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No signs of any rapture in New Jersey this morning yet. In fact, at 11am (PT; 2pm in NJ) Ed Potosnak — the Blue America-endorsed candidate for the Congressional seat currently being held by health-care hypocrite Leonard Lance — will be talking to us live from north-central Jersey. Ed will be joining us in the comments section (below) to accept the Blue America 2012 endorsement, live-blogging about his campaign and how New Jersey voters are reacting to the right-wing jihad against the middle class, seniors and the whole social compact. Meanwhile, contributions for Ed’s campaign are gratefully being accepted at our Blue America page . We endorsed Ed last September for the 2010 race against Lance primarily because of his emphasis on education policy and its role in innovation and moving the country forward. Ed himself is a chemistry teacher and small business owner and several years ago he was selected as an Albert Einstein Distinguished Educator Fellow. “In my first year as an Einstein Fellow I helped craft legislation to improve science and mathematics education. This bill was introduced by then-Senator Obama; it passed, and is being implemented. In the second year of my fellowship I worked on legislation to ensure every student has access to a high quality education, establishing a 9-11 like commission to address the urgent crisis in our schools. This also passed and the Equity Commission is currently underway… There is so much more to do and I am running for Congress to once again get the job done.” The incumbent he’s running against is a garden variety career politician whose decades in office has been more about self-service than public service– something you may have noticed if you were tuned into the fracas between Lance and Blue America over his health-care hypocrisy , which led to this ad: Ed performed extremely well in a devastating year for Democrats. Not one Democratic challenger unseated a Republican incumbent but, with a feisty yet under-funded grassroots campaign, Ed managed to hold his own against the red tidal wave. This year looks far more promising nationally — especially in NJ’s 7th, where Obama beat McCain 51-48% in 2008 and will probably do a lot better next year against Bachmann or Palin or Romney or Gingrich or Pawlenty or whichever sociopath they come up with on the right. “The issues we care about today are as important as they were this past November,” he told us, “creating jobs, growing the economy, improving education, promoting innovation, and protecting the American dream… Things need to get done in Washington. The GOP has done nothing to address jobs and the economy… According to Congress’ Joint Economic Committee if the Ryan plan to turn Medicare into an inadequate voucher program, for which Congressman Lance voted, were to be signed into law, seniors across America would face bleak economic prospects. “But with the exception of Florida, there is no state more disastrously impacted than right here in New Jersey. Congressman Lance has seen these numbers and well knows that by 2022, out-of-pocket expenses for the typical 65-year-old enrollee in New Jersey would jump from $6,832.43 to $13,892.47 , the second biggest increase in America ($7,060.03). I’ll fight against that ever being enacted every day I’m in office.” An openly gay candidate, Ed takes equality and social justice very seriously. “We need better representation in Washington to ensure that America’s policies are fair and just for all. The future of America depends on the education we provide today and we need to act with urgency to improve our schools and foster innovation. We must ensure that every single child in America is prepared to help our nation overcome the challenges of the modern world, innovate, and lead the global economy.” If you’d like to help Ed’s campaign, you can do so at the Blue America ActBlue page

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Brazil’s crackdown on deforestation of the Amazon

Brazil’s environment agency Ibama has cracked down on deforestation – but in some regions it is on the rise again From the veranda of his farmhouse on the outskirts of this isolated riverside settlement, Gilvan Onofre can hear the helicopters coming, their rotors slicing through the humid Amazon air. “There is no longer any way of hiding,” sighed Onofre, a 70-year-old cattle rancher who moved to the region in the 1970s seeking his fortune and admits to having destroyed huge tracts of rainforest. “Everyone knows that Ibama is photographing us and what we are doing from two metres above.” Ibama is Brazil’s environmental protection service, the group tasked with monitoring, catching and punishing those responsible for the plunder of the Amazon rainforest. Boca do Acre, a cattle-ranching town in the deep south of Amazonas state, is one of the new frontlines of the government’s war on illegal deforestation. When Onofre arrived here on 23 December 1972, there was hardly a cow to be seen. Boca do Acre was a tiny community of rubber-tappers surrounded by dense jungle accessible only by river. Since then the landscape has changed beyond recognition. It now has the largest cattle herd in Amazonas and much of the virgin rainforest has gone, replaced with dozens of sprawling cattle ranches, dotted with white zebu cows and the occasional cowboy. “In 30 or so years, we have gone from zero to 400,000 [heads of cattle],” boasted Onofre, president of the local ranchers’ association. “Nowadays everybody says we have to preserve the forest. But when we arrived nobody knew we had to protect anything; we had to deforest. We chopped the trees down so we could feed our animals, our cattle.” Amazonas remains by far the best-preserved of Brazil’s nine Amazon states, with about 97% of its original forest cover intact. But environmentalists and government officials fear the state’s southern limits are becoming a new frontier for deforestation, with ranchers and loggers looking to push north into the untouched forests. Ibama’s president, Curt Trennepohl, admitted last week, in an interview with the Observer , that “aliens” from other states had set their sights on the forests surrounding Boca do Acre and other towns in southern Amazonas. Ibama’s intelligence reports suggested that “people with a history of exploitation and involvement in illegal deforestation” were trying to move in, many of them from the lawless state of Pará. Recent years have brought positive news for defenders of the Amazon region. Between 2004 and 2009, deforestation fell from around 27,000 to 7,600 square kilometres, but last December the country’s environment minister, Izabella Teixeira, announced the lowest levels of deforestation on record, with around 6,451 sq km of forest lost between August 2009 and July 2010. The celebrations proved short-lived. By April, satellite images indicated that, while deforestation had continued to fall in some logging regions, among them Pará, it was on the rise in better preserved regions such as Amazonas. The images indicated that deforestation there soared by around 87% between August 2010 and February this year, compared with the same period a year earlier. Much of that was in Boca do Acre. Neighbouring municipalities, such as Lábrea, Apuí and Novo Aripuanã, also showed troubling levels of destruction. “If the government is not present to revert this process… then it is going to take over Amazonas state,” warned André Muggiati, a Greenpeace campaigner based in Manaus. “The government must not allow Amazonas state to become like Pará and Mato Grosso,” he added, referring to two states that have been ravished since the 1960s by illegal loggers, ranchers and soy farmers. “The deforestation has to be stopped there.” Authorities say they have ramped up their activities, with 58 anti-deforestation operations this year. A “zero deforestation pact” was recently signed with ranchers in Boca do Acre and Apuí, under which the seizure of cattle reared on illegally deforested land would be suspended if new deforestation stopped. “This has worked better than we had expected,” said Trennepohl, claiming that recent months had seen deforestation around Boca do Acre fall away. A wider Amazon offensive, particularly in the soy-growing Mato Grosso state, was announced last week after satellite images showed a large rise in destruction there. “For us it was not just a surprise but a shock,” Trennepohl said of the new data which showed a jump in deforestation of more than 470% between March and April this year. “It was a surprise that can only be the result of a rise in commodity prices overseas.” The government would throw its “whole force” at the region, he vowed. More than 500 Ibama operatives have been sent in and around 200 operations are planned. The army will also be deployed. In Boca do Acre, ranchers such as Onofre believe the measures are helping to slow the destruction. Frequent Ibama raids had made ranchers “reluctant” to illegally clear land on which to expand their herds, said the rancher. “People know that, if they do, the [Ibama] people will come and screw them.” But not everyone is convinced. Some environmentalists are concerned that increased repression in other parts of the Amazon is creating a “safe haven” for those intent on profiting from rainforest destruction in places such as south Amazonas and fear that the coming years could see a new wave of destruction here. Even Audálio Silva de Noronha, head of Boca do Acre’s loggers’ union, admitted being concerned about the arrival of large-scale logging groups from other parts of the country. “There is a migration of people, not from here, but from Acre [state], from the south of Brazil, people who come to buy land here with this intention,” said 49-year-old Noronha, a furniture maker who extracts his living from the forests surrounding Boca do Acre and employs 24 locals in his workshop. “They are not coming to create [environmental] reserves,” he said, but to “exploit”. “If there is not rigorous action against deforestation, it will rise, yes. We know that human beings don’t know any limits. They always want more and more.” Trennepohl said Ibama’s intelligence sector had also detected a movement of loggers and ranchers from other Amazon states. “We will contain the haemorrhage,” he promised. “This will not happen in south Amazonas because we have this intelligence and we are watching. Any aliens who arrive buying land will be watched.” Locals, however, say repression will only achieve so much. In Boca do Acre, residents believe destruction will continue unless measures are taken to help those who live in the forest support their families without permanently damaging the environment. “Here all we see is repression… weekly visits from Ibama, to arrest, fine, repress and even embargo areas,” complained Noronha. “It is very simple to talk about preservation when you are in an office with the air conditioning on or when you are on Copacabana beach in Rio drinking beer.” Recently fined R$12,000 (£4,500) for using undocumented and illegally deforested timber, Noronha said sustainable forest management projects were urgently needed to allow responsible logging. At the moment, he conceded, “everything is illegal”. He added: “Our survival has to come from the forest. There is no other way. There are no universities here. There are no factories. If you don’t have a government job, you have to claw some kind of survival from the rivers and the forest.” Back on his ranch, Onofre reflected on his hopes that Brazil’s congress would approve a controversial bill altering the forest code and reducing the amount of rainforest Amazon landowners had to protect. Opponents argue that changes to the code would effectively hand an amnesty to environmental criminals. Failing that, Onofre at least has another business to fall back on: a roadside “love-motel”, just opposite his cattle farm, called “G-Spot”. It was, he joked, the only part of his local empire that environmental officials could not touch. “If they turn up there, they have to pay!” Deforestation Forests Brazil Conservation Tom Phillips guardian.co.uk

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PA Republican: Change Unemployment Benefits So People Can’t ‘Take A Paid Vacation’

enlarge I try really, really hard not to hate people. I really do. But I can’t help it, I do hate the small-minded, vicious politicians who come up with these proposals. Dear God, please save us from the Republican nuts in the Pennsylvania state legislature. This is the same wack job who wrote a bill that will let Pennsylvanians shoot to kill if someone makes you nervous: A Republican member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives says he wants to reform the state’s unemployment insurance system in part because the way benefits are currently calculated lets workers take a paid vacation for most of the year. “This is a fairness thing,” Rep. Scott Perry said in an interview with The Huffington Post. “What we’re trying to accomplish here is to make sure the system is solvent for people who are truly needy.” Perry’s bill would save the state $632 million a year through 2018, according to an analysis by the Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry. The measure would achieve most of the savings by changing the way benefit amounts are calculated. Under current Pennsylvania law, the size of a claimant’s weekly check is based either on his highest quarterly earnings in the previous year or 50 percent of his full-time weekly wage, whichever is higher. (More detailed explanations are available on the department’s website.) Perry would change the former method to base benefits on the average of a claimant’s best three quarters. While it sounds like a small, technical change, it would reduce payouts to unemployed workers by $463 million a year because 70 percent of claimants in Pennsylvania have uneven wages during the course of a year and would no longer receive benefits based on just their best three months. The average weekly payment would drop from $324 to $277 , according to Sharon Dietrich of Community Legal Services, a nonprofit that advocates for the legal rights of low-income Pennsylvanians. And the change would stop people from abusing the system, Perry said. “We have people that might work only one quarter of the year and are making more on unemployment than somebody that works all year long at a sustained job,” he said. “How is that fair?” Must. Bang. Head. On. Wall.

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Greg Gutfeld: Obama’s Media Honeymoon Lasting Longer Than Most Marriages

At a function commemorating the 50th anniversary of the first live presidential news conference Monday, veteran journalists bemoaned the fact that the press are too “timid” at such events today. On Thursday, “Red Eye's” Greg Gutfeld pointed out that this is because “The media loved President Obama from the moment their gazes met from across that smoky room…So all the smart folks knew that from the start, Obama's honeymoon would outlive most marriages” (video follows with transcript and commentary): GREG GUTFELD: So some veteran journalists have piled on the current roster of White House correspondents, accusing them of being too nice to Captain Perfect. This happened during a media shindig Monday, marking the 50th anniversary of the first live televised news conference by JFK. Now, some blame the 24 hour news cycle for making press conferences less important, boring, and more staged. Maybe so. But I think these old coots are avoiding the real culprit behind these mundane conferences, and that is this: The press got their guy. The media loved President Obama from the moment their gazes met from across that smoky room. They accepted him unconditionally, for he is one of them: an academic liberal, progressive crusader, Democrat, West Wing fan, closet smoker. On the other hand, he was the first black President – and you know how the media hates that sort of thing. So all the smart folks – i.e. me and my masseuse Antonio – knew that from the start, Obama's honeymoon would outlive most marriages. For the media to turn on Obama, he'd have to renounce Lady Gaga or worse kitten videos. That's why watching a press conference, and expecting a “truth to power” moment, is like watching The View and expecting coherence. Other than a mild risk-free display of angst for the sake of theater, forget about any kind of defiance. It's just rude. But the real folly is watching these old reporters criticizing the new crop for being timid. Cuz something tells me they'd be doing the same thing. They're just mad they aren't there to do it. And if you disagree with me, you sir are worse than Hitler. To be sure, in the past 29 months, there have been moments when it seemed the honeymoon was ending, but the love being expressed for Obama by so-called journalists today is possibly deeper and more disgraceful than what we saw in 2008 when he was first running for president. Suddenly every Republican presidential candidate is a racist. His possible female opponents, Michele Bachmann and Sarah Palin, are too stupid for the job. Even liberals having the nerve to criticize the current White House resident are being disparaged for doing so. Others are allegedly having a hard time getting their anti-Obama pieces published. Yes, the media got their guy, and they're going to do everything in their power to keep him.

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Amanda Knox case experts are given more time to review DNA evidence

Five inmates will also be allowed to give evidence at appeal against conviction for murder of Meredith Kercher Experts who are reviewing disputed DNA evidence in the appeal of Amanda Knox have been given more time to deliver their verdict. Knox, who was convicted in December 2009 of murdering her British housemate Meredith Kercher in Italy in 2007, broke down at the end of her latest appeal hearing. The decision of the court in Perugia, which gave DNA experts a further six weeks to file their report, means that a verdict is unlikely before the autumn, almost four years after Kercher, 21, was found with her throat cut. The American student, 23, told the court that being in prison was “very frustrating and mentally exhausting”. Two DNA experts from Rome’s Sapienza University are considering disputed DNA traces found on a kitchen knife – the alleged murder weapon – and on the clasp of Kercher’s bra. In the murder trial, prosecutors said Knox’s DNA had been found on the knife’s handle and Kercher’s DNA had been found on the blade. But the defence says those DNA traces were inconclusive and could be the result of contamination. The experts could not re-test the tiny traces and are now assessing the reliability of the original tests. The court also ruled that five serving inmates who have written letters claiming to have information on the Knox case will be able to give evidence. At least one is expected to say that Rudy Guede, who has also been jailed over the murder, has claimed in prison that Knox did not take part in the killing. The court said it would allow new witnesses sought by the defence to testify at the appeal. Kercher, a 21-year-old Leeds University student from Coulsdon, Surrey, was found with her throat slit on 2 November 2007, in her bedroom at the house she shared with Knox and others during her year abroad. Knox, from Seattle, and her former lover Raffaele Sollecito, 26, were later charged with sexual assault and murder and received prison sentences of 26 years and 25 years respectively in December 2009. Guede, a small-time drug dealer, was handed a 30-year sentence for murder and sexual violence following a fast-track trial in October 2008, which was later reduced to 16 years. Amanda Knox Meredith Kercher Italy Europe guardian.co.uk

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The Koch Secret Formula: Third Party Sarah, President Obama Wins…Or Does He?

enlarge “I have that fire in my belly,” Sarah Palin told Fox this week . Apparently she is locked and loaded to defeat “Obama” for the presidency. Or maybe not. Who knows? How much money is in it? How much money is in not being in it? It is easy to conclude that running for president, much less being president, is way too much work for the eternally bellyaching Palin. An 18-month slog on the campaign trail is potentially way too embarrassing (Is Turkey Asian or European or for Thanksgiving only?) and damaging to her brand (see Donald Trump). And it doesn’t pay all that great. Teasing the media while coaxing new donations from her easily duped minions seems a far more believable sled run for a woman who has already quit her actual government job for the riches of a TV somebody or other. But what if…. The Republican Party has all but conceded the presidency to the Man who got Bin Laden? What if they realize, like Trump, Christie, Barbour, Jeb and Huckabee obviously have, that no matter whether it’s Romney or Daniels or Bachmann or Pawlenty who carries their Medicare-killing flag, a second term for President Obama looms virtually unavoidable? There yet will remain a slew of down-ballot races: preserving the GOP House majority, taking the Senate, winning or losing state government majorities all over the nation. The GOKochs understand that all of this matters. Enormously. And a flawed Romney who doesn’t ignite the GOP’s angry evangelical and Tea Party zealots could hand the House back to Democrats, who likely will turn out in desperate droves to stave off hell by reelecting the president. A bureaucratic Bush soldier like Mitch Daniels, who has spurned Grover Norquist’s “no taxes” pledge, would likely embed a similar ennui into the wild purists and could leave Harry Reid in charge of the Senate. enlarge Enter the crazy conspiracy. Enter the Abominable Snow Snooki. She avoids the GOP dog & pony show for months and months, flinging barbs and “refudiations” from her million dollar throne on Fox. And then, when Romney or Daniels or the logo of Exxon or Anthem Blue Cross sews up the nomination, Palin swoops in as the first Tea Party candidate ever to run for president. She’d stride onto the big stage for an easy few months, spewing venom at President Obama and bathing in the adoration of Valentino blazers and her ardent devotees. Yes she’d lose. Yes it would be wildly fun and horrifying and entertaining. And yes she’d return to Fox more feisty and popular than ever. So it might work famously for Palin, but a third party candidate? Wouldn’t that gift-wrap electoral college victories to President Obama in Georgia, Montana, perhaps even Texas? How could the Republican powerbrokers stand for it? Because they know that she’ll electrify the zanies, Aynsteins, anti-taxers, secessionistas and Born Again Dominionists, who drawn to the booth to vote for their Alaskan Idol would likely then proceed to mark Xs for the regular GOP anti-abortion, Medicare killers elsewhere on the ballot. Even if she swiped 15% of the total from the top of the GOP ticket, all those extra Republican votes she draws to the polls could keep Boehner banging his giant gavel and install a couple more Scott Walkers, Rick Scotts and Dan Snyders in governor’s mansions across the land. Yes, it’s a Democrat’s dream. President Obama would be safe to parry the extremists in the GOP for four more years. But if this double the GOP vote on the rest of ballot costs his party elsewhere, Sarah Palin could again prove to be every Democrat’s nauseating nightmare. Maybe I shouldn’t give them any ideas. In the words of that other great SNL parodist, “Never mind.” enlarge

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Malaysian orphans killed by landslide

At least five boys killed as rescuers dig by hand to reach 24 children and adults trapped under mud At least five children have been killed in Malaysia after a landslide buried their orphanage. Rescuers have been digging by hand to reach the 20 boys and four adults trapped when the landslide struck the orphanage in a rural village in central Selangor state. The bodies of five boys, aged eight to 17, have been recovered. Six boys and a 30-year-old warden who were critically injured have been pulled from the mud and taken to hospital, police said. The district police chief, Abdul Rashid Wahab, said around 200 firefighters, police and other emergency workers are involved in the search for another nine children and three staff at the orphanage for ethnic Malay Muslim boys. “They just had lunch at the tent by the side of the house when two landslides apparently occurred at the same time. The tent collapsed, burying 24 people as they did not have time to escape,” he said. “Rescuers have to dig using their hands and other equipment because the surrounding soil is very soft due to the rain.” He said the search would continue. The three-storey house at the foot of a hill was not damaged in the landslide but was partly covered in sludge. Several households near the orphanage have been told to evacuate amid concerns about further landslides. Mohamad Hambali Ismail, a warden at the orphanage, told local media that the children were preparing to receive visitors when the landslide hit. “I heard a loud noise. Suddenly the earth was chasing me. I had to run to save myself,” Hambali, 34, told the Malay-language Berita Harian newspaper. Malaysia Natural disasters and extreme weather guardian.co.uk

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Malaysian orphans killed by landslide

At least five boys killed as rescuers dig by hand to reach 24 children and adults trapped under mud At least five children have been killed in Malaysia after a landslide buried their orphanage. Rescuers have been digging by hand to reach the 20 boys and four adults trapped when the landslide struck the orphanage in a rural village in central Selangor state. The bodies of five boys, aged eight to 17, have been recovered. Six boys and a 30-year-old warden who were critically injured have been pulled from the mud and taken to hospital, police said. The district police chief, Abdul Rashid Wahab, said around 200 firefighters, police and other emergency workers are involved in the search for another nine children and three staff at the orphanage for ethnic Malay Muslim boys. “They just had lunch at the tent by the side of the house when two landslides apparently occurred at the same time. The tent collapsed, burying 24 people as they did not have time to escape,” he said. “Rescuers have to dig using their hands and other equipment because the surrounding soil is very soft due to the rain.” He said the search would continue. The three-storey house at the foot of a hill was not damaged in the landslide but was partly covered in sludge. Several households near the orphanage have been told to evacuate amid concerns about further landslides. Mohamad Hambali Ismail, a warden at the orphanage, told local media that the children were preparing to receive visitors when the landslide hit. “I heard a loud noise. Suddenly the earth was chasing me. I had to run to save myself,” Hambali, 34, told the Malay-language Berita Harian newspaper. Malaysia Natural disasters and extreme weather guardian.co.uk

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Ed Miliband: Labour must win back middle classes

Labour leader sets out mission to regain trust of voters by admitting to past mistakes and pledging to tackle inequality Ed Miliband has said the Labour party must offer a new national mission to win back voters who deserted them for the Conservatives. In a speech to the Progress thinktank in London, Miliband pledged to tackle the “new inequality” between the rich and the rest of society, but also admitted the gap had grown under the last Labour government. The party would only succeed in regaining power if it could counter the “shrivelled, pessimistic, austere” vision of David Cameron and the Conservatives, he said. In a direct pitch to middle-class voters in the south of England, Miliband said their living standards were being squeezed in the same way as those in poorer parts of the country. Labour needed the humility to acknowledge that the inequality between “those at the top and everyone else” had grown under the last Labour government, although the coalition was exacerbating the problem. “Inequality is no longer an issue just between rich and poor. But between those at the top and those both in the middle and on lower incomes,” he said. “Since 2003, those at the top have seen their living standards continue to rise at extraordinary rates, while those of the rest have stagnated. “This is about the middle-income people in the south of England and elsewhere who don’t consider themselves rich even though they may be higher-rate taxpayers.” Miliband said the recent local elections showed that the party was winning back disaffected Liberal Democrat voters who felt betrayed by their leadership, but it had yet to make inroads into the Conservative vote. To win back those former Labour voters, the party needed to own up to its past mistakes, including being too relaxed about the impact of cheap migrant labour on wages, he said. “Eastern European immigration did place downward pressure on wages. People can argue about the extent. We were too relaxed about that.” Miliband offered little policy detail in his speech, focusing instead on his broad vision of how Labour would approach the next general election. He attacked what he said was the Conservatives’ “almost Maoist contempt” for any institution that did not conform to their ideological beliefs. “That’s why they tried to sell off our ancient forests. It’s why [universities minister] David Willetts saw nothing wrong with the suggestion that the wealthy should be able to buy their way into university,” he said. However he warned that the party could not afford to simply “hunker down and benefit from an unpopular government”. “I hear it quite a lot – let’s be a louder, prouder opposition,” he said. “But to think that is enough is to fail to understand the depth of the loss of trust in us and the scale of change required to win it back.” He said he was committed to tackling Britain’s budget deficit, but that the current government’s austerity measures were loading more of the financial burden on to those who were already struggling. Improving jobs and wages would mean “asking less of the state”, although he did not eloborate on whether this meant something akin to Cameron’s “big society”. “The truth is that we cannot create a society that is equal to the aspirations of the British people in a world of wide and growing inequalities – a world in which there are bailouts for bankers and austerity for the rest. “Asking more of our economy, good jobs and wages, means asking less of the state. At times, we hung on to a picture of Britain in which people were either poor, and desperately in need of our help, or affluent, aspirational, and doing OK. “We failed to understand that for millions of people in the middle, life was becoming more and more difficult. “In the future the Labour offer to aspirational voters must be that we will address the new inequality by hard-wiring fairness into the economy.” The Conservative party deputy chairman, Michael Fallon, dismissed the speech, saying the Labour leader had failed to set out a credible alternative. “He says the public want more from his party and he’s right, they want to know his plan to deal with the appalling deficit that the last Labour government left the country,” he said. Ed Miliband Labour Equality Recession Economics guardian.co.uk

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Ed Miliband: Labour must win back middle classes

Labour leader sets out mission to regain trust of voters by admitting to past mistakes and pledging to tackle inequality Ed Miliband has said the Labour party must offer a new national mission to win back voters who deserted them for the Conservatives. In a speech to the Progress thinktank in London, Miliband pledged to tackle the “new inequality” between the rich and the rest of society, but also admitted the gap had grown under the last Labour government. The party would only succeed in regaining power if it could counter the “shrivelled, pessimistic, austere” vision of David Cameron and the Conservatives, he said. In a direct pitch to middle-class voters in the south of England, Miliband said their living standards were being squeezed in the same way as those in poorer parts of the country. Labour needed the humility to acknowledge that the inequality between “those at the top and everyone else” had grown under the last Labour government, although the coalition was exacerbating the problem. “Inequality is no longer an issue just between rich and poor. But between those at the top and those both in the middle and on lower incomes,” he said. “Since 2003, those at the top have seen their living standards continue to rise at extraordinary rates, while those of the rest have stagnated. “This is about the middle-income people in the south of England and elsewhere who don’t consider themselves rich even though they may be higher-rate taxpayers.” Miliband said the recent local elections showed that the party was winning back disaffected Liberal Democrat voters who felt betrayed by their leadership, but it had yet to make inroads into the Conservative vote. To win back those former Labour voters, the party needed to own up to its past mistakes, including being too relaxed about the impact of cheap migrant labour on wages, he said. “Eastern European immigration did place downward pressure on wages. People can argue about the extent. We were too relaxed about that.” Miliband offered little policy detail in his speech, focusing instead on his broad vision of how Labour would approach the next general election. He attacked what he said was the Conservatives’ “almost Maoist contempt” for any institution that did not conform to their ideological beliefs. “That’s why they tried to sell off our ancient forests. It’s why [universities minister] David Willetts saw nothing wrong with the suggestion that the wealthy should be able to buy their way into university,” he said. However he warned that the party could not afford to simply “hunker down and benefit from an unpopular government”. “I hear it quite a lot – let’s be a louder, prouder opposition,” he said. “But to think that is enough is to fail to understand the depth of the loss of trust in us and the scale of change required to win it back.” He said he was committed to tackling Britain’s budget deficit, but that the current government’s austerity measures were loading more of the financial burden on to those who were already struggling. Improving jobs and wages would mean “asking less of the state”, although he did not eloborate on whether this meant something akin to Cameron’s “big society”. “The truth is that we cannot create a society that is equal to the aspirations of the British people in a world of wide and growing inequalities – a world in which there are bailouts for bankers and austerity for the rest. “Asking more of our economy, good jobs and wages, means asking less of the state. At times, we hung on to a picture of Britain in which people were either poor, and desperately in need of our help, or affluent, aspirational, and doing OK. “We failed to understand that for millions of people in the middle, life was becoming more and more difficult. “In the future the Labour offer to aspirational voters must be that we will address the new inequality by hard-wiring fairness into the economy.” The Conservative party deputy chairman, Michael Fallon, dismissed the speech, saying the Labour leader had failed to set out a credible alternative. “He says the public want more from his party and he’s right, they want to know his plan to deal with the appalling deficit that the last Labour government left the country,” he said. Ed Miliband Labour Equality Recession Economics guardian.co.uk

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