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Riot sentence rift opens between Liberal Democrats and Conservatives

Lib Dem peers warn of ‘loss of proportion’ and Simon Hughes calls for ‘relative leniency on first-time offenders’ Two of the most significant figures in the British legal establishment have made urgent warnings about tough sentencing for riot-related offences as the split in the coalition over the response to last week’s violence dramatically widened. Lord Macdonald, who led the prosecution service in England and Wales for five years, warned that the courts risked being swept up in a “collective loss of proportion”, passing jail terms that lack “humanity or justice”. Meanwhile his fellow Liberal Democrat peer Lord Carlile, the barrister who was until this year the government’s independent adviser on terrorism strategy, warned against ministerial interference in the judicial process, arguing that “just filling up prisons” would not prevent future

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Laura Clawson at Daily Kos reports : Members recently received letters from Verizon announcing that it is canceling group benefit plans for striking workers. This is an action which employers often take in strike situations to try unsettle the resolve of the strikers. At CWA, we have faced this issue many times in the past and always protected our members and their families so that no one is harmed as a result of management’s ruthless act. This will be true for this strike as well. Rather than attempting to negotiate a fair settlement with the workers, Verizon has decided to go the punitive route, trying to break the striking workers. Verizon has never attempted to approach this situation in good faith and this is another example of that. The Communications Workers of America say they are familiar with the tactic, though, and that they will make sure to take care of the working families affected by this move.

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Laura Clawson at Daily Kos reports : Members recently received letters from Verizon announcing that it is canceling group benefit plans for striking workers. This is an action which employers often take in strike situations to try unsettle the resolve of the strikers. At CWA, we have faced this issue many times in the past and always protected our members and their families so that no one is harmed as a result of management’s ruthless act. This will be true for this strike as well. Rather than attempting to negotiate a fair settlement with the workers, Verizon has decided to go the punitive route, trying to break the striking workers. Verizon has never attempted to approach this situation in good faith and this is another example of that. The Communications Workers of America say they are familiar with the tactic, though, and that they will make sure to take care of the working families affected by this move.

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Arson, destruction, thievery, beatings and even murder – they’re the inevitable reaction to increased college tuition fees? To hear the broadcast news networks spin the violence and looting convulsing English cities in August, the riots were clashes between the “haves and the have-nots” (a term used by NBC reporter Martin Fletcher) in British society. According to the networks, an oppressed minority unleashed pent-up rage against a conservative government hell-bent on cutting government spending and creating economic inequality in the process.

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Anna Hazare’s fight for change has inspired millions of Indians

The arrest of the anti-corruption campaigner has brought people from all walks of life together to demand an end to the old ways At the time I write this, millions of my countrymen are on the streets, fighting for a strong anti-corruption law. Many more are glued to their TV sets, watching developments as the initially defiant Indian government looks on track to eat humble pie. This fight is led by Anna Hazare, a 74-year-old activist, who is on hunger strike until parliament considers the bill that would establish a Lokpal – ombudsman – with the power to investigate and punish corrupt politicians and civil servants. Hazare had fasted in April and forced the government to agree to include his team in drafting the bill. His non-violent yet aggressive, Gandhi-like method of protest, together with his anti-corruption cause, struck a chord with Indians. Thousands of non-government organisations fight for social causes every day in India, but none has ever achieved this kind of support. From rickshaw drivers to software engineers, from businessmen to spiritual leaders, people from all walks of life back Anna. So do I. This level of support is unusual here. The usual Indian response is phrases all of India’s young are used to hearing from the older generation: “Nothing will ever change in this country”, “nobody can touch the powerful”, and “the common man is meant to suffer”. Cynics thrive in India, and they have ample evidence to support their attitude. After all, things have not changed much over the past five decades – governance is as incompetent and corrupt as ever, and the guilty are almost never punished. Archaic laws, designed for autocratic, colonial rulers with no accountability (yes, blame the British for everything) have been retained and abused to the hilt by the current politicians. Power talks; truth and justice are often crushed. We remain a poor country, despite having world-class talent and ample natural resources. And yet, something is different about India’s class of 2011. Despite all the Uncle Cynics, people from all walks of life came forward to fight for the bill. From their parents’ generation that said “nothing will ever change”, they came forward to say: “I am the change.” I had spotted this desire and aggression in the young during my travels as a speaker in 50 Indian cities over the past two years. I could sense a disconnection between the aspirations of the young and the leaders. I never imagined a 74-year-old could tap into it so well. Yet, even though the government agreed to engage with Anna in April, it backtracked and insulted, ignored and snubbed his team during the drafting of the new legislation. The government made a lame, impotent bill of its own which covered only 0.5% of the government’s officers, and disincentivised whistleblowers. The government hoped that with half of India illiterate, and most of the other half ignorant, nobody would know the difference. Disillusioned, Anna threatened to start another fast on 16 August. The government played shady games, like not giving him a venue or not letting him set up a tent in the rainy weather. Support grew as people witnessed the government’s hubris on television. In a serious lapse of judgment, the government arrested Anna from his home on the morning of 16 August. News spread, and the nation exploded on to the streets. By evening, the government wanted to release him. In a masterstroke, Anna refused to come out of jail, and continued his fast there. The country is in a frenzy, and the government is in a fix. The ruling class, most from three generations ago, are bewildered. They don’t understand movements going viral, with social networks acting as catalysts. Seasoned politicians they may be, but they cannot fathom why students from the premier Indian institutes of technology and farmers from rural villages are backing this activist, who seems to have come from nowhere. What’s worse, the government cannot figure a way out. If it passes an anti-corruption law, many of its own lawmakers may end up in jail. If it does not, people will keep flooding on to the streets. The best outcome would be for the government to eat humble pie and bring Anna back to a real, equal negotiating table. Whether it will or not remains to be seen. What has happened? How has a sleepy, defeatist India suddenly been galvanised into action? Why do our people, used to a feudal-colonial setup for centuries, suddenly want their politicians to be accountable, rather than treat them like kings? It is difficult to answer these questions at the moment, as we are still in the middle of the movement. However, a few things are clear: India seems to have suddenly woken up to an intense craving for the good and the honest. With Anna’s repeated success at shaking the government, it has also become cool to be righteous. The young generation, brought up to believe that power is everything, now sees a role model in Hazare, who is taking the mickey out of India’s most powerful by goodness and virtue alone. This mass infusion of morality in young Indians will be the biggest contribution of this movement, beyond the actual law. Truth has trounced power, and that does not happen very often in India. On a flight from Delhi to Mumbai on 16 August, I teased a policeman at the airport security check. I asked him why the police arrested Anna in the morning. He kept a studied, official silence as he frisked me and stamped my boarding pass. As I left the checkpoint, he whispered in my ear: “Sir, my seniors may be with the government, but I am with Anna.” Chetan Baghat is India’s best-selling English-language novelist and, according to Time magazine, one of the 100 most influential people in the world. Born in Delhi in 1974, he travels widely in his home country, often to small towns. His books deal with the lives, fears, aspiration and troubles of young Indians. Anna Hazare India corruption index guardian.co.uk

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A life unravelled … whistleblower who incurred wrath of the Murdoch empire

Relentless legal pursuit of ex-News Corp employee likened to ‘Rambo tactics’ Five years ago Robert Emmel was enjoying the American dream. He lived in a detached house in a suburb of Atlanta, Georgia, drove a BMW, and earned $140,000 a year as an accounts director in a highly successful advertising company called News America Marketing. Today, Emmel is described by his lawyers as destitute. Jobless and in debt, he was discharged from bankruptcy last year. He does occasional consultancy work that last month brought in $500, and this month, court documents show, will probably produce nothing. His wife’s earnings raise monthly household income to about $3,000 – half their outgoings. This is a cautionary tale about what can happen to someone who dares to become a corporate whistleblower. Or, more specifically, someone who incurs the wrath of News Corporation, the media empire owned by Rupert Murdoch, of which News America forms a part. Emmel’s lawyer, Philip Hilder, has had a ringside seat at the gradual unravelling of his client’s life. A former federal prosecutor based in Houston, Texas, Hilder is well versed in whistleblower cases having represented Sherron Watkins, who helped uncover the Enron scandal. Hilder said: “News America has engaged in Rambo litigation tactics. They have a scorched earth policy, and it’s taken a huge toll on him.” News Corp has devoted the efforts of up to 29 lawyers to pursuing Emmel personally, at a cost estimated at more than $2m. Emmel, by contrast, has relied on two lawyers, Hilder and Marc Garber in Atlanta, working for no pay since January 2009. Attention has been focused on News Corporation’s activities in the UK, where the News of the World phone-hacking scandal has led to the arrest of 10 people associated with the company. In the US, oversight of News Corp is gathering pace with the department of justice and the FBI looking into the company, while senators are considering launching committee hearings into News Corp practices. One incident that US investigators are exploring is the hacking of a website run by one of News America’s rivals, an instore advertising business called Floorgraphics. The firm discovered that its password-protected site had been breached from an IP address at News America’s offices in Connecticut. News America has condemned the breach as a “violation of the standards of our company” but says it does not know how it happened. Emmel was one of the main witnesses for Floorgraphics at a subsequent trial against his old company. He worked for News America for seven years from 1999 to 2006, turning whistleblower in his final year there. The company is the leading US provider of in-store advertising services, helping to bring products from firms such as Coca-Cola, Kraft and Nabisco to the attention of supermarket shoppers. Headed by Paul Carlucci, who now publishes Murdoch’s tabloid the New York Post, it enjoys annual revenues of more than $1bn and has a 90% stranglehold on the market. News America also has a record of legal disputes with its commercial rivals, three of whom have launched lawsuits against it in recent years accusing the firm of using unlawful practices. All three lawsuits – including the Floorgraphics one and cases initiated by Valassis and Insignia – were eventually settled, but not before News America agreed to pay an astounding $655m to end the disputes. Emmel acted as a whistleblower in all three cases. He gave two days of evidence in the Floorgraphics trial after which News America rapidly settled, and was also named in the Valassis and Insignia cases. By 2006 Emmel said he was increasingly concerned about what he alleged were improper practices on the part of his employers. He alleged that News America was engaging in “criminal conduct against competitors” and using “deceptive and illegal business practices” to defraud its retailer customers out of money owed. He claimed he had “substantial oral and documentary evidence” to support his allegation that the company had defrauded its own customers, used anti-competitive techniques against rival companies, and fraudulently inflated its reported earnings unbeknown to its shareholders. News America denies the allegations. In a statement, it said: “There have been three very public lawsuits about these matters and at no time during any of these legal proceedings was any evidence produced to support Mr Emmel’s claims.” For a year before he was sacked in November 2006, Emmel began compiling documentary evidence that he suggested backed up the allegations, and posted it to public bodies and individuals including the US securities and exchange commission, two senators, two Senate committees and the New York attorney general. It is not known what happened to Emmel’s allegations within the regulatory bodies he approached. He posted one set of 55 pages of documents on 20 December 2006, shortly after he had been fired and a day before he signed a non-disclosure agreement with News America. That set of documents went to Nicholas Podsiadly, an official in Washington then working as an investigative counsel at the Senate finance committee. At one point, court documents show, Podsiadly said the committee was considering referring the allegations to the justice department and the federal trade commission. Podsiadly did not reply to a request for information. A spokeswoman for the finance committee said nothing would be done with any documents sent by Emmel until the litigation over them had ended. Emmel today remains under a court-imposed injunction that forbids him from disclosing anything from these documents. “I cannot comment,” he said. News America learned of Emmel’s whistleblowing activities after it had sacked him in a dispute over his timekeeping. It then unleashed its legal armoury against him. In April 2007 it filed a lawsuit accusing him of six violations relating to his disclosure of confidential information, pressing its case with more than 300 pleadings to the Georgia courts. The company said Emmel refused to return “tens of thousands of stolen documents” and added: “Initiating legal action was News America Marketing’s only recourse to protect the company’s private information.” Despite the tenacity with which it has pursued Emmel, News America has had very little satisfaction through the courts. In March 2009 the district court in Georgia threw out all of its claims against him, bar one – a claim of breach of contract relating to his posting of the 55 pages of documents the day before he signed a non-disclosure agreement. Even that count, however, has been overturned by the US appeal court, which ruled in Emmel’s favour in June, although the court kept the non-disclosure injunction in place noting that a significant proportion of Emmel’s legal fees had been paid by News America’s competitors. In 2009 the company made clear that it intended to go to trial to ask for $425,000 from Emmel to cover legal costs incurred in the breach of contract element of the lawsuit, as it was entitled to dothough the sum was way beyond his ability to pay. Emmel’s lawyers say the move forced him into bankruptcy. News America then insisted on a deposition to extract financial information out of Emmel, a move that is allowable under the law but that astonished Emmel’s bankruptcy lawyer, Danny Coleman, because he says there had been no suggestion from the authorities that anything about the bankruptcy was out of order. “In my view, that was an abuse of the legal system,” he said. “They took the law to its extreme and they used it to harass my client and prolong his agony. After months of work on the deposition, nothing irregular was found. Hilder said he was struck by an irony in the Emmel case. “Here is a company, News Corp, that is in the business of disseminating information to the public, and yet its subsidiary does everything in its power to silence him.” News America denies engaging in inappropriate litigation and insists that it only wants to protect commercially confidential information, adding that Emmel’s lawyers were “once again attempting to distort the facts in this case”. The company added it had “vigorously defended itself against Mr Emmel’s charges against the company, all of which were dismissed by the court”. It says the injunction does not prevent him from co-operating with any formal investigation into News America. The idea that Emmel had been driven into destitution was “preposterous”, it said, “given his legal fees – to the tune of $750,000 – were paid by two competitors to News America”. Emmel’s lawyers do not dispute that until 2009 he received legal fees from Floorgraphics and Insignia, but say that was consistent with his role as a whistleblower against his old company. While legal proceedings continue, the injunction preventing Emmel from approaching corporate regulators remains in place. But the appeal court in June made one important proviso. Nothing in the injunction, it ruled, “prevents Emmel from complying with grand jury or court-issued subpoenas or from co-operating with law enforcement authorities in any formal investigations of News America”. News Corporation Media business United States Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk

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Charlie Spiering of the Beltway Confidential blog for the Washington Examiner yesterday noted how President Obama is pining for the days of monolithic media, when Americans all watched, and trusted, liberal anchor Walter Cronkite [video follows page break]: While President Obama was in Iowa, he was asked about the heated rhetoric and unwillingness to compromise. The President compared himself to Lincoln, as highlighted by Byron York, then he compared Washington politics to his marriage,(“I let Michelle have her way 90% of the time”) and finally blamed the changed media landscape for the rise in partisan politics. “It used to be that everybody was sitting there watching Walter Cronkite, now everybody is on their own little blog or on their own separate news forum. If you're a Democrat you're reading the New York Times, if you're a Republican, you're watching Fox News. . . people don't listen to each other much.” Well, at least he admitted the obvious: the New York Times is gospel to the Left.

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Unemployment rises sharply, official figures show

The government has repeatedly pointed to job creation by the private sector as reassuring news in the face of the slowdown David Cameron’s hopes that rising job prospects would help to draw a line under the social unrest on Britain’s streets have been dashed by the latest official figures, which reveal a sharp increase in unemployment. The government has repeatedly pointed to job creation by the private sector as reassuring news in the face of the slowdown in economic growth over the past nine months. But the Office for National Statistics revealed that unemployment jumped by 38,000 to 2.49 million in the three months to June, on the government’s preferred measure which includes all those out of work and actively looking for a job. The increase would cancel out the 30,000 jobs George Osborne hopes to create with his new enterprise zones, 11 more of which have been were announced. The unemployment rate rose to 7.9%, from 7.8% in the previous quarter. On the more timely claimant count measure, unemployment was up by 37,100 on a month earlier – the biggest increase since February 2009, when the economy was deep in recession. The figures showed that youth unemployment has risen again, after dropping in recent months, and there was fresh evidence that high unemployment could have been a contributing factor to last week’s wave of rioting. Analysis by the TUC showed that several of the hotspots were among the 10 areas of the country where the largest number of claimants are chasing each job vacancy. Employment minister Chris Grayling conceded that the news was disappointing. “We always said that the road to recovery would be choppy. Clearly this has been a difficult few months with a range of one-off factors and a slowdown in the world economy having an impact on the UK. This is why we are focused on taking steps to increase growth, support the economy and encourage businesses to invest and create jobs.” Other indicators of the strength of the jobs market, including the number of hours worked across the economy and the number of vacancies available, all revealed a marked deterioration. Michael Saunders, UK economist at Citigroup, said: “The labour market data showed broad-based weakness, with slowing employment, rising unemployment, falling hours, falling vacancies and rising redundancies. Further significant increases in unemployment probably lie ahead for coming months.” A record 1.26 million people reported that they were working part-time or in a temporary job because they had been unable to find a full-time role. Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit, said, “business confidence clearly needs to rise before employment growth will pick up again, but at the moment the surveys suggest that companies remain worried about economic growth both at home and abroad and are generally erring towards cost-cutting rather than expansion”. Labour warned that the government’s deficit-reduction plans could be blown off course by rising joblessness. Kerry McCarthy, a shadow Treasury minister, said: “The Tory-led government is at risk of creating a vicious circle of lower growth and higher unemployment – fewer people in work paying taxes makes it harder to get the deficit down.” The TUC’s analysis showed that in the London borough of Haringey, which includes riot-hit Tottenham, there are almost 29 benefit claimants for every vacancy. With only 367 vacancies and 10,518 people out of work and claiming benefit, Haringey is second in the list of places where jobs are hardest to find. Hackney and Lewisham, which were also affected by rioting, are also in the top 10, with 22 and 21 claimants respectively for each potential job. In Hackney, there were fewer than 500 vacancies for more than 11,000 claimants, while in Lewisham just over 10,000 people were after 487 available jobs. In London as a whole, unemployment as measured by the claimant count rose by 22,000 between April and June, the latest month for which data is available, pushing the total above 400,000. The TUC analysis found that seven of the UK’s toughest labour markets were in Scotland and Wales, which were unaffected by last week’s riots. West Dunbartonshire had the highest ratio of claimants to available jobs (31.8), with 3,815 people and 120 vacancies. David Blanchflower, the labour market economist and former member of the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee, said: “The relative matters: if you live in Hackney, you can very easily see people in Islington doing just fine: it’s being waggled in front of you.” Young people had borne the brunt of the weakness in the labour market, he said. A total of 949,000 16- to 24-year-olds, or 20.2% of the young workforce, were unemployed, the figures showed. Women also appear to be suffering disproportionately, because of their high concentration in the public sector. Of the 38,000 increase in unemployment over the quarter, 21,000 were women, according to the ONS. The number of women out of work is now 1.05 million, the highest since the spring of 1988. For those who have managed to stay in work, there was some evidence that pay deals are starting to creep up, with average earnings growing at an annual rate of 2.6%, up from 2.3% in the three months to May. Unemployment UK riots David Cameron Young people Women Heather Stewart guardian.co.uk

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I said I wasn’t going to watch Hannity anymore after Juan Williams called him myopic and a liar because he’s too toxic to my nervous system, but I stumbled upon this dang video clip and it pulled me back in, again. If you ask many Republicans today, they will tell you that the $700 billion financial bailout Bernanke actually happened under Obama’s watch even though the mortgage collapse happened under George W. Bush and he was front and center begging for the cash. Struggling to stave off financial catastrophe, the Bush administration on Friday laid out a radical bailout plan with a jawdropping price tag – a takeover of a half-trillion dollars or more in worthless mortgages and other bad debt held by tottering institutions. —- A grim-faced President Bush acknowledged risks to taxpayers in what would be the most sweeping government intervention to rescue failing financial institutions since the Great Depression. But he declared, “The risk of not acting would be far higher.” The administration is asking Congress for far-reaching new powers to take over troubled mortgages from banks and other companies, including purchasing sour mortgage-backed securities. Administration officials and congressional leaders are to work out details over the weekend. — Bush said simply, “We must act now.” “America’s economy is facing unprecedented challenges. We’re responding with unprecedented measures,” Bush declared, standing in the White House Rose Garden with Paulson, Bernanke and Christopher Cox, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission… read on The ease by which Hannity lies is really frightening when you think about it . Sean Hannity may have just gone on record as the last person on the planet to recognize the housing bubble . On Tuesday, Hannity offered a simple — and spectacularly ignorant — explanation for the mortgage crisis: Obama’s “policies;” Obama’s “fault.” It’s unfortunate that disinformation like this is happening 24/7 on Fox and AM hate talk radio, but that’s the truth of it. I now rescind my previous promise of never checking out Hannity. There’s no Beck so I do have to keep track of these propagandists. At least Beck was so over the top crazy for a while with his chalk boards and conspiracy theories that I would occasionally fall down laughing.

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Care home firm at heart of abuse allegations closes third unit

Castlebeck closes Arden Vale, a centre for people with learning disabilities and mental health A third care home run by Castlebeck, the care company at the centre of allegations of abuse against vulnerable patients, is to close. The Care Quality Commission (CQC) said the company had agreed to close Arden Vale, in the West Midlands, by next Thursday. It is a home for people with learning disabilities and mental health problems. Arden Vale was the subject of legal action by the CQC after it inspected the facility in June, which would prevent Castlebeck from operating at the site. The CQC said it had taken action after seeing “no evidence” of the improvements to care it had demanded. Castlebeck hit the headlines after an undercover BBC reporter secretly filmed vulnerable residents with learning disabilities at Winterbourne View hospital near Bristol being pinned down, slapped, doused in cold water and repeatedly taunted and teased. Winterbourne View closed in June. Last week the company announced that Rose Villa, also in Bristol, would close for operational reasons. Castlebeck, owned by Lydian Capital Partners, a Geneva-based investment fund backed by a consortium of investors including Irish billionaires Denis Brosnan, Dermot Desmond and JP McManus, said it was making “alternative arrangements for the 19 people in its care at Arden Vale”. Castlebeck chief executive, Lee Reed, said: “The safety and well-being of people in our care will always be of paramount importance to us. Poor quality care will not be tolerated. We remain deeply sorry and apologise for any incidences where our services have in the past not met the high standards that we, those we support and their families, expect and deserve.” Social care Mental health Health Randeep Ramesh guardian.co.uk

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