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Legal aid reforms minister has £250,000 invested in firms with insurance interests

Jonathan Djanogly is piloting controversial proposals which could net insurance industry £1bn a year Jonathan Djanogly, the justice minister piloting controversial plans to cut legal aid and curb payouts, which could benefit the insurance industry to the tune of £1bn a year, has stockmarket investments worth at least £250,000 in companies with insurance arms. He is also weighing up proposals which may have a profound effect on his brother-in-law’s business which advertises compensation claims for accidents. Labour wrote to the cabinet secretary, Sir Gus O’Donnell, on Monday night to demand an investigation following the Guardian’s inquiry. Djanogly, a Conservative MP the legal services minister, is pushing a bill through parliament which will attempt to slash the budget for legal aid by £350m as well as shifting part of the costs of bringing cases on a “no-win, no-fee” basis from losing defendants to winning claimants. This reduces the costs liabilities of companies and their insurers if they unsuccessfully defend a claim as it will force claimants to pay out of any awarded damages their lawyers’ success fees and insurance policies that cover court costs. Last week the Guardian revealed that the minister could personally profit from the changes. In the past three years Djanogly has been entitled to an average annual payout of £41,000 from being a “minority partner” in his family’s firm of insurance underwriters, The Djanogly Family LLP. The 46-year-old, considered to be one of the 10 richest MPs, is heir to a £300m family fortune and has amassed a sizeable personal stake in the insurance industry. In the most recent declaration of MPs interests he continues to hold shareholdings of worth at least £195,000 in three banks with insurance arms – Barclays, HSBC and Lloyds TSB. He also has at least another £65,000 in Amlin insurance stock. Djanogly also declares in the ministerial register of interests that his “brother-in-law owns ‘Going Legal Ltd’ and ‘Legal Link Introductory Services Ltd’”. Both are claims management companies, which advertise “no-win, no-fee” compensation claims for accidents and charge a referral fee for passing on potential cases to lawyers and insurance firms. According to company accounts, Ben Silk, Djanogly’s brother in law, saw a combined profit from the two firms last year of £130,000. Going Legal, according to its website, deals with employment cases and Legal Link asks: “Suffer an injury caused by someone else?” on its homepage. Both offer 0800 telephone numbers for people to call. The regulation of the claims management industry is part of Djanogly’s ministerial duties. Last week, after pressure from former Labour justice secretary Jack Straw, he announced that “rising insurance costs will be tackled by a ban on referral fees” while admitting there was “no universally recognised definition of ‘referral fees’.” Labour’s justice spokesman, Andy Slaughter, has written to cabinet secretary Gus O’Donnell calling for an investigation into Djanogly. Slaughter points out a slew of conflict of interests claims given that the minister has neither resigned or removed himself from discussions from which he could personally profit. The letter argues that the minister’s assertion that his financial interests are in “blind trust/blind management arrangement” does not bear scrutiny as the “minister’s holdings are concentrated into financial services companies with exposure to the insurance market and The Djanogly Family LLP is explicitly set up to act in the insurance and reinsurance market”. Slaughter argues that as Djanogly “did not resign from the LLP and dispose of his interests (he has a) fiduciary duty to promote the interests of The Djanogly Family LLP”. This, says Slaughter, is in conflict with “his duty as a minister to promote the public interest”. Slaughter says “his shareholdings, weighted towards financial services companies and those with insurance interests, are incompatible” with being a minister adding that Djanogly “holds stocks in Lloyds and Tesco, both of which responded to consultation” backing the Jackson changes. The Labour MP adds that “given the minister’s role as regulator of claims management companies and his brother-in-law’s ownership of two claims management companies, it is reasonable to perceive a conflict of interest”. “Given the sums of money involved, the multiple ways in which the minister would benefit from this legislation, this would appear to be a severe breach of the code.” Slaughter says that if the MoJ’s permanent secretary, Sir Suma Chakrabarti, was informed of these arrangements it calls into question his judgment. In some cases when particularly complicated issues surrounding a minister’s investments prove too difficult for his or her own department to resolve the matter is sent to Downing Street. Slaughter notes: “In the event the prime minister was consulted, as per clause 7.9 of the Code, this poses serious questions as to the judgment of the prime minister.” The ministerial code states that “ministers must scrupulously avoid any danger of an actual or perceived conflict of interest between their ministerial position and their private financial interests”. It advises ministers to dispose of interests or recuse themselves from discussions and policy if there could be even a perception of a “conflict of interest”. The Cabinet Office said it had received the letter from Labour’s justice team. A spokesman for Djanogly said: “As Mr Djanogly made clear on Friday, his financial interests are a matter of public record, in declarations made both as a minister and as an MP. The government’s reforms to the no-win, no-fee system are based on an independent review by Sir Rupert Jackson.” Djanogly’s Liberal Democrat colleague at the Ministry of Justice, Lord McNally, described the Guardian story as an “example of shoddy journalism” at the party fringe on Tuesday in Birmingham saying there was “no breach of the ministerial code”. Djanogly told Radio 4 earlier this year his reforms, based on a report by Lord Justice Jackson in 2010, would change the current system which “help[s] claimants to the detriment of defendants, who would normally be the insurance companies” earlier this year. Experts say the changes to legal aid will benefit the insurance industry, which has to pay out compensation in personal injury cases, by at least “hundreds of millions of pounds”. The Association of British Insurers admits that industry will benefit from the reforms but argue that consumers, not shareholders, will benefit – pointing out that in Ireland similar measures to those contained in the legal aid, sentencing and punishment of offenders bill saw motor insurance premiums drop by up to 16%. Conservatives guardian.co.uk

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A report released by Oxfam America and the Farm Labor Organizing Committee shows that laborers working in American tobacco fields are frequently being denied basic human rights. Specifically: Farm workers who toil in the tobacco fields of North Carolina often spend hours in the blistering sun and get paid less than the minimum wage. They are exposed to toxic chemicals just to do their jobs, according to a new report issued yesterday. The report, “A State of Fear,” shows that one in four tobacco farm workers is paid less than the federal minimum wage. Many suffer from nicotine poisoning after absorbing nicotine through their bare skin. After a long day at work, they return to squalid living conditions such as overcrowded rooms with insect-infested mattresses and nonfunctioning toilets and showers. This is yet another instance of the apparently widespread mistreatment of workers in the United States. Conservatives and business leaders would have you believe that American workers are overpaid, underworked, lazy and ungrateful. The reality is almost universally the opposite of that, and this report adds to the evidence that shows the true situation. And, as always, the solutions to the problems are easy to achieve if politicians have the courage to do the right thing: The report calls for: – Manufacturers to respect the internationally recognized human rights of workers, including the right to freedom of association. – Industry leaders to create a council that brings together manufacturers, growers, farm workers and their chosen representatives to address conditions. – Manufacturers to work to ensure a stable industry by allowing more grower input in their pricing formulas.

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A report released by Oxfam America and the Farm Labor Organizing Committee shows that laborers working in American tobacco fields are frequently being denied basic human rights. Specifically: Farm workers who toil in the tobacco fields of North Carolina often spend hours in the blistering sun and get paid less than the minimum wage. They are exposed to toxic chemicals just to do their jobs, according to a new report issued yesterday. The report, “A State of Fear,” shows that one in four tobacco farm workers is paid less than the federal minimum wage. Many suffer from nicotine poisoning after absorbing nicotine through their bare skin. After a long day at work, they return to squalid living conditions such as overcrowded rooms with insect-infested mattresses and nonfunctioning toilets and showers. This is yet another instance of the apparently widespread mistreatment of workers in the United States. Conservatives and business leaders would have you believe that American workers are overpaid, underworked, lazy and ungrateful. The reality is almost universally the opposite of that, and this report adds to the evidence that shows the true situation. And, as always, the solutions to the problems are easy to achieve if politicians have the courage to do the right thing: The report calls for: – Manufacturers to respect the internationally recognized human rights of workers, including the right to freedom of association. – Industry leaders to create a council that brings together manufacturers, growers, farm workers and their chosen representatives to address conditions. – Manufacturers to work to ensure a stable industry by allowing more grower input in their pricing formulas.

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Xiaomi Phone to get vanilla Android 2.3.5 next month, Ice Cream Sandwich in January

By now most of you may already know that the attractively priced Xiaomi Phone will support both MIUI and vanilla Android ROMs (though not simultaneously on its dual-partition system ); but earlier today, CEO Lei Jun confirmed that October will see the release of said device’s vanilla Android 2.3.5 ROM, meaning the keen beans won’t have to wait long after the Xiaomi Phone’s launch in the same month. More interestingly, Lei also announced that his Beijing-based chums will be rolling out a vanilla 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich build in January, which is about two or three months after Eric Schimdt’s expected launch date . Sounds about right if you look at previous releases, and we shall look forward to observing the epic 4.0 battle between the Xiaomi Phone, the ASUS Padfone and the rumored Nexus Prime . Xiaomi Phone to get vanilla Android 2.3.5 next month, Ice Cream Sandwich in January originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Sep 2011 12:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Playboy Club

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Playboy Club

The Playboy Club Season 1 Episode 1 Pïlot The Playboy Club – Episode 1 – Season 1 Full {NEW!} The Playboy Club Season 1 – Episode 1 pikelet says: Halfway through episode one of The Playboy Club . Enjoying this immensely.

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MySpace’s new owners scrapped plans for a summer relaunch party because the revamp of the social-networking site is going more slowly than expected, insiders tells the Wall Street Journal . Justin Timberlake and Specific Media, who bought the site for $35 million in June, now plan to unveil the new, music-focused…

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London fashion week: Once upon a time …

Trends are strictly for the high street. The designers at London fashion week had their own stories to tell on the catwalk The script of this London fashion week was written in advance. London in 2012 is all about the Olympics, after all, and these are the clothes London’s designers will be selling next summer. Ergo … well, it’s obvious, isn’t it? Cashmere will be out, and Lycra in; the go-faster stripe becomes the new Breton top. Or so we thought. London’s designers may not be the one-legged-trousered provocateurs they once were, but they still have a little of the awkward squad about them. So they refused to play ball with the neat concept of Olympic-themed summer collections. Where sportswear figured as an influence, it was in a highly stylised guise: racer-back dresses at Marios Schwab and Peter Pilotto ; a satin tennis skirt at Christopher Kane; Aertex-effect shirts at JW Anderson . London designers will not be dictated to. For all the ongoing tussles with New York and Milan over schedules, there is a real sense of confidence about London fashion week these days. For these few days, designers take ownership of the capital with an assurance that was not there a decade ago. All those fashion shows in disused car parks – in retrospect, they seem like reflection of fashion’s self-image in those years as something self-consciously alternative, disenfranchised from the “real world”. How times have changed. One of the joys of this week was touring the landmark buildings that designers had taken over for their shows. The commandeering of the gorgeous Somerset House as London fashion week HQ and the now-regular Downing Street receptions have had a knock-on effect of inspiring designers to hold their events in the city’s other famous addresses. So we went to the Tate Modern for Matthew Williamson , the Royal Courts of Justice for Giles Deacon, Queen Elizabeth Hall for Antonio Berardi, the Savoy for Maria Grachvogel and Erdem, Claridges for Mulberry, the Royal Opera House for Sass & Bide and the British Museum for Temperley. (OK, Beyoncé showed in a car park. But everyone knows the rules are different for megastars.) But if the Olympians are not to be next season’s muses, who is? Perhaps the Duchess of Cambridge – so feted by the fashion world on her wedding day only five months ago? There was an oblique reference, perhaps, at Temperley , where Pippa Middleton – who wore a green Temperley dress to her sister’s evening reception in April – sat in the front row. One of the references cited for the collection was Tracy Lord in High Society, a character played by Grace Kelly – whose lace-sleeved wedding dress was similar in style to the Duchess’s. No, you’re right – that’s tenuous, even for fashion. The princess bride is, frankly, over. A mischievous mind could, however, see a connection between the Cambridges’ married life in Anglesey and the fact that a new character – the Valiumed-out Stepford housewife – turned up on the catwalk this season. Jonathan

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Obama: World Will Stand With Post-Gadhafi Libya

President Barack Obama promised the Libyan people that the world will stand with them as they reshape their country following the fall of Moammar Gadhafi’s regime. (Sept. 20)

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President Obama’s plan to give the economy a short-term jolt, paid for in part by tax hikes on the rich, won’t turn things around, a top economic adviser to Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney writes. In a column for Bloomberg News, Glenn Hubbard argues that the economy suffers from more fundamental problems, and lays out

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Hurricane Irene: Northeast Farmers Warn Of Pumpkin Shortage Induced By Storm

NEW YORK — Northeastern states are facing a jack-o’-lantern shortage this Halloween after Hurricane Irene destroyed hundreds of pumpkin patches across the region, farmers say. Wholesale prices have doubled in some places as farmers nurse their surviving pumpkin plants toward a late harvest. Some farmers are trying to buy pumpkins from other regions to cover orders. “I think there’s going to be an extreme shortage of pumpkins this year,” said Darcy Pray, owner of Pray’s Family Farms in Keeseville, in upstate New York. “I’ve tried buying from people down in the Pennsylvania area, I’ve tried locally here and I’ve tried reaching across the border to some farmers over in the Quebec area. There’s just none around.” Hurricane Irene raked the Northeast in late August, bringing torrents of rain that overflowed rivers and flooded fields along the East Coast and into southern Canada. Pray saw his entire crop, about 15,000 to 20,000 pumpkins, washed into Lake Champlain. But pumpkin farmers had been having a difficult year even before the storm. Heavy rains this spring meant many farms had to postpone planting for two or three weeks, setting back the fall harvest, said Jim Murray, owner of the Applejacks Orchard in Peru, N.Y. A late harvest can be fatal to business because pumpkin sales plummet after Halloween on Oct. 31. Wholesalers need to get pumpkins on their way to stores by mid-September. Another spate of rain about two weeks before Irene caused outbreaks of the phytophthora fungus _a type of water mold – in many fields, said Jim Stakey, owner of Stakey’s Pumpkin Farm in Aquebogue, on New York’s Long Island. This week a cold snap threatened to kill the surviving vines, Murray said. “We were real close to a frost last night,” Murray said Saturday. “It was 34, and if we had had a frost, a lot of immature pumpkins would have never made it.” The wholesale price for a bin of 32 to 45 pumpkins ranged from $150 to $200 in upstate New York, about twice the normal price, Pray said. It was still unclear how the shortage would affect retail prices, he said, but in a normal year, each pumpkin could sell for up to $15 at a supermarket in a big city like New York. The problems for Northeast farmers have been a boon for growers in other parts of the country, especially in big pumpkin-producing states like Illinois, Indiana, California, Ohio and Michigan. “There’s been a ton of people calling from New Jersey,” said Larry Goebel, co-owner of Goebel Farms in Evansville, Ind. “We can sell every pumpkin we want to sell.” With good pumpkins hard to find, Murray said buyers can make them last longer by washing them with water mixed with a little bleach. That kills any fungus left over from the fields and staves off mold and rotting, he said. The pumpkin crunch could also affect tourism because pick-your-own pumpkin farms have become important attractions in many rural areas, farmers said. Stakey’s 26-acre farm offers pumpkin-picking along with pony rides, a cornfield maze, rides in a farm wagon and other events. He said he’s buying extra pumpkins to put in the fields to supplement his own crop. “Just get your pumpkins early, that’s all I can say,” he said. “It’s going to be a difficult season.”

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