled itself to say goodbye. Gifford, though, delivered a psychological gift, promising Champion his job as stable jockey would be waiting for him, even though he doubted that would be the outcome. “They gave me six to eight months to live. If I’d had the cancer 18 months before there’d have been no cure anyway, so I’d have been a goner,” Champion says. “It was eight months to live – or a 35-40% chance of living, with the treatment. The odds weren’t particularly good. I didn’t want to die. But I didn’t realise until they started pumping the stuff in how toxic it was. Jesus, I felt so ill after two days. It was horrendous treatment. Thankfully now we’ve gone from 35-40% to 95% on testicular cancer alone [with early diagnosis]. So that’s how far we’ve come. “Some days you’d rather be dead. I got septicaemia half-way through the treatment. You think you’re drifting away and feel relief. Then they change your blood, get you up and you start the whole thing all over again. “Josh always said my job was there. I know he never really thought I’d live. But he kept giving me the confidence, which I needed. I started riding out when I came out of hospital, but I couldn’t breathe. My lungs had been damaged and the weather was cold, which made it hurt more; so I went to the States, to South Carolina, where the weather was nice and warm. It made things easier. I spent eight months there.” Champion’s first post-cancer winner was on the Flat in Florida in May, 1980, but resuming over jumps in Britain was gruelling, and peppered by setbacks. But by Christmas, Champion was back in the groove. He had never given up on Aldaniti as a National contender, despite the animal’s two serious tendon injuries and fractured hock. He says: “He was a horse I’d always said would win a National one day. I’d been associated with horses who had gone on and won Nationals. I won the Eider Chase on Highland Wedding before he won at Aintree. I rode Rag Trade in his first race over fences. I used to look after Rubstic, who won a National. They all gave me this same feel. They had a low head carriage, were well balanced and were all good jumpers. “He [Aldaniti] broke down so many times. The last time it happened, at Sandown, it was very bad and the vets wanted to put him down. But he was such a great patient. He stood in a box for six months in plaster. That’s hard for a horse. After that Nick Embiricos [his owner] did all the road work. He came back into the yard on 1 January and Josh rode him out every day himself. He thought it was the only way he was going to get him to Liverpool. Josh has terrific hands, because the old horse used to pull very hard. If Josh hadn’t ridden him every day he might not have got there. “When the old horse went to Ascot for the Whitbread Trial he was 16-1 but he absolutely bolted up. He never came off the bridle. I thought – if he’s as good as that on the day, that’s good enough for the National, in my book. He went from 66-1 for the National to 14-1 so he must have been pretty impressive.” Champion refers to Aldaniti as “the old horse” a lot. Their lives, even now, are inseparable. In the race, Aldaniti, a 10-1 shot, beat Spartan Missile, ridden by an amateur, Mr John Thorne, who was killed a year later in a point-to-point. Even in its aftermath the 1981 Grand National was redemptive and tragic by turns. “From the moment I went by the post everything seemed to change in my life – for good and bad, I suppose,” Champion says. “I was still a professional jockey, though. I had to ride in a race an hour later. Part of the job. And I’m glad I did. It should have won, but it didn’t. “Every time I tried to have a glass of champagne the press took it off me for the photograph. The first drink I had was a can of Coke on the motorway going back. Made up for it the next night, though.” Champion trained for a while but his cancer trust became more consuming: “I don’t know how long we believed it would go for, but it got bigger, and we’ve got our own research laboratory, which has been very successful. Our next target is prostate. One in 10 men get prostrate cancer now and hopefully we’ll come up with the goods there.” After the race 30 years ago Champion and Aldaniti stayed together: “I used to see him regularly because he did so much for the cancer trust. Holyrood Castle, Buckingham Palace. He used to go up in the lift at big stores. Terrific temperament. He was wonderful with the public – a nice kind horse who loved the attention.” Aldaniti died of a heart attack in 1997, aged 27. This is one of those National stories (the greatest of them all, to this day) that expresses the full human and equine grandeur of the challenge. The contest itself is a metaphor for what Aldaniti and Champion overcame to be there in the first place, never mind win. No wonder he is almost ever-present on Grand National day: “I’ve only missed one in 40 years – and that was because I had the first heart attack, 10 years ago. I rode in 10. I love going up there. I always walk down to The Chair. It brings back memories. I love the Liverpool people. They go there and they enjoy themselves. “That’s what I like to see.” The Bob Champion Cancer Trust is at bobchampion.org.uk Horse racing Grand National Paul Hayward guardian.co.uk

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Israeli writers fight to save bookshop

For years Munther Fahmi has been living in the city of his birth on a series of tourist visas after his permanent residency lapsed. Now the authorities have warned they may not issue any more On the edge of the busy forecourt of Jerusalem’s world-famous American Colony hotel, Munther Fahmi is in his usual spot; sitting in the bookshop that has become a haven of tolerance for scholars in a bitterly divided city. For 13 years, Fahmi has lined his shelves with works of history and literature, written by Arabs, Jews and scholars from around the world. Over that time, he has created what has been described as “the only decent English-language bookshop in the country”. “It’s the most enjoyable thing I have ever done in my life. It has been such a part of the life of Jerusalem,” he told the Observer . “I really did not fully appreciate how much until it was under

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Man charged over school stabbing

Samuel Tomlinson to appear before magistrates on Monday charged with attempting to kill Chloe West An 18-year-old man has been charged with the attempted murder of a teenager who was stabbed near the gates of a secondary school in Stourbridge. West Midlands police said Samuel Tomlinson, from the Sedgley area, would appear before magistrates in Dudley on Monday charged with attempting to kill Chloe West and wounding one of the 14-year-old’s fellow pupils. Chloe, who suffered wounds to her upper body and face outside Ridgewood High School in Stourbridge on Friday, was discharged from Birmingham Children’s Hospital this afternoon after undergoing surgery. Crime guardian.co.uk

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Lansley impressed by MC NxtGen

Recording of YouTube sensation by singing binman and doctors’ cult hero MC NxtGen was funded by Unison His musical attack on Andrew Lansley’s plans for the NHS has become a viral sensation on the web. But the story behind the rise of Sean Donnelly, aka MC NxtGen, to the status of cult hero among the nation’s surgeons, doctors and nurses has remained something of a mystery. Now the Observer can reveal that the 22-year-old singer was given his helping hand by the health workers’ union, Unison. Donnelly and his girlfriend, an occupational therapist and member of the union, contacted officials with the idea three weeks ago. The union insists that the words to the track are those of Donnelly, who is a binman by day, but admit that they were so impressed by his lyrics that they funded the recording and a film clip. The result has capitalised on strong opposition to the government’s proposed reforms, with David Cameron expected to announce a delay this week in the publication of the health and social care bill until after local elections on 5 May. The prime minister is said to be increasingly worried about public opinion against change, demonstrated by the popularity of Donnelly’s rap. By yesterday, a week since his clip was posted on YouTube, it had received 200,000 hits. Donnelly, from Loughborough, has now been contacted by BBC3 to feature on a forthcoming programme, and Channel 4 has asked him to write a rap on the subject of the royal wedding. “It has been a hectic week,” said Donnelly. “I have got a few TV meetings lined up for next week – it’s good, really good. I did the rap first and then thought Unison might be able to back me up so I got my girlfriend to put it through to them and they really liked it and got me the place to film it. It took about a day and a half. I don’t think it cost much because Tom the video guy doesn’t charge much. “I did the lyrics myself, went on the internet, did some research and put it together like a jigsaw and made it funny. And it has just spread.” Filmed in Ash Field school, a special school for the physically disabled in Leicester, and eschewing the traditional hiphop themes of bling, booty and babes, Donnelly’s three-minute rap about the Department of Health’s white paper, Equity and Excellence: Liberating the NHS, is personally dedicated to the secretary of state for health. “Andrew Lansley, greedy, Andrew Lansley, tosser,” runs the rap, over a sample taken from the Animals’ House of the Rising Sun. “The NHS is not for sale, you grey-haired manky codger!” But if Donnelly is far from polite, he has certainly done his research. “So the budget of the PCTs, he wants to hand to the GPs/ Oh please. Dumb geeks are gonna buy from any willing provider,/ Get care from private companies.” Later, he adds: “We’ll become more like the US/ and care will be farmed out to private companies,/ who will sell their service to the NHS via the GPs/ who will have more to do with service purchase arrangements than anything to do with seeing their patients.” He is now trying to release the track on iTunes. Lansley was moved to comment. “We will never privatise the National Health Service,” he said. “But I’m impressed that he’s managed to get lyrics about GP commissioning into a rap .” Dave Prentis, general secretary of Unison, said: “We want to use every means to let people know about the damage it will cause to the NHS.” Andrew Lansley Rap Daniel Boffey guardian.co.uk

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