Cuts protests last winter prompted one police chief to warn of a new era of political unrest. But months later, the great British revolt went quiet. Will a teachers’ strike reignite the unrest? Just off a stairwell at the University of London Union, last winter one of the nerve centres of the student anti-cuts protests, there is a small, locked room. “Free Education For All,” read the old placards piled carelessly on a windowsill. “Protest/Strike/Occupy.” Stacked more neatly on the floor, like firewood, are hundreds of unused placard handles. Has the anti-cuts movement just been biding its time in recent months, while the coalition’s poll ratings have steadied and mass protests have almost ceased? Or has a certain momentum been lost? This Thursday’s planned strikes, the first big, overtly political ones since the coalition took office more than a year ago, should clarify the state of play somewhat. But what is already obvious, though not much remarked on, is that opposition to the government’s radical policies – policies for which it has provocatively little electoral mandate – has not developed in the ferocious way many people thought it would. Are most Britons simply not that angry with the coalition? Or is it that modern political anger has its limits? Seven months ago, the students who had just stormed the roof of Conservative party headquarters sent a text to journalists. “We are against all cuts,” the occupiers announced. “This is only the beginning.” Strikingly, within hours a government source described the disorder in London that day in exactly the same terms: “This is just the beginning. This is the first of a series of protests by various sections of society against what we are now doing. This sets the benchmark for other protests.” A fortnight on, after another turbulent student march, it was the turn of the head of the Metropolitan police, Sir Paul Stephenson, to forecast “disorder on the streets” as Britain entered a “new period” of political ferment. Through the winter and into the early spring, evidence of this apparent change kept coming: campus occupations on a scale not seen since the 1970s; the involvement of schoolchildren , and of young Britons of all classes, on the student marches; the massive all-ages anti-cuts demonstration in London in March; even the attack during the December student march on a Rolls-Royce containing a startled Prince Charles and Camilla – a world-turned-upside-down moment worthy of a revolutionary propaganda film. “In November and December there was this euphoria of dissent,” says Mark Fisher, a leftwing blogger and academic. “It made you think a new thing was coming.” In March, the radical publisher Verso rush-released a book, Springtime: The New Student Rebellions , on the unrest in Britain, the rest of Europe and the Arab world. “There is a new mood in the air,” declared the introduction. At Verso’s 40th anniversary party in London in November, intense-looking participants from ongoing student occupations met excited veterans of the legendary youth insurrections of the 60s. But then the great British revolt went a bit quiet. A plan to turn Trafalgar Square in London into a centre of resistance like Tahrir Square in Egypt came to nothing. The campus occupations ended. At the May local elections, the Liberal Democrats were mauled but the Conservatives did much better than expected. The wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton in April suggested that much of austerity Britain was still keener to gawp at rather than attack luxurious royal vehicles. Meanwhile, the spring’s unusual glut of sun and bank holidays and huge non-cuts-related foreign news stories also helped change the British political atmosphere. Just at the moment the long-dreaded cuts began to take effect, with the start of the current financial year, they almost disappeared from the front pages for the first time in many months. “It’s not that the anger has gone away, but without the constant flashpoints provided by the student protests, it feels more dissipated,” says Fisher. Owen Jones, another well-connected young leftwing writer, says: “The danger is just to have one-day [actions], almost to release a bit of anger, make the point, do some media-friendly protest-as-theatre, then go home – with no sense of where the protests go next.” University College London had the winter’s most high-profile student occupation . The grand square room the students held for a fortnight – talking to journalists, hosting sympathetic academics and celebrities, and turning the walls, according to an admiring London Review of Books article, into “a sort of slogan competition” – now looks as if the occupation never happened. The walls are slogan-free and spotless. The chairs are back in rows for the room’s usual round of exams and dinners and conferences. Outside in the main quadrangle, the occupation’s banners are gone, and students wander about in graduation gowns: non-political life goes on. Since January, pollsters have noticed this lull. “We expected to see more anger,” says Tomasz Mludzinski of Ipsos Mori. “The net satisfaction ratings for the government are holding up pretty well.” In the 70s Edward Heath, a more moderate Tory prime minister than David Cameron, infamously had ink thrown at him and a cigarette stubbed out on his neck by enraged voters. During Margaret Thatcher’s premiership in the 80s, Morrissey and Elvis Costello wrote songs longing for her death, Margaret on the Guillotine and Tramp the Dirt Down (” . . . when they finally put you in the ground/I’ll stand on your grave and tramp the dirt down”). Heath and Thatcher’s modest backgrounds, and Thatcher’s gender, made some people readier to hate them. Cameron’s old-fashioned male ruling-class aura, depressingly, prompts more deference and acceptance. In recent months, the double-digit leads Labour sometimes enjoyed over the Tories in the winter have disappeared, to be replaced by a flimsier advantage. The Conservatives’ ratings remain remarkably steady, at around the 36% they won in the general election. The proportion of voters worried about losing their jobs or being directly hurt by the cuts is, according to YouGov, slightly smaller now than it was in January. “We’ve had at least 18 months of everyone telling us, ‘It’s going to be hard,’” says Lawrence Janta-Lipinski of YouGov. “There’s been some very good perception management by the government.” Cameron, famously, used to work in PR. Others, too, have had things to gain from issuing apocalyptic forecasts: police chiefs shielding their budgets from the cuts; unions wanting to show their continuing political relevance; newer anti-cuts groups wanting attention; and a media hungry, as ever, for national crises. Meanwhile, Cameron’s U-turns – starkly different from Thatcher’s behaviour in office – have made his government’s policies look like bargaining positions rather than actual ambitions. Political anger needs a focus, and the coalition presents a moving target. Polls also show voters deeply split over who is responsible for the cuts and the feeble economy: besides the coalition, they blame the bankers, Gordon Brown’s government and the global economy. The parliamentary expenses scandal has also cast a long shadow, spreading a paralysing disillusionment with politics in general, evident in the poor performances of all three main parties in the 2010 election. Ed Miliband’s time as Labour leader has done little, so far , to unite and energise the coalition’s enemies. But his frustrating silences and missed open goals in the Commons are only part of a bigger problem. As a political vehicle and way of thinking, the British left has been losing ground for three decades. Even the fiery Mark Serwotka , head of the Public and Commercial Services Union and one of the instigators of Thursday’s strikes, conceded in this paper last December : “The union movement today is different from that of the early 1980s – the last time we faced such an attack on the public sector. Membership is barely half what it was, and anti-union laws constrain us.” Labour local authorities, too, lack the legal loopholes – and the political confidence – that enabled Ken Livingstone’s Greater London Council to act as a rallying point against Conservative policies in the 80s. Instead, with expressions of regret, and fierce but usually short-lived protests outside their council chambers, current Labour authorities have voted the government’s cuts through. In 2009, shortly after the financial crisis, Fisher published Capitalist Realism , a punchy but dispiriting book about the collective gloom created by a malfunctioning market economy and a shrinking left. Across the west, he wrote, there is a “widespread sense that not only is capitalism the only viable political and economic system, but also that it is impossible even to imagine a coherent alternative”. A related sense of resignation underlies public attitudes to the cuts: seen as “unfair” by a two-to-one margin in all YouGov’s recent polls, but also seen as “necessary” by the same margin. The sociologist Richard Sennett produces a good metaphor for the dread and passivity that has frequently been the British national mood since the general election: “It’s the snail pulling into its shell.” Thirty years ago next month, another economic slump and austerity government helped provoke Toxteth in Liverpool into the fiercest of the many riots of the Thatcher era. Toxteth is still poor: most of its eerily half-empty landscape of huge, often derelict Victorian properties, waste ground and boxy council estates is in the most deprived 1% of neighbourhoods in the country. The area remains profoundly alienated from the Conservatives, without a Liverpool MP since 1979. But residents seem more resigned than in the 80s. “The north ‑always gets hit worst by cuts,” says a pensioner in one of the few remaining shops, who has been in Toxteth since the 40s. “People are angry. But they’re really scared of losing their homes, their jobs.” A newsagent in the street where the 1981 riot started says: “This government can’t manage a thing. But when I get into debt, I blame myself first, the government second.” As we talk, a stream of customers ask him the prices of the cheapest sweets and sugary drinks: modern British escapism in action. “In the 80s, you could get 100,000 people on the streets in Liverpool against the Tories,” says Tony Nelson, a longstanding Liverpool trade union and community activist. “Those days are gone. People are watching Jeremy Kyle on TV all day. There is anger among the unemployed, but community groups like us, we’re keeping a lid on it for now.” But, he goes on: “The government needs to be very careful: they’re thinking of taking funds away from the community groups. People in this city have always had a disrespect for authority. If there’s one place where something kicks off, it’ll be here.” There are two ways that street unrest can badly damage a government. One is for the government to appear to have lost control, as with Heath and the miners’ strikes of the 70s, which led to power cuts and the police being swamped by mass pickets. The other is for protests to crystallise a wider dissatisfaction, as with the poll tax march and riot of 1990, which showed how out of touch the Thatcher government had become. In other circumstances, anger can fizzle out – or even backfire. The 1981 inner-city riots , the 1984-85 miner’s strike , and the immense 2003 anti-Iraq war march all temporarily shook governments, but left them even more publicly determined not to change course. In each case, they won a general election not long afterwards. So far for the coalition, the protests have been awkward rather than fatal. But it is more vulnerable than most recent governments. There is potential for splits both between and inside the coalition parties in response to well-organised opposition. The government’s many U-turns have made further campaigns against its policies likely. There is the economic situation: Britons are among the gloomiest of all westerners about their economy, according to Ipsos Mori. And there is the fact that austerity governments across the world are losing elections. In many ways the coalition, with its lack of a proper majority or mandate, and its faithful adherence to the free-market economics discredited by the financial crisis, resembles a cartoon character that has run off a cliff and, any moment, may feel the force of gravity. “After two years of this government, will the public be as forgiving? I don’t think so,” says Vidhya Alakeson of the Resolution Foundation , a thinktank which this year has been running focus groups of economically-stressed voters. She has found her interviewees “partly ignorant” about the impact the cuts will have on them, and “partly grateful to still be staying afloat” financially, for now, but also “a bit sad” at “losing out on options” they expected to have. After the seemingly endless boom of the Blair years, says Alakeson, “I don’t think those expectations have gone away.” And frustrated public expectations can be lethal for governments. Often, it is not until the second or third year that a British government’s poll ratings collapse. And Britain, like other rich democracies, is only just emerging from a long depoliticised era, dominated by the technocratic ideas explored in Adam Curtis’s recent BBC2 documentary series All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace , and by what Fisher calls the “debate and comment” culture of cathartic but politically impotent radio phone-ins and internet forums. The anti-coalition actions so far have at least re-established the idea that protest can be meaningful, and even enjoyable. And just as the cuts are turning out not to be the overnight apocalypse many feared, but a quieter, more relentless erosion , so the protests may not hurt the government immediately, but eat away at its perceived legitimacy for years until its rickety structure suddenly folds. “There’s a huge, slow momentum building,” says a spokesman for the rising activist group UK Uncut, which is scheduled to meet unions for the first time to discuss coordinated anti-government protests. “So far, UK Uncut has done single-day actions, but it will definitely have to look again at that model. There is some way to go in getting the Daily Mail readers who are outside their local library protesting at cuts and, say, striking teachers to link up.” Yet few doubt that interesting times are coming. On Newsnight a fortnight ago, a British political veteran gave his little-reported view of the prospects for unrest in Europe and beyond. “There is enormous discontent among young people,” he said, “about longterm unemployment, about the extent of economic problems . . . We will see political movements for change – not just in the Arab world.” And as he concluded his remarks, the foreign secretary William Hague looked intriguingly calm. Protest Cuts and closures Students Tuition fees Public sector cuts Public services policy Public finance David Cameron Conservatives Liberal-Conservative coalition Andy Beckett guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Hundreds of guards sentenced to between four months and seven years over 2009 mutiny that left 74 people dead Hundreds of Bangladeshi border guards who challenged the government in a deadly 2009 mutiny have been sentenced to up to seven years in prison. The bloody mutiny – which killed 74 people, most of them commanding officers – erupted at a crucial time for Bangladesh’s troubled democracy, just two months after the powerful military had handed power over to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s newly elected government. The guards began the revolt in late February 2009 during an annual gathering in the capital, Dhaka. They said they were fighting against alleged discrimination and demanding parity in pay and other perks enjoyed by commanding army officers. The mutineers opened fire, blocked roads and drove officers out of their offices and homes. Fifty-seven commanders, including the head of the paramilitary border security agency, were among the dead. The uprising quickly spread across the impoverished country that has struggled for decades with shaky democracy and chronic flooding that has stymied economic development. The military has backed 21 coups since the country’s 1971 independence from Pakistan. A court on Monday gave 108 border guards seven-year prison sentences, and another 549 guards sentences ranging between four months and six years, the force’s chief, Major General Rafiqul Islam, said. Hundreds of others charged in the case have yet to face the special court handling mutiny cases. The military has been angry with Hasina’s handling of the mutiny, which ended in negotiations and offers of amnesty for mutiny leaders. The government rescinded the amnesty offers, however, after dozens of bodies were found dumped in shallow graves and sewers. Hasina has pledged justice for the victims’ families. Bangladesh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The Hollywood actor, who plays the pro-democracy leader in movie, was deported on the day she arrived in Rangoon The Hollywood actor Michelle Yeoh, who stars as the pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi in an upcoming movie, has been deported from Burma. The Malaysian actor arrived in the country’s main city, Rangoon, on 22 June and was deported the same day because she was on a blacklist, a government official said. The official did not say why Yeoh was on the list, but Burma’s repressive government has routinely rejected the visa requests of journalists and perceived critics for years. Aung San Suu Kyi’s spokesman Nyan Win confirmed Yeoh had been deported but had no other details. The Luc Besson movie about Aung San Suu Kyi’s life, The Lady, is due out later this year, and Yeoh has said she hopess her portrayal of Aung San Suu Kyi will raise awareness about the Nobel peace prize winner’s story . Aung San Suu Kyi, 66, has spent most of the past two decades detained by the former military junta. She was released last year , days after an election that her party boycotted and in which she was barred from being a candidate. The vote was the nation’s first in 20 years, and in March the junta handed power to a civilian government. But critics say little has changed and the new government is merely a front for continued rule by the army, which has been in power since 1962. Yeoh visited Burma in December and spent time with Aung San Suu Kyi for the movie, which was filmed in neighbouring Thailand. Yeoh, a former Miss Malaysia, shot to international fame when she co-starred with Pierce Brosnan in the 1997 James Bond film Tomorrow Never Dies as a tough but beautiful Chinese spy. She has also starred in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and Memoirs of a Geisha. Burma Aung San Suu Kyi guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Aide to Cameron who died in Glastonbury had radical plans to make Tory membership more palatable No 10 and Conservative headquarters had been deeply involved and supported the radical plans to transform Tory party membership drawn up by Christopher Shale and leaked hours before he died in unexplained circumstances at the Glastonbury festival. The damning assessment by Shale, David Cameron’s constituency chairman, of the Conservative membership offer to voters was initially seen as a freelance operation. But it has now emerged that Shale’s strategy paper, Project Vanguard, was backed by Conservative HQ and was calculated to make membership more palatable to the “98% of Tory voters” who are “politics light” and would be terrified of canvassing. Shale, 56, had been feeling ill before he had found out about the leak, according to a source close to his widow, Nikki. A coroner ordered toxicology tests to be carried out after an initial postmortem proved inconclusive. The aim of the project was to launch proposals for membership on 6 October, the day after Cameron’s speech to the Conservative party conference. Some of the analysis by Shale, who was found in a toilet in a VIP area at the festival, had clear echoes of the 2002 conference speech by Theresa May, who as chairman of the party said the Conservatives were still seen as the “nasty party”. Shale’s goal was to boost party membership by recognising that membership, and the offer made to potential members, were deeply unappealing. The objective was “to achieve a transformational increase in membership of West Oxfordshire Conservative Association and to do this in ways other apply to similar effect nationally”. In his preface, Shale said he wanted to “thank everyone at Number 10 who has given their time support and ideas”. He wrote: “If one asks Tory voters as I have done many times over the years to complete the sentence ‘I should join the Conservative Party because …’ there is no compelling response. If there was I’d have heard it by now. There is not. The claimed benefits – the right to attend party conference, take part in selecting our MPs, and so on – are of zero interest to most current, let alone potential, members.” The leaking of the document might have proved embarrassing for Shale, but not devastating, even if it were written in a jocular tone that might have disturbed older party members. Shale listed reasons not to join the Conservatives, including “collectively we are not an appealing proposition”. He went on: “As a group we don’t look that much different to how we looked 10 to 20 years [ago]. Everyone else does. The perception is that we are too fond of looking inwards rather than outwards”. He added: “To many potential members the idea of Tory party social activity is at best rather a threat than promise, at worst a perfect oxymoron. And they are generally right.” He went on: “The widespread perception is that our party plunders its members at every turn… we rarely miss an opportunity to pick a member’s pocket. Their money disappears into a bottomless pit. And then we ask for more ad nauseam.” Shale said the public regarded membership as a big step, losing intellectual independence and being forced down a slippery slope leading “to leafleting on a wet Wednesday evening or worse still, terrifying in fact, canvassing”. Some people would be deterred by any idea they might be publicly identified as member of the party. They also fear “they have to support us even when you know we’re wrong”. He admits that “literally 98% of Tory voters are politics light” – meaning they are not really interested in politics and find heavy politics a big turn-off. He says the answer is to change the environment in which the Conservative party operates so it does not turn off “politics-light people” . He says the party has to give an undertaking: “We will behave look sound and present ourselves differently. We’ll raise money by earning it, not begging it. They wont be asked to sign up anything onerous, agree with all our policies or defend us when they think we’re wrong. They won’t be pressganged into activism. They will have the option to keep their membership as private as they want. They can leave at a moment’s notice.” His solutions included getting into “the events management business, a day in HMP Wormwood Scrubs, an evening with a non-politician celebrity, a great debate modelled loosely on the Oxford Union, a day watching prime minister’s questions .He also promised one social action element far removed from the stereotypical spectre of “marauding hordes of Tories armed with paintbrushes loose in the vicinity bursting with bonhomie furiously painting for victory”. Christopher Shale Conservatives Glastonbury festival Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Earlier today, a grand jury convicted former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich, a Democrat, on 17 of 20 counts of corruption. 11 of of the guilty verdicts related to attempts to profit from the “sale” of the U.S. Senate seat Barack Obama vacated when he became president. At USA Today's On Deadline blog (as of its 5:33 p.m. update), Michael Winter failed to identify Blagojevich or any other politician involved as a Democrat. Neither did the video found at Winter's article. This is not surprising, because the video came from the “see no evil Democrat” Associated Press. In six items all carrying today's date found at the AP's main site in a search on the former governor's last name at 8:15 p.m. ET, the wire service not only failed to tag Blago as a Democrat, it failed to tag anyone as Democrat. Here's the list: Related links are here , here , here , here , here , and here . They are saved at my web host for fair use, future reference and discussion purposes here , here , here , here , here , and here . ( Update: The 7:47 p.m. story above by Michael Tarm and Karen Hawkins was updated at 9:41 p.m. , and now contains the following text at the eighth paragraph: “The 54-year-old Democrat, who has been free on bond since shortly after his arrest, spoke only briefly with reporters as he left the courthouse, saying he was disappointed and stunned by the verdict.” As far as I'm concerned, that's way too little, way too late.) In the second-most blatant example in the AP's string of “Name That Party” failures (though the competition was fierce; wait until you see the most blatant example found in a seventh story which was not carried nationally), the item containing others' comments on the verdict carries the following quotes from Illinois Senator Mark Kirk and Illinois Governor Pat Quinn: In mild surprises, both the New York Times and Reuters tagged Blagojevich as a Democrat in the first sentence of their respective stories' second paragraph. Reuters's description of Blago as a “two-term Democrat” isn't correct, because he didn't finish his second term, unlike others who routinely receive the description before their terms are up. “Twice-elected” is the proper term for Blago. But let's get back to the self-described Essential Global News Network . Illinois, with its sad history of bipartisan corruption, is an interesting test of the AP's stated commitment to fairness , the consistency of that commitment over the years, and its claim to play no favorites. Illinois has had three governors convicted of crimes both during and after their terms in office since the 1960s: Otto Kerner, Democrat (1961-1969) — On February 19, 1973, four years after he left office but while he was serving as a federal judge, ” Kerner was convicted on 17 counts of bribery, conspiracy, perjury, and related charges” relating to his time as governor. Daniel Walker, Democrat (1969-1973) — “In 1987, he was convicted of improprieties related to the First American Savings & Loan Association of Oak Brook” unrelated to his time in office. George Ryan, Republican (1999-2003) — On April 17, 2006, he was convicted on 20 of 22 counts of “racketeering, bribery, extortion, money laundering and tax fraud” which occurred while he was governor. As to Kerner, the results of a Google News Archive search on “otto kerner convicted associated press democrat” (not in quotes) indicate that the AP's coverage carried at the Wall Street Journal on February 20, 1973 at least used the word “Democrat”; it's not possible to know whether Kerner was tagged, but it seems likely, especially since he was appointed to the Federal Appeals Court by Democratic president Lyndon Baines Johnson, and was “the first active member of the federal Court of Appeals ever to be convicted in criminal trial.” The New York Times's coverage of Kerner's conviction (a portion of which is shown here ) noted in its very first sentence that until his conviction, he “had been unusual in the rough-and-tumble world of Illinois Democratic politics — a product of the Cook County machine who had never been touched by scandal.” As to Walker, the AP's unbylined coverage carried at the New York Times on August 6, 1987 tagged him as a Democrat in its third paragraph. Ryan is an interesting case, because although a Republican, he gained much sympathy from the establishment press for his outspoken advocacy for ending the death penalty, and because, as the AP's coverage of his conviction noted, just before leaving office in 2003 he “commuted the death sentences of 167 inmates to life in prison and pardoned four others.” One AP item by Michael Robinson tagged Ryan as “long one of the most powerful Republicans in Illinois” in its sixth paragraph, while another waited until the 24th of 26 paragraphs to label him as “the Republican governor (who) declared a moratorium on executions in Illinois.” Now for the most blatant example of “Hide Blago's Party” — In a a historical compilation (“Sorry history of Illinois governors”) of previous governors convicted of crimes which is apparently being published regionally (it's not at the AP's national site as of 10:00 p.m. ET), the wire service opens by saying that “Illinois governors have (a) long history of legal trouble. Rod Blagojevich is just the latest example.” It doesn't tag Blago as a Democrat. The report then proceeds to list every other previously convicted governor — and his party. As I have noted so many times, the AP's Stylebook, at least as of 2008 (there's no substantive reason why it should change), had the following to say about when and how to report a person's political party affiliation: Party Affiliation – Let relevance be the guide in determining whether to include a political figure’s party affiliation in a story. Party affiliation is pointless in some stories, such as an account of a governor accepting a button from a poster child.
Continue reading …Scrapping ‘dead-end’ courses will ‘ensure students get their money’s worth’ as universities set to charge higher tuition fees University courses with a poor track record of employment will be “named and shamed” under government proposals to give students a clearer choice of degree and curb the costs of tuition fee loans. In a higher education white paper, ministers will ask for the publication of detailed information about the employment and earning outcomes of specific degrees. David Willetts, the universities minister, believes too many courses are not valued by employers. Ministers recognise some graduate professions, such as teaching or nursing, are less well paid than others. But they are concerned that only nine out of 141 computer gaming-related courses , for example, are accredited by the industry body. Scrapping or overhauling “dead-end” courses would limit losses to the taxpayer from students who fail to repay their loans. At present, two-thirds of universities are seeking to charge the maximum £9,000 fee from next year, despite wide variations in employability. A Whitehall source said: “The reforms are all about ensuring that students get their money’s worth. We’re asking graduates to contribute more once they are earning, so it is only right that universities deliver for students. Universities will become more accountable to students and they will have to be far more transparent about what they are offering.” Universities will be required to publish comparable data on teaching hours and accommodation costs, and to account for how fee income is spent. The government will expect them to publish online student surveys of lectures and courses, to stimulate competition between academics. The white paper comes as research revealed that graduates are facing record levels of competition for jobs, with more than 80 fighting for every position, research suggests. Employers are now receiving 83 applications on average for each job – almost double the numbers of two years ago (49), and nearly treble compared with three years ago (31) according to the Association of Graduate Recruiters. Ministers want teenagers to have better information when choosing A-levels by asking universities to publish the qualifications of previously successful applicants. The Russell group, for example, favours traditional subjects : maths, English, geography, history, the three pure sciences and languages. Sir Steve Smith, president of Universities UK, which represents the sector, said: “Students are not in a position to make critical decisions if they don’t have access to transparent and comparable information. But does everyone get the same access to information? “Amongst 18-year-olds, those in higher socioeconomic groups have their parents, and those in lower socioeconomic groups rely on [school] careers guidance. There is pressure on schools to increase their tariff scores, so they might get you to do an A-level that is not accepted by the most demanding institutions.” The white paper is also expected to free up recruitment of the 50,000 students a year who achieve grades AAB or higher at A-level. Today, universities have a fixed number of government-funded places for home undergraduates each autumn, and are fined if they over-recruit. Expansion by grades would reward selective schools. Nearly a third of students achieving AAB or above are at private schools – about 16,000 – and 20% of those achieving the top grade at state sixth forms are in grammar schools. The Office for Fair Access, the government watchdog which vets proposals to charge fees above £6,000, has been privately warning universities that they must set higher targets for admissions of low-income students. One highly-ranked university, which did not want to be named, was told by Offa it was not enough to measure itself against its rivals. “Our aim is to improve the performance of the sector as a whole and we therefore need you to improve your absolute performance … as well as measure how you are doing compared to others,” the watchdog wrote. “Please consider this issue as soon as possible and make any amendments you think appropriate …” The white paper is expected to propose scaling back of student quotas under a model known as “core-margin”. A reduced number of places will be given as a coreallocation, and institutions will be invited to bid for the rest by demonstrating strength of demand and value for money. Universities charging fees beneath a set threshold – thought to be £7,500 a year – are expected to be permitted to expand their places. A poll of employers has found intense competition for graduate jobs, with an average of 83 candidates chasing each vacancy. The number of applications per job has reached the highest ever recorded, according to the survey by the Association of Graduate Recruiters. Carl Gilleard, chief executive of the association, said this was partly because job-hunters were making multiple applications and partly because of pressure from those who had failed to get a toehold on the ladder in previous years. The poll finds a sustained recovery of the graduate recruitment market is under way with vacancies expected to rise by 2.6% this year. For the first time in two years, employers predicted that graduate starting salaries would increase, with the average salary expected to reach £25,500. Ucas, the universities and colleges admissions service, released figures on Monday giving a final portrait of applications for 2011 ahead of exam results in August. The figures show applications are up 1.4% overall, to 647,008. There is a rise of 5.6% in the number of 19-year-olds applying, indicating that many candidates squeezed out last year may be having another go. Higher education Students Tuition fees Education policy Jeevan Vasagar Jessica Shepherd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Earlier today, a grand jury convicted former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich, a Democrat, on 17 of 20 counts of corruption. 11 of of the guilty verdicts related to attempts to profit from the “sale” of the U.S. Senate seat Barack Obama vacated when he became president. At USA Today's On Deadline blog (as of its 5:33 p.m. update), Michael Winter failed to identify Blagojevich or any other politician involved as a Democrat. Neither did the video found at Winter's article. This is not surprising, because the video came from the “see no evil Democrat” Associated Press. In six items all carrying today's date found at the AP's main site in a search on the former governor's last name at 8:15 p.m. ET, the wire service not only failed to tag Blago as a Democrat, it failed to tag anyone as Democrat. Here's the list: Related links are here , here , here , here , here , and here . They are saved at my web host for fair use, future reference and discussion purposes here , here , here , here , here , and here . In the second-most blatant example in the AP's string of “Name That Party” failures (though the competition was fierce; wait until you see the most blatant example found in a seventh story which was not carried nationally), the item containing others' comments on the verdict carries the following quotes from Illinois Senator Mark Kirk and Illinois Governor Pat Quinn: In mild surprises, both the New York Times and Reuters tagged Blagojevich as a Democrat in the first sentence of their respective stories' second paragraph. Reuters's description of Blago as a “two-term Democrat” isn't correct, because he didn't finish his second term, unlike others who routinely receive the description before their terms are up. “Twice-elected” is the proper term for Blago. But let's get back to the self-described Essential Global News Network . Illinois, with its sad history of bipartisan corruption, is an interesting test of the AP's stated commitment to fairness , the consistency of that commitment over the years, and its claim to play no favorites. Illinois has had three governors convicted of crimes both during and after their terms in office since the 1960s: Otto Kerner, Democrat (1961-1969) — On February 19, 1973, four years after he left office but while he was serving as a federal judge, ” Kerner was convicted on 17 counts of bribery, conspiracy, perjury, and related charges” relating to his time as governor. Daniel Walker, Democrat (1969-1973) — “In 1987, he was convicted of improprieties related to the First American Savings & Loan Association of Oak Brook” unrelated to his time in office. George Ryan, Republican (1999-2003) — On April 17, 2006, he was convicted on 20 of 22 counts of “racketeering, bribery, extortion, money laundering and tax fraud” which occurred while he was governor. As to Kerner, the results of a Google News Archive search on “otto kerner convicted associated press democrat” (not in quotes) indicate that the AP's coverage carried at the Wall Street Journal on February 20, 1973 at least used the word “Democrat”; it's not possible to know whether Kerner was tagged, but it seems likely, especially since he was appointed to the Federal Appeals Court by Democratic president Lyndon Baines Johnson, and was “the first active member of the federal Court of Appeals ever to be convicted in criminal trial.” The New York Times's coverage of Kerner's conviction (a portion of which is shown here ) noted in its very first sentence that until his conviction, he “had been unusual in the rough-and-tumble world of Illinois Democratic politics — a product of the Cook County machine who had never been touched by scandal.” As to Walker, the AP's unbylined coverage carried at the New York Times on August 6, 1987 tagged him as a Democrat in its third paragraph. Ryan is an interesting case, because although a Republican, he gained much sympathy from the establishment press for his outspoken advocacy for ending the death penalty, and because, as the AP's coverage of his conviction noted, just before leaving office in 2003 he “commuted the death sentences of 167 inmates to life in prison and pardoned four others.” One AP item by Michael Robinson tagged Ryan as “long one of the most powerful Republicans in Illinois” in its sixth paragraph, while another waited until the 24th of 26 paragraphs to label him as “the Republican governor (who) declared a moratorium on executions in Illinois.” Now for the most blatant example of “Hide Blago's Party” — In a a historical compilation (“Sorry history of Illinois governors”) of previous governors convicted of crimes which is apparently being published regionally (it's not at the AP's national site as of 10:00 p.m. ET), the wire service opens by saying that “Illinois governors have (a) long history of legal trouble. Rod Blagojevich is just the latest example.” It doesn't tag Blago as a Democrat. The report then proceeds to list every other previously convicted governor — and his party. As I have noted so many times, the AP's Stylebook, at least as of 2008 (there's no substantive reason why it should change), had the following to say about when and how to report a person's political party affiliation: Party Affiliation – Let relevance be the guide in determining whether to include a political figure’s party affiliation in a story. Party affiliation is pointless in some stories, such as an account of a governor accepting a button from a poster child.
Continue reading …Cragg Hines, a longtime Washington bureau chief and columnist for the Houston Chronicle (who retired in 2007), announced his very strong backing of a liberal gay Democrat for the Virginia State Senate. In the gay magazine Metro Weekly , Hines wrote “it would be worth electing him just to see the look on the faces of right-wing Republican legislators and their sometimes vicious, off-the-wall supporters” when he was sworn in.
Continue reading …So the news on the debt ceiling talks is filled with two issues today, one is suddenly defense spending was put on the table by Republicans. As President Obama prepares to meet Monday with Senate leaders to try to restart talks about the swollen national debt, some Republicans see a potential path to compromise: significant cuts in military spending. Senior GOP lawmakers and leadership aides said it would be far easier to build support for a debt-reduction package that cuts the Pentagon budget — a key Democratic demand — than one that raises revenue by tinkering with the tax code. Last week, Republicans walked out of talks led by Vice President Biden, insisting that the White House take tax increases off the table. {} In listening sessions with their rank and file, House Republican leaders said they have found a surprising willingness to consider defense cuts that would have been unthinkable five years ago, when they last controlled the House. While the sessions have sparked heated debate on many issues, Rep. Peter Roskam (Ill.), the deputy GOP whip, said there are few lawmakers left who view the Pentagon budget as sacrosanct. The second bit of news is that Mitch McConnell has declared that there will be no new taxes included in budget talks . Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell on Monday renewed his call to take tax increases off the table in the debt-limit talks between congressional leaders and the Obama administration. Republicans “want to finally get our economy growing again at a pace that will lead to significant job growth,” McConnell wrote in an op-ed published on CNN.com , hours before he is to huddle with President Obama and Vice President Biden at the White House to discuss the debt ceiling. First of all, you can’t have negotiations between two party’s if the one, the GOP refuses to include tax increases of any kind in the mix. That’s not negotiating, that’s hostage taking. I don’t believe for a second any proposed cuts to military spending will be anything more than some paper clips and staplers in the Pentagon, but it does make for some juicy talking points they can use on TV. See, we’re willing to cut Defense, but Democrats won’t cut medicare and Social Security. We’re serious, they’re not. Conservatives understand that the beltway bipartisan fetish is always running high in DC and they will help them make the case that this is a significant shift for the GOP. As talking points go, Atrios says: I give it about 2 days before Republicans start screeching about how Democrats want to cut defense money while our heroes are in harms way, blah blah blah Now the WH is already cutting like crazy, but Eric Cantor wants more. The White House has offered nearly $1 trillion in cuts to domestic agencies over the next decade and $300 billion more from security agencies. But House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) pressed for as much as $1.7 trillion in cuts. And he wanted an overall cap on spending that would leave the door open to slashing the entire sum from domestic programs — such as education, food safety, health research and criminal justice — when lawmakers draft spending bills next spring. “Everything is on the table,” Cantor said in an interview afterward. But the decision on how much to cut defense “belongs in the appropriations process.” White House budget director Jack Lew objected, and the meeting grew heated. Democrats said they could never support a package that targets only social programs and extracts no pain from the military, big business or the wealthy. Every “cut” is on the table, but not revenue increasers. This is all kabuki and the debt ceiling isn’t the same type of game they played with as shutting down our own government was. But if Democrats use meaningless military cuts to justify massive cuts in education, food safety, health research and criminal justice as some kumbaya moment, then this will be not a deal, but a ritual sacrifice. Digby: Good cuts, bad cuts: Seriously, the defense budget is a very logical place to look for savings. It’s been off limits to any kind of serious oversight for decades, particularly the one just past. I have no doubt that significant savings can be found there. If they can come up with some cuts in obsolete programs that don’t hurt any of their prized constituencies and donors too badly, a deal could potentially be made that would give President Obama an argument to take to his base as his liberal accomplishment in this “deal”. But keep in mind that when they make the argument that we can’t raise taxes because the economy is too fragile, the economic logic of that is the same as cutting spending. So it isn’t about the economy — it’s about shrinking government. No matter how worthy a goal cutting the Pentagon is on the merits, it’s not a liberal economic policy. In fact, none of this is an economic policy at all — it’s a ritual sacrifice. We’ve feared for a long time that Medicaid is something that might end up on the chopping block to help complete some Grand Bargain which would excite the Villagers for sure. Progressives been warning our readers about this for a long time. mcjoan writes: White House Medicaid proposal would likely force states to cut aid Drew Westin tries to explain to the Democrats how they can win in 2012: Three Ways Democrats Could Choose to Lose in 2012, and What They Can Do to Avoid It “If Democrats think that the average senior who votes will be able to distinguish competing claims about which party’s Medicare cuts will cut them the deepest, they are deeply mistaken. We will end up with a he-said/she-said about which party “really” cares about grandma’s health, and the media will offer voters guidance such as, “Democrats say their cuts will have less impact on seniors, whereas Republicans say their plan will give seniors more choices.” Andrea Mitchell was talking to Cillizza today at the end of her show and mentioned that if Republicans won’t raise taxes then how can they really negotiate? Chris agreed. I found that interesting because maybe in some tiny way a piece of truth is slipping through the DC wall because the never raising taxes mantra has been considered a principled position by Republicans when in reality it’s all about making the rich, richer off the backs of the working class.
Continue reading …For months, NewsBusters has been alerting readers that the media scrutiny on every word uttered by Republican presidential candidates this election cycle will be like nothing we've ever experienced. MSNBC's Chris Matthews perfectly demonstrated this on Monday's “Hardball” when he not only took Congresswoman Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) to task for mistaking the name of the town John Wayne was born in, he also expressed shocked that she would say “Iowa” fourteen times during a speech given in – wait for it! – Iowa (video follows with transcript and commentary): CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: Next, Bachmann plays fast and loose with the facts — again. Here she is in Iowa talking up the state's favorite son, the man known as the Duke, John Wayne. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) MICHELE BACHMANN: What I want them to know is just like John Wayne was from Waterloo, Iowa, that’s the kind of spirit I have, too. It's really about not being ashamed of America. It's embracing America. (END VIDEO CLIP) MATTHEWS: Well, she almost got it right. Actor John Wayne was born in Winterset, Iowa, about three hours away, though his parents briefly did live in Waterloo, before he was born. Isn't that terrible? Bachmann mistook Waterloo for Winterset. Horrors. To put this in some perspective, as NewsBusters reported last week, President Obama on Thursday said he had literally awarded a Medal of Honor to one Jared Monti, meaning in person while he was alive. Unfortunately, Monti was bestowed this honor posthumously in 2009 having been killed in Afghanistan three years prior. Obama later apologized to the family for his misstatement. Despite the seriousness of this gaffe, Matthews has yet to report it. In fact, according to LexisNexis, through Sunday, not one television news network has. But in Matthews' sickeningly biased world, a Republican presidential candidate mistaking the names of two small towns in Iowa is far more calamitous. Not done with the Bachmann bashing, the “Hardball” host next took issue with her actually referring to Iowa while speaking in Iowa: MATTHEWS: Speaking of Bachmann, it’s time for tonight's big number. Besides that John Wayne gaffe, the Congresswoman today left no doubt as to the focus of her campaign. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIPS) BACHMANN: It is so great to be here in Iowa…I grew up here in Iowa…This part of Iowa…My Iowa roots…Iowa values…Iowa roots…Iowans…Iowa's…Iowa..Iowa…Iowa… Thank you, Iowa. (END VIDEO CLIPS) MATTHEWS: Wow. Well, all in all, fourteen mentions of Iowa in a short speech. The kickoff, fourteen mentions, tonight's big number. Short speech? Hardly. It lasted 22 minutes, which means Bachmann referred to Iowa roughly every one a a half minutes. Imagine that – a political candidate actually repeating numerous times the name of the state she not only grew up in, but was also speaking in front of. But Americans shouldn't be shocked by this. As I've been predicting for months, if you thought the behavior of our news media in 2008 was deplorable, what they're going to do in the next roughly year and a half in order to get Obama reelected is going to be like nothing you imagined in your wildest dreams. Every “i” not dotted and “t” not crossed by a Republican candidate is going to be played over and over again by the current White House resident's press minions. By contrast, Obama will be able to step over his tongue at will – even claiming a fallen soldier is actually alive – and these same media members will totally ignore it. What this means is GOPers are going to have to pitch a perfect game every time they're in public, for there are people in the new and old media waiting to record and publish every so-called misstep – even the number of times the name of a state is repeated. As Bette Davis famously said in “All About Eve,” “Fasten your seatbelts. It's going to be a bumpy night.”
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