The discovery that a Roman road may in fact have been made by Iron Age Britons offers a glimpse of a far more sophisticated society than previously thought It’s not a question often asked, but perhaps it should be. What did the Druids do for us? The discovery of a road in Shropshire that was built by pre-Roman engineers suggests that indigenous Britons may have been much more accomplished than we – or the Romans – liked to imagine. The road itself tells the story well. The route had long been known as a lost Roman road, named Margary No 64 after the man who first mapped what everyone assumed to be the country’s earliest network. It was visible as a low earthwork and as marks in ploughed fields, and in 1995 archaeologists dug up a bit. Sure enough, it looked Roman. But in 2009, quarrying by Tarmac was due to destroy 400m of it, giving archaeologists a rare opportunity to expose a long section of road, some of it, crucially, very well preserved. At first, it still looked Roman, from its cambered, cobbled surface on a metre of hardcore and a clay base, to the ditches at the sides with a thin scatter of Roman rubbish. However, dig director Tim Malim noticed that the road had twice been rebuilt, and knew its history could be dated using a technique that tells you when buried mineral grains were last exposed to sunlight. The unexpected result was a more than 80% chance that the last surface had been laid before the Roman invasion in AD43. Wood in the foundation was radiocarbon-dated to the second century BC, sealing the road’s pre-Roman origin. And Malim thinks a huge post that stood in 1500BC close to the crest of the hill was a trackway marker. So, while the cobbles rattled to the sound of carts and chariots generations before the Romans invaded Britain, the route itself was older than Rome. When the Roman army marched around its new conquest, it was not above using the road and discarding its litter. Indeed, there’s every reason to believe that the Shropshire road continues north to meet Watling Street, suggesting that one of the Roman engineers’ great achievements was at least in part no more than an act of resurfacing. It is fashionable among archaeologists and ancient historians to debate how much Britain was really “Romanised”. There is no consensus. But notwithstanding villas with central heating and public statues of Roman emperors, some academics portray the four centuries of Roman occupation as a mere ripple on the longer and stronger flow of native culture and politics. But what of the reverse? Could Britain have been more “Roman” than was thought, before it was invaded? What do we find if we follow route 64 back into the past? The road implies not just the ability to design and organise its construction, but also the justification for its cost – heavy traffic. Immediately we are outside a vision of ancient Britain where wheeled vehicles appear only in battle, as Roman writers would have it, in chaotic displays of chariotry. Archaeological evidence is clear that long before the Roman invasion, the British landscape was well organised, with a dense network of fields and tracks. Larger settlements were towns in all but name, where homes were separated from industrial areas by streets, and functions such as mass storage and ritual had their separate places. Baths, medicines, skilled arts and crafts, perhaps even forms of currency – such things were commonplace, and can be seen evolving over millennia. But archaeology is revealing a twist to this native sophistication, which suggests that before they were invaded, Britons were more aware of Rome than Rome was of Britain. This is seen no more clearly than in a cemetery near Colchester , Essex, excavated mostly in the 1990s at, as it happens, another Tarmac quarry. Some very special people had been buried there. They weren’t leaders, but members of the ruling class who had died between about AD40 and AD60: it’s conceivable that some of them actually saw the invading Roman army, but they had grown up and learned their skills long before. There is nothing about their graves that looks in the least bit Roman. One of the men could have been a druid. But when you look at the things the deceased took with them, you notice a striking thing: Rome. Or more specifically, precious Roman objects requiring Roman expertise. These include a beautiful blue glass jar of a type more typically found in the Mediterranean region around the time of the birth of Christ, that probably held a cosmetic. There is a pottery inkwell: did its owner write? One man took with him a large Italian wine jar and a copper jug and basin set, such as was common in Pompeii; an amber-coloured glass bowl may have been made in Italy. And then there is “the doctor”. This man had his wine jar, his imported pottery service and copper vessels. But he also had a set of surgical instruments – one of the oldest known in the ancient world. The tools are recognisably functional – scalpels, forceps, probes and more – and comparable to finds made around the Roman empire. But they are not Roman. On current evidence, they were made in Britain to designs that merely borrowed from Greece and Italy. Buried with the surgeon’s shiny tools were divining rods and a magical board game. Whether you call him a doctor or a druid, he was a local aristocrat with access to luxuries and ideas from Rome and beyond, and he had the ability to choose. Archaeology traditionally deals in centuries; history in years. If you find something that looks Roman, you will probably call it Roman, though the dating may be too imprecise to pin down your discovery to a generation, still less a few years either side of a historical event such as a military invasion. Many things here once thought “Roman” could, in fact, be older. Shropshire’s road, then, could be the start of a journey that changes the way we think about early Britain. Mike Pitts is editor of British Archaeology . Archaeology Heritage guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …On Wednesday's Newsroom, CNN hyped the concerns of psychiatrist Terry Kupers over the imprisonment of Wikileaks suspect Bradley Manning. Kupers labeled Manning's months-long solitary confinement ” cruel or inhumane treatment, and by international standards, they constitute torture .” The guest also claimed that ” nobody has been accused of crimes like Bradley Manning's .” Anchor Carol Costello noted in her introduction to her interview of Kupers (which aired 47 minutes into the 10 am Eastern hour) that “Manning, the man accused of giving Wikileaks classified documents, spent most of the last nine months in solitary confinement. One psychiatrist tells CNN that amounted to torture, and it could have done more harm than good .” An on-screen graphic trumpeted this charge: ” Wikileaks Suspect 'Tortured': Doc: Months of solitary does permanent damage. ” Once she greeted her guest, the CNN personality stated that “Private Manning is no longer in solitary confinement, I understand. They- he has one hour a day where he's out, and for most of the day he can communicate with other prisoners. So is that better?” Kupers, a part-time member of the faculty at The Wright Institute in Berkeley, California , replied that “social contact is better….He has been entirely deprived for a very long time, seven or eight months, and that is known to cause mental illness, and the prevalence of suicide in those kind of conditions is extremely high. So for those reasons, it's a very stressful situation for him .” Costello then noted that “the threat of suicide was there. That's why he was forced to sleep naked because he was trying to kill himself with his clothes,” and asked, “So, what do you do?” The psychiatrist made his first hint that Manning's rights had been trampled upon: “If he is truly suicidal, then what he needs is to be removed from conditions that are known to cause suicide, such as solitary confinement, and to be put in treatment. It isn't okay to strip him of his clothes. The Constitution guarantees humane conditions for people, and this was a violation .” Kupers finally specifically accused the military of torture after Costello followed up by bringing up the armed services' separate system of justice: COSTELLO: But this is a military prison. It's not like a prison that normal people go to when they commit crimes in the United States. Many people would argue that this man is a traitor to his country, and he's being treated accordingly. KUPERS: Well, always, there's some rationale for human rights abuses for torture, and that's what the military is claiming here . They're claiming they're preventing suicide when actually they're putting him in the precise conditions that cause suicide, and they're depriving him of rights that United States citizens have even if they're in the military. The Constitution still applies. Near the end of the interview, the psychiatrist tried to set Manning apart as he continued to accuse the military of wrongdoing: COSTELLO: So, what do you suggest? Should he be treated differently than other prisoners who have been accused of similar crimes? KUPERS: Well, nobody has been accused of crimes like Bradley Manning's. He has not turned information over to any foreign government. Rather, he has released documents. A lot of people are saying he's a whistleblower . This is something that needs to be determined in court. He is pre-trial. But he is being put into conditions that are considered an Eighth Amendment violation, that is, they constitute cruel or inhumane treatment, and by international standards, they constitute torture . This is not okay. He hasn't been convicted of anything. COSTELLO: Well, I'm sure military personnel would beg to differ. But thank you for your perspective. Terry Kupers is live from Berkeley today. Thank you. Actually, the guest is making a distinction without a difference. While the private allegedly didn't disclose the classified information to a foreign government, he is still accused of “communicating, transmitting and delivering national defense information to an unauthorized source.” It doesn't matter whether that “unauthorized source” is a foreign government or unaffiliated organization. CNN let Kupers expound on his take in a column which they posted on a their website on Wednesday . He went much further in his condemnation of the military than he did during his interview with Costello: Clearly, Manning's treatment violates these constitutional guarantees and international prohibitions against torture . Why? Have we permitted our government, under the cloak of security precautions, to set up a secret gulag where conditions known to cause severe psychiatric damage prevail? As a concerned psychiatrist, I strenuously object to this callousness about conditions of confinement that predictably cause such severe harm. — Matthew Balan is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. You can follow him on Twitter here .
Continue reading …That was Lady Gaga’s reaction to the PS22 school choir’s take on Just Dance – and she’s not alone. Hermione Hoby met the YouTube superstars – and their inspiring teacher There was really only one moment worth watching at last month’s Oscars. At the end of a dull ceremony, a chorus of 10-year-olds took to the stage and sang Over the Rainbow with joyful lack of inhibition and more feeling than most Oscar-winning performances. But that would have been no surprise to the 10 million people who have watched PS22′s pop covers online. PS22 is the largest elementary school on New York’s Staten Island, an unremarkable, state-funded school with a thoroughly remarkable fifth-grade chorus. Tori Amos, Kylie Minogue and Beyoncé are among their fans; after they covered Just Dance , Lady Gaga called them: “Fabulous. Perfect. Soulful. Amazing.” Now, as 10-year-old Azaria says: “We’ve met so many celebrities we’ve forgotten half of them!” They’ve also covered more esoteric fare, like Ariel Pink’s Round and Round . The week after the Oscars, the sign outside the school reads: “We welcome home Hollywood’s newest stars, PS22 Chorus!” As I’m signing in at reception, a door bursts open and there’s chorus director Gregg Breinberg flinging open his arms to hug me. There’s a lot of hugging over the next few hours. As Breinberg walks around the school, kids mob him, yelling: “Hi, Mr B!” The school has 1,200 pupils, but he seems to know everybody’s name. When he started the chorus 10 years ago, he was newly arrived in the school and worried about the security of his position. “I was trying to be the music teacher that I thought I was supposed to be and not the music teacher that I am,” he explains, over a hasty pizza lunch. Eventually, he threw caution to the wind and decided to follow his instincts. “I always tell the kids that the most interesting music can come when you break the rules. That holds true for our chorus. They have a unique sound: these kids do not sound like typical elementary school kids.” Almost more moving than the sound they make is how expressive they are as performers. They sway and groove and make idiosyncratic hand movements along to the lyrics, finishing each song with whoops and yells. How does he get that sort of uninhibited performance from them? “Because if you don’t stop ‘em, they do it naturally,” he says, grinning. “It’s what happens when you put them in a setting where they’re comfortable and where it’s OK to goof. In the context of the group, that team spirit means they can really rise above their limitations.” And there are plenty of those. Most of the kids come from economically disadvantaged families and, as Breinberg says, many “really had big issues with behaviour. A lot are in special education.” Pupils only get to be in the chorus if they work hard and behave well. At the start of each academic year, Breinberg holds auditions and casts a new chorus, “and kids that really couldn’t sing on the pitch at the beginning but loved it and wanted it so bad that I just had to give it to them, they end up actually on key by the end of the year”. Today, former member 18-year-old David Bobe has come back to tell the chorus he’s just been invited on to American Idol. Nonetheless, “these are not prodigies,” Breinberg says. “It’s that group dynamic that makes this amazing thing happen. Hopefully I inspire them just the same way they inspire me. I think that’s why it works – there’s this whole foundation of respect: respect for me; respect for them; respect for the music.” And then it’s time for practice. Half-eaten pizza slice in hand, he yells “Chorus!” through the corridors and kids come running. They’re working on a version of the national anthem for an ice hockey game at Madison Square Garden the following week. The words are written on a whiteboard and he goes through each line patiently. “Does anybody know what ramparts are?” he asks. “Craziness?” offers one pupil. “Parts of a ramp?” suggests another. It’s a reminder that though they may sing with more soul than most of the artists they cover, they are still, of course, just kids. Cheering each other on, they all say that the best thing about being in chorus, as 10-year-old Jonathan puts it, is that “it makes everyone feel like they have more friends”. “The best feeling,” says Breinberg, “is when you see those kids rising above themselves. We just want to give them something to hold on to and something to inspire them to be better people. And all the beautiful music is almost incidental, you know?” Pop and rock Lady Gaga Beyoncé Tori Amos Oscars Kylie Minogue YouTube guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Occasionally Tweety comes up with a good one. Here he is with a panel discussing Michele Bachmann’s “ignorance”, and he doesn’t let her off the hook even for a minute, going all the way back to 2008. Here’s the thing: When Tweety says the right wing has adopted an “anti-intellectual cant, as if not knowing anything is somehow knowing everything,” he’s partly right. C&L member mmtwain quite accurately pointed out on my post yesterday , Bachmann isn’t really ignorant. She’s just playing it for TV. [S]he knows where Lexington and Concord are. I think it’s part of the deeply cynical strategy to appeal to the “regular folks.” The logic of “I’m just like you.” Oh, and look at those pointy headed intellectuals calling me out because I got the state wrong. I agree with the “garbage in, garbage out” comment, too. There is a way to challenge this stupidity, or this “glamorization of stupidity” as Aaron Sorkin calls it. She needs to be asked, “If a plumber couldn’t get the most basic pipe terms correct or if a carpenter couldn’t join two pieces of wood, you wouldn’t hire those people. So, if a politician can’t get the most basic facts of American history correct, then they shouldn’t be in the job. Why isn’t this being shoved out there the way stupid Fox memes are? That’s exactly right. Her audiences will forgive her little gaffe at the mic easily. Those mean liberals picking on her? They’re unforgivable. Bachmann’s True Believers will rise up to defend her. Nixon in a skirt, spreading faux populism everywhere she gaffes. BillO’s Pinheads and Patriots segment last night asked which she was. Wanna bet over 3/4ths of the audience call her a patriot?
Continue reading …Here's an example of a former newspaper man correcting a politician's claim — and his correction requiring a correction. Appearing on “The Tonight Show With Jay Leno” on Monday, MSNBC's Chris Matthews offered kneejerk condemnation of Mike Huckabee saying President Obama grew up in Kenya as “racist,” an assertion Huckabee had acknowledged as inaccurate. Matthews piled on, making his own demonstrably false claim in the process (video after page break) — LENO: OK, how about Huckabee? MATTHEWS: He gives a bad name to empty suits. LENO: What happened to Huckabee? He's talking, what's all this …? MATTHEWS: Huckabee, he's one of these guys that comes off as nice. He's, you know, a reverend and a minister and all this. He's out there selling that Barack Obama grew up with the Mau Maus in Kenya. …. followed by Matthews making an incoherent, apropo-of-nothing, self-congratulatory plug for his stint in the Peace Corps — MATTHEWS: I mean, the guy needs, I spent three years in the Peace Corps, I mean, and I've been back in the two years and I've been back and forth a lot, I, he never spent one day in his life in Kenya. He grew up in Hawaii. He spent like six, a couple of years in Indonesia, going to Catholic school there. The rest of the time he's playing basketball in Honolulu. We've got pictures of him playing for his team in Honolulu when he's a kid. We got the announcement when he was born in the Honolulu newspapers when he's born, and they killed, I think it's racist, I'm sorry. I think that's the game they're playing. Matthews's emphatic claim that Obama “never spent one day in his life in Kenya” is refuted by someone presumably considered an unimpeachable source to Matthews — Obama himself, specifically in his first book “Dreams From My Father.” In fact, not only does Obama's weeks-long visit to Kenya in 1987 comprise fully the last third of “Dreams From My Father” — with Part Three aptly titled “Kenya” — the emotional odyssey to his ancestral homeland is clearly a pivotal episode in Obama's life. In the book, Obama describes visiting the graves of his father and grandfather — At the edge of a neighboring cornfield, at the foot of a mango tree, I saw two long rectangles of cement jutting out of the earth like a pair of exhumed coffins. There was a plaque on one of the graves: HUSSEIN ONYANGO OBAMA, B. 1895. D. 1979. The other was covered with yellow bathroom tiles, with a bare space on the headstone where the plaque should have been. … How to explain the emotions of that day? I can summon each moment in my mind almost frame by frame. … It wasn't simply joy that I felt in each of these moments. Rather, it was a sense that everything I was doing, every touch and breath and word, carried the full weight of my life; that a circle was beginning to close, so that I might fully recognize myself as I was, here, now, in one place. … For a long time I sat between the two graves and wept. When my tears were finally spent. When my tears were finally spent, I felt a calmness wash over me. I felt the circle finally close. I realized that who I was, what I cared about, was no longer just a matter of intellect or obligation, no longer a construct of words. I saw that my life in America — the black life, the white life, the sense of abandonment I'd felt as a boy, the frustration and hope I'd witnessed in Chicago — all of it was connected with this small plot of earth an ocean away, connected by more than the accident of a name or the color of my skin. The pain I felt was my father's pain. My questions were my brothers' questions. Their struggle, my birthright. Obama “never spent one day in his life in Kenya,” according to Chris Matthews — providing that one ignores what Obama describes as one of the most significant days in his life. In a September 2010 Forbes magazine cover story “How Obama Thinks,” the basis for his perceptive book “The Roots of Obama's Rage,” Dinesh D'Souza describes the relevance of this scene, calling it “the climax of Obama's narrative” — In an eerie conclusion, Obama writes that “I sat at my father's grave and spoke to him through Africa's red soil.” In a sense, through the earth itself, he communes with his father and receives his father's spirit.
Continue reading …The head of England’s leading hospitals predicts that Andrew Lansley’s NHS reforms will lead to hospital closures Hospitals will shut, others will lose their accident and emergency or maternity units, and some will be downgraded to glorified health centres because of the
Continue reading …Click here to view this media You could tell, watching Sean Hannity this past week, that he has been chafing. His normal schtick is to take whatever’s in the news and then figure out an angle for attacking President Obama over it and off he goes. But that’s been really, really hard this week: All the news that he’s had to talk about has been about the Japan earthquake. It’s just been killing him. Finally, last night he figured out a way: Obama filled out his NCAA pool! He’s been shooting some hoops and playing some golf! Ohmigod! Best of all, who did he bring on to help him slag Obama for all his relaxation time? In addition to Useless Tool Stephen Moore, the segment featured Dana Perino. That’s right, the former press secretary for the president who took more vacation time than any president in history. You’ll recall that Bush was notorious for vacationing in the middle of major crises — the most notorious being his long break during Hurricane Katrina . He also notably went on vacation for an entire month after receiving that Aug. 6, 2001, Presidential Daily Briefing warning, “Bin Laden determined to strike in US” . All told Bush spent 1,020 days of his presidency on vacation. Bush spent 487 days at Camp David, and made 77 visits to his ranch in Crawford during his presidency, and spent all or part of 490 days there. But Obama’s disengaged from global affairs because he filled out his NCAA bracket? Really? One suspects that Obama could have walked across the Pacific, single-handedly repaired those nukes and restored those coastal towns and raised the dead, and these clowns would find a reason to blame him for letting the disaster happen in the first place.
Continue reading …Owner of house where Mandela buried gun as a young freedom fighter reportedly asking unaffordable price for it to be returned For historians in South Africa, it has become a holy grail. The pistol given to the young militant Nelson Mandela, and hidden by him underground half a century ago, has gone down in legend as the first weapon of the war against apartheid. But an attempt to reunite the 92-year-old with the artefact has collapsed into a bitter dispute between museum officials and the owner of a house where it is thought to be buried. The Liliesleaf Trust , which preserves the former headquarters of the armed wing of the African National Congress, said it had been denied access to the neighbouring property because of its owner’s “belligerent and selfish stance”. But Al Leenstra, the homeowner, said through his lawyer that he has offered to sell it at a reasonable price, and accused the trust of twisting the facts to manipulate public emotion. While the two parties continue to wrangle, the hopes of returning the gun – estimated to be worth 22m rand (£1.9m) – to South Africa’s first democratic president, or to the ANC in time for its centenary next year, appear to be dwindling. The semi-automatic Makarov pistol was presented to Mandela in 1962, reportedly on the instructions of emperor Haile Selassie, by the colonel in charge of his military and political training in Ethiopia. Mandela then returned to Liliesleaf farm, the secret base of the ANC’s military wing in Rivonia, Johannesburg, where he wore blue overalls to pose as a caretaker under the alias David Motsamayi. In July 1962, Mandela took the precaution of wrapping the gun in foil and an army uniform and burying it under a tin plate along with 200 rounds of ammunition. He was arrested soon after and charged in what became known as Rivonia Trial in 1963. In the decades that followed a number of new buildings appeared at Liliesleaf, including the house above the pistol’s apparent hiding place. Allister Sparks, a veteran journalist, recalled a visit to Liliesleaf with Mandela years after his release. “He was reminiscing about all the things that had gone on while he was there,” he said. “He said to the house maid, ‘Where’s the kitchen? I buried some weapons here 20 paces from the kitchen.’ “We went to the kitchen and he stepped out his paces but by the time he got to 10 he hit the garden wall. So it was over in the neighbour’s property … Anyway, we never found it and poor Nick Wolpe has been digging ever since.” Wolpe, chief executive of the Liliesleaf Trust, was asked by Mandela in 2003: “Have you found my gun?” He is eager to search the neighbouring property, but says he is now “being held to ransom” by an asking price of 3m rand (£265,000) to buy it. Wolpe said the search “has been brought to an abrupt halt by the unreasonable behaviour of the owner of the property” where the gun is possibly buried. “The property owner has backtracked and displayed a greediness, realising that there is much to be gained and in so doing has begun to exploit the situation,” he said. “It is very unfortunate that the homeowner has taken such a belligerent and selfish stance as the trust is extremely keen to uncover the whereabouts of the buried Makarov gun due to recent events surrounding Mr Mandela’s health. This is highly unlikely to happen now.” He added: “It is very sad and disappointing as we very much would like to find the gun while Mr Mandela is alive.” Wolpe said there had been years of negotiations with several adjacent properties for a “fair and reasonable price”. “I am extremely angry and frustrated. We’ve made it clear over the years that it’s a negotiated purchase and we’re not prepared to pay over the odds.” But Bobbie Lanham-Love, a lawyer representing 77-year-old Leenstra, insisted: “It’s a reasonable price, in accordance with the price quoted by Mr Wolpe last year, not two or three times the value or anything like that. The truth is that our client could probably go to the market and realise a much higher value.” Lanham-Love accused the trust of twisting the facts to play on public sympathy: “Nelson Mandela is our greatest hero. It’s so easy to hide behind the facade of an emotional argument like this.” Nelson Mandela South Africa David Smith guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Former Lib Dem leader to stand with Ed Miliband at joint alternative vote campaign rally after Nick Clegg drops objection The row between the Liberal Democrats and Labour over a joint approach to the referendum on the alternative vote has been resolved after the former Lib Dem leader Charles Kennedy was given permission to share a platform with Ed Miliband. Nick Clegg agreed that Kennedy could appear alongside Miliband – and that Clegg will not be present. Plans for a Kennedy-Miliband rally were dropped last week after the deputy prime minister objected. Miliband called on Clegg this week to lie low during the referendum, saying his presence would reduce support for the yes campaign among Labour supporters. The joint event will occur on 29 March, but the episode has left bruised feelings on both sides that will take time to repair. Clegg will deliver a speech in Manchester on Friday urging yes to AV supporters to rise above party politics. He feels frustrated that Miliband is not doing more to campaign for a yes vote, arguing that short-term arguments between the two parties are dwarfed by the importance of the referendum. Lib Dems are also concerned that David Cameron is going too far in supporting the no campaign, including personal attacks on Clegg. The no campaign held a meeting in No 10 on Tuesday. As Miliband battled with Clegg, he suffered the embarrassment of seeing more than half his MPs sign a no to AV petition. The Labour leader was joined at a rally in London by Neil Kinnock, Oona King and Ken Livingstone. Three members of the shadow cabinet are openly campaigning against AV: Caroline Flint, Mary Creagh and John Healey. Flint, the shadow communities secretary, said that 5 May, which also sees local elections, will be a “referendum on Nick Clegg”. But she denied the Labour split on AV was a problem, saying there was an “open discussion” within the party. Lord Falconer, a former Labour cabinet minister and one of the patrons of the no campaign, argued that a no vote could precipitate an earlier general election. Writing in the New Statesman, he said: “Miliband could be prime minister sooner than many people think. And the way to achieve that is to reject his advice on AV. If the referendum is won by the yes campaigners, it would be advantageous for the Lib Dems to delay the general election until after AV is introduced in 2015, under the terms of the Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Act. “But if the Lib Dems lose the referendum, there will be no reason to delay – the quicker they get out of the coalition, the sooner they will be on the road to recovery with the electorate.” Clegg’s aides believe senior Conservatives are aiding personal attacks on the deputy prime minister. “Imagine if there was a no to Trident campaign,” said one, “and it was putting out posters attacking Cameron and Fox as warmongers, Lib Dem HQ was funding it and Nick was helping drum up cash … I don’t think so.” They believe Cameron has gone too far to assuage the concerns of his anti-AV backbenchers and is now helping the no to AV campaign too effectively. In the words of one senior Lib Dem, no to AV has become a “Tory front campaign”, and “anti-Clegg swift boat [a reference to attacks on John Kerry during the 2004 US election]“. On Tuesday, these tensions reached their apogee when the no to AV team held a meeting in No 10.Also on Tuesday night, Lib Dem activists were given the go-ahead to “highlight” the close Conservative ties to the NO campaign. AV Electoral reform Liberal Democrats Labour Ed Miliband Charles Kennedy Nick Clegg Allegra Stratton Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk
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