I heard two different talking heads yesterday say that President Obama had a report from the deficit commission that he didn’t follow. Dean Baker explains why that’s a crock: I know we are not supposed to say “lie” in Washington, but this is really get tiresome. There was no report from President Obama’s deficit commission. The rules under which the commission could issue a report were very clear. It had to have the support of 14 of the 18 members in a vote that took place by December 1, 2010 . There was no vote taken by that date, although 12 of the 18 members did indicate their support for a report produced by the commission co-chairs, Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson, on December 2. This means that there was no commission report. Therefore, when Dan Balz tells Washington Post readers about the recommendations of the deficit commission, he either has no clue what he is talking about or he is deliberately deceiving Washington Post readers. If he wants to be honest, he is welcome to refer to it as a report of the co-chairs and to even point out that the report had support of 12 of the 18 commissioners, but it is simply not accurate to describe it as a report of the commission. Btw, the headline of the piece describes the failure to reach agreement on a big deficit reduction package as a “lost opportunity.” Those reading through the piece would find that one element of this lost opportunity is the failure to raise the age of eligibility for Medicare . Wow, just think, if only Speaker Boehner and President Obama could have gotten their act together people aged 65 and 66 could now be paying for their own health care. We’re all really going to regret this lost opportunity.
Continue reading …American activist’s father says incomplete footage was given to court hearing into his daughter’s death in Gaza The family of Rachel Corrie, the US activist killed in Gaza while protesting against house demolitions in 2003, on Monday claimed the Israeli military authorities withheld video evidence during the Corries’ civil lawsuit and misled US officials on crucial details. Craig Corrie, Rachel’s father, told a press conference in Jerusalem that the footage from a surveillance camera near the scene of his daughter’s death submitted to the court was “incomplete”. Additional video material obtained by the family showed Rachel’s body in a different spot to the place identified by some military commanders, he said. He also alleged that the Israeli military had misled US officials on the position of Rachel’s body when she was killed. Rachel, from Olympia, Washington state, was killed while attempting to protect the home of a Palestinian family in the Rafah area of Gaza from being demolished by Israeli troops in March 2003. Her family and other activists who witnessed the incident say she was crushed by an Israeli army bulldozer. Following Rachel’s death the then Israeli prime minister, Ariel Sharon, promised US president George W Bush a “thorough, credible and transparent” investigation. An internal Israeli military investigation, which was never published nor released to the US government nor the Corries, concluded that the two soldiers who operated the bulldozer had not seen Rachel and that no charges would be brought. The case was closed. In March last year the Corrie family launched a civil case, accusing the military of either unlawfully or intentionally killing Rachel or of gross negligence. Hearings in the case ended on Sunday and a verdict is due to be delivered next April. “After more than a year of hearings, we are at this moment in much the same place as we were when they began – up against a wall of Israeli officials determined to protect the state at all costs, including at the expense of truth,” said Cindy Corrie, Rachel’s mother. “We came seeking accountability. We demand justice,” said Craig Corrie. The final witness in the case, Colonel Pinhas Zuaretz, told the court in Haifa that Rafah was a war zone in 2003 and “reasonable people would not be there unless they had aims of attacking our forces”. Members of the International Solidarity Movement, such as Rachel Corrie, were aiding “Palestinian terrorists”, he said. In arguing that the case should be dismissed, the Israeli government claimed Rachel was responsible for her own death. Both sides have 90 days to submit closing arguments in writing. Israel Gaza Rachel Corrie Ariel Sharon Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media We’ve had way too few voices calling out this kabuki theater on the debt ceiling for what it is, a manufactured political crisis, when the real crisis is the lack of jobs in the United States. Katrina Vanden Heuvel did just that on Reliable Sources today. KATRINA VANDEN HEUVEL: Yes. So I think in the last weeks, we’ve seen more attention paid for the fact you no longer have a Republican Party Richard Nixon would recognize. This is an extremist Republican Party willing to blow up the global economy by tethering draconian, cruel deficit cuts to the debt ceiling — a debt ceiling, by the way, Republicans seven times voted for to lift under George W. Bush. But I think the largest crisis the media — the media malpractice, Howard, is the fact that you have the idea, the concept that America is bankrupt. It is not bankrupt. What is bankrupt is the inside the Beltway consensus that the real crisis in this country is about deficits and debt. When you look at the front pages in the last days, the last few years, Howard, what is it? It is a jobs crisis. So, when you listen to Bill Daley on “Meet the Press” this morning and he said President Obama came to Washington to do something big, what we need is coverage of what a grand bargain on jobs could be, and the consequences of what we’re seeing inside the beltway for millions of Americans. Naturally no progressive can come on CNN without a conservative being put on as well for “balance”, so we got treated to Tony Blankley giving the usual Republican talking points on their refusal to raise taxes when we’ve got some of the greatest income disparity since the Gilded Age and painting Democrats who don’t like this deal as being unreasonable for not wanting to see our social safety nets cut instead of raising taxes on the rich. Full transcript below the fold. KURTZ: The clock is ticking as President Obama and Hill leaders meet again tonight to try to hammer out a deal to avoid a government default, even as House Speaker John Boehner warning last night that he wants a much smaller deal than the $4 trillion President Obama has been pushing. This high-stakes game of budgetary poker poses an unusual challenge for journalists. Democrats have been saying they’re negotiating in good faith by offering major spending cuts and modest tax increases, while the Republicans are holding the economy hostage by refusing to talk about raising revenue. The Republicans reject this, saying they’re protecting the economy by focusing on out of control spending. So, who’s right? Well, David Brooks, the conservative “New York Times” columnist called out the GOP this week in a way that most mainstream journalists have not. He writes, “If the Republican Party were a normal party, it would take advantage of this amazing moment. It is being offered the deal of the century: trillions of dollars in exchange for a few hundred billion dollars of revenue increases. The Republican Party may no longer be a normal party. Over the past few years, it has been infected by a faction that is more of a psychological protest than a practical, governing alternative.” Joining us now to talk about the coverage of the budget showdown, in New York, Katrina Vanden Heuvel, editor and publisher of “The Nation” magazine. And here in Washington, Tony Blankley, executive vice president of Edelman Public Relations and a former press secretary for Newt Gingrich. Katrina Vanden Heuvel, here’s David Brooks saying the republicans are not a normal party. Have most of the media been unwilling to point a picture and say the Republicans are largely responsible for blocking any deal here? KATRINA VANDEN HEUVEL, THE NATION: Yes. So I think in the last weeks, we’ve seen more attention paid for the fact you no longer have a Republican Party Richard Nixon would recognize. This is an extremist Republican Party willing to blow up the global economy by tethering draconian, cruel deficit cuts to the debt ceiling — a debt ceiling, by the way, Republicans seven times voted for to lift under George W. Bush. But I think the largest crisis the media — the media malpractice, Howard, is the fact that you have the idea, the concept that America is bankrupt. It is not bankrupt. What is bankrupt is the inside the Beltway consensus that the real crisis in this country is about deficits and debt. When you look at the front pages in the last days, the last few years, Howard, what is it? It is a jobs crisis. So, when you listen to Bill Daley on “Meet the Press” this morning and he said President Obama came to Washington to do something big, what we need is coverage of what a grand bargain on jobs could be, and the consequences of what we’re seeing inside the beltway for millions of Americans. KURTZ: I would agree that 14 million unemployed often get lost in this debate. Tony Blankley, I’m not taking sides here. The Republicans have — they’re standing on principles. But journalists could easily write that by saying we’ll negotiate anything, except tax increases, which is, of course, have the debate, Republicans are blocking progress toward a deal. TONY BLANKLEY, COLUMNIST FOR TOWNHALL.COM: Look, I’m in favor actually of objective journalism. KURTZ: OK. BLANKLEY: When I was Newt’s press secretary, I would seek out the journalists who knew the substance and were trying as hard as they could to report objectively. There’s not as many of those reporters and those news organizations around now as there used to be. If you have the choice between a transcription service, where the media just reports what each side says, and cheerleading, which I think is sometimes we ultimately we get, I’ll take transcription over cheerleading, but I prefer journalism over transcription. Let me give you just one example, and he’s a good friend of mine. Major Garrett of today’s “National Journal.” He’s one of the best reporters, he’s got a story on this budget, where he leads in the first two paragraphs characterizing Boehner’s position to Watergate, because he’s standing firm on no taxes. You have to get down to the 13th paragraph of a 15-paragraph story, before he says the Democrats are just as much to blame for refusing to deal with entitlements as the Republicans are for taxes. So, is that — Major is one of the best reporters in the business. Is that objective journalism? KURTZ: But on that point, Katrina, Democrats have their own sacred cows. Medicare is one of them. It’s a great issue for the Democratic Party. But President Obama has put nearly $500 billion in Medicare cuts on the table, saying the Republicans now should give something on revenue. But, again, I don’t see the press — I think the press is so worried about appearing to take sides that they don’t want to say, well, the Democrats took another step here and the Republicans, and, look, Boehner is under a lot of pressure from his Republican Caucus, are still digging in. VANDEN HEUVEL: But let me reframe it if I might. There’s too much covering this debate in terms of political gamesmanship, brinkmanship. What we need is not the grid of negotiation but the sensible policy, context and history. Senator Moynihan once said people have a right to their own opinions but not to their own facts. I think we need more reporting on stories, for example, like what “The New York Times” did in March of this year showing that G.E. profited $14 billion in 2010 and paid zero — nada — in federal taxes. These are the stories that should provide the context for understanding that there should be no moral, political, or policy equivalents between raising taxes on the very richest in corporations and taking away lifelines for millions of Americans who have already borne the brunt of these cuts. I come back to the fact that sourcing, Howard, sourcing journalistic issue. Where are the stories? We need more stories about the consequences of what is going on inside the beltway around this country. KURTZ: I understand that you want to broaden the media’s economic debate, but there is, of course, the August 2nd deadline, after which the United States government will be in default. VANDEN HEUVEL: It relates to that. KURTZ: Let me — let me bring Tony back in, because this whole argument about tax increases is an interesting challenge for the press. Obama says close what he calls tax loopholes — corporate jets, the oil industry, hedge fund managers, you know, great populist targets. Republicans — and that’s a modest amount of money, let’s face it — Republicans say that’s a tax hike. We don’t want to raise taxes. Shouldn’t journalists say most people wouldn’t think of ending ethanol subsidies as a tax hike? It’s the closing of a tax preference that a lot of people think can’t be justified. BLANKLEY: Well, it’s not a question really of what most people think, but what an objective journalist who’s informed judges to be the reality. And so, one man’s tax break is another man’s interest deduction, which is not a tax break but necessary to support — KURTZ: That’s a tax preference that lot of people love because they have housing (ph). But still costs the treasury money. (CROSSTALK) BLANKLEY: Yes. Well, the phrase “costs the treasury money” suggest it was the treasury’s money in the first place. KURTZ: Foregone. All right. BLANKLEY: But, look, I’m in favor of the journalism reporting in detail what each party is proposing and the history of those proposals. For instance, obviously, from the Republican point of view, in 1982, I was with Reagan and the White House. We had the (INAUDIBLE) taxing deal where Reagan was promised $3 of spending cuts for $1 of tax increase. The history was that he didn’t get all of the spending cuts. He got all the taxes. So, when you analyze what’s the likelihood of proposed spending cuts coming online, I’d like to see journalism report on the history of promised spending cuts and how many of them actually came out. That would be a useful — KURTZ: Sometimes they have. Do you think the coverage, Tony, has been fair or biased? BLANKLEY: Oh, I think it’s been in a broad zone of fairness right now, because it’s largely been transcription. It’s largely been they say — the Republicans say this about themselves, the — KURTZ: Right, which doesn’t help viewers that much. And, Katrina, I asked Eric Cantor, the House majority leader, well, what are you willing to give up since the Democrats have put an awful lot in the trillions of dollars of spending cuts on table, which they’re not necessarily in favor of? And he said, well, look, we don’t want to raise the debt ceiling. We’re raising the debt ceiling, that’s our sacrifice in exchange for spending cuts. Do you think the press has accepted that frame of the issue? VANDEN HEUVEL: Yes. I think, well, first of all, Howard, you know this better than I do — there’s no more one press in this country. There are two, three, four different medias. And Eric Cantor can’t. I mean, here’s a guy who has said, if you don’t play my game, I’m going to walk away. I mean, that is not politics. And though I think President Obama has too often led with compromise, there’s no question that if you look at the compromise that the Democratic Party has made rightly or wrongly in my view over these last six months, a year, there is a sense of shared sacrifice. I come back. I agree with Tony Blankley, by the way. Maybe our journalism can accommodate history or context, but we need to look back at the last 30 years and see how the tax burden on the very much rich is today at the lowest point in decades. That should play a rule in the conversations, Howard, about the debt ceiling, about deficit reduction. And, finally, the discredited supply-side economics that has infiltrated the media, call it bias or whatever, that is leading the way our coverage is framed. The idea that spending cuts lead to recovery or prosperity — no. KURTZ: OK. Well, there’s a great debate about that. Let me close with this, Tony Blankley. Each side has its talking points. You talk about transcription journalism. You don’t seem that uncomfortable with it, but I think it’s almost a surrender to just say one side says this, one side says that. Where is, you know — BLANKLEY: I completely agree. I think there’s a rich, recent political economic history to be reported on by the media and they’re not doing enough of it. I agree. I wouldn’t be — as a conservative Republican, I’d be very comfortable with a deep historic analysis and reporting by journalism regarding the history of tax cuts, budgets, revenue raises, whether you raise the rates, do you increase revenue. There’s a lot of good stuff there. KURTZ: Well, we still have an opportunity with the debate just really heating up and the deadline facing us. Let the record show, I got Tony Blankley and Katrina Vanden Heuvel to agree on at least one point here this morning. VANDEN HEUVEL: History. KURTZ: Thanks very much for joining us.
Continue reading …Balado, Kinross Jarvis Cocker once famously made headlines by wiggling his bum in front of Michael Jackson at the Brit awards, and on Sunday night he courted tabloid infamy again by pretending to wipe his posterior with the last edition of News of the World at T in the Park. “That’s all this is good for,” he sneered during Pulp’s triumphant set. So trusted is its promise of a party of epic proportions, the UK’s second biggest music festival has become a rite of passage for young Scots and a ritual for older ones that sells out long before the lineup is announced. A threatened deluge for the most part held off – at least until the final day – and sunshine occasionally split the clouds. This was a vintage year for T in the Park. The lineup boasted such an embarrassment of headliners that Beyoncé had to play second fiddle to Coldplay on Saturday night. Queen B – at her second and final UK festival appearance this summer – offered a more compact, hour-long version of her glorious Glastonbury set, and arguably bettered it. From the high-impact opener of Crazy in Love to a breathless Destiny’s Child medley, she was a class apart. Her undeniable star quality rubbed off on a sea of girls perched on friends’ shoulders during Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It), their left hands twisting in the air as the sun eased over the hills behind them. Perhaps unsurprisingly, there were lulls in a bill diluted by the necessity to try and offer something for everyone. Friendly Fires’ full-throttle indie raving felt like natural festival fare; less so lightweight turns from popsters Ke$ha and the Saturdays. As ever there were a smattering of heritage acts who brought some reliable fun. The party-starting mood of Tom Jones on Friday was captured by the simultaneously hilarious and mortifying sight of a chubby bloke doing a striptease in the mud to You Can Leave Your Hat On. Debbie Harry did an admirable job of stoking the atmosphere as the heavens opened during Blondie’s Sunday afternoon greatest-hits set. After Pulp’s memorable return to the stage in Scotland, it was left to Foo Fighters at the last to battle the worsening elements, and win, before the festival rounded off with a fireworks and lone-bagpiper finale. Rating: 4/5 T in the Park Pop and rock Pulp Jarvis Cocker Beyoncé Tom Jones Blondie Foo Fighters News of the World guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Balado, Kinross Jarvis Cocker once famously made headlines by wiggling his bum in front of Michael Jackson at the Brit awards, and on Sunday night he courted tabloid infamy again by pretending to wipe his posterior with the last edition of News of the World at T in the Park. “That’s all this is good for,” he sneered during Pulp’s triumphant set. So trusted is its promise of a party of epic proportions, the UK’s second biggest music festival has become a rite of passage for young Scots and a ritual for older ones that sells out long before the lineup is announced. A threatened deluge for the most part held off – at least until the final day – and sunshine occasionally split the clouds. This was a vintage year for T in the Park. The lineup boasted such an embarrassment of headliners that Beyoncé had to play second fiddle to Coldplay on Saturday night. Queen B – at her second and final UK festival appearance this summer – offered a more compact, hour-long version of her glorious Glastonbury set, and arguably bettered it. From the high-impact opener of Crazy in Love to a breathless Destiny’s Child medley, she was a class apart. Her undeniable star quality rubbed off on a sea of girls perched on friends’ shoulders during Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It), their left hands twisting in the air as the sun eased over the hills behind them. Perhaps unsurprisingly, there were lulls in a bill diluted by the necessity to try and offer something for everyone. Friendly Fires’ full-throttle indie raving felt like natural festival fare; less so lightweight turns from popsters Ke$ha and the Saturdays. As ever there were a smattering of heritage acts who brought some reliable fun. The party-starting mood of Tom Jones on Friday was captured by the simultaneously hilarious and mortifying sight of a chubby bloke doing a striptease in the mud to You Can Leave Your Hat On. Debbie Harry did an admirable job of stoking the atmosphere as the heavens opened during Blondie’s Sunday afternoon greatest-hits set. After Pulp’s memorable return to the stage in Scotland, it was left to Foo Fighters at the last to battle the worsening elements, and win, before the festival rounded off with a fireworks and lone-bagpiper finale. Rating: 4/5 T in the Park Pop and rock Pulp Jarvis Cocker Beyoncé Tom Jones Blondie Foo Fighters News of the World guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Balado, Kinross Jarvis Cocker once famously made headlines by wiggling his bum in front of Michael Jackson at the Brit awards, and on Sunday night he courted tabloid infamy again by pretending to wipe his posterior with the last edition of News of the World at T in the Park. “That’s all this is good for,” he sneered during Pulp’s triumphant set. So trusted is its promise of a party of epic proportions, the UK’s second biggest music festival has become a rite of passage for young Scots and a ritual for older ones that sells out long before the lineup is announced. A threatened deluge for the most part held off – at least until the final day – and sunshine occasionally split the clouds. This was a vintage year for T in the Park. The lineup boasted such an embarrassment of headliners that Beyoncé had to play second fiddle to Coldplay on Saturday night. Queen B – at her second and final UK festival appearance this summer – offered a more compact, hour-long version of her glorious Glastonbury set, and arguably bettered it. From the high-impact opener of Crazy in Love to a breathless Destiny’s Child medley, she was a class apart. Her undeniable star quality rubbed off on a sea of girls perched on friends’ shoulders during Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It), their left hands twisting in the air as the sun eased over the hills behind them. Perhaps unsurprisingly, there were lulls in a bill diluted by the necessity to try and offer something for everyone. Friendly Fires’ full-throttle indie raving felt like natural festival fare; less so lightweight turns from popsters Ke$ha and the Saturdays. As ever there were a smattering of heritage acts who brought some reliable fun. The party-starting mood of Tom Jones on Friday was captured by the simultaneously hilarious and mortifying sight of a chubby bloke doing a striptease in the mud to You Can Leave Your Hat On. Debbie Harry did an admirable job of stoking the atmosphere as the heavens opened during Blondie’s Sunday afternoon greatest-hits set. After Pulp’s memorable return to the stage in Scotland, it was left to Foo Fighters at the last to battle the worsening elements, and win, before the festival rounded off with a fireworks and lone-bagpiper finale. Rating: 4/5 T in the Park Pop and rock Pulp Jarvis Cocker Beyoncé Tom Jones Blondie Foo Fighters News of the World guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Italian 10-year bond yields hit 5.4% • Euro drops on fears of another bailout • Eurozone finance ministers meet over crisis Fears that Italy will be forced to seek a bailout sent Italian government bonds falling on Monday, as Europe’s most senior finance ministers gathered to discuss the ongoing eurozone debt crisis . The euro also dropped sharply, as City traders and analysts warned that Italy could be close to becoming the fourth member of the eurozone to require financial help. The concern was shared in Europe’s stock markets, where shares also lost ground. The yield, or interest rate, on an Italian 10-year government bond jumped to 5.4%, closer to the 7% level which is generally seen as unsustainable. “What will really concentrate the mind of the finance ministers will be the recent upward trend in Italian government bond yields,” said Gary Jenkins, head of fixed income research at Evolution Securities. “What would keep me awake at night if I was a European finance minister is that we are only about 2% away from a potential disaster scenario.” European Council president Herman Van Rompuy was scheduled to meet ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet, EU commission president José Manuel Barroso, EU commissioner Olli Rehn and Luxembourg’s Jean-Claude Juncker, who chairs the group of eurozone finance ministers, at 11am BST to discuss the crisis. Clouds have been gathering over Italy since Friday, when shares in several Italian banks fell sharply over concerns that they would fail the next round of EU stress tests . Economists have warned that the eurozone lacks the firepower to fund a bailout of Italy. German newspaper Die Welt reported on Monday that the European Central Bank is considering doubling its existing stabilisation mechanism to €1.5 trillion. “We are seeing contagion spreading to Italy. The bailout facility as it stands would be nowhere near big enough to deal with Italy,” Adam Cole, head of global currency strategy at Royal Bank of Canada Europe, told Bloomberg. The Italian blue-chip index, the FTSE MIB index, fell by 1.35%, while the Spanish Ibex lost 1.7%. Traders in London said the eurozone crisis was dominating attention again, with the FTSE 100 falling 13 points to 5976. “The risk is that we may well have already seen the best of the stock market strength for the moment,” said Yusuf Heusen, senior sales trader at IG Index. The euro lost more than a cent against the dollar, trading around $1.411. The cost of insuring the debts of Europe’s weaker members also rose on Monday. The Italian five-year credit default swap rose by 32 basis points to 281bp, which means it would cost €281,000 a year to insure €10m of Italian debt. According to the Financial Times , EU leaders are now preparing for Greece to default on some of its debts – abandoning hopes that private creditors might roll over their borrowings. Gavan Nolan, director of credit research at Markit, said this had driven up the cost of insuring Greek, Portuguese, Spanish and Irish government bonds. European debt crisis European banks Italy Europe Graeme Wearden guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Deputy prime minister meets family of Milly Dowler, whose lawyer has called on Rebekah Brooks to quit her position The deputy prime minister Nick Clegg has intervened in the row over News Corporation’s bid to take over BSkyB to make a direct appeal to Rupert Murdoch to “do the decent thing” and drop the deal. He said Murdoch should look at the public revulsion towards allegations about phone hacking, payments to police and an “industrial scale” cover-up at News International and reconsider his bid. It came after the deputy prime minister met the family of murdered teenager Milly Dowler, whose phone was allegedly hacked by the News of the World. The Dowler family’s lawyer, Mark Lewis, also called on Rebekah Brooks, chief executive of News International, to “do the honourable thing” and quit. Clegg told the BBC: “On the BSkyB bid, Rupert Murdoch is now in town in London seeking to sort things out. I would simply say to him, look how people feel about this. Look at how the country has reacted with revulsion to the revelations. “So do the decent and sensible thing and reconsider: think again about your bid for BSkyB. “Listening to Bob, Sally and Gemma Dowler, it reminds you that it is innocent families like them who have paid a very heavy price for truly grotesque journalistic practices, which are simply beneath contempt. We owe it to the Dowlers and other innocent victims of hacking to get these inquiries right, to make sure they are really strong, [so] they can get to the bottom of what happened and make sure it never happens again.” The dramatic intervention came as the government scrambled to solve the conundrum of how to delay or even veto the media magnate’s bid to gain 100% of BSkyB without facing legal action. Jeremy Hunt, the culture secretary, on Monday wrote to the media regulator Ofcom asking it to examine the recent revelations to see if they have any bearing on whether the Murdochs are “fit and proper” people to hold large broadcasting licences in the UK. Labour is threatening a Commons vote on Wednesday on the issue, which would not be legally binding but would make it almost impossible for the government not to act. Several senior Lib Dems have indicated that they could back such a vote if it is not too partisan. Clegg was speaking after a 50-minute meeting with the Dowler family to discuss their views on how the two inquiries the government is instigating should be carried out. The mother, father and sister of Milly Dowler – whose phone was allegedly hacked by investigators working for the News of the World in the days after she went missing – pushed Clegg to hold broad inquiries, not just restricted to the practices at the News of the World or the allegations of press payments to the Metropolitan police, but to other forces as well. Speaking from the steps of the cabinet office, the Dowler family’s lawyer Mark Lewis said his clients “take the view that Rebekah Brooks should do the honourable thing”. “They don’t see why she should stay in the job. They see this as something that went right to the top. She was editor of the News of the World at the time that Milly was taken in 2002. She should take editorial responsibility.” The former Scotland Yard deputy assistant commissioner Brian Paddick, who was also hacked and also attended the meeting, said Surrey police should have told the Dowler family that they may have been targeted. He told the press conference: “Apparently Surrey police knew at the time that the phone was being hacked into. Why they didn’t tell the family at all … is a matter for Surrey police to answer. What it does show is that this relationship between the police and the press is not restricted to the Metropolitan police.” Rupert Murdoch Nick Clegg Phone hacking BSkyB News International Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers News of the World Rebekah Brooks Milly Dowler Press freedom Liberal Democrats Brian Paddick Polly Curtis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Peter Robinson says ‘rioting is not the answer’ on eve of loyalist march past flashpoint republican area in north Belfast With less than 24 hours to go before the most controversial loyalist parade of Ulster’s marching season, the first and deputy first ministers of Northern Ireland have appealed for calm across the community. Peter Robinson, the first minister, said on Monday that while feelings were running high on the eve The Twelfth – when Protestants celebrate the battle of the Boyne, with marches – “violence and rioting” was not the answer. He called on “everyone to take a step back and think of the consequences before doing something which you will later regret”. A major security operation will be in force on Tuesday in north Belfast where Orangemen are scheduled to march past the republican Ardoyne area and nationalists are planning a demonstration. Residents have accused ministers in the power-sharing cabinet at Stormont of ignoring their community’s demands that a feeder parade is re-routed away from their area, which has been the scene of violent disorder in previous years owing to the opposition to the marches. Robinson said: “In recent weeks the eyes of the world have focused in on Northern Ireland for both all the right reasons and, unfortunately, all the wrong reasons. “As a government we are continuing to work hard to create jobs and investment and to build and grow our economy. “We must not allow the progress that has been made to be thwarted by those who want to drag us back to the past.” His deputy, Martin McGuinness, said it was “in the interests of everyone” to ensure that Northern Ireland had a “peaceful summer”. McGuinness said: “As a government we are committed to creating a better future for all. Some recent events do not help. Issues surrounding a small number of contentious parades need to be resolved. “I call on elected representatives, community leaders and indeed everyone in positions of authority within local communities to use their influence wisely this summer.” The Greater Ardoyne Residents Committee said it would be the politicians’ fault if violence erupted during the parade. Northern Ireland Peter Robinson Martin McGuinness Police Henry McDonald guardian.co.uk
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