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Apple lowers UK iPad 2 prices

The new tablet will go on sale from 5pm on Friday in the UK and 24 other countries – at lower prices helped by the favourable exchange rate. Meanwhile, Samsung is back in the fray with 9-inch and 10-inch tablets. It’s a day for tablets. First RIM announced US prices and dates , though not UK ones, for its Playbook tablet. Now Apple has announced the price for the UK version of the iPad 2, which will work out cheaper – even after the VAT rise introduced in January – than the first version. Prices are, including VAT: Wi-Fi only: 16GB: £399.00 (£332.50 ex 20% VAT) 32GB: £479.00 (£399.17 ex 20% VAT) 64GB: £559.00 (£465.83 ex 20% VAT) Wi-Fi and 3G: 16GB: £499.00 (£415.83 ex 20% VAT) 32GB: £579.00 (£482.50 ex 20% VAT) 64GB: £659.00 (£549.17 ex 20% VAT) Those compare to prices last year respectively of £429, £499, £599, £529, £599 and £699. Calculating the differences, the retail (with VAT) price has fallen by between 4% and 7%, with the average being 5%; the ex-VAT price (the one you would normally compare against the US price) has fallen by between 5% and 9%, averaging 7.4%. That is Apple unveiling its next weapon – price – in this battle, where everyone is using every trick that they know to get an edge. Or is it? It turns out that what’s happening is that Apple is indeed cutting prices, but doing it with the help of the exchange rate. At the moment $1 = £0.6191 ; back in May 2010 (when the iPad launched in the UK and other countries) it was $1 = £0.682452 (20-day average) , so the dollar has weakened against the pound (you need fewer pounds to buy a dollar now than you did). The dollar, in fact, is about 10% lower now than it was against the pound last May. In turn, that means that $499, the iPad price in 2010 and 2011, equated in 2010 to £340.54, but is now £304.69. (In other words: it takes fewer pounds to get the $499 that Apple wants to get for each iPad sold.) So it might seem like Apple is doing everyone an enormous favour by cutting the price (and it certainly won’t hurt sales), but it is actually benefiting from the movement in exchange rates – in fact, it’s going to make more profit from iPad sales this year than last year, even with a lower price. A couple more interesting wrinkles to the iPad 2 launch internationally: sales won’t start until 5pm in the evening of Friday, or 1am that day if you’re ordering online. Why has it chosen such a time of day to do it? No word on that (we have called Apple but got no response), but there’s the faintest possibility that it’s to discourage the people who made the lives of would-be iPad buyers in the US hell – buying up loads of them in order to ship them off to the Far East. And another clue that that is the motive comes from the fact that sales in Hong Kong, Singapore and South Korea won’t start for another two weeks, even while the other 25 countries (Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the UK) get theirs. (Though that won’t really dissuade them – they’ll just come back at the weekend, surely.) And just to add to the tablet fun, at CTIA Samsung has announced (or possible re-announced) its tablets and pricing. There will be the Galaxy Tab 10.1 (guess the screen size), to be released on 8 June – running Android 3.0 (“Honeycomb”). Prices: $499 (16GB), $599 (32GB). The Galaxy 8.9 will be priced at $469 (16GB), $499 (32GB), and be released in “early summer”. So is this iPad competition? Well, Honeycomb is certainly nice, and that’s price-competitive with the iPad, at least in the US. UK prices haven’t been set (or suggested) and the release date is only “later this year”. Samsung didn’t want to share sales figures either: “those are only for internal use,” we were told. (The press release and details haven’t made it to Samsung’s online press releases .) The list of tablets that have been announced is thus growing ever longer, but the list of those actually seen in the wild in the UK remains extremely short – the iPad and the Samsung Galaxy Tab (and now @Dirkbruere’s Advent Vega) being the principal ones. Anyone else got a tablet not in that list that they’ve bought in the UK this year? And what do you think of it? iPad Apple Tablet computers Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk

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Police seek guidance over cuts rally

Met keen to avoid repeat of battles at student protest as 4,500 assigned officers to be monitored by human rights group Frontline police awaiting deployment to Saturday’s demonstration against government cuts have appealed for clear instructions about what to do in the event of disorder. Peter Smyth, chair of the Metropolitan Police Federation, told the Guardian that operations – which have degenerated into pitched battles between demonstrators and the police – have been hampered by ambiguity as orders are relayed down the chain of command. About 4,500 police officers are being assigned to the demonstration, which is expected to be the biggest mass protest the UK has seen since the march against the war in Iraq in 2003. Off-duty officers are also expected to join the march to protest about planned cuts of 20% to police budgets. “If you are the officer and the order comes down to clear the streets, that can mean going up to people and saying: ‘Excuse me, it is time to go, and can you move along please’. Or it can mean a baton charge. Sometimes that is not clear,” Smyth said. “Officers need to be given clear instructions about what is expected of them. That is a problem, and senior officers have been a bit guilty of issuing ambiguous orders.” On the Guardian Focus podcast , Smyth said that officers are hoping for better this time. The Met was particularly stung by criticism after rioters at last November’s student march were permitted to cause damage and invade Conservative party headquarters at Millbank. “The Met says it has listened. Clearly Millbank was a complete disaster for the Met. They underestimated the protest and weren’t ready when violence broke out. I think this time they will be ready, and I’m really hoping it will be a peaceful protest,” he said. Smyth said some members will attend the demonstration while off duty. “There will be a number of police officers joining the march so we have a bit of a common cause with the TUC on this one,” he said. The federation has previously voiced concern for its members when violence breaks out. In January, an editorial in its magazine, Metline, demanded immediate answers to “some pretty fundamental” questions. “Does the requirement to facilitate peaceful protest override the police’s duty to prevent disorder? How many police officers are allowed to be injured before those who are left are deployed with the correct protective equipment? How much criminal damage is acceptable before the police are allowed to act?” The editorial called for those in charge to set an example. “It is time for the leadership of the police service to shove their heads above the parapet and start leading; telling those officers who will be policing these protests whether to stand back and keep their fingers crossed or come forward and ensure that the law is upheld.” Assistant commissioner Lynne Owens, responsible for public order policing at Scotland Yard, said officers from the Met and those seconded from forces in the home counties will have a full day’s briefing. “Our expectation is that they come expecting to police a peaceful protest, but if we have to intervene against violence I am confident that officers will do that. There is an expectation that they will use force if they have to, and it will be the minimum force required to meet our lawful aims.” She said officers will be fully aware of what is expected. “I am very confident that because of the planning and conversations we have had, [all], down to the constable on the ground, will be very clear about expectations on the day.” The police operation is to be scrutinised at close quarters by the human rights group Liberty, whose officials have been allowed to sit in with police and TUC representatives during the weeks of planning. Liberty will also line the route with 100 legal observers and will have access to the police control room. During the march itself Liberty says the agreement will allow it to better fulfil the monitoring function, but the move has attracted criticism. Activists within the Network for Police Monitoring accuse Liberty of undermining its own independence. The network plans to deploy its own group of trained legal advisers to monitor events and provide advice to demonstrators on the day. Police Protest Tax and spending Anti-war movement Cuts and closures Budget Hugh Muir guardian.co.uk

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US military ‘shot six Libyan villagers’ in pilot rescue

• Six injured on ground after US fighter jet crashes • US military denies shooting Libyan civilians in rescue • Fighting continues on the ground Read the Guardian’s latest news story Follow live updates here 6.35pm: France’s foreign minister, Alain Juppé, has announced that a meeting of foreign ministers from countries taking part in the military action on Libya would be held in the next few days and mentioned Paris, Brussels and London as possible venues. Kim Willsher in Paris reports for the Guardian: He spoke to the French parliament as it emerged the coalition of countries involved in the operation was riven with disagreements over who should lead it and the role of Nato. France has opposed Nato taking charge of the military operation. “At the president’s behest and with the agreement of our British colleagues that we set up a political structure to oversee the operations involving foreign ministers from the countries taking part and the Arab League,” Juppé said. Laurent Tessiere, spokesman for the French ministry of defence, said France had opposed Nato running the operation because it did not want to “send the message that this was a western only led operation” and said this was a “key political dimension to be understood by the Arab world”. He admitted discussions over the role of Nato had been a “very vivid debate” that was still going on but that the views of countries involved was “converging towards a solution”. And he denied reports that France had not consulted with its allies over the timing of air strikes against Libya. He said the French chief of military staff had negotiated for days “and sometimes whole nights” with his opposite numbers in the UK and the US. 6.31pm: It’s clear that Western forces want to assassinate Muammar Gaddafi, Libya’s deputy foreign minister has said in an interview with Reuters. “That’s the problem now we are seeing, the coalition forces they are part of the war against the legitimate government,” Khaled Kaim claimed, adding that coalition forces were also striking soldiers in their barracks. Kaim said it was clear from a strike that damaged a building in Gaddafi’s Tripoli headquarters that Western forces want to assassinate the Libyan leader. All sides should declare a ceasefire with the aim of stabilising Libya, he said, adding that the regime was was looking to Libya’s tribes to help it open a dialogue with rebels. 6.20pm: Good evening and welcome to our continuing coverage of events in Libya. You can catch up with earlier coverage here . • There are conflicting accounts of events following the crash of a US F-15E Strike Eagle in Libya after which six civilians were injured. A US spokesman has “100%” denied reports that the civilians were injured by shooting from a US helicopter rescue mission for the two pilots. A US admiral earlier refused to deny that a crew sent to rescue downed airmen opened fire on Libyan villagers. A witness reportedly said the rescue team fired shots to keep the Libyans away, then swooped in and rescued one of the crew. Six Libyans are said to be wounded. The F-15E Strike Eagle jet was conducting a mission Monday night when it crashed outside Benghazi, apparently from a malfunction. • Residents in Misrata, western Libya, say the town has come under heavy tank and sniper fire. Doctors reportedly are operating on people with bullet and shrapnel wounds in hospital corridors. Ajdabiya and Zintan have also reportedly been under attack in a continuing onslaught from Muammar Gaddafi’s forces. • The US insists it will hand control of military operations to its allies within days amid rows over Nato’s leadership role in the air campaign. France has proposed that a new political steering committee outside Nato be responsible for overseeing military operations as some Nato countries oppose military intervention in Libya. Here is the latest story on events today . Full live coverage continues here. Libya Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Defence policy Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk

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WI State Sen. ‘Randy Hopper Knows How To Create Jobs.’ Yep, For His Young Lobbyist Mistress!

This reminds me of something I tweeted a month ago: GOP job creation? Marry your mistress, creating job vacancy, and fill it. Progress! As he pointed out in his campaign ad, Wisconsin Republican Sen. Randy Hopper really does know how to create jobs. His new girlfriend (he’s 45, she’s 26) just got a new job working for the state — and it pays $11,000 more than the last person who filled it. Just a coincidence, doesn’t have a thing to do with Hopper being best buds with Gov. Scott Walker! Even though the state is supposedly broke, top officials in Gov. Scott Walker’s team were able to scrape together enough money to give a state job to the woman identified as Sen. Randy Hopper’s girlfriend. Anything for a political ally. Valerie Cass, a former Republican legislative staffer, was hired Feb. 7 as a communications specialist with the state Department of Regulation and Licensing. She is being paid $20.35 per hour. The job is considered a temporary post. enlarge Valerie Cass, lucky new state employee. Cass previously had worked in the state Senate and for the GOP campaign consulting firm Persuasion Partners in Madison. She also was paid for campaign work for the state Republican Party and U.S. Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner before that. “Ms. Cass’ name was among many forwarded to DRL by the Governor’s Transition Team as potential candidates for positions with the department,” said David Carlson, the agency’s spokesman. But who exactly recommended her for the post? Cullen Werwie, spokesman for the governor, confirmed that it was Keith Gilkes, Walker’s chief of staff. She was then interviewed by the Department of Regulations and Licensing’s executive assistant and deputy and hired by Secretary Dave Ross, a Walker cabinet member. An internal staff directory lists Cass as working in the secretary’s office as the assistant to the executive assistant. Werwie said Gilkes did not recommend her as a favor to the first-term lawmaker, who voted for the governor’s controversial budget-repair bill earlier this month. Since the recall effort was launched, news outlets and bloggers have focused in on Hopper’s pending divorce. His estranged wife, Alysia, issued a statement to WTMJ-TV (Channel 4) accusing Hopper, 45, of beginning an affair with Cass, 26, last year. He filed for divorce in August. “Randy is the love of my life,” she said in the statement. “This divorce and the lack of any attempt to save our marriage is solely his decision not mine.” There have been conflicting reports on whether she or the family’s maid signed Hopper’s recall petition. Democratic Party sources have told No Quarter that Hopper’s estranged wife has agreed to give to his opponent, whoever that may be. Hopper has maintained that he had nothing to do with Cass’ recent appointment to the state job. Carlson said she filled a vacancy created by a previous limited-term employee who left in January. These temporary workers can put in no more than 1,043 hours during a fiscal year, which ends June 30. According to a Madison TV report, Cass received a substantial pay raise over her predecessor. If she were to put in a full year in her current job, she would make about $43,200. Her predecessor was paid at a rate of $31,200 a year.

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Is there a state of the nation play?

The sheer variety of British new writing means that refracting plays through the prism of national identity, as Aleks Sierz’s new book does, feels blinkered Pick a play – any play written in the last decade – and the chances are Aleks Sierz could offer an interpretation about how it refracts national identity. Mike Bartlett’s Cock would be a portrait of an uncertain, indecisive Britain, endlessly caught between two possible futures. Ghost Stories ? Why, the crippling paranoia born of a fragmented society, in which everyone is ultimately alone. And the Rain Falls Down ? What could be more British than obsession with the weather? I’m being facetious, of course. Only one of those examples (Cock) comes from Sierz’s new – and broadly enjoyable – book, Rewriting the Nation: British Theatre Today , a survey of the last 10 years of new writing in the UK. In it, Sierz attempts a working definition of new writing, assesses the health of our new writing culture and pulls together a composite picture of contemporary Britain. It’s a neat reflection of theatre’s uncanny capacity to echo and encapsulate its surrounding society. Often overly neat. Reading Rewriting the Nation, I found myself nagged by the very concept it examines. What, I kept thinking, makes a play a state of the nation play ? How does it mark itself out as such? Watching Cock at the Royal Court last year, it never once occurred to me that Ben Whishaw’s John might be “a metaphor for a nation unsure of itself”. Undoubtedly it tackles sexuality, but it also seemed concerned with generations. Yet if age felt important, why not nationality? After all, I thought of these people as British – sometimes, particularly so – and yet that seems to be secondary, if not irrelevant. Sometimes there’s no room for doubt, if only because the title of a play doesn’t allow for it. A nation can be a play’s constant or protagonist, as in Richard Bean’s England People Very Nice , which focused satirically on waves of immigration into the East End of London, or else its pivot. By placing Englishmen abroad, DC Moore’s The Empire highlights their Englishness, just as Roy Williams does with the England match of Sing Yer Heart Out for the Lads . Other plays are draped in national iconography: Jerusalem, set on St George’s Day, bombards us with English symbols from the off, beginning with a St George’s cross and Hubert Parry’s stirring setting of William Blake. Elsewhere, however, it’s harder to discern. Setting can, but doesn’t necessarily, confer state of the nation status. How crucial is Leeds to Blasted or London to Earthquakes in London? I suspect both could be broadly the same play if set elsewhere, but their stress on setting forces location – and with it, national identity – into the crosshairs. Likewise, while institutions inevitably reflect the society that created and continues to shape them, they can also function as metaphors or microcosms of that society. Michael Billington suggested that Nina Raine’s Tiger Country showed the state of the NHS without reaching beyond to the state of the nation, as does Peter Nichols’s The National Health. I read Mogadishu in terms of its wider political implications, but not John Donnelly’s The Knowledge , even though both are set in schools. Family structures and organisations can exact a similar multiplicity. It seems a cop out to say so, but there’s no way out bar subjective perception. Whether you see a character as a particular individual or representative, as English or simply as human, depends on the angle of approach. That said, though there aren’t strict parameters that identify a state-of-the-nation play, to refract everything through the prism of national identity, as Sierz does, feels singularly blinkered. Theatre Matt Trueman guardian.co.uk

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I bet not many of you have heard of ” Tentherism Why would you? It’s a bizarre misreading of the Constitution that one might find coming out of the new textbooks approved by the wingnut Texas School board. But that’s just a guess. (In reality, as Dave explained awhile back, ‘Tentherism’ was first devised by Patriot/militia movement leaders back in the 1990s.) It works great for Russell Pearce, the xenophobic president of the Arizona Senate responsible for the vile SB-1070 racial-profiling law, whose radical bastardization of the U.S. Constitution is limitless. While many in the Tea Party coalition are using this twisted tactic to attack Social Security, child labor laws, federal taxes and health-care reform, in Pearce’s mind, it means you’re not really a citizen of the United States at all. Think Progress: One of the most radical offshoots of modern conservatism in the United States is called “ tentherism ,” which invokes the Constitution’s Tenth Amendment to claim that a whole host of federal government powers are illegitimate, from the operations of the Social Security program to the national highway system, and that states are supreme. During a speech at the Oceanside Tea Party rally in recent months, Arizona State Senate President Russell Pearce (R) took this philosophy to a new extreme. In the speech, where he denounced the federal government’s efforts to stop the implementation of the state’s radical anti-immigrant law , Pearce claimed that Americans aren’t even citizens of the United States, that they are rather citizens of “sovereign states,” meaning that we should be loyal to the laws of individual states rather than the federal government: PEARCE: U.S. history, most of us weren’t around when the Constitution was written. But you remember we kind of existed before Congress, the states. We created the Congress, we created the federal government, by compact. Do you know what existed before the Congress, the states? Do you know, you’re not a citizen of the United States. You’re a citizen of a sovereign state. The fifty sovereign states makes up United States of America, we’re citizens of those sovereign states. It is not a delegated authority. It’s an inherent authority that states have over the federal government. [applause] It’s about time somebody gets it right! {} And if Pearce actually read the Constitution, he would also see that it clearly trumps state law and “shall be the supreme Law of the Land ; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby.” This isn’t the first time Pearce has flirted with secessionist tendencies. Earlier this year, he sponsored a measure that would essentially nullify federal laws that Arizona state lawmakers disagreed with, amounting to a radical assault on our rule of law. States’ rights have been the basis for all kinds of right-wing resistance to civil-rights measures, beginning with the South’s claims in the 1950s and ’60s that Brown v. Board of Education and the Civil Rights Acts were infringements upon them; Ronald Reagan frequently resorted to this argument as he began his climb up the food chain of the GOP. But Tentherism is states’ rights on steroids. And in Pearce’s hands, it’s approaching advocacy of the most extreme far-right belief system — “sovereign citizenship,” or the Patriot/militia belief that individual citizens can declare themselves exempt from federal oversight. This is not particularly surprising from Pearce, considering his propensity for playing footsie with neo-Nazis and his advocacy of all kinds of far-right ideas, primarily those that bash Latinos — so much so that his fellow Arizona Republicans finally stopped his latest anti-immigrant slate after the state’s business community pleaded with them to give it up. But as we’ve seen, crazy is hard to give up. Every time he thinks up a way to dehumanize Latinos, I think it must be like a hit on a crack pipe to a man like Pearce. It’s very addictive. So what do you think his response is to these men of business, the so called Masters of the Universe? Well, some people can’t take a hint. Is it any wonder that so many people are frustrated living with these Tom Tancredo-like extremists in AZ that they want to break away and rejoin the USofA as the 51st state ?

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Gove sets children 50-book challenge

Michael Gove’s remark that children should be reading 50 books a year is called into question by authors from Philip Pullman to children’s laureate Anthony Browne Education secretary Michael Gove has suggested that children as young as 11 should be reading 50 books a year – and that leading children’s authors should recommend them. Following a tour he made of America’s independently-run, state-funded charter schools – including the Infinity Charter School in Harlem, which set its pupils a “50-book challenge” over the course of a year – Gove said that schools in the UK needed to “raise the bar” on children’s reading: “Recently, I asked to see what students were reading at GCSE,” Gove said. “I discovered that something like 80-90% were just reading one or two novels – and overwhelmingly it was the case that it included Of Mice and Men. We should be saying that our children should be reading 50 books a year, not just one or two for GCSE.” The education secretary’s remarks follow a December report that showed British teenagers slumping from 17th to 25th place in an international league table for reading standards. But children’s laureate Anthony Browne has said Gove’s aims are at odds with the library closures happening under his government’s watch. He declared himself “surprised” at Gove’s comments, “given that the government is cutting library budgets, and that programmes giving free books to children, such as Bookstart, are also being cut.” “It’s always good to hear that the importance of children’s reading is recognised – but rather than setting an arbitrary number of books that children ought to read, I feel it’s the quality of children’s reading experiences that really matter,” Browne said. “Pleasure, engagement and enjoyment of books is what counts – not simply meeting targets.” Browne’s views were echoed by others’. Frank Cottrell Boyce , author of children’s novels Cosmic and Millions, said that while Gove’s instincts were right, the government’s wider actions were “militating against what Gove wants – like closing libraries, which is just a disaster.” Alan Garner, author of children’s classic The Weirdstone of Brisingamen, meanwhile, questioned the advisability of turning books into numbers. “Is any number a useful guide?” he asked. “The important aim should be a reading that is wide and deep rather than numerical. In my own primary school years I read everything I could find, which amounted to at least four books a week and as many comics as possible. The Beano and The Dandy were equal with Tarzan of the Apes, Enid Blyton, HG Wells, Kipling, wildlife books, fairy tales, encyclopaedias. This resulted, painlessly, in a large vocabulary, an awareness of differences of style, the absorption of grammar and syntax and an ability to spell.” Philip Pullman, author of the prizewinning His Dark Materials trilogy, agreed – and added a further caveat. “I’m all in favour of children reading books, of course, the more the merrier,” he said. “What I’m wary of is that people will start saying that quality is more important than quantity. When it comes to reading books, children should be allowed – and encouraged – to read as much rubbish as they want to. But that can only happen when there are plenty of good books as well as rubbish all around them. Where are they going to get these 50 books a year from?” Meanwhile, Miranda McKearney, chief executive of the Reading Agency, which runs an annual Summer Reading Challenge in which children are encouraged to read six library books over the holiday, expressed concern over the execution of Gove’s ambition. “So often the discussion about how to inspire children to read focuses just on schools, but libraries, and families, have a key role to play,” she said. “We won’t crack the problems unless we build a more systemic approach.” Michael Gove Young people Children Children and teenagers Children’s laureate Benedicte Page guardian.co.uk

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SNP underdogs in election – Salmond

Party leader tells candidates they have ‘everything to gain’ in the six weeks before elections which polls suggest Labour will win Alex Salmond has admitted the Scottish National party is still short of achieving a winning position in the race to triumph at the Holyrood elections in May, as the campaign jumped into gear. Speaking just after Holyrood was formally dissolved, Salmond appeared to hint that the SNP was starting as underdog when he told his party’s candidates that they had “nothing to fear” but had “everything to gain” in this campaign. He said the SNP were still three points off achieving the 40% of the votes they needed on 5 May to secure a second term in office. As the Weber Shandwick “poll of polls” showed Labour eight points clear of the SNP, Salmond acknowledged that a sufficient number of voters still had to be persuaded that his party was best able to govern Scotland. Referring to that 40% target, he said: “The recent polls show us within touching distance of achieving that objective, still a few points behind but I think we can go into this campaign with confidence. Because as the choice becomes clear, [as] the contrast between the SNP team and the Labour team becomes starkly obvious and as the message of a 100 brilliant commitments by this SNP government becomes clear, then we’ve nothing to fear from this campaign. “On the contrary, we’ve everything to gain in this next six weeks. Can we take our vote from 37% to 40% over the next six weeks, you bet we can.” Salmond’s cautious assessment is confirmed by senior party figures, who admit privately that its private polling puts the SNP three to four points behind Labour. Asked whether he did see himself as the underdog, Salmond said: “It’s a neck and neck race, and I’m taking nothing for granted. That’s your word, not mine. I’m quite happy with the position we’re in … It’s going to be a close finish.” That contrasts strongly with the SNP’s consistent lead in the polls at this point during the 2007 campaign, when the party won its first term of government. By the start of that campaign, the nationalists had established a lead in the polls for several months. The next Scottish parliament is expected to sit for a five-year term, after Westminster passed legislation fixing its current parliament at five years which would have clashed with the original May 2015 date for the following Holyrood election. Holyrood now has new powers to hold its election a year later. Weber Shandwick and its politics website ScotlandVotes.com said analysis of all the recent polls put Labour on course to win 60 of Holyrood’s 129 seats – five short of majority – against the SNP’s 46 seats. Moray Macdonald, Weber Shandwick’s deputy managing director in Scotland, said Labour was taking votes chiefly at the expense of the Liberal Democrats, who are down to 9% and are expected to suffer heavily with public anger over the Lib Dem-Tory coalition in Westminster. The main parties are expected to unveil their manifestos in early April and formally launch their campaigns from next week. Labour began its effort with a 48-hour tour of “battleground” seats in Edinburgh, Fife and central Scotland by its Scottish leader, Iain Gray. Speaking during the last first minister’s questions in Holyrood before the parliament was dissolved, Gray accused Salmond of holding back crucial announcements until the last four weeks for “partisan party advantage”. He said: “Well, it doesn’t make up for four years of promises broken, schools unbuilt, projects cancelled, criminals released and thousands extra on the dole. Times up. Hasn’t the first minister failed on all the big issues that really matter?” Scottish National Party (SNP) Scottish politics Alex Salmond Scotland Labour Liberal Democrats Conservatives Severin Carrell guardian.co.uk

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Why the NHS needs to be reformed

Changing the way the health service operates is essential, argues former minister Lord Warner in a new book At a time when Labour may think it has the government on the ropes over its planned NHS shakeup, the party’s leadership is unlikely to welcome a book being launched next week by Lord Warner, the former health minister under Tony Blair, on why the health service should embrace market-based reform. But Warner has never been one to hold back on speaking his mind. In 2009, when Gordon Brown was pushing through policy of free personal care at home, Warner branded it a “cruel deception”. Last month, as a member of the Dilnot commission on long-term care funding, he appeared to jump the gun on the commission’s conclusions by declaring that any compulsory form of care insurance would not “fit the public mood music”. Now the former civil servant, social services director and Youth Justice Board chair is returning to the NHS debate with some typically trenchant reflections on what he thinks should be done to secure the service for the future. While the government could succeed where Labour lost its nerve on reform, he thinks, the plans before parliament need some serious underpinning to work. “Simply increasing the influence of clinicians without changing the way the NHS does its business will not deliver desired change,” Warner concludes in the book, A Suitable Case for Treatment – the NHS and Reform. “Without a more robust financial, economic and performance architecture, greater devolution and clinician power could produce financial meltdown …” It is clear from the book that Warner was frustrated by much of his ministerial experience, from 2003 to 2006, particularly after becoming minister of state in 2005 and taking responsibility for NHS delivery and subsequently reform. He acknowledges that Labour “saved” the service, but laments the “serious mistakes” he believes it made in failing to achieve effective commissioning of healthcare, allowing an excessive expansion of the workforce, thus worsening productivity, and ducking the challenge of replacing seriously underperforming and unsustainable hospitals and other care providers. It is the latter that he regards as the acid test of the coalition’s plans, much of which he admits he supports. “Having given people a reasonable chance to remedy their defects,” he says, “you have to be able then to remove them and let some new players come in. Whether they are from the NHS, social enterprise or the private sector, I don’t think I care. “But one of the things I do care about, which is one of the reasons for writing the book, is just allowing failure to carry on, taking taxpayers’ money and giving lousy services to the public. And many of those lousy services are in the poorer areas: the sharp-elbowed middle classes usually find some way to cope with the problem.” He wants to see evidence that the coalition is serious about penalising failure. He wants also a tougher financial management regime for the new-look NHS and intends to table an amendment to the reform legislation in the Lords, proposing a financial management standards board sitting within the NHS commissioning board and drawing on outside expertise. Appalling management “No one else in the world would be running an £80bn or £100bn business based on the kind of appalling financial management we have in the NHS,” he says. “It’s a very curious state of affairs to be expending that amount of public money on something where, on the whole, we don’t know the costs of goods and services and we certainly don’t know the different costs between different providers. “I find it difficult to see how you can have any kind of market of proper competition if you don’t have, in the public arena, a financial management system which delivers more and better information about the costs of goods and services.” Warner thinks the jury is out on whether GP-led commissioning will work as the coalition hopes. To do so, he says, it will need far better data collection and analysis than primary care trusts ever had and, above all, a willingness and capacity to “reign in” the acute hospital sector and switch resources into community health services and social care. The acute sector, he argues, is clinging to a model of care that is wholly outdated for the ageing population. “Stacking significant numbers of 85- to 90-year-olds, largely women, in the medical wards of acute hospitals doesn’t seem to me an appropriate clinical business response for this day and age,” he says. Urging a big shift towards more care of older people in nursing homes, which is far cheaper and away from the threat of hospital-acquired infections, he adds: “Many more could be in single rooms in nursing homes, being nursed and managed more safely than on bayed wards in hospitals.” Among other items on the Warner wish-list are a fresh and strategic approach to managing the NHS estate, making far better use of its land, buildings and facilities, and an end to national pay bargaining to allow flexibility in local labour markets. Such ideas, he accepts, clash with what he sees as the innately introspective nature of the NHS – “a major problem” – and an unwillingness among much of its leadership to approach it as a business. He likens the NHS mindset to that of local government leaders in the 1970s and early 1980s. “They were forced, brutally, by Thatcher to start looking outside for some of the solutions to their problems. It’s not about handing stuff over lock, stock and barrel to the private sector; it’s actually getting on your bike and going to look at how other businesses do their business.” As a minister, he recalls, he was repeatedly told that things he was suggesting were “not the NHS way”. “Well,” he says, “it’s about time they were.” But Warner is not confident. “Bringing about NHS change,” he reflects in the conclusion to his book, “becomes like a first world war battle, capturing a few yards at a time – often with casualties – and then along comes a new general who beats a retreat. As the coalition government tries to take the Blair reforms to their logical conclusion, history suggests they may have the same experience.” • A Suitable Case for Treatment, by Lord [Norman] Warner, is published by Grosvenor House at £16. NHS Health Doctors Nursing David Brindle guardian.co.uk

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An unusual birthday treat

On a run with the Kenyan military, Adharanand Finn experiences unexpected psychological challenges As birthday treats go, it’s an unusual one. I leave the house at 7am and head up the pot-holed road out of Nairobi and into Ngong. There, near the top of a hill, I pull off the road and follow a dirt track into a field. The wind is blowing hard as I come to a halt on the grass and step out of the car. Weathered military tents flap rhythmically along one side of the field. In front of the tents, about thirty men and women in running kit stand in lines listening as a man with a stick under his arm paces back and forth and talks to them in Kiswahili. I’m 37 years old today. And to celebrate, I’ve come for a morning run with the Kenyan Air Force. The lined-up personnel all turn to watch me as I walk across the grass to where a few plastic chairs have been left under a tree. One of the men breaks rank to come over to see me. I guess there needs to be some kind of security check in a military camp. The other people, I presume, are supposed to be standing to attention, but they’re all smiling at me. The lines are not even straight. I tell the man I was invited to run by one of the coaches, Benjamin Mbusya. It seems to be a good enough explanation, as he smiles, says “Karibu” (welcome) and returns to his line. The Kenyan armed forces employ athletes to live and train at various camps like this, mostly up here in the Ngong Hills – I pass two more on my way to the Air Force camp. The runners have to undergo some basic military training, and occasionally have to don uniform for a parade, but otherwise they live as full-time athletes with the freedom to come and go largely as they please. It’s a very loose arrangement and I find it hard to pin down exactly how it works. Nancy Langat, the Olympic 1500m champion, for example, is a member of this very camp, but she’s not here now. I can’t imagine she spends too much time here, to be honest. Unlike the camps in Iten, which are full of distance runners, this camp includes athletes from every event, from the high jump and shot put, to the sprints and hurdles. The military invests in the athletes in order to do well in the national championships, where it hopes to beat its arch rivals, the police and the prisons service. At the recent national cross country championships , the armed forces were outshone by the police, who named some of the best runners in the world, including both winners, Geoffrey Mutai and Linet Masai, among their ranks. I’m teamed up with a group of eight men for this morning’s one-hour forest run. Coach Benjamin orders one of the athletes to stick with me if I start to drop behind, which is reassuring. The run starts off at a gentle pace. “Poli, poli,” (slowly, slowly) they say. Falsely buoyed by my recent run with the Nairobi Hash House Harriers , where I was easily one of the fastest runners in the group, I set off at the front. For one mad moment I even contemplate pushing the pace on, before my rational self steps in to point out that I’m running with the Kenyan military here. The Hash House Harriers it is not. For the first half an hour or so, I push along happily in the group, up and down the hills, enjoying the sense of movement, the feeling of being part of a group, a tribe of steely warriors making our way purposefully across field and glade. We follow dirt tracks that meander up to the top of the hills. Up here the landscape resembles a huge British allotment, with small plots of cultivated land and wooden huts dotted everywhere. Except that the huts are people’s houses. After about half an hour, however, as the pace gradually, almost imperceptibly, increases, I begin to drift back. Up a particularly steep hill, my legs grow suddenly weary. Once the momentum of the group is lost, I find it harder to push myself on. The man who was ordered to stay with me eases down to my pace, along with another runner. Knowing that they will stay with me no matter how slow I go is not good for my motivation. On previous runs, the thought that I may end up lost has pushed me on, but here I’m free to give in to my legs’ demands, and slow down. I can’t quite decide, as I run, whether I’m being pathetic, or whether I’ve already been heroic for keeping up this long. The two runners next to me are finding the new pace very easy. This may be the military, but they’re very good natured about my slow running. There is no “beasting” or shouting, or even any real encouragement to go faster. “Just enjoy it,” one says to me when I apologise for slowing down. These really aren’t soldiers. As I don’t have a watch, I try asking them, between gasps, how far we have left to run. “This is the last hill,” says one, as we make our way through a herd of goats blocking the path. “Nearly there.” It’s amazing, sometimes, how psychological running is. Suddenly my legs feel light and frisky again. Once we get past the goats, I pick up the pace to the top of the hill and start stretching out along the gradual downhill slope on the other side. They match me stride for stride, of course, relieved to be moving again. The main group is actually not that far ahead. “Perhaps I can catch them,” I think, opening out my stride. It feels great. The last hill is done. It’s lovely downhill all the rest of the way. Although they call it a forest run, it is only now, for the first time, that we actually head into any forest. The path winds around from one side to the other, occasionally rising up a little short hill. At each turn I keep thinking we must be about to finish, but we don’t. “Five more minutes,” says one of the runners, sensing that I’m starting to slow again. Five minutes? That’s more than I was expecting. But I’ve slowed them down enough. I can manage. Finally the finish comes in sight. The other runners are standing around stretching. I make a vague attempt at a sprint, and then we’re done. Hand shakes all around. The others are smiling. I’m panting. But it’s done. Another run survived. I leave them eating mangoes for breakfast back at the camp as I return to Nairobi, where my wife and children have prepared a big chocolate cake for my birthday. • The book Running with the Kenyans by Adharanand Finn will be published in 2012 Running Fitness Adharanand Finn guardian.co.uk

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