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Tornadoes tear through US midwest leaving dozens dead

Tornadoes in Missouri kill at least 30 people in one small city, leading governor to call state of emergency Tornadoes have torn through parts of the US midwest, killing at least 30 people in the Missouri city of Joplin and causing extensive property damage. The deaths came from a powerful tornado that plowed through the south-west Missouri city of some 50,000 people late on Sunday afternoon. “At this point we know we are up into the 30 range,” the Newton County coroner, Mark Bridges, told Reuters when asked about the deaths. “We have heard up into the over-100 [range], but … I don’t think anyone has a good count right now,” he said of the casualties. He also said that 11 bodies had been recovered from one location. The storms continued to build on the violent weather this spring in the US, which saw more than 330 deaths last month as tornadoes hit seven states. That included 238 deaths in Alabama on 27 April as twisters battered Tuscaloosa and other urban areas. The Missouri governor, Jay Nixon, said earlier on CNN that an unknown number of people had died in his state: “We don’t have any numbers, but we have had confirmation that there have been deaths.” He declared a state of emergency and announced he was ordering Missouri national guard troops be deployed to help state troopers and other agencies respond to storms that he said “have caused extensive damage across Missouri”. Whole neighbourhoods as well as a hospital in Joplin were badly damaged, according to authorities and local television footage. “It’s done quite a bit of damage,” a police officer in Joplin told Reuters. “It hit quite a few parts of town.” A Missouri highway patrol dispatcher, Charles Bradley, said the extent of the damage is still unknown as a variety of state and local agencies send help to the area. “There is a hospital that was majorly damaged,” Bradley said of Joplin. “It’s kind of like Tuscaloosa again.” Denise Bayless, 57, who lives north of the city, told Reuters that many buildings on Main Street were levelled and the city’s only high school was burning. She and her husband were at church when their adult son called to say the tornado was hitting his house, and the couple got in their car to drive to his aid. “We just had to weave in and out of debris. Power lines were down everywhere, and you could smell gas. It was scary,” she said. Carla Tabares and her husband, Tony, were in the Outback steakhouse in Joplin when the tornado hit. They had just run through rain into the restaurant and sat down to order when a waitress told them a tornado was headed their way. “It was really awful, really scary,” said Tabares. She and her husband squeezed into the restaurant’s cooler with several families and children in the dark, hearing the howling winds outside. When they emerged, the building was largely unscathed but several other nearby restaurants and businesses suffered severe damage. “I’m just thankful we got out alive and I really feel sorry for the people who didn’t,” said Tabares. Another tornado ripped through the north Minneapolis and some suburbs on Sunday, tearing roofs off dozens of homes and garages, killing one person and injuring at least 30 others, authorities said. The twister struck on Sunday afternoon and plowed across a 3-5 mile (5-8 km) area in a northeasterly direction, an assistant city fire chief, Cherie Penn, said. Storms knocked out electricity to about 22,000 homes and businesses in the area, but power was restored to several thousand customers within hours, according to a spokeswoman for the utilities provider Xcel Energy. Tornadoes overnight on Saturday in north-east Kansas killed one person and damaged some 200 structures. A state of emergency was declared for 16 counties, state officials said. United States Missouri Natural disasters and extreme weather guardian.co.uk

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Obama in Ireland – live coverage

Barack Obama kicks off a six-day European trip today in Ireland. The US president will meet Mary McAleese, his Irish counterpart, before travelling to his ancestral home of Moneygall. Follow live updates here 10.03am: “But what’s being said on Twitter?” I hear you cry: . 9.54am: Last week Andrew Marr , this week Jedward . Did Obama wrong someone in a previous life? Still he’s reportedly meeting Brian O’Driscoll as well , so every cloud. Speaking of clouds, Obama’s helicopter is just coming in to land at Áras an Uachtaráin, the official residence of the President of Ireland, under a big load of them. 9.47am: Our Ireland correspondent, Henry McDonald, will be tracking the US president’s movements today. Henry writes that the Irish government has wisely “advised members of the public who want to see President Obama in the flesh not to bring any weapons to Dublin’s College Green this evening”. Umbrellas (presumably and especially ones from Cold War Bulgaria) flags, banners, sharp objects and bags or backpacks are all banned from a secured area between Dame Street and the gates of Trinity College from 2pm on today. The advice to carry “no weapons” appears this morning in a government advertisement published in today’s Irish papers. Meanwhile among those celebrities who will make appearances on various platforms around the President are sports stars like Brian O’Driscoll, fresh from Leinster’s Heineken Cup triumph in Cardiff at the weekend; actors including Gabriel Byrne and Daniel Day Lewis and a host of pop and traditional music stars including the infamous X-Factor twosome Jedward. Meantime welcome to the Irish weather Mr President! Irish state weather organisation Met Eireann reports it will be wet, windy and stormy today. 9.42am: He’s out! Holding hands with Michelle as they walk down the steps. Michelle’s hair is being blown about all over the place. The president is in a dark blue suit, with blue tie and what appears to be a pink shirt. Michelle is in a light dress with dark suit jacket. They meet Ireland’s Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Eamon Gilmore at the bottom of the steps, before trotting across the tarmac to a waiting helicopter. They will shortly be heading for central Dublin to meet Mary McAleese and Enda Kenny. 9.37am: Obama’s plane is stationary on the Dublin tarmac, the steps being wheeled towards the open door. It’s raining and blowing a gale – which should add to the authenticity of the president’s visit. Just waiting for the man himself to disembark now. 9.32am: Air Force One is down. Obama is in Ireland. Let the fun begin… 9.30am: Ireland’s burgeoning reputation for booking big-name acts continues to grow. Last week the country welcomed the Queen , who wowed supporters with her ability to wear green, make small talk and resist the lure of Guinness. This week the country has arguably gone one better, attracting US President Barack Obama, who will meet President Mary McAleese and Taoiseach Enda Kenny. Obama will arrive in Dublin for his 24-hour trip, which will include a 45 minute visit to Moneygall, County Offaly, said to be home to some of his ancestors. The village has been decked out with US flags ahead of Obama’s arrival – make him feel at home, etc – and he will reportedly meet some of his distant relatives during his stay. First Lady Michelle Obama has made the trip too, and tonight the pair will return to Dublin, where Obama will deliver his set-piece speech in front of a crowd of 25,000 people in College Green. Tomorrow, Obama’s six-day European jaunt continues with visits to England, France and Poland, but today all the talk is of his presence in the Emerald Isle. Will he support Ireland’s drive to improve the terms of the IMF/European Central Bank multi-billion euro bail out? Will he get on with his long lost relatives? Will he drink a pint of Guinness? Find answers to those questions/some of those questions here. Barack Obama Ireland United States Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk

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Obama in Ireland – live coverage

Barack Obama kicks off a six-day European trip today in Ireland. The US president will meet Mary McAleese, his Irish counterpart, before travelling to his ancestral home of Moneygall. Follow live updates here 10.03am: “But what’s being said on Twitter?” I hear you cry: . 9.54am: Last week Andrew Marr , this week Jedward . Did Obama wrong someone in a previous life? Still he’s reportedly meeting Brian O’Driscoll as well , so every cloud. Speaking of clouds, Obama’s helicopter is just coming in to land at Áras an Uachtaráin, the official residence of the President of Ireland, under a big load of them. 9.47am: Our Ireland correspondent, Henry McDonald, will be tracking the US president’s movements today. Henry writes that the Irish government has wisely “advised members of the public who want to see President Obama in the flesh not to bring any weapons to Dublin’s College Green this evening”. Umbrellas (presumably and especially ones from Cold War Bulgaria) flags, banners, sharp objects and bags or backpacks are all banned from a secured area between Dame Street and the gates of Trinity College from 2pm on today. The advice to carry “no weapons” appears this morning in a government advertisement published in today’s Irish papers. Meanwhile among those celebrities who will make appearances on various platforms around the President are sports stars like Brian O’Driscoll, fresh from Leinster’s Heineken Cup triumph in Cardiff at the weekend; actors including Gabriel Byrne and Daniel Day Lewis and a host of pop and traditional music stars including the infamous X-Factor twosome Jedward. Meantime welcome to the Irish weather Mr President! Irish state weather organisation Met Eireann reports it will be wet, windy and stormy today. 9.42am: He’s out! Holding hands with Michelle as they walk down the steps. Michelle’s hair is being blown about all over the place. The president is in a dark blue suit, with blue tie and what appears to be a pink shirt. Michelle is in a light dress with dark suit jacket. They meet Ireland’s Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Eamon Gilmore at the bottom of the steps, before trotting across the tarmac to a waiting helicopter. They will shortly be heading for central Dublin to meet Mary McAleese and Enda Kenny. 9.37am: Obama’s plane is stationary on the Dublin tarmac, the steps being wheeled towards the open door. It’s raining and blowing a gale – which should add to the authenticity of the president’s visit. Just waiting for the man himself to disembark now. 9.32am: Air Force One is down. Obama is in Ireland. Let the fun begin… 9.30am: Ireland’s burgeoning reputation for booking big-name acts continues to grow. Last week the country welcomed the Queen , who wowed supporters with her ability to wear green, make small talk and resist the lure of Guinness. This week the country has arguably gone one better, attracting US President Barack Obama, who will meet President Mary McAleese and Taoiseach Enda Kenny. Obama will arrive in Dublin for his 24-hour trip, which will include a 45 minute visit to Moneygall, County Offaly, said to be home to some of his ancestors. The village has been decked out with US flags ahead of Obama’s arrival – make him feel at home, etc – and he will reportedly meet some of his distant relatives during his stay. First Lady Michelle Obama has made the trip too, and tonight the pair will return to Dublin, where Obama will deliver his set-piece speech in front of a crowd of 25,000 people in College Green. Tomorrow, Obama’s six-day European jaunt continues with visits to England, France and Poland, but today all the talk is of his presence in the Emerald Isle. Will he support Ireland’s drive to improve the terms of the IMF/European Central Bank multi-billion euro bail out? Will he get on with his long lost relatives? Will he drink a pint of Guinness? Find answers to those questions/some of those questions here. Barack Obama Ireland United States Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk

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Francis Fukuyama: ‘Americans are not very good at nation-building’

In his new book, The Origins of Political Order, the author of the The End of History lays down the conditions required for a nation to become a democracy. He talks to Stephen Moss about his fears for our immediate future – but why he is still an optimist Francis Fukuyama is on day 24 of a world tour to plug his fat new book, The Origins of Political Order. I bump into him and a minder as he arrives at his publisher’s offices in central London. The offices, in what looks like an old warehouse, aspire to be a bit Manhattan – open plan, stripped wood, buzzy. The downside is that the ancient lift has packed up, and the office is three floors up. Nobly, Frank – as his friends call him – insists on carrying a suitcase, which is almost as large as he is, as well as his backpack up all three flights, despite my efforts to help. He has just had breakfast with the Financial Times and is doing the rounds of TV studios, but pausing only to get a cup of tea we plunge straight in to what for me is a rather intimidating seminar on global politics. It’s a bit like being 20 again and, horribly underprepared, going to a tutor to discuss the church under Henry II. Happily, Fukuyama fields my scattergun questions with polite aplomb. The only time he looks disconcerted is when the photographer asks him to start taking off his clothes to get a more relaxed look – Fukuyama doesn’t really do relaxed. Almost 20 years after it appeared, he is still best known as the author of The End of History . It was that book – perhaps even just that title – that turned a foreign policy wonk and middle-ranking figure in the state department into a global super-pundit. The 1992 book, which expanded on a famous essay published three years earlier, was much quoted without being much read. Much mocked, too, after 9/11, when his critics pointed out that, far from being over, history seemed to be more urgent and unpredictable than ever. But they had misunderstood his thesis: he had not argued that conflict would cease but that, with the collapse of the Soviet empire, the ideological struggle was over. Liberal democracy was the only game in town. The new book, the first of two volumes, explores how liberal democracies are established, how – in a nice phrase he uses prominently – countries “get to Denmark”. In the west we take a great deal for granted – that we can vote governments out, that the rule of law will more or less hold sway, that corruption will be punished, that we will enjoy political freedoms, but much of the world doesn’t enjoy those privileges. Fukuyama is attempting to work out how states developed and why some became liberal democracies and others, notably China, opted for an authoritarian model. Fukuyama argues that getting to Denmark relies on three things that have to be in harmony – a functioning state, the rule of law and accountable government. China’s problem was an overmighty state: it got civilisation too soon. By a series of happy accidents, England managed to get all three by the 17th century, exported them to the US via freedom-conscious settlers and provided a model for the rest of the world. Those three preconditions of liberal democracy are the holy grail. “The fact,” he writes, “that there are countries capable of achieving this balance constitutes the miracle of modern politics, since it is not obvious that they can be combined.” The condition that the debt-ridden and divided EU is in at the moment made me wonder whether “getting to Denmark” was quite so desirable a journey these days, and I begin by asking him what he makes of Europe’s nervous breakdown. “Collectively it seems to me that the EU is in big trouble,” he says. “They basically let in a whole bunch of countries that they shouldn’t have. There’s no mechanism for disciplining them once they’re in and there’s no exit strategy.” He doesn’t understand why Greece, Ireland and Portugal are submitting to the euro straitjacket. “The policy which is now being dictated out of Berlin is crazy. There’s just no way those countries are going to grow with a strong currency and an austerity policy that stretches out for years into the future. They’ll have to consider coming out.” The point I’m driving at is a pessimistic one: that the EU might implode; that the predicted decade of austerity could produce very nasty, ultra-competitive national politics; that Beacon Europe might become Fortress Europe; that as in the 1930s liberal democracy could come under assault even in its heartlands. To my surprise, he accepts the argument, in part at least. “That’s one of the things that is in this book that wasn’t in my original book – the possibility of political decay. I don’t think there’s any particular reason why, if you are a liberal democracy, you can’t decay. Your institutions can get too rigid; your ideas can get too rigid. I think right now a lot of developed democracies are going to have to renegotiate their basic social contract, because a lot of the welfare state arrangements are just not sustainable, and that’s something democracies are really not good at. They aren’t good at persuading people to pay higher taxes and accept cuts in benefit for the sake of something that’s going to happen a generation from now.” Apocalypse now? “Things could get bad quickly,” he admits. “We’re seeing the rise of populist parties across Europe. There’s a lot of political correctness about immigration and the whole nexus of problems associated with it. People aren’t allowed to talk about that, and there’s now been this explosion on the right where people not only talk about it but are saying some pretty nasty things about it.” He finds it odd that the crash of 2008 and the political disaffection that has flowed from it have fuelled rightwing populism but not leftwing populism, either in the US or Europe. “The left isn’t strong anywhere,” he says. “You don’t have charismatic, inspiring leaders anywhere. You look at Italy. Why is this rascal Berlusconi still prime minister? It’s because the left in Italy can’t come up with an inspiring agenda that anyone believes in.” He seems to think that the long-term trend is towards liberal democracy and political freedom, but in the short term we may all be dead because democracies struggle in slumps. “It is much easier to run a democracy and a capitalist economy that produces inequalities if you have long-term growth because, even if it’s not evenly shared, at least everybody is benefiting down the road. Without growth you return to a Malthusian world where it’s more zero sum. One person gets rich at the expense of another person, and then it becomes much harder to maintain democracy.” So is he an optimist – the conventional reading after The End of History – or a pessimist? “I’m basically an optimist because I do think there’s this historical modernisation process, and by and large it’s been very beneficial to people. But there are blips. History doesn’t proceed in a linear way.” Or in a geographically even way – the current pessimism in Europe is offset by hope in north Africa and the Middle East. “The Arab spring has,” he says, “put a lot of authoritarian governments on notice.” Fukuyama’s official position these days is as a senior fellow in international studies at Stanford University in California. This is one of those glorious American academic jobs where he gets to teach when he wants to, and is essentially being paid to think – and to add lustre to his department. It leaves him free to sit on a dozen advisory boards around the world, and to get involved in putting into practice the overriding lesson of his new book, which is that building workable democracies is tough and relies on the grassroots being cultivated. “I’ve been running an international development programme and doing a lot of work with the World Bank and aid agencies which are trying to improve governance and deal with corruption in weak states,” he says. “The Denmark problem is a big one. People have unrealistic expectations for the kinds of improvements that can be made, and how quickly. They need to set more modest goals.” This new realism also feeds into the political journey he has undergone. In the 1980s he was a strong supporter of Reaganism and worked for the state department under both Reagan and George Bush Sr. He supported George W Bush in 2000, and favoured intervention after 9/11. But he has since renounced both Bush and the attempt to impose democracy on countries such as Iraq and Afghanistan. He voted for Obama in 2008 and tells me that, following his move last year from Washington to the west coast, he does not intend to register as a Republican supporter (registration enables you to vote in state primaries) but will register as an independent, or perhaps even as a Democrat. For a conservative thinker with strong Republican links and a reputation in the 1980s as a leading neocon, a Rubicon has been crossed. The turning point was the younger Bush’s mishandling of the Iraq war. “They didn’t launch the war to export democracy,” he says. “They launched it because of security concerns, and attached this democracy justification as an afterthought, which I didn’t think was helpful to the cause of democracy. If you thought the problem through, you’d realise that this is a long-term, costly endeavour, and you would think long and hard before you took it on, because if you just do it in a half-arsed way and give up after a few years you’re liable to make things worse.” Fukuyama made a powerful case against his former neocon allies in his 2006 book America at the Crossroads. He still wants to “export American ideals”, but tells me “it ought to be done through soft-power instruments”. “In general,” he says, “Americans are not very good at nation-building and not very good colonialists. Look at the impact of the United States on Latin America or the one colony we had, the Philippines. Those countries are still not doing very well. We stumbled into Afghanistan and Iraq, which are basically tribal societies, and most Americans have no idea of how a tribal society operates.” The mistakes of the Bush years were, he believes, a direct consequence of Reagan’s success in seeing off the Soviet Union in the 1980s, a high-stakes gamble that could have backfired and succeeded only because of the liberalising role played by Mikhail Gorbachev. “This minor political miracle happens – they take this very principled stand against a dictatorship, they’re not willing to compromise, and then the dictatorship collapses. That was their [the Republicans'] last experience of government, then you had the Clinton years, and what they were hoping for was a repeat of that in Iraq. You take a principled stand against a dictator, you depose him, and then you have a similar eastern Europe-style upwelling of support. But they should have realised that the eastern European situation was an unusual one. The roots were there. They were basically western countries that had been knocked off course by the Soviet Union, and it was natural that they should embrace western values and democracy, whereas Iraq, because of the Israeli-Palestinian situation and the whole history of colonialism, was never going to embrace the west.” What about Libya? Is intervention there also a mistake? “I supported the no-fly zone. It would have been terrible if Gaddafi had got into Benghazi. Having said that, we’re stuck now, and there’s not an obvious good way out, but I still think this is better than letting Gaddafi take Benghazi. He’s more likely to collapse than the opposition, and you just have to keep your fingers crossed.” The bigger question is how to build a successful state once he has gone, and the National Endowment for Democracy – one of the organisations Fukuyama advises – is mentoring rebel groups in an effort to create the conditions for a successful transition. Fukuyama, who is 58, was born in Chicago but grew up in New York. His father is a second-generation Japanese-American whose own father fled the Russo-Japanese war in 1905 and started a shop on the west coast before being interned in the second world war (that distant family experience has made Fukuyama a critic of Islamophobia). His mother, who comes from an academic family in Japan, met her husband when she came to study in the US. Some Japanese was spoken at home, but Fukuyama, an only child, never learned to speak it – “it just wasn’t fashionable to be ethnic when I was growing up” – though he says his three children have embraced their dual identity and his eldest son is learning Japanese. His education was multi-layered: classics and humanities at Cornell, comparative literature at Yale, political science at Harvard. He specialised in the Soviet Union and in 1979 joined the Rand Corporation thinktank, before spending two spells as an adviser at the state department under Republican administrations in 1981-82 and 1989-90. As well as moving away from the Republicans – he says the party is “out to lunch at the moment” – he insists that he is not one of those Kissinger-style academics who covets a big job in the government, of whatever hue. “I’ve figured out in the course of my life that the one thing I’m good at doing is writing books,” he says, “and it would be crazy to trade that in for something else. I can still contribute to the political debate.” If he had pat solutions to the world’s problems he might be tempted, he says, but there are no pat solutions. “Take Pakistan, which I think is the scariest and most dangerous issue facing us right now. I have no idea what you do there.” One thing he is sure about is that Obama was right to authorise the killing of Bin Laden. “In an extraordinary case like that, it wouldn’t have been possible to put him on trial,” he says. “It would have been a circus.” Despite all the problems, he sees cause for hope. He points to South American presidents such as Brazil’s Lula who gave up power when they could have come up with a political fix and carried on. He also welcomes the end of America’s hegemony, and believes the world’s new multi-polarity could create greater stability. On the downside, he says Russia is “hopeless – if they didn’t have energy, they’d be a totally inconsequential country. Nothing good has happened there since Putin came to power, and it’ll need a generation of younger Russians to take over who don’t have this chip on their shoulder.” He sees China as a “really interesting challenge – a very high-quality authoritarian government”. Can it challenge the liberal democratic model? “It’s theoretically possible,” he admits, “but it’s such a hard system to duplicate, and I don’t think the Chinese believe that anyone can duplicate it, and therefore they’re not proselytising other countries to adopt it.” For all the qualifications and the new mood of pessimism over the immediate prospects for countries caught up in the crash, he still holds to his belief that liberal democracy is the endpoint of political evolution and the system to which countries will continue to aspire. China, the only current viable alternative, “lacks a basic legitimacy in the same way that these Arab regimes do, because it doesn’t respect the rights of ordinary Chinese; it tramples on them all the time. There are lots of violent social protests that we never get to hear about, and the economic model is going to run out of steam because you cannot keep growing at 10% a year based on exporting all this stuff to people who can’t afford it any more.” There is no immediate threat to the Chinese system, he says, but in 20 or 30 years it will come under severe pressure. Liberal democracy is likely to win again, proving that he was right about the “end of history” even in this most dramatic and history-making of epochs. That, at least, is the theory. Francis Fukuyama United States Stephen Moss guardian.co.uk

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Francis Fukuyama: ‘Americans are not very good at nation-building’

In his new book, The Origins of Political Order, the author of the The End of History lays down the conditions required for a nation to become a democracy. He talks to Stephen Moss about his fears for our immediate future – but why he is still an optimist Francis Fukuyama is on day 24 of a world tour to plug his fat new book, The Origins of Political Order. I bump into him and a minder as he arrives at his publisher’s offices in central London. The offices, in what looks like an old warehouse, aspire to be a bit Manhattan – open plan, stripped wood, buzzy. The downside is that the ancient lift has packed up, and the office is three floors up. Nobly, Frank – as his friends call him – insists on carrying a suitcase, which is almost as large as he is, as well as his backpack up all three flights, despite my efforts to help. He has just had breakfast with the Financial Times and is doing the rounds of TV studios, but pausing only to get a cup of tea we plunge straight in to what for me is a rather intimidating seminar on global politics. It’s a bit like being 20 again and, horribly underprepared, going to a tutor to discuss the church under Henry II. Happily, Fukuyama fields my scattergun questions with polite aplomb. The only time he looks disconcerted is when the photographer asks him to start taking off his clothes to get a more relaxed look – Fukuyama doesn’t really do relaxed. Almost 20 years after it appeared, he is still best known as the author of The End of History . It was that book – perhaps even just that title – that turned a foreign policy wonk and middle-ranking figure in the state department into a global super-pundit. The 1992 book, which expanded on a famous essay published three years earlier, was much quoted without being much read. Much mocked, too, after 9/11, when his critics pointed out that, far from being over, history seemed to be more urgent and unpredictable than ever. But they had misunderstood his thesis: he had not argued that conflict would cease but that, with the collapse of the Soviet empire, the ideological struggle was over. Liberal democracy was the only game in town. The new book, the first of two volumes, explores how liberal democracies are established, how – in a nice phrase he uses prominently – countries “get to Denmark”. In the west we take a great deal for granted – that we can vote governments out, that the rule of law will more or less hold sway, that corruption will be punished, that we will enjoy political freedoms, but much of the world doesn’t enjoy those privileges. Fukuyama is attempting to work out how states developed and why some became liberal democracies and others, notably China, opted for an authoritarian model. Fukuyama argues that getting to Denmark relies on three things that have to be in harmony – a functioning state, the rule of law and accountable government. China’s problem was an overmighty state: it got civilisation too soon. By a series of happy accidents, England managed to get all three by the 17th century, exported them to the US via freedom-conscious settlers and provided a model for the rest of the world. Those three preconditions of liberal democracy are the holy grail. “The fact,” he writes, “that there are countries capable of achieving this balance constitutes the miracle of modern politics, since it is not obvious that they can be combined.” The condition that the debt-ridden and divided EU is in at the moment made me wonder whether “getting to Denmark” was quite so desirable a journey these days, and I begin by asking him what he makes of Europe’s nervous breakdown. “Collectively it seems to me that the EU is in big trouble,” he says. “They basically let in a whole bunch of countries that they shouldn’t have. There’s no mechanism for disciplining them once they’re in and there’s no exit strategy.” He doesn’t understand why Greece, Ireland and Portugal are submitting to the euro straitjacket. “The policy which is now being dictated out of Berlin is crazy. There’s just no way those countries are going to grow with a strong currency and an austerity policy that stretches out for years into the future. They’ll have to consider coming out.” The point I’m driving at is a pessimistic one: that the EU might implode; that the predicted decade of austerity could produce very nasty, ultra-competitive national politics; that Beacon Europe might become Fortress Europe; that as in the 1930s liberal democracy could come under assault even in its heartlands. To my surprise, he accepts the argument, in part at least. “That’s one of the things that is in this book that wasn’t in my original book – the possibility of political decay. I don’t think there’s any particular reason why, if you are a liberal democracy, you can’t decay. Your institutions can get too rigid; your ideas can get too rigid. I think right now a lot of developed democracies are going to have to renegotiate their basic social contract, because a lot of the welfare state arrangements are just not sustainable, and that’s something democracies are really not good at. They aren’t good at persuading people to pay higher taxes and accept cuts in benefit for the sake of something that’s going to happen a generation from now.” Apocalypse now? “Things could get bad quickly,” he admits. “We’re seeing the rise of populist parties across Europe. There’s a lot of political correctness about immigration and the whole nexus of problems associated with it. People aren’t allowed to talk about that, and there’s now been this explosion on the right where people not only talk about it but are saying some pretty nasty things about it.” He finds it odd that the crash of 2008 and the political disaffection that has flowed from it have fuelled rightwing populism but not leftwing populism, either in the US or Europe. “The left isn’t strong anywhere,” he says. “You don’t have charismatic, inspiring leaders anywhere. You look at Italy. Why is this rascal Berlusconi still prime minister? It’s because the left in Italy can’t come up with an inspiring agenda that anyone believes in.” He seems to think that the long-term trend is towards liberal democracy and political freedom, but in the short term we may all be dead because democracies struggle in slumps. “It is much easier to run a democracy and a capitalist economy that produces inequalities if you have long-term growth because, even if it’s not evenly shared, at least everybody is benefiting down the road. Without growth you return to a Malthusian world where it’s more zero sum. One person gets rich at the expense of another person, and then it becomes much harder to maintain democracy.” So is he an optimist – the conventional reading after The End of History – or a pessimist? “I’m basically an optimist because I do think there’s this historical modernisation process, and by and large it’s been very beneficial to people. But there are blips. History doesn’t proceed in a linear way.” Or in a geographically even way – the current pessimism in Europe is offset by hope in north Africa and the Middle East. “The Arab spring has,” he says, “put a lot of authoritarian governments on notice.” Fukuyama’s official position these days is as a senior fellow in international studies at Stanford University in California. This is one of those glorious American academic jobs where he gets to teach when he wants to, and is essentially being paid to think – and to add lustre to his department. It leaves him free to sit on a dozen advisory boards around the world, and to get involved in putting into practice the overriding lesson of his new book, which is that building workable democracies is tough and relies on the grassroots being cultivated. “I’ve been running an international development programme and doing a lot of work with the World Bank and aid agencies which are trying to improve governance and deal with corruption in weak states,” he says. “The Denmark problem is a big one. People have unrealistic expectations for the kinds of improvements that can be made, and how quickly. They need to set more modest goals.” This new realism also feeds into the political journey he has undergone. In the 1980s he was a strong supporter of Reaganism and worked for the state department under both Reagan and George Bush Sr. He supported George W Bush in 2000, and favoured intervention after 9/11. But he has since renounced both Bush and the attempt to impose democracy on countries such as Iraq and Afghanistan. He voted for Obama in 2008 and tells me that, following his move last year from Washington to the west coast, he does not intend to register as a Republican supporter (registration enables you to vote in state primaries) but will register as an independent, or perhaps even as a Democrat. For a conservative thinker with strong Republican links and a reputation in the 1980s as a leading neocon, a Rubicon has been crossed. The turning point was the younger Bush’s mishandling of the Iraq war. “They didn’t launch the war to export democracy,” he says. “They launched it because of security concerns, and attached this democracy justification as an afterthought, which I didn’t think was helpful to the cause of democracy. If you thought the problem through, you’d realise that this is a long-term, costly endeavour, and you would think long and hard before you took it on, because if you just do it in a half-arsed way and give up after a few years you’re liable to make things worse.” Fukuyama made a powerful case against his former neocon allies in his 2006 book America at the Crossroads. He still wants to “export American ideals”, but tells me “it ought to be done through soft-power instruments”. “In general,” he says, “Americans are not very good at nation-building and not very good colonialists. Look at the impact of the United States on Latin America or the one colony we had, the Philippines. Those countries are still not doing very well. We stumbled into Afghanistan and Iraq, which are basically tribal societies, and most Americans have no idea of how a tribal society operates.” The mistakes of the Bush years were, he believes, a direct consequence of Reagan’s success in seeing off the Soviet Union in the 1980s, a high-stakes gamble that could have backfired and succeeded only because of the liberalising role played by Mikhail Gorbachev. “This minor political miracle happens – they take this very principled stand against a dictatorship, they’re not willing to compromise, and then the dictatorship collapses. That was their [the Republicans'] last experience of government, then you had the Clinton years, and what they were hoping for was a repeat of that in Iraq. You take a principled stand against a dictator, you depose him, and then you have a similar eastern Europe-style upwelling of support. But they should have realised that the eastern European situation was an unusual one. The roots were there. They were basically western countries that had been knocked off course by the Soviet Union, and it was natural that they should embrace western values and democracy, whereas Iraq, because of the Israeli-Palestinian situation and the whole history of colonialism, was never going to embrace the west.” What about Libya? Is intervention there also a mistake? “I supported the no-fly zone. It would have been terrible if Gaddafi had got into Benghazi. Having said that, we’re stuck now, and there’s not an obvious good way out, but I still think this is better than letting Gaddafi take Benghazi. He’s more likely to collapse than the opposition, and you just have to keep your fingers crossed.” The bigger question is how to build a successful state once he has gone, and the National Endowment for Democracy – one of the organisations Fukuyama advises – is mentoring rebel groups in an effort to create the conditions for a successful transition. Fukuyama, who is 58, was born in Chicago but grew up in New York. His father is a second-generation Japanese-American whose own father fled the Russo-Japanese war in 1905 and started a shop on the west coast before being interned in the second world war (that distant family experience has made Fukuyama a critic of Islamophobia). His mother, who comes from an academic family in Japan, met her husband when she came to study in the US. Some Japanese was spoken at home, but Fukuyama, an only child, never learned to speak it – “it just wasn’t fashionable to be ethnic when I was growing up” – though he says his three children have embraced their dual identity and his eldest son is learning Japanese. His education was multi-layered: classics and humanities at Cornell, comparative literature at Yale, political science at Harvard. He specialised in the Soviet Union and in 1979 joined the Rand Corporation thinktank, before spending two spells as an adviser at the state department under Republican administrations in 1981-82 and 1989-90. As well as moving away from the Republicans – he says the party is “out to lunch at the moment” – he insists that he is not one of those Kissinger-style academics who covets a big job in the government, of whatever hue. “I’ve figured out in the course of my life that the one thing I’m good at doing is writing books,” he says, “and it would be crazy to trade that in for something else. I can still contribute to the political debate.” If he had pat solutions to the world’s problems he might be tempted, he says, but there are no pat solutions. “Take Pakistan, which I think is the scariest and most dangerous issue facing us right now. I have no idea what you do there.” One thing he is sure about is that Obama was right to authorise the killing of Bin Laden. “In an extraordinary case like that, it wouldn’t have been possible to put him on trial,” he says. “It would have been a circus.” Despite all the problems, he sees cause for hope. He points to South American presidents such as Brazil’s Lula who gave up power when they could have come up with a political fix and carried on. He also welcomes the end of America’s hegemony, and believes the world’s new multi-polarity could create greater stability. On the downside, he says Russia is “hopeless – if they didn’t have energy, they’d be a totally inconsequential country. Nothing good has happened there since Putin came to power, and it’ll need a generation of younger Russians to take over who don’t have this chip on their shoulder.” He sees China as a “really interesting challenge – a very high-quality authoritarian government”. Can it challenge the liberal democratic model? “It’s theoretically possible,” he admits, “but it’s such a hard system to duplicate, and I don’t think the Chinese believe that anyone can duplicate it, and therefore they’re not proselytising other countries to adopt it.” For all the qualifications and the new mood of pessimism over the immediate prospects for countries caught up in the crash, he still holds to his belief that liberal democracy is the endpoint of political evolution and the system to which countries will continue to aspire. China, the only current viable alternative, “lacks a basic legitimacy in the same way that these Arab regimes do, because it doesn’t respect the rights of ordinary Chinese; it tramples on them all the time. There are lots of violent social protests that we never get to hear about, and the economic model is going to run out of steam because you cannot keep growing at 10% a year based on exporting all this stuff to people who can’t afford it any more.” There is no immediate threat to the Chinese system, he says, but in 20 or 30 years it will come under severe pressure. Liberal democracy is likely to win again, proving that he was right about the “end of history” even in this most dramatic and history-making of epochs. That, at least, is the theory. Francis Fukuyama United States Stephen Moss guardian.co.uk

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MPs condemn Kraft over boss’s snub to parliament

Irene Rosenfeld’s failure to attend hearings into the Cadbury takeover verged on ‘contempt for the House of Commons’, says MPs’ report Kraft came close to showing contempt for the House of Commons in refusing to put forward chief executive Irene Rosenfeld to answer questions about its acquisition of Cadbury, MPs said on Monday. A report from the Business, Innovation and Skills select committee lifts the lid on the correspondence between the American food group and the committee. Rosenfeld declined invitations to answer questions on the £11.5bn deal on two separate occasions – during the last parliament in early 2010 and again, more recently, as part of the select committee’s review of the takeover . “Irene Rosenfeld, the chief executive officer and chairman of Kraft, refused to give evidence despite repeated requests from us that she should appear. Neither that refusal to attend, nor the manner of it, reflected well on Kraft, nor did Kraft’s persistence in failing to acknowledge the seriousness of the Takeover Panel criticism – criticism which, by its gravity, would alone have merited Ms Rosenfeld’s appearance before us, as a committee of public scrutiny. That sorry episode overshadowed what could have been a positive discussion on the future of Cadbury under Kraft’s ownership. In its correspondence with the committee, Kraft in our view steered close to a contempt of the House. We trust that that will not be repeated,” the committee’s report said. Kraft was criticised by the Takeover Panel for suggesting it would keep open Cadbury’s Somerdale plant near Bristol – and then backtracking a week after the takeover. The committee’s report quotes correspondence from Kraft questioning the MPs’ insistence on calling Rosenfeld as a witness. Marc Firestone, executive vice president of Kraft, wrote to the committee in February of this year: “Given our understanding that the committee’s purpose is to inquire into relevant facts, the repeated demands for Ms Rosenfeld to appear in person are regrettable. Based on the experience of last year’s hearing and recent comments by some committee members, there seems to be a desire to have a ‘star witness’ towards whom ill-founded allegations and insults can be made, with little or no attempt to discuss the facts and look rationally into the evidence. Indeed, a review of the transcript from last year’s hearing shows that it went far beyond spirited debate to a remarkable level of rancour.” The MPs said this was a “total misrepresentation” of their reasons for inviting Rosenfeld, adding: “The description of the committee’s ‘motive’ for inviting Ms Rosenfeld in our view fell short of an explicit contempt of the House, but not by much. The manner and tone of the letter was unacceptable and showed a distinct lack of judgment by Mr Firestone.” The committee concluded that Rosenfeld’s “repeated refusal to appear before a committee of Parliament demonstrates a regrettably dismissive attitude to a national parliament – an attitude which we trust Kraft will rapidly take action to shed.” The report does detail “encouraging” progress from Kraft in other areas. “It would appear from the evidence given to us that Kraft is currently honouring the undertakings given to our predecessor committee and is committed to investment in Cadbury. We were especially encouraged by continued investment in Bournville and recruitment into research. Given the particular responsibility Kraft has to Cadbury employees following the Somerdale episode, we trust that this approach to investment will continue. It would also assist considerably in rehabilitating Kraft’s reputation if the savings planned from integration synergies were used to support further investment for growth and accommodate the results of that growth in terms of recruitment needs.” The committee also remains concerned that some marketing functions have been transferred away from the UK to Zurich. Trade union Unite said that it welcomed the scrutiny of Kraft, “in particular the recommendation that the UK urgently needs a new takeover regime. The committee also says a repeat of Kraft’s behaviour over Cadbury’s Somerdale plant – which it promised to reprieve from closure then subsequently reneged on this once it had purchased the confectionary firm – must be guarded against by ensuring that promises made during bids are made binding. “So concerned has Unite been about Kraft’s failure to disclose basic information since the takeover that it is now seeking to use international agreements to ensure it informs the union about its plans. Unite says Kraft must come clean on plans for the next five-year period at least to reassure the workforce of its commitment to the UK.” Kraft Food & drink industry Cadbury Alex Hawkes guardian.co.uk

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MPs condemn Kraft over boss’s snub to parliament

Irene Rosenfeld’s failure to attend hearings into the Cadbury takeover verged on ‘contempt for the House of Commons’, says MPs’ report Kraft came close to showing contempt for the House of Commons in refusing to put forward chief executive Irene Rosenfeld to answer questions about its acquisition of Cadbury, MPs said on Monday. A report from the Business, Innovation and Skills select committee lifts the lid on the correspondence between the American food group and the committee. Rosenfeld declined invitations to answer questions on the £11.5bn deal on two separate occasions – during the last parliament in early 2010 and again, more recently, as part of the select committee’s review of the takeover . “Irene Rosenfeld, the chief executive officer and chairman of Kraft, refused to give evidence despite repeated requests from us that she should appear. Neither that refusal to attend, nor the manner of it, reflected well on Kraft, nor did Kraft’s persistence in failing to acknowledge the seriousness of the Takeover Panel criticism – criticism which, by its gravity, would alone have merited Ms Rosenfeld’s appearance before us, as a committee of public scrutiny. That sorry episode overshadowed what could have been a positive discussion on the future of Cadbury under Kraft’s ownership. In its correspondence with the committee, Kraft in our view steered close to a contempt of the House. We trust that that will not be repeated,” the committee’s report said. Kraft was criticised by the Takeover Panel for suggesting it would keep open Cadbury’s Somerdale plant near Bristol – and then backtracking a week after the takeover. The committee’s report quotes correspondence from Kraft questioning the MPs’ insistence on calling Rosenfeld as a witness. Marc Firestone, executive vice president of Kraft, wrote to the committee in February of this year: “Given our understanding that the committee’s purpose is to inquire into relevant facts, the repeated demands for Ms Rosenfeld to appear in person are regrettable. Based on the experience of last year’s hearing and recent comments by some committee members, there seems to be a desire to have a ‘star witness’ towards whom ill-founded allegations and insults can be made, with little or no attempt to discuss the facts and look rationally into the evidence. Indeed, a review of the transcript from last year’s hearing shows that it went far beyond spirited debate to a remarkable level of rancour.” The MPs said this was a “total misrepresentation” of their reasons for inviting Rosenfeld, adding: “The description of the committee’s ‘motive’ for inviting Ms Rosenfeld in our view fell short of an explicit contempt of the House, but not by much. The manner and tone of the letter was unacceptable and showed a distinct lack of judgment by Mr Firestone.” The committee concluded that Rosenfeld’s “repeated refusal to appear before a committee of Parliament demonstrates a regrettably dismissive attitude to a national parliament – an attitude which we trust Kraft will rapidly take action to shed.” The report does detail “encouraging” progress from Kraft in other areas. “It would appear from the evidence given to us that Kraft is currently honouring the undertakings given to our predecessor committee and is committed to investment in Cadbury. We were especially encouraged by continued investment in Bournville and recruitment into research. Given the particular responsibility Kraft has to Cadbury employees following the Somerdale episode, we trust that this approach to investment will continue. It would also assist considerably in rehabilitating Kraft’s reputation if the savings planned from integration synergies were used to support further investment for growth and accommodate the results of that growth in terms of recruitment needs.” The committee also remains concerned that some marketing functions have been transferred away from the UK to Zurich. Trade union Unite said that it welcomed the scrutiny of Kraft, “in particular the recommendation that the UK urgently needs a new takeover regime. The committee also says a repeat of Kraft’s behaviour over Cadbury’s Somerdale plant – which it promised to reprieve from closure then subsequently reneged on this once it had purchased the confectionary firm – must be guarded against by ensuring that promises made during bids are made binding. “So concerned has Unite been about Kraft’s failure to disclose basic information since the takeover that it is now seeking to use international agreements to ensure it informs the union about its plans. Unite says Kraft must come clean on plans for the next five-year period at least to reassure the workforce of its commitment to the UK.” Kraft Food & drink industry Cadbury Alex Hawkes guardian.co.uk

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China detains 300 Tibetan monks after self-immolation incident

Around 300 Tibetan monks from a Sichuan monastery have been detained by security staff after a monk set himself on fire Security forces have detained about 300 Tibetan monks from a monastery in southwestern China for a month amid a crackdown sparked by a monk’s self-immolation, according to two exiled Tibetans and a prominent writer, citing sources there. Tension in Aba prefecture, a heavily ethnic Tibetan part of Sichuan province, have risen to their highest levels since protests turned violent in March 2008, ahead of the Beijing Olympics, and were put down by police and paramilitary units. The monks from Aba’s Kirti monastery, home to about 2,500 monks, were taken into custody on 21 April on military trucks, according to two exiled monks and a writer, who said their information was based on separate accounts from witnesses who live in Aba. The detentions come as China’s ruling Communist party celebrates 60 years since the “peaceful liberation” of Tibet, and underscores the government’s struggle to win the hearts and minds of Tibetan people across the country. Kirti Rinpoche, the head of the Kirti monastery, said that it was the first time that Chinese security forces had seized such a large number of monks at a time, and that he had no information on their whereabouts. “The situation is getting more and more repressive,” said Kirti Rinpoche, who is based in India’s Dharamsala, the seat of the exiled Tibetan government, and receives his information through a network of contacts inside Aba. “The restrictions imposed on the monastery and the monks are getting more intensified. It’s literally a suffocating situation where monks are not allowed to do anything at all,” he added. His account could not be independently verified as the government restricts visits by foreign reporters to restive Tibetan regions. Repeated calls to the Aba county government and public security bureau went unanswered. The Foreign Ministry said last month everything was “normal” at Kirti. The spike in tension in Aba stems from the self-immolation of Phuntsog, a 21-year-old monk, on 16 March, in apparent protest against government controls. Instead of putting out the flames, Chinese police beat the young monk, creating huge resentment in the monastery, according to exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama. The Aba government said in late April that after the burning incident, it had decided to give monks “legal education”, due to the “illegal activities” committed by some monks that included visiting prostitutes, getting drunk, gambling and pornography, state news agency Xinhua news agency reported. Chinese security forces clashed with residents who were trying to prevent the monks from being taken away for “re-education”, according to Tibetan sources. “The people didn’t want the authorities to arrest the monks, so they started sitting outside the monastery to protect it day and night,” said prominent Beijing-based Tibetan writer Woeser, who said her information was based on witness accounts. “But the troops let out dogs to bite the people and after that, they beat them too.” Authorities have stepped up “patriotic re-education” campaigns at Kirti, in an effort to stamp out separatist sentiment and allegiance to the Dalai Lama. “During the ‘patriotic re-education’ sessions, monks are taught reasons why they should not keep any pictures of their spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, and then made to repeat them,” said an exiled Tibetan monk, Kanyag Tsering, who gets his information through a network of contacts inside Aba. China routinely rejects any accusations about mistreatment or exploitation of Tibetans, saying its rule has bought untold benefits to what was a dirt poor and feudal society. “The Dalai Lama group and some westerners see Tibet’s peaceful liberation and development through tinted glass,” Du Yongbin, a scholar at the China-Tibetology Research Centre in Beijing, said in a commentary in the China Daily on Monday. “They either ignore the unprecedented development that Tibet has experienced or think Tibet’s development threatens traditional Tibetan culture. Their logic seems to be to treat Tibet like a museum piece,” he said. China Tibet Human rights Dalai Lama Censorship Buddhism Religion guardian.co.uk

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Spain’s socialists routed in elections

The opposition People’s party hopes to turn local and regional poll momentum into a victory at a national level Spain’s ruling Socialists have suffered a stinging losses in local elections and now face a balancing act between voter anger over high unemployment and investor demands for strict austerity measures. A week of protests by Spaniards fed up with the stagnant economy and the EU’s highest jobless rate preceded Sunday’s elections , which left the Socialists out of power in most of the country’s cities and almost all the 17 autonomous regions. Pressure could now grow from inside and outside the Socialist party for the prime minister, José Luis Zapatero, to call early elections, although he vowed on Sunday night to hang on to the end of his term in March next year. While the outcome of local elections does not always forecast general elections, the centre-right opposition People’s party (PP) will try to turn Sunday’s momentum into a victory at the national level. “This is a beautiful day for our party. We’ve won the best result in our party’s history in municipal and regional elections,” Mariano Rajoy, who will be the PP candidate in the next general elections, told cheering supporters. The PP grabbed several traditional Socialist strongholds for themselves, including the city of Seville and the Castilla-La Mancha region, both plagued with especially high unemployment. In the aggregated municipal vote nationwide the PP had a 10-percentage point lead over the Socialists, who have not lost so badly in municipal elections since democracy returned to Spain in 1978 after the Franco dictatorship. Spaniards had been patient during four years of economic trouble, but this wore out in the run-up to the elections when tens of thousands of mostly young protesters took to the streets in cities around the country. The PP is expected to call for early elections, but does not have enough seats in parliament to win a vote of no confidence. The Socialists must choose in the next few months a successor to Zapatero, who has said he will not run for a third term. The deputy prime minister, Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba, and the defence minister, Carme Chacón, are both contenders. Analysts said Zapatero wants to hang on as long as he can, giving the economy more time to pick up and boosting the Socialists’ chances to win again or at least to limit PP gains. “They’re waiting for the rain to stop. If the economy improves in the third quarter and unemployment also improves, they can say it’s because of their economic reforms,” said Antonio Barroso, analyst with Eurasiagroup consulting firm, who sees Zapatero remaining in office until March. The election took place against the backdrop of the euro zone debt crisis, which forced Zapatero to make steep spending cuts to fend off concerns that Spain would follow Greece, Ireland and Portugal into budget problems and a bailout. The austerity measures have held back economic growth and some sectors are still destroying jobs. Zapatero promised voters that no more austerity is in the works. A fresh round could provoke renewed protests. At the same time he promised investors that he will not budge from a commitment to cut the budget deficit to 6% of gross domestic product this year, but some experts questioned whether he will achieve this with the economy in the doldrums. “There’s a risk of everything becoming excessively politicised which will be detrimental for the economy,” said Carlos Berzosa, professor of applied economy at Madrid’s Complutense university. Spain José Luis Zapatero Europe guardian.co.uk

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Republican Tim Pawlenty announces run for US president

Tim Pawlenty, the former Minnesota Governor, says he will seek the 2012 Republican presidential nomination Former Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty has announced that he is seeking the 2012 Republican presidential nomination, adding some weight to a field of candidates seen as struggling to defeat President Barack Obama. “Tomorrow my first campaign stop will be in Iowa and that’s where I’m going to begin a campaign that tells the American people the truth,” Pawlenty said in the video on his website. “I’m Tim Pawlenty and I’m running for president of the United States.” Pawlenty, 50, is respected by political insiders and could emerge as one of his party’s strongest candidates, although he has been near the bottom of the pack of potential Republican challengers in public opinion polls. Pawlenty, known as “T-Paw” to his supporters, was a popular two-term governor in a Democratic-leaning state, giving him credibility as a Republican who can attract vital support from independent voters. The son of a truck driver who grew up near stockyards and a meat-packing plant, Pawlenty was 16 when his mother died of cancer and his father lost his job. Pawlenty went on to work his way through college and law school at the University of Minnesota. Despite the struggles of his early life, the soft-spoken Pawlenty is seen by some Republicans as lacking the toughness needed to take on an incumbent president with strong campaign finances like Obama. The president leads potential Republican candidates in most polls but he could slip if unemployment numbers do not improve quickly enough. Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney has been leading some early polls for the Republican nomination. Newt Gingrich, a former speaker of the US House of Representatives who entered the race two weeks ago, has had a rocky start having drawn the ire of fellow conservatives by criticising a Republican plan to overhaul the Medicare health insurance program for the elderly. Prominent Republicans such as Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels, former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee and Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour have decided not to join the race. Two potential candidates with ties to the conservative tea party movement, US Representative Michele Bachmann and 2008 vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin, have not announced their plans. United States Tim Pawlenty Republicans US politics US elections 2012 Minnesota guardian.co.uk

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