French finance minister throws in her hat after ‘mature reflection’, and is backed by the UK, Germany, France and the EU The French finance minister, Christine Lagarde, has launched her bid to become the next head of the International Monetary Fund following the resignation of Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who is facing charges of sexual assault. If she is successful she will become the first woman to head the organisation, known as “the world’s banker”, since its inception in 1945. Lagarde, who has the backing of Britain, Germany, France and the European Union, said she came to the decision to throw her hat in the ring to become the IMF’s new managing director after “mature reflection” and having consulted with the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy. “If I’m elected I’ll bring all my expertise as a lawyer, a minister, a manager and a woman [to the job],” she said at a press conference in Paris on Wednesday. Although Lagarde has emerged as a front-runner for the influential post, which has historically been held by a European, IMF directors from Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (Brics) said the unwritten convention of appointing a managing director from Europe was “obsolete” and undermined the legitimacy of the fund. The Brics group called for a “truly transparent, merit-based and competitive process”. Lagarde is also facing a possible legal investigation into the payment of €285m of taxpayers’ money to controversial businessman Bernard Tapie, a supporter of Sarkozy, to settle a long-running legal dispute. Strauss-Kahn, 62, stood down last week after he was arrested in New York on 14 May and indicted on seven charges of sexual assault on a hotel housekeeper, including attempted rape. He denies the charges and has been released on bail. Admirers of the 55-year-old Lagarde, a former national synchronised swimming champion, have described her as a “rock star” of the financial world. She earned praise at home and abroad for her handling of the economic crisis in Europe and for her no-nonsense, straight-talking approach. Having worked as a lawyer in the US for 25 years she speaks impeccable English. She earned the nickname L’Américaine among her compatriots for suggesting the French needed to stop their “obsessive thinking”, roll up their shirtsleeves and “get to work” to pull the country out of the financial doldrums. Kenneth Rogoff, a former IMF chief economist who is now professor at Harvard University, said of her: “She is enormously impressive, politically astute and a strong personality.” He told the New York Times: “At meetings all over the world, she is treated practically like a rock star.” Sarkozy is reported to be planning to seek Barack Obama’s support for Lagarde when the leaders meet at the G8 economic summit in the French seaside town of Deauville on Thursday and Friday. America has by far the biggest say, with 16.74% of the votes, followed by Japan with 6.01%, Germany 5.87%, and the UK and France with 4.85%. Other member countries have less than 4%. On Wednesday the US treasury secretary, Timothy Geithner, said Lagarde and the Mexican candidate for the post, Agustin Carstens, were both “credible” figures to lead the IMF, but added he wanted the candidate with the broadest support. The debt crisis in European countries, including Greece, Portugal and Ireland, has made the IMF’s role overseeing the global financial system – and lending money to struggling nations – even more crucial. Lagarde said she would not focus exclusively on Europe. “No zone has been spared by the financial crisis,” she said, adding that she would “serve the fund, not as a European, not as a French person or minister, but as someone at the service of the fund and its members”. A decision on whether an inquiry will be held into the Tapie affair will be made in Paris on 10 June, but Lagarde said she had “total confidence” and would maintain her candidacy even if an investigation is launched. “I have always acted in the interests of the state and in absolute respect of the law,” she said. The IMF’s 24-member executive board, representing the 187 member countries, is expected to name a new managing director by the end of June. If appointed, Lagarde said she would also bring a woman’s touch to the male-dominated corridors of the IMF headquarters in Washington. In a recent television interview, the French minister expressed the view that men, left to themselves, will usually make a mess of things, a view she reiterated in a newspaper interview. “In gender-dominated environments, men have a tendency to show how hairy chested they are, compared with the man who’s sitting next to them … I honestly think that there should never be too much testosterone in one room.” Christine Lagarde IMF France Europe Dominique Strauss-Kahn Economics Global economy Kim Willsher guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Draft of Washington-EU deal leaked to the Guardian shows agreement ‘violates basic European principles’ The personal data of millions of passengers who fly between the US and Europe, including credit card details, phone numbers and home addresses, may be stored by the US department of homeland security for 15 years, according to a draft agreement between Washington and Brussels leaked to the Guardian. The “restricted” draft, which emerged from negotiations between the US and EU, opens the way for passenger data provided to airlines on check-in to be analysed by US automated data-mining and profiling programmes in the name of fighting terrorism, crime and illegal migration. The Americans want to require airlines to supply passenger lists as near complete as possible 96 hours before takeoff, so names can be checked against terrorist and immigration watchlists. The agreement acknowledges that there will be occasions when people are delayed or prevented from flying because they are wrongly identified as a threat, and gives them the right to petition for judicial review in the US federal court. It also outlines procedures in the event of anticipated data losses or other unauthorised disclosure. The text includes provisions under which “sensitive personal data” – such as ethnic origin, political opinions, and details of health or sex life – can be used in exceptional circumstances where an individual’s life could be imperilled. The 15-year retention period is likely to prove highly controversial as it is three times the five years allowed for in the EU’s PNR (passenger name record) regime to cover flights into, out of and within Europe. A period of five and a half years has just been negotiated in a similar agreement with Australia. Germany and France raised concerns this week about the agreement and the unproven necessity for the measure. Britain has already announced its intention to opt in to the European PNR plan, in which the home secretary, Theresa May, played a key role, and is expected to join the US agreement this summer. The Home Office minister Damian Green has said: “The power of PNR lies in the fact that by using an automated system and interrogating it intelligently, we are able to sift data quickly and in such a way that it reveals patterns and makes links that would otherwise not be readily apparent.” The text of the draft agreement does not explicitly mention profiling but instead talks of “processing and analysing PNR data”. The US Senate passed a resolution last week saying it “simply could not accept” any watering down by European ministers of data-sharing, describing it as “an important part of our layered defences against terrorism”. Senators said it was an important tool in the security agencies’ “identifying possible threats before they arrive in our country”. But the European parliament, which would have to approve it, has demanded proof that such a PNR agreement is necessary, and said it should in no circumstances be used for data-mining or profiling. A provisional agreement on sharing airline passenger data between the EU and the US has been in force since 2007, but has been the subject of an intense civil liberties debate across Europe. This draft agreement appears to give the Americans all they have asked for. A leaked opinion from the EU council of ministers’ legal advisers also warns that the EU’s PNR scheme is disproportionate and not in line with privacy requirements under human rights law. The German constitutional court ruled last years that six months was the maximum appropriate period for retaining personal telecommunications data. The EU-US agreement tries to allay some of these privacy concerns by proposing to “mask” or “depersonalise” the identity of individuals after six months on the homeland security department’s active database. The data will be transferred to a dormant database after five years, to be held for a further 10 years. But the agreement allows for the identity of individuals to be restored at any stage by authorised officials in connection with a particular law enforcement operation. The agreement will not only cover transatlantic flights, but appears to raise the prospect that airlines will have to provide PNR details to Washington for other international flights. It also allows passenger data to be passed to agencies in countries outside the US and Europe. Jan Philip Albrecht, a German green party member of the European parliament’s civil liberties committee, said the agreement in its current form should be rejected. “The planned PNR agreement with the US violates fundamental constitutional principles of European states. Europeans should have the right to protection of their fundamental rights when cooperating with other countries like the US and Australia.” “A blanket retention of personal data for five or even more years is a huge infringement of data protection principles. The mass collection and analysis of PNR data as planned in the new agreements cannot be justified in the view of recent court judgements. “Especially the untransparent profiling practices in the US are in clear contradiction to the European parliament’s demands. In this form, the parliament has to vote the proposals down.” The data to be collected includes 19 separate items relating to each airline passenger, including their billing details, contact numbers, the names of those they are travelling with and how much baggage they have, as well their itinerary. Airlines are to be required to provide the details up to 96 hours in advance, compared with 72 hours now under the provisional arrangement. US national security Data protection United States Air transport European Union Privacy UK security and terrorism Global terrorism Terrorism policy Europe Alan Travis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media One of the reasons conservatives are so incompetent at governance is that they are so rigidly ideological that they’re congenitally incapable of responding to changing facts and realities on the ground — as we witnessed in the leadup to the Bush Economic Meltdown of 2008. They prefer clinging to their disproved and debunked oligarchical fantasies (they still adhere largely to “trickle down” economics, after all) than deal with the set of cards that the real world hands them. That’s why we’re still stuck with the Bush Tax Cuts, too. So of course, in the wake of last night’s win by Democrat Kathy Hochul in New York’s 26th District — a resounding repudiation of Paul Ryan’s Medicare plans, as well as Republican overreaching generally — the conservative punditry was out circling the wagons around their latest Randian hero. Ryan was on Joe Scarborough’s show this morning where everyone was wringing their hands over those nasty Democrats and their demagoguery, better known in the real world as Democrats’ mastery of the political facts of Medicare. It was the same story on Fox & Friends too. Now, if these people were competent in the least, they’d realize that their ideological rigidity had taken them out onto political thin ice and it was cracking away underneath them. Newt Gingrich showed a flash of this when he tried to distance himself from the Ryan plan — and then, of course, came quickly to whimpering heel. So onward they plunge. Indeed, Newt is now sturdily defending Ryan even in the wake of the NY-26 disaster. Earlier this week, Charles Krauthammer and Jonah Goldberg were on Bret Baier’s “All Star Panel” extolling Ryan’s many virtues and pleading with him to get in the race for the Republican nomination for president. Both of them thought Ryan should be drafted if he didn’t run on his own. (Jonah has penned a column to this effect, too. ) And even after this disaster, their tune will not change one iota. Because they cannot budge from the ideological corner into which they’ve painted themselves. Ryan’s Path to the Poorhouse is not just an economic and social disaster in the making for Americans, it’s one that ordinary, common-sense voters can see coming a mile away. Democrats don’t have to “demagogue” to make a clear case that it would be disastrous. Well, at least one conservative — David Frum — can see the disaster coming for the GOP, too : The political dangers in the Ryan budget could have been predicted in advance. In fact, they were predicted in advance – and widely. Yet the GOP proceeded anyway, all but four members of the House putting themselves on record in favor. Any acknowledgment of these dangers was instantly proclaimed taboo, as Newt Gingrich has painfully learned. Bill Kristol and Charles Krauthammer have enthusiastically promoted Paul Ryan as a presidential candidate. And this morning, as the reckoning arrives, the denial continues. Here’s Jonah Goldberg in a column arguing that “perhaps the only guy who can explain the GOP budget should run.” In reality, Ryan is very unlikely to accept this draft. He declined the opportunity to run for US Senate in Wisconsin, likely because he sensed he could not win a state-wide election in which his budget would be the main issue. Now we’re likely headed to the worst of all possible worlds. The GOP will run on a platform crafted to be maximally obnoxious to downscale voters. Some may hope that Tim Pawlenty’s biography may cushion the pain. Perhaps that’s right, at least as compared to Mitt Romney, who in the 2008 primaries did worst among Republicans earning less than $100,000 a year. And yes, Pawlenty is keeping his distance from the Ryan plan. But biography only takes you so far. The big issues of 2012 will be jobs and incomes in a nation still unrecovered from the catastrophe of 2008-2009. What does the GOP have to say to hard-pressed voters? Thus far the answer is: we offer Medicare cuts, Medicaid cuts, and tighter money aimed at raising the external value of the dollar. No candidate, not even if he or she is born in a log cabin, would be able to sell that message to America’s working class.
Continue reading …Get your box of Kleenex and prepare for an hour of schmooze, tears and backslaps with Hadley Freeman 8.00pm: Evening all or, if you’re reading this in America, good afternoon. And if you’re reading this in Australia, good morrow! So perhaps the Rapture didn’t happen on Saturday but the end of the world will be happening this evening Well, the end of The Oprah Winfrey Show after 25 years, anyway, which is OBVIOUSLY THE SAME THING. So get your box of Kleenex or, if you are less sentimentally inclined, vomit bag and prepare for an hour of schmooze, tears and backslaps. I’ll be liveblogging from the start of the show at 9pm GMT, Kleenexes strewn across my sofa. Oprah Winfrey United States Hadley Freeman guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Get your box of Kleenex and prepare for an hour of schmooze, tears and backslaps with Hadley Freeman 8.00pm: Evening all or, if you’re reading this in America, good afternoon. And if you’re reading this in Australia, good morrow! So perhaps the Rapture didn’t happen on Saturday but the end of the world will be happening this evening Well, the end of The Oprah Winfrey Show after 25 years, anyway, which is OBVIOUSLY THE SAME THING. So get your box of Kleenex or, if you are less sentimentally inclined, vomit bag and prepare for an hour of schmooze, tears and backslaps. I’ll be liveblogging from the start of the show at 9pm GMT, Kleenexes strewn across my sofa. Oprah Winfrey United States Hadley Freeman guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Vatican acts after reports of monks staging concerts featuring a lap dancer and running hotel service It sounds like something out of Father Ted: a renowned monastery in Rome where monks staged concerts featuring a lap-dancer-turned-nun and opened a hotel with a 24-hour limousine service has been shut down by the pope. As part of Benedict XVI’s crackdown on “loose living” within the Catholic church, 20 or so Cistercian monks are now being evicted from the monastery at the basilica of Santa Croce in Gerusalemme, which hosts some of the church’s holiest relics. “An inquiry found evidence of liturgical and financial irregularities as well as lifestyles that were probably not in keeping with that of a monk,” said Father Ciro Benedettini, a Vatican spokesman. “The church remains open but the monks are awaiting transfer.” Reports saying the monks amassed large debts have also emerged, but Benedettini declined to give further details of the Vatican report, which was signed off in March. The monks’ days have been numbered since 2009, when the Vatican sacked their flamboyant abbot, Father Simone Fioraso, a former fashion designer who built up a cult following among Rome’s fashionable aristocratic crowd as well as show business worshippers such as Madonna, who prayed at the church in 2008. In 2009 Anna Nobili, a nightclub dancer who became a nun, was invited to perform her “holy dance” before an audience including archbishop Gianfranco Ravasi, head of the Vatican’s cultural department. For her performance Nobili, who says she uses dance as a form of prayer, lies spread-eagled in front of the altar clutching a crucifix or twists and turns as in pole-dancing routines. Dating back to the 4th century, Santa Croce in Gerusalemme was built to house relics brought back from the Holy Land by the mother of Emperor Constantine. They include items described as nails and splinters from the cross, thorns from Jesus’s crown, and a bone from the finger St Thomas pushed into the wounds of Christ. The monks living there now had opened a shop selling organic produce from their kitchen garden, but this was shut down in 2009 amid accusations of their having secretly stocked the shelves from a neighbourhood grocery. The Italian newspaper La Stampa said that VIP guests were also encouraged to stay at a hotel opened at the Santa Croce monastery which offered a 24-hour limousine airport service. In 2008 Fioraso hosted a week-long, televised, reading of the bible with religious figures, politicians and celebrities reading tracts, starting with Pope Benedict himself. But a year later Fioraso was ousted, despite protests from parishioners who defended his “patience, dedication, sacrifice and passion”. The Vatican’s removal of the monks to other monasteries, ending their 500-year presence at the basilica, follows Benedict’s hard line with other wayward orders, including the Legionaries of Christ, run by the Mexican priest Marcial Maciel Degollado, who fathered numerous children, was disciplined over sexual abuse allegations and was banished to a life of penitence. The basilica was supported by the Friends of Santa Croce, a who’s who of Roman society run by a Italian claiming descent from Charlemagne. Italian press reports have speculated that the inspectors from the Vatican suspected homosexual relations between monks at the monastery. Pope Benedict XVI Catholicism Vatican Italy Religion Tom Kington guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Former US Democratic candidate alleged to have used more than $1m in illegal contributions to conceal affair in 2008 The disgraced former US vice-presidential contender John Edwards is to be charged for allegedly using more than $1m in illegal campaign contributions to hide an affair that destroyed his presidential ambitions. The justice department is to accuse Edwards, once a rising star of the Democratic party as its 2004 vice-presidential candidate, of accepting substantial donations to his 2008 campaign from two wealthy supporters in order to cover up the relationship with his campaign videographer, Rielle Hunter, and the fact that they had a child together. The charges come out of a grand jury investigation which heard from more than a dozen witnesses including Edwards’s former chief aide, Andrew Young, who at one time covered up for his boss by falsely claiming paternity of the child and then writing a book about it. Last year, Young discovered a video tape of Edwards having sex with Hunter among a box of personal possessions left at his home by his former boss’s mistress. A judge ordered the tape to be turned over to the court as part of an investigation into whether cash given to Hunter by Edwards was in effect hush money. Edwards is to be accused of using the campaign donations to support and seclude Hunter. Edwards now faces the choice of attempting to reach a plea bargain which would result in him being struck off as a lawyer or taking his chances on a trial and the prospect of prison time. The charges are only the latest in a string of public humiliations and exposures which have some of Edwards’s former supporters saying that because of his actions and lies they now regard his political persona as a fabrication and that he was unfit for public office. After his 2008 campaign for his party’s presidential nomination faltered in the face of competition from Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, Edwards was once again considered a likely vice-presidential nominee. But revelations about his affair began to appear in the tabloid press. He initially denied them but they killed off his chances of higher office and later that year he admitted to the relationship with Hunter. However, it was another two years before he admitted to paternity of the child. Further revelations about the true nature of John and Elizabeth Edwards’s marriage emerged. She was regarded as her husband’s closest adviser and strategist who was instrumental in selecting his staff and directing his campaign. But she was later revealed to be an “abusive” individual who left creepy voicemails and terrified her husband’s campaign staff. Elizabeth Edwards had known about the affair for months before it was made public, but her husband assured her it was just a one-night stand. Later she released a book that detailed her struggle with her husband’s infidelity. The couple split up after he admitted the affair with Hunter and she died in December of cancer. John Edwards US politics United States Democrats US elections 2008 Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Rep. Rob Woodall (R-GA) faced criticism this week when video was released of him telling a constituent that she should sponsor her own health care instead of using the government’s Medicare program. The Georgia Democratic Party released more video Wednesday from that same town hall event where Woodall explained why he wouldn’t give up his own government-funded health care program. “You take government-subsidized health care, but you are not obligated to take that if you don’t want to,” Democratic activist Ilene Johnson told Woodall. “Why aren’t you going out on the free market in the state where you are a resident and buy your own health care?” “It’s because it’s free,” Woodall replied. “It’s because it’s free. The same reason I went out to Walgreens and bought Activon when I don’t have any arthritis pain. Because it’s free. Folks, if you give people things for free, don’t blame them for taking them.” The Atlanta Journal-Constitution has a transcript .
Continue reading …Contaminated waste is expected to be transported to the landfill site at King’s Cliffe by road from Harwell in Oxfordshire The government has over-ridden local planning objections and pushed through a controversial scheme to allow 250,000 tonnes a year of nuclear waste to be dumped in a traditional landfill site in a Northants village. Residents said they were “shocked” that such a groundbreaking decision could be taken before the conclusions of a wide-ranging debate about radioactive safety after the Fukushima atomic plant crisis. But Eric Pickles, the secretary of state for communities and local government said that “the risk of actual harm from the development would be very low” and it should therefore be given the go-ahead. The decision at the site at King’s Cliffe, a village near Peterborough, could have significant implications for other areas where landfill is needed to deal with the large volumes of low level waste from the UK’s atomic industry. Britain’s only purpose-built low level waste depositary at Drigg in Cumbria is rapidly filling up and ministers decided last year that the law should be changed to allow traditional landfill sites to be used in some circumstances. There is another row in Cumbria after the Environment Agency gave the go-ahead last month for a permit to dispose radioactive waste at the Lillyhall landfill site, from the Sellafield nuclear complex. Augean, the waste management outfit, is expected to bring waste in to the East Northamptonshire site at King’s Cliffe by road from Harwell in Oxfordshire, which was established in 1946 as Britain’s first atomic energy research establishment. But local fears that the facility could also be used for waste created at other nuclear plants such as Bradwell in Essex. Planning permission had been denied by Northamptonshire councy council and a local referendum had damned the scheme but Augean appealed to the secretary of state saying the 250,000 tonnes would be mainly made up of relatively uncontaminated rubble and other debris. It argued that the facility has accepted hazardous waste without harmful effect on the environment or local economy. In a statement Augean said: “We are very pleased that our planning application has withstood the close examination of the inquiry and that the secretary of state has upheld our proposals for East Northamptonshire Resource Management Facility (ENRMF) His support joins that of the Environment Agency in allowing this important scheme to go ahead.” The company, with no prior experience of handling nuclear waste and which has been fined by the Environment Agency for past breaches of regulations, said it would work with local residents to further allay any concerns. But Clare Langan, a local resident and member of the campaign group King’s Cliffe Waste Watchers, said she was bitterly disappointed that the green light had been given to Augean. “In a post-Fukushima environment where nuclear planning is being halted in Germany and Japan it seems bizarre that the (UK) government is blundering ahead with disposing of nuclear waste in the most absurdly inappropriate place,” she argued. Louise Bagshaw, MP for nearby Corby told the BBC the decision undermined the government’s professed commitment to localism. “We had a local referendum at the ballot box, not a petition, actual votes cast and 96% of people were against this dump. I will be asking the secretary of state why his department has taken this appalling decision.” The decision got the thumbs up from the City though. Edison Investment Research put out a note on Augean saying this potentially lucrative waste business could “transform the economics within the group.” The decision by the Environment Agency to agree to radioactive dumping at Lillyhall by the Waste Recycling Group and its partner Energy Solutions has angered local residents and authorities there. Allerdale Borough Council, Copeland Borough Council and Cumbria County Council all objected to the scheme. “My fear is that this decision opens up the market for this waste to be disposed of wherever the best deal on costs is on offer, rather than factoring in the wider environmental and economic concerns,” said Tim Knowles, the councillor responsible for the environment at the County Council. debate about whether the region should host a national high level waste dump. The government desperately needs a solution to the high waste stored at plants around the country as it proceeds with plans for new nuclear facilities to generate low carbon electricity. Nuclear waste Energy Energy industry Nuclear power Waste Eric Pickles Local politics Local government Terry Macalister guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Social network will attempt to protect users’ right to defend themselves in legal case brought by footballer Twitter will notify its users before handing their personal information to UK authorities seeking to prosecute them over alleged breaches of privacy injunctions, a senior executive at the company said on Thursday. Asked about the escalating dispute over gagging orders in Britain, Twitter’s general manager of European operations, Tony Wang, said: “Platforms should have responsibility not to defend the user, but to protect that user’s right to defend him or herself.” Twitter was thrown into the centre of the storm over privacy injunctions on Friday when it emerged a footballer launched legal action against the social network in connection with an alleged affair with the former Big Brother contestant, Imogen Thomas. This prompted the player to be named by even more Twitter users and on Monday Lib Dem MP John Hemming used parliamentary privilege to name Manchester United’s Ryan Giggs as the footballer behind the high-profile privacy injunction. The injunction remains in place . Speaking at the eG8 internet forum in Paris on Wednesday, Wang said he could not comment specifically on the ongoing UK legal action. “If we’re legally required to turn over user information, to the extent that we can, we want to notify the user involved, let them know and let them exercise their rights under their own jurisdiction,” he added. “That’s not to say that they will ultimately prevail, that’s not to say that law enforcement doesn’t get the information they need, but what it does do is take that process into the court of law and let it play out there.” Alexander Macgillivray, Twitter’s general counsel, later clarified the social network’s privacy policy. Macgillvray said on Twitter: “Our policy is notify users & we have fought to ensure user rights. Sadly, some more interested in headlines than accuracy. Twitter declined to comment further. Schillings, the law firm acting for the footballer, filed the legal action against Twitter and its users on Friday, after tens of thousands of internet users allegedly exposed details of his alleged extra-marital affair. The court order – known as a Norwich Pharmacal order – could force Twitter to hand over the name, email address and IP address of the person behind the account. Earlier this month, an unknown person or individuals published on a Twitter account the names of various people who had allegedly taken out gagging orders to conceal sexual indiscretions. The account rapidly attracted more than 100,000 followers. An injunction preventing the naming of the player still stands. Rejecting a third attempt by the Sun newspaper to lift the gagging order in the high court on Monday, after the player had been named in the Commons, Mr Justice Tugendhat said: “It is obvious that if the purpose [of the injunction] was to protect a secret then it would have now failed – but as it is to do with harassment it has not failed.” Privacy & the media Digital media Twitter Internet Blogging Superinjunctions Injunctions Josh Halliday guardian.co.uk
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