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Barack Obama’s UK state visit – day two live updates

Day two of Barack Obama’s UK visit sees the US president in Downing Street talks, giving a speech to parliament and his wife reunited with London schoolgirls she first met in 2009 8.50am: Oh dear. Eamonn Holmes is on Sky News talking about Michelle Obama and fashion. “Most women would cover that derriere,” he tells Emily Sheffield, the deputy editor of British Vogue (and Samantha Cameron’s sister). The two go on to discuss the clothes worn by the Duchess of Cambridge and the Queen. Holmes is careful what he says about SamCam. 8.45am: It’s day two of Barack Obama’s state visit to Britain. Yesterday the US president went to Buckingham Palace and looked at the art , exchanged gifts with his hosts , managed to get some US media attention by meeting William and Kate, lay a wreath at Westminster Abbey, high-fived David Cameron in a game of table tennis and rounded off the day with a Windsor lamb and a Sussex rosé at a state banquet where guests included Tom Hanks. Today is the real political business of the visit. He and Hillary Clinton will hold talks with David Cameron, Nick Clegg, George Osborne and others where the focus is likely to be on joint US-UK security issues, then later this afternoon give a speech to both houses of parliament. His wife, Michelle, is hosting a barbecue with Samantha Cameron for military families before she goes to Oxford University to host an open day for pupils from Elizabeth Garrett Anderson School in north London. It’s the same school she visited in 2009, telling pupils “I thought being smart was cooler than anything in the world” (also: “I do hugs”). Below is an approximate schedule. •  Talks at 10 Downing Street • 12.30pm: Downing Street press conference • Barbecue at No 10 hosted by Michelle Obama and Samantha Cameron • 2.15pm: Michelle Obama at Oxford University • 4.30pm: Obama gives speech to parliament •  Dinner at Winfield House Barack Obama Simon Jeffery guardian.co.uk

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Row over volcanic ash cloud as most flights resume

British Airways and Ryanair attack airspace closures, claiming their planes have gone through no-fly zones without incident The head of British Airways and Iberia has joined the clamour over the handling of the volcanic ash cloud this morning after claiming that a BA test flight “found nothing” after flying through a smoke plume deemed by regulators to be too dangerous for normal commercial flights. Echoing criticism from Ryanair, Willie Walsh said the plane flew through an ash “red zone” for 45 minutes over Scotland and northern England and encountered no difficulties. The chief executive of International Airlines Group, the parent of Britain and Spain’s national carrier, spoke as the cloud from the Grímsvötn volcano moved away from UK airspace and began to affect travel in Germany. Walsh told BBC4′s Today programme that the flight operated at different altitudes, through a zone designated by the Met Office to contain high densities of ash – a level at which no commercial carrier has received safety clearance to operate. “Initially it flew over the north of England, Newcastle, Glasgow, Edinburgh, back to Newcastle. The aircraft then returned and has been examined. All the filters were removed and will be sent to a laboratory for testing. The simple answer is that we found nothing.” Travel plans for thousands of people are getting back on track as the ash cloud moves out of British airspace. Some airline passengers face continuing disruption as flights have been cancelled to destinations in Germany. About 500 flights were halted – and others delayed – across Europe on Tuesday as the eruption of the Grímsvötn volcano in Iceland caused havoc at airports in Scotland and northern England. The transport secretary, Philip Hammond, has held out hopes that the late May bank holiday getaway will not fall victim to similar travel chaos, although the Met Office has warned possible changes in wind direction could bring the ash back by the end of the week. A Met Office spokesman said concentrations of ash would reduce significantly over the next 24 hours. But much of the UK could be affected by the ash cloud on Friday if the volcano continued to erupt at current levels. “There’s a risk of seeing high concentrations of volcanic ash above 35,000ft on Friday.” Passengers are being warned to continue to check with airlines as carriers return to near-normal services. British Airways cancelled one London-Hamburg and two Hamburg-London flights, and easyJet cancelled some German flights. EasyJet said Hamburg airport would be closed until 2pm UK time and Berlin’s Schonefeld and Tegel airports were expected to be shut. EasyJet said more of its flights could be cancelled later. Ryanair cancelled all its flights in and out of the German airports of Bremen, Lubeck and Magdeburg until 1pm UK time. There were other delays caused by the knock-on effects of Tuesday’s disruption. Despite the better volcanic and weather forecast, the Barcelona football team who play Manchester United at Wembley in the Champions League final on Saturday brought forward their journey to London from Thursday to Tuesday. After chairing a meeting of Cobra, the government’s emergency planning committee, Hammond said the ash plume was getting smaller and less intense. He was “cautiously optimistic” that south-west winds would clear the remainder from British airspace over the next couple of days. “In the short term it is reasonably positive news,” he said. Hammond and O’Leary, head of Ryanair, have clashed over the airline’s claim that one of its planes flew safely through airspace condemned as dangerous by the Civil Aviation Authority. The minister said the aircraft had only gone through a zone already redesignated safe. The British Airways test flight was to help determine procedures to continue flying in accordance with recommendations developed by ICAO, the global aviation governing body, over the last 12 months. Hammond said the blanket flight bans imposed by UK authorities last time there was a volcanic eruption were a thing of the past. The new system in the UK allows individual carriers to apply for permission to fly in different environments depending on their capabilities. This meant proportionally fewer flights had been cancelled and airports closed this time around. “We’re red-lining a much smaller proportion of total ash cloud this year compared to last,” Hammond said. Other countries within the EU have different arrangements for managing flights and airspace during such crises. Iceland volcano 2011 (Grimsvotn) Air transport Natural disasters and extreme weather Iceland Transport policy Transport Dan Milmo James Meikle guardian.co.uk

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Jane Corwin sees early lead dissolve after coming out in favour of Republican plan to cut millions from Medicare Democrats have won a heavily Republican upstate New York congressional seat, in a special election that was regarded as a potential bellwether for US national elections next year. Erie County clerk Kathy Hochul edged past Republican state assemblywoman Jane Corwin to win the seat in the 26th congressional district in north-west New York state. The rural-suburban district between Buffalo and Rochester is one of the state’s most conservative. But Corwin saw her early lead dissolve after coming out in favour of a Republican budget plan that would cut billions from Medicare, the popular government healthcare plan for senior citizens. The Democratic victory in the strongly Republican district came just six months after the Republicans rode discontent over the soaring deficit and fragile economic recovery to a sweeping victory in November’s congressional elections. The Republicans picked up 63 seats to regain control of the House of Representatives and trimmed the Democrats’ majority in the Senate. Hochul’s victory gives the Democrats hope that they can use voters’ anxiety over Republican proposals to overhaul Medicare to their advantage in November 2012, when all seats in the House and a third of seats in the Senate are on the ballot. President Barack Obama will also be seeking re-election. At the same time, Republicans find themselves on the political defensive on the Medicare issue, exhibiting significant internal strains for the first time since last autumn’s electoral gains. With 89% of precincts reporting, Hochul had 48% of the vote, compared with 42% for Corwin. A third candidate, Jack Davis, with 9%, also siphoned votes away from Corwin by running as a supporter of the ultra-conservative Tea Party movement. Scores of Hochul supporters, roaring with delight and chanting “Kathy, Kathy, Kathy,” jammed into a UAW union hall in Buffalo suburb Amherst for Hochul’s victory speech. The crowd chanted “Medicare, Medicare.” The seat became vacant in February when Republican Chris Lee, who won in 2010 with 74% of the vote, resigned after shirtless photos he sent to a woman surfaced online. The 26th congressional district was one of only four districts in the state out of 29 that favoured Republican John McCain over Barack Obama in 2008. But Corwin, a multimillionaire state assemblywoman, watched her lead evaporate after expressing support for a plan crafted by House budget committee chairman Paul Ryan to strip billions from Medicare. Corwin said she supported the Ryan plan as a way to ensure Medicare for future generations. Under Ryan’s proposal, Medicare would remain unchanged for those 55 or older, including the millions who receive healthcare under the programme. Anyone younger would be required to obtain coverage from a private insurer when they turn 65, with the government providing a voucher to subsidise part of the cost of premiums. Hochul quickly seized on Corwin’s position and cast herself as the protector of Medicare in a district with a large population of voters over 55. Hochul’s ads said that she wants to reduce government spending, but blasted Corwin for favouring Medicare cuts “to pay for more tax cuts for multimillionaires”. Corwin tried to shift her position, suggesting she would favour changing the Ryan plan if elected. The race had long been expected to be an easy victory for Republicans, but once the race turned unexpectedly competitive both national parties and several independent groups poured in more than $2m (£1.23m) to sway voters. Lee, who had just started his second term, abruptly resigned after a gossip website published a shirtless mobile phone picture he had sent to a woman he had been flirting with on Craigslist, the classified ads website. Tuesday’s vote will not have an immediate effect on the balance of power in Washington. Republicans still hold a commanding majority in the House. A recent Associated Press-GFK poll found that most Americans do not believe Medicare has to be cut to balance the federal budget. Democrats Republicans New York US elections 2012 US Congress United States US politics guardian.co.uk

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Suicide bomber attacks Pakistani police

Five police officers killed and at least 30 wounded in latest violence to hit Pakistan since killing of Osama bin Laden A suicide car bomber has struck a police building in Pakistan’s main north-west city, killing five police officers and wounding at least 30 others in the latest violence to hit the country since the US raid that killed Osama bin Laden. Although no group immediately claimed responsibility for the early morning strike on Wednesday in Peshawar, the attack added to growing fears of a long, bloody summer as Pakistani Taliban and other al-Qaida-affiliated groups carry out threats to avenge the al-Qaida chief’s death. Already this month, the Pakistani Taliban have claimed they carried out three revenge attacks, including a deadly 18-hour siege of a naval base. The bomber’s target appeared to be a building belonging to the police’s criminal investigation department, but the station was located in an army cantonment and military facilities are also nearby, said Liaquat Ali Khan, a senior police official in Peshawar. Investigators with the police counter-terrorism unit were stationed at the centre, said Fayaz Khan Toru, the leading police official in north-west Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province. Police officer Mohammad Zahid was in the basement of the building when the bomb went off. “I felt like the sky fell on me,” Zahid said from the hospital where he was being treated for multiple injuries. “The explosion jammed the door of my room in the basement, but there was a small hole in the wall so I crawled through that. When I got outside, there was lots of dust and smoke.” Military forces quickly sealed off much of the area as machines were brought in to sift through the facility’s wreckage. “Our determination is much higher than before, and we will fight till the defeat of these terrorists,” said Bashir Bilour, a senior official with the provincial government. Since the death of Osama bin Laden, US-Pakistan relations have sunk to new lows. The Pakistani Taliban are exploiting the tense relations by promising to attack both Pakistani and western targets to avenge Bin Laden’s death. The militant group has long despised the Pakistani government and army for their alliance with the US, a sentiment shared by many ordinary Pakistanis. Since the Bin Laden raid, the group has taken responsibility for a twin suicide bombing at a paramilitary police training facility that killed around 90 people and a car bomb that slightly wounded two Americans in north-west Pakistan. Pakistan Taliban Osama bin Laden Global terrorism guardian.co.uk

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Kathy Hochul (D) wins Upset in NY-26 Special Election because of Medicare

Click here to view this media A huge win happened tonight for the Democratic Party and to Congresswoman-Elect Kathy Hochul because Republican voters are afraid that they will lose their Medicare at the hands of the GOP. NY Times: Voters, who turned out in strikingly large numbers for a special election, said they trusted Ms. Hochul, the county clerk of Erie County, to protect Medicare. “ I have almost always voted the party line,” said Gloria Bolender, a Republican from Clarence who is caring for her 80-year-old mother. “This is the second time in my life I’ve voted against my party.” Pat Gillick, a Republican from East Amherst, who also cast a ballot for Ms. Hochul, said, “The privatization of Medicare scares me.” The district, which stretches from Buffalo to Rochester, has been in Republican hands for four decades, producing influential figures like Representative Jack Kemp and siding with Carl P. Paladino, a Republican, over Andrew M. Cuomo in the governor’s race last year. via emailed press release: DNC Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz released the following statement after Congresswoman-Elect Kathy Hochul’s victory in the New York Special Election : “I wholeheartedly congratulate Congresswoman-Elect Hochul and her grassroots supporters for their hard work and dedication despite being outspent by a 2-to-1 margin. Tonight’s election result is not just a victory for Congresswoman-Elect Kathy Hochul, it’s a victory for the residents of Western New York and for Americans who believe that our elected leaders should fight to protect Medicare and ensure that our government works for our seniors, working families and young people . Kathy’s Republican opponent, and those who spent a small fortune on her behalf in a solidly Republican district, found out the hard way that their extreme plans to abolish Medicare and slash Medicaid and investments in health care, education, innovation and job creation are wrongheaded and unpopular even in a district that should have been a cakewalk for the Republican candidate.

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Tornadoes hit Oklahoma and Kansas

At least six people were killed in Oklahoma and Kansas as the violent storms moved east, just two days after a tornado killed 122 in Joplin, Missouri Authorities in Dallas evacuated the airport and a baseball stadium on Tuesday night as a new round of tornadoes tore across middle America, just two days after the deadliest twister in modern history. At least six people were killed in Oklahoma and Kansas as the violent storms moved east, striking barely 48 hours after a tornado descended on the town of Joplin, Missouri killing 122. The new line of violent storms caused havoc across a region that has already experienced a severe year for tornadoes. In Dallas, officials bundled people off planes and into a basement beneath an airport terminal building. Fans were evacuated from a major league baseball game. The storms at one point even forced the evacuation of the storm prediction centre in Oklahoma City. In Joplin, hundreds remained missing yesterday after the town took a direct hit from a tornado. The recovery effort interrupted by bouts of severe weather. Two emergency workers were struck by lightening on Monday. Officials estimated about 8,000 buildings were destroyed. The heavy toll spurred calls for an overhaul of the tornado system to help ensure people get out of harms’ way. “We need to ask ourselves, what can we do to protect Americans?” Jack Hayes, the head of the national weather service told reporters. “I have to say, it’s not enough. We have to do more.” He suggested the higher death tolls in recent tornadoes could be linked to demographic changes, with Americans moving into western and southern states that are prone to hurricanes. The national weather service is considering introducing smartphone warnings and other systems. Storm sirens sounded more than 20 minutes before the tornado hit Joplin just before 6pm on Sunday more than the 13- or 14-minute average warning time, said Greg Carbin, the meteorologist who heads the weather services storm prediction centre. That should have been ample time to get to cover. But forecasters are growing concerned that people – especially those living in tornado-prone areas of the south and central United States, are becoming blase about warnings, or that the warnings are not getting through in time. Increasing the warning lead time might even make the problem of complacency worse because it would also affect accuracy of forecasts, said Carbin. That is something we grapple with all the time, said Carbin. “If we want to push the envelope with respect to predictions are we also going to overwarn or cry wolf too often? I would argue that there may be some signs we are already doing that.” However, Missouri s governor, Jay Nixon, suggested some people in Joplin could not hear the tornado sirens over strong winds and heavy rain. When the pressure caused those alarms to go off, there was so much rain, so much hail many of the folks couldn t even hear it, he said. There were similar complaints after last month’s deadly tornadoes in Alabama and other southern states when thunderstorms blew down powerlines and weather service systems, leaving mobile phones as the only means of communication, Bob Henson of the University Corporation of Atmospheric Research said. People tend to confirm a warning themselves before acting. “Did the sirens go off? What is the TV meteorologist saying? What are my family and friends doing?” he said. Fast-changing conditions also lead people to underestimate the danger. United States Natural disasters and extreme weather Oklahoma Kansas Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk

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Obama’s Visit May Have Been Worth $200 Million to Ireland

Celebrities, step aside. A presidential endorsement can be the most lucrative of all. President Obama downed a pint of black brew in four sips on Monday. Call it the luck of the Irish, but Guinness is rejoicing – and seeing green. The endorsement – dozens of photos of Obama slurping down the pint and declaring

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Time Attacks Arrogant ‘Pigs’ Lying About Sex, Quite Different Than the Monica Outbreak of 1998

Time’s cover this week proclaims “Sex. Lies. Arrogance. What Makes Powerful Men Act Like Pigs.” The May 30 cover story by Nancy Gibbs pondered the allegations against Arnold Schwarzenegger and Dominique Strauss-Kahn: But both suggest an abuse of power and a betrayal of trust. And both involve men whose long-standing reputations for behaving badly toward women did not derail their rise to power. Which raises the question: How can it be, in this ostensibly enlightened age, when men and women live and work as peers and are schooled regularly in what conduct is acceptable and what is actionable, that anyone with so little judgment, so little honor, could rise to such heights? This is not now Gibbs wrote of Bill Clinton during the depths of his intern-sex scandal. Clinton wasn’t an arrogant pig, but a miraculous politician who deserved forgiveness. From February 9, 1998 :

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Moore: Obama Should Use Power Over Auto Companies To Kill Cars, Replace With Mass Transit

Want to know how socialists think? Check out Michael Moore on MSNBC this evening, wishing President Obama would use the government's power over the auto manufacturers to . . . kill the internal combustion engine. As everyone knows, politicians and pundits know more about the market than billions of consumers.

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Moore: Obama Should Use Power Over Auto Companies To Kill Cars, Replace With Mass Transit

Want to know how socialists think? Check out Michael Moore on MSNBC this evening, wishing President Obama would use the government's power over the auto manufacturers to . . . kill the internal combustion engine. As everyone knows, politicians and pundits know more about the market than billions of consumers.

Continue reading …