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Rick Santorum Tells Don Lemon That He Has Some Gay Friends

Click here to view this media Poor little old Rick Santorum just can’t seem to get a break. What has the world come to when an anti-gay zealot like Ricky has to suffer such harsh attacks as he received from CNN’s Don Lemon asking him if he actually has any gay friends? Or maybe not, but some right wing blogs that I refuse to link to thought that Don Lemon was terribly unfair to Santorum for having the nerve to make him answer questions about his bigotry towards gay people. Keep in mind here that Don Lemon has come out as not only being gay , but being a victim of pedophilia as well , so I doubt that Lemon would be anyone that would be expected to have a warm spot for Santorum in his heart to put it mildly. Given that background, I’d say he took it pretty easy on Santorum for his attacks on the gay community and his willingness to demonize them for political gain. Santorum once again proved that he should be considered the part of the clown show that is the GOP’s list of potential presidential candidates running for president in 2012 with this interview and good for Lemon for painting him as just another Stephen Colbert satire where he claims he has black friends as proof he’s not a racist. In the segment above, after citing a new CNN poll which shows that voters are less concerned about social issues and more concerned about the economy, CNN’s Don Lemon notes that those poll results might be “very interesting” to a presidential candidate like Rick Santorum, who he points out “can be very divisive on social issues, like gay rights.” That was putting it mildly and it was good to see someone like Santorum being put on the defensive for his stance on gay rights for once, even if it was tepid at best. I’m no fan of Don Lemon given his typical stenography for all things right wing on CNN and for a lot of his coverage on that network being little more than tabloid “journalism”, but I was glad to see him put Santorum on the defensive where he deserves to be during this segment. Rough transcript below the fold. LEMON: I was recently on Joy Behar and she said that, she called you, I think it was a bigot, I’m paraphrasing, bigoted or homophobic or what have you… Santorum: I have a difference of agreement on a public policy issue. That doesn’t mean I’m, you know, I hate anybody. I don’t hate anybody. And I’m called by my faith to love everybody. I do. I mean, I pray for people whether they’re for me or against me because that’s what I’m supposed to do. And just because I disagree with a, you know with what a definition, a legal definition of a marriage is doesn’t mean I dislike anybody or hate anybody or am spiteful of anybody or hate anybody or am spiteful of anybody because I think that’s what best for society. And we should be able to disagree without calling people bigots. LEMON: Yeah. SANTORUM: I think that’s really sad that you have people on the other side, because you stand up for something that has been an institution in this world for 2,000 years, that all of a sudden now, you’re a hater, you’re a mean person. I’m not. I’ve never been. LEMON: Do you have any gay friends? SANTORUM: Yeah. In fact I’ve had gay people work for me. LEMON: Yeah. And friends. SANTORUM: Yes! LEMON: You know when people say I have black friends. SANTORUM: I – well, I mean, yes, I have – in fact I was with a gay friend of mine just two days ago. I mean, so, yeah, I do. And they respect that I have differences of opinion on that. I talk about these things in front of them and we have conversations about it. They differ from me. But they know that I love them because they’re my friends. And they know that I respect and we have respect for their (inaudible). LEMON: You know that’s the headline — Rick Santorum has gay friends. SANTORUM: It shouldn’t be. It was well known that Rick Santorum had a leading gay Republican working for him for ten years. I don’t know what, I don’t know that the, what the shock value is here. I mean the fact of the matter is when for example, when there was a man, who was working as the Executive Director of the national Republican’s Senatorial Committee, who was outed by one of the gay papers, the first person who came to his aid was me. Because he was doing a great job. So I, I understand the narritive. It’s always easy to sort of hang a narrative; oh, this guy’s for, you know, standing up for traditional marriage, he must hate gay people. No. I don’t. I just disagree with what the issue of marriage should be.

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Rick Santorum Tells Don Lemon That He Has Some Gay Friends

Click here to view this media Poor little old Rick Santorum just can’t seem to get a break. What has the world come to when an anti-gay zealot like Ricky has to suffer such harsh attacks as he received from CNN’s Don Lemon asking him if he actually has any gay friends? Or maybe not, but some right wing blogs that I refuse to link to thought that Don Lemon was terribly unfair to Santorum for having the nerve to make him answer questions about his bigotry towards gay people. Keep in mind here that Don Lemon has come out as not only being gay , but being a victim of pedophilia as well , so I doubt that Lemon would be anyone that would be expected to have a warm spot for Santorum in his heart to put it mildly. Given that background, I’d say he took it pretty easy on Santorum for his attacks on the gay community and his willingness to demonize them for political gain. Santorum once again proved that he should be considered the part of the clown show that is the GOP’s list of potential presidential candidates running for president in 2012 with this interview and good for Lemon for painting him as just another Stephen Colbert satire where he claims he has black friends as proof he’s not a racist. In the segment above, after citing a new CNN poll which shows that voters are less concerned about social issues and more concerned about the economy, CNN’s Don Lemon notes that those poll results might be “very interesting” to a presidential candidate like Rick Santorum, who he points out “can be very divisive on social issues, like gay rights.” That was putting it mildly and it was good to see someone like Santorum being put on the defensive for his stance on gay rights for once, even if it was tepid at best. I’m no fan of Don Lemon given his typical stenography for all things right wing on CNN and for a lot of his coverage on that network being little more than tabloid “journalism”, but I was glad to see him put Santorum on the defensive where he deserves to be during this segment. Rough transcript below the fold. LEMON: I was recently on Joy Behar and she said that, she called you, I think it was a bigot, I’m paraphrasing, bigoted or homophobic or what have you… Santorum: I have a difference of agreement on a public policy issue. That doesn’t mean I’m, you know, I hate anybody. I don’t hate anybody. And I’m called by my faith to love everybody. I do. I mean, I pray for people whether they’re for me or against me because that’s what I’m supposed to do. And just because I disagree with a, you know with what a definition, a legal definition of a marriage is doesn’t mean I dislike anybody or hate anybody or am spiteful of anybody or hate anybody or am spiteful of anybody because I think that’s what best for society. And we should be able to disagree without calling people bigots. LEMON: Yeah. SANTORUM: I think that’s really sad that you have people on the other side, because you stand up for something that has been an institution in this world for 2,000 years, that all of a sudden now, you’re a hater, you’re a mean person. I’m not. I’ve never been. LEMON: Do you have any gay friends? SANTORUM: Yeah. In fact I’ve had gay people work for me. LEMON: Yeah. And friends. SANTORUM: Yes! LEMON: You know when people say I have black friends. SANTORUM: I – well, I mean, yes, I have – in fact I was with a gay friend of mine just two days ago. I mean, so, yeah, I do. And they respect that I have differences of opinion on that. I talk about these things in front of them and we have conversations about it. They differ from me. But they know that I love them because they’re my friends. And they know that I respect and we have respect for their (inaudible). LEMON: You know that’s the headline — Rick Santorum has gay friends. SANTORUM: It shouldn’t be. It was well known that Rick Santorum had a leading gay Republican working for him for ten years. I don’t know what, I don’t know that the, what the shock value is here. I mean the fact of the matter is when for example, when there was a man, who was working as the Executive Director of the national Republican’s Senatorial Committee, who was outed by one of the gay papers, the first person who came to his aid was me. Because he was doing a great job. So I, I understand the narritive. It’s always easy to sort of hang a narrative; oh, this guy’s for, you know, standing up for traditional marriage, he must hate gay people. No. I don’t. I just disagree with what the issue of marriage should be.

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Ed Miliband insists Labour party is for the grafters

Miliband highlights pay inequality audits to shame greedy executives and dismisses leadership questions as tittle-tattle Ed Miliband dismissed what he described as tittle-tattle about his leadership and for the first time offered specific proposals to engineer a society of responsibility, including the introduction of pay inequality audits designed to shame greedy private sector executives. The Labour party leader is determined to be even-handed in his call for clearer social responsibility from executives as well as welfare claimants, so those in the middle who play by the rules no longer feel cheated. He vowed to stop Labour being seen as “the party of those ripping off our society”, such as benefit cheats and bankers. He was on the side of grafters, he said. He also said he wanted employee representatives on all executive pay remuneration committees, but said the state could not impose a maximum differential within a company of no greater than 20 to one. However, he said, such a differential was desirable and he admitted the last Labour government had sent out the wrong message to those at the top. It had appeared as if business groups, and even the governor of the Bank of England, were “more willing to speak out on top pay than we did”. The poor and rich were too often leading parallel lives in the same town, but in different worlds, he warned. “We should not be surprised that it is hard to nurture a sense of responsibility and solidarity.” His speech came as his policy review chief, Liam Byrne, in a separate speech, said the public wanted to hear what Labour will do to introduce greater fairness in society before they will listen to general messages from Labour about optimism. Byrne’s remarks are not a criticism of his leader’s previous speeches, but reflect a recognition at the top of the party that Miliband will not get a public hearing unless he addresses public anger that the Labour government had not seemed to be on the side of the hard-working majority. Byrne said Labour will look at increasing the responsibility on the unemployed to look for work, and conduct a potentially far reaching review of national insurance contributions so there are clearer rewards for those that have paid in. A similar review of the contributory principle has been proposed by Policy Exchange, the right of centre think tank. Miliband admitted “people who act responsibly – people who do their duty are getting angry and I understand why”. He said: “Labour – a party founded by hard-working people for hard-working people – was seen by some, however unfairly, as the party of those ripping off our society.” He said he wanted councils to give priority on council house waiting lists if applicants behaved responsibily by volunteering, finding work, or avoiding anti-socal behaviour. His speech was hailed by Frank Field, the Labour MP for Birkenhead and welfare specialist, as a break from the past. He said: “Ed Miliband today begins to redefine what Labour means by fairness and so begins the long haul of building a new coalition of voters straddling both working and middle class voters. It signals the end of Labour’s attack on the working class moral economy that has always believed benefits should be largely based on contributions and not decided simply on terms of need. It is difficult to overestimate how significant today’s speech is.” But at the end of the long-planned speech, Miliband was inundated by media questions over his leadership. He was speaking amid the fallout from claims in a book that his relations with his brother, David, have not been repaired since he defeated the former foreign secretary for the party leadership last year. A Sunday Times-YouGov poll showed his personal standing at an all-time low. Miliband dismissed the speculation about this leadership as irrelevant to those outside Westminster. “The most important thing I have learned is that the gossip and tittle-tattle of Westminster is actually irrelevant to most people’s lives.” He refused to shift his strategy: “The task for a politician is to understand what is happening in our society and to talk about it. The most important part of a leader of the opposition and what determines whether you win elections or not is whether you have an analysis of what is wrong with society and how you will change it.” He insisted David was loyal to his leadership. “Ever since the leadership contest happened, he [David] accepted the result and he must make his own decision as to what is the best future for him is. I made no secret that I wanted him in the shadow cabinet, but he made the right decision for himself and, he thought, for the party.” In probably his most specific proposals, Miliband called for measures to make sure high pay and performance are no longer detached. He said: “Over the last 12 years chief executive pay in Britain’s top companies has quadrupled while share prices have remained flat.” Referring to the recent interim report of the independent High Pay Commission, he said the pay of someone at the top of a company has gone from 69 times the average wage to 145 times. He denied his proposals were timid, saying: “I think that court of public opinion having to explain what these ratios are and why these decisions have been taken is incredibly important. An employees’ representative on every top-pay remuneration body is a radical proposal and would make an enormous difference.” Ed Miliband Labour Equality Executive pay and bonuses Unemployment Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk

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Ed Miliband insists Labour party is for the grafters

Miliband highlights pay inequality audits to shame greedy executives and dismisses leadership questions as tittle-tattle Ed Miliband dismissed what he described as tittle-tattle about his leadership and for the first time offered specific proposals to engineer a society of responsibility, including the introduction of pay inequality audits designed to shame greedy private sector executives. The Labour party leader is determined to be even-handed in his call for clearer social responsibility from executives as well as welfare claimants, so those in the middle who play by the rules no longer feel cheated. He vowed to stop Labour being seen as “the party of those ripping off our society”, such as benefit cheats and bankers. He was on the side of grafters, he said. He also said he wanted employee representatives on all executive pay remuneration committees, but said the state could not impose a maximum differential within a company of no greater than 20 to one. However, he said, such a differential was desirable and he admitted the last Labour government had sent out the wrong message to those at the top. It had appeared as if business groups, and even the governor of the Bank of England, were “more willing to speak out on top pay than we did”. The poor and rich were too often leading parallel lives in the same town, but in different worlds, he warned. “We should not be surprised that it is hard to nurture a sense of responsibility and solidarity.” His speech came as his policy review chief, Liam Byrne, in a separate speech, said the public wanted to hear what Labour will do to introduce greater fairness in society before they will listen to general messages from Labour about optimism. Byrne’s remarks are not a criticism of his leader’s previous speeches, but reflect a recognition at the top of the party that Miliband will not get a public hearing unless he addresses public anger that the Labour government had not seemed to be on the side of the hard-working majority. Byrne said Labour will look at increasing the responsibility on the unemployed to look for work, and conduct a potentially far reaching review of national insurance contributions so there are clearer rewards for those that have paid in. A similar review of the contributory principle has been proposed by Policy Exchange, the right of centre think tank. Miliband admitted “people who act responsibly – people who do their duty are getting angry and I understand why”. He said: “Labour – a party founded by hard-working people for hard-working people – was seen by some, however unfairly, as the party of those ripping off our society.” He said he wanted councils to give priority on council house waiting lists if applicants behaved responsibily by volunteering, finding work, or avoiding anti-socal behaviour. His speech was hailed by Frank Field, the Labour MP for Birkenhead and welfare specialist, as a break from the past. He said: “Ed Miliband today begins to redefine what Labour means by fairness and so begins the long haul of building a new coalition of voters straddling both working and middle class voters. It signals the end of Labour’s attack on the working class moral economy that has always believed benefits should be largely based on contributions and not decided simply on terms of need. It is difficult to overestimate how significant today’s speech is.” But at the end of the long-planned speech, Miliband was inundated by media questions over his leadership. He was speaking amid the fallout from claims in a book that his relations with his brother, David, have not been repaired since he defeated the former foreign secretary for the party leadership last year. A Sunday Times-YouGov poll showed his personal standing at an all-time low. Miliband dismissed the speculation about this leadership as irrelevant to those outside Westminster. “The most important thing I have learned is that the gossip and tittle-tattle of Westminster is actually irrelevant to most people’s lives.” He refused to shift his strategy: “The task for a politician is to understand what is happening in our society and to talk about it. The most important part of a leader of the opposition and what determines whether you win elections or not is whether you have an analysis of what is wrong with society and how you will change it.” He insisted David was loyal to his leadership. “Ever since the leadership contest happened, he [David] accepted the result and he must make his own decision as to what is the best future for him is. I made no secret that I wanted him in the shadow cabinet, but he made the right decision for himself and, he thought, for the party.” In probably his most specific proposals, Miliband called for measures to make sure high pay and performance are no longer detached. He said: “Over the last 12 years chief executive pay in Britain’s top companies has quadrupled while share prices have remained flat.” Referring to the recent interim report of the independent High Pay Commission, he said the pay of someone at the top of a company has gone from 69 times the average wage to 145 times. He denied his proposals were timid, saying: “I think that court of public opinion having to explain what these ratios are and why these decisions have been taken is incredibly important. An employees’ representative on every top-pay remuneration body is a radical proposal and would make an enormous difference.” Ed Miliband Labour Equality Executive pay and bonuses Unemployment Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk

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Research into brain disorders under threat as drug firms pull out

Scientists warn of big financial and social impact while fear of litigation and expense is linked to move A decision by leading drug companies to pull out abruptly from research into brain disorders such as depression and schizophrenia leaves families without hope and will have a huge financial impact on society, senior scientists are warning. Recent announcements by companies such as UK-based GlaxoSmithKline and AstraZeneca that they no longer intend to research new antidepressant drugs has effectively marked an end to the Prozac era, when leading drug companies vied to produce rival blockbuster pills that would be prescribed by GPs to millions of people with mild to moderate depression. GSK’s chief executive, Andrew Witty, denied last year that the controversy that broke around such pills – including its own Seroxat, which was said to increase the risk of suicidal thoughts in young people – was a factor in the decision. He said they were some of the most expensive drugs to research, which could fail in late-stage trials. Neuroscientists including David Nutt, professor of neuropsychopharmacology at Imperial College London, and Guy Goodwin, professor of psychiatry at Oxford University, are concerned that new treatments will dry up. They are the authors of a report for the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ECNP) published on Tuesday, which calls for urgent action to tackle the collapse of funding into research and medicines for brain disorders. “What we have forgotten, and must not forget, is if we stop this research we will have a dead space of 20 to 30 years before we can re-tool again,” said Nutt. More than a quarter of the European Union population suffers from one or more neurological disorders every year, they say, which is a huge burden on health services and economies as people stay away from work. Their report says that throughout Europe, brain diseases are responsible for the loss of 23% of years of healthy life and 50% of years of disability – at a total cost of £237bn a year. “Despite the public health imperative, not only has EU research funding remained very low, but – even worse – big pharma is increasingly coming to see research into better neuropsychiatric drug targets as economically non-viable,” said Nutt. Charities and public bodies leave the financing of drug treatments for mental disorders to the drug companies, the scientists say. If the industry is not researching the causes of depression or schizophrenia in order to find new drugs, scientists will not be able to advance their knowledge. “We have a pretty primitive understanding of how the brain works in comparison to other systems,” said Nutt. The scientists hope they can persuade drug companies to share the information they already have, and that by putting details of their research and unused potential drug discoveries into a “medicines chest”, scientists will be able to investigate and learn from. Some companies may be willing to take part, said Nutt. “The issue that most comes up is about litigation – companies’ concern that they could be sued 30 years down the line if an adverse effect emerged. We’re thinking the ECNP could perhaps provide the insurance cover.” There are a number of reasons why companies are leaving the field, according to the report. Medicines for brain disorders take longer to develop than for other conditions – on average, 13 years – and there is a high failure rate. Only one anti-depressant, Agomelatine, has been licensed in the last 10 years, compared with 10 new drugs for epilepsy. Companies are also increasingly fearful of lawsuits, as patients pursue them through the courts over the adverse effects of medicines. Nutt, who was appointed to a government inquiry into the safety of Seroxat in 2003 but (with others) had to withdraw because of previous financial links to GSK, denied there were serious issues with antidepressants. “All drugs have side-effects. The risk-benefit analysis of antidepressants is overwhelmingly positive,” he said. He and Goodwin contrast the funding available in cancer treatment, much of which is provided in Britain by the charity Cancer Research UK. Enduring stigma around mental illness means that people are less willing to contribute to mental health research than to cancer research, they say. It is also easier to mount studies of cancer drugs – in advanced cancers, trials leading to a licence for a new medicine can be run in a few hundred patients. Trials for new drugs for brain disorders have to involve thousands to ensure safety and efficacy in people who may be prescribed them by their GP. Medical research Pharmaceuticals industry Depression Schizophrenia GlaxoSmithKline Sarah Boseley guardian.co.uk

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Thousands of children held in prison cells overnight

Charity calls for stop to ‘evil practice’ of detaining under 16s in custody for minor offences which causes trauma to the child Thousands of children under 16 are being held overnight in police cells every year, figures reveal. At least 53,000 children under the age of 16 were held overnight in police cells in 2008 and 2009, including 13,000 children aged between nine and 13, according to figures obtained by the Howard League for Penal Reform from half the police forces in England and Wales. The charity called the practice “evil” and urged that it be stopped. Channel 4 News, which will report on the research on Tuesday, discovered those detained overnight in cells included a 16-year-old girl arrested for stealing a can of lager and a girl of 13 who stole a make-up bag. Nine of the children detained between 2008 and 2009 were under the age of criminal responsibility, which is 10 in England and Wales. There were 1,674 children aged 10 or 11; an age group covered by legal safeguards designed to limit the likelihood of them being detained overnight. Almost 11,500 were children under 14, the European average age of criminal responsibility. “I was horrified to discover how prevalent the practice is across the country. Thousands of children are detained for at least one night in police cells ever year,” said Frances Crook, the director of the Howard League. “A police cell is not an appropriate place for children. This is an evil practice and must stop.” Crook said she feared the actual numbers might be much higher. Although the charity asked all 43 police forces in England and Wales for figures under freedom of information rules, only half responded. The Metropolitan police were among the forces which refused to release data. “We may actually be talking hundreds of thousands of children detained overnight each year,” said Crook. The FoI requests reveal that the practice varies wildly across the country. Greater Manchester police held nearly 4,000 girls and nearly 13,000 boys for the night in its police cells in a year. Kent police held 2,700 boys and girls overnight. Nottinghamshire held 1,300. Norfolk, however, only held 122 children overnight in the same year. Crook said most children detained are not serious offenders. “It appears children are being held in police cells for child protection reasons, for example when a child is found in the street drunk. This could be an increasing response to children in need as local authorities face cuts to children’s services,” she said. “We’re dealing with children who are in need.” Anita Dockley, research director for the charity, blamed failures in the referral process from police custody to local authority accommodation. “This referral process is a vital safeguard for children who are charged and whose bail is refused by the police. But police admitted to us that requests by them for local authority accommodation are often not met.” This is, she pointed out, contrary to international law, which states that “no child should be deprived of his or her liberty unless it is a measure of last resort”. Some police forces admit concern over the numbers and are trying alternative approaches. In 2006, Hull was third in a national league table of local authorities sending children under the age of 18 to custody. But it had little impact on re-offending, said commander Keith Hunter of Hull police. He introduced full time youth justice workers into his police custody suite. Now in its third year, the scheme steers away from the criminal justice system through age-appropriate alternatives, including counselling, supported return to school, anger management and alcohol awareness training. The programme has halved the number of child detentions in Hull. Other figures support Crook’s claim that children are being unnecessarily arrested and detained. At least a quarter of a million children were arrested last year – including 22,135 aged 10 to 13 – but only 81,500 were sentenced by a court and only 4,200 were sentenced to custody. This, said Crook, “suggests that for two thirds of children who are put through the trauma and indignity of an arrest and detention in a police station, it was unnecessary”. Andy Adams, speaking for the Association of Chief Police Officers, said: “As with adults, detention of children in custody is authorised for a number of reasons, including to further a criminal investigation, to uncover the identity of any suspects or because the disappearance of that person would hinder any prosecution. The rules for the detention of suspects are set down in law and on every occasion must be authorised by a custody officer. “Detentions of both children and adults in police custody are reviewed regularly to ensure that they are being held in accordance with the law and not for any longer than required for police investigations.” Youth justice Young people UK criminal justice Prisons and probation Amelia Hill guardian.co.uk

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Ashton Kutcher and Demi Moore Find Media ‘Sifting Through’ Palin’s Email ‘Repulsive’

When lefties Ashton Kutcher and Demi Moore think the media's Palin Derangement Syndrome has gone too far, you know the press are hitting new depths of indecency. Judging from the couple's Twitter accounts, the recent feeding frenzy over the former Alaska governor's email was all they could stand : Over the weekend, the former Alaska governor got a surprising show of support from actor Ashton Kutcher, who trashed the media for digging through thousands of emails Palin sent when she was in office. “As much as I'm not a fan of Sarah Palin I find sifting through her emails repulsive and over reaching media,” Kutcher said on Twitter . Wife Demi Moore followed : Warms the cockles, doesn't it? (H/T Tammy Bruce )

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‘NHS reform is safe’ – Andrew Lansley makes private plea for Tory support

Health secretary expected to deny that altered reforms represent Lib Dem victory, claiming Tory red lines have not been crossed Andrew Lansley, the health secretary, has issued a private plea to angry Conservative MPs to stand by him as he prepares to push through a heavily amended version of his NHS reforms. The government will accept a series of changes proposed by an independent panel. But amid anger on the Tory benches at Liberal Democrat claims that they have secured a major victory by forcing Lansley to back down, the health secretary has told Tory MPs that the core principles of his reforms will remain in place. “Andrew is saying stick with me because the Tory red lines have not been crossed and his main aims – to give GPs commissioning powers and to encourage greater competition – will remain,” one Tory said. “Andrew can carry on. He will just have to move at a slower pace.” The government will put on a show of unity when David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Lansley give their formal response to the Future Forum report on the NHS reforms in a joint appearance at a London hospital. The three men will endorse the main proposals of the report, which was formally presented to the government by Professor Steve Field, the chairman of the Future Forum. These are: • The health and social care bill should be amended to ensure that the primary duty of Monitor, the health service regulator, is not to promote competition. “Monitor’s role in relation to competition should be significantly diluted in the bill,” the report said. • The membership of new GP-led consortiums, which are designed to take control of 65% of the NHS budget, should be widened to ensure there is “effective multi-professional involvement in the design and commissioning of services”. • The original 2013 deadline for the completion of the reforms should be relaxed. The new consortiums should only “take on their full range of responsibilities when they can demonstrate that they have the right skills, capacity and capability to do so”. • Private providers should not be allowed to “cherry pick” patients and the government “should not seek to increase the role of the private sector as an end in itself”. • The health secretary “must remain ultimately accountable” for the NHS, in contrast to Lansley’s original proposal in the bill which made him mainly responsible for the promotion of public health. In a letter to ministers, Field said the government had slipped up in its original plans. “We heard genuine and deep seated concerns from NHS staff, patients and the public which must be addressed if the reforms are to be progressed,” he wrote. Clegg told his parliamentary party that the Lib Dems should be proud of their efforts after their demands, tabled at their spring conference in March, were “handsomely met”. The deputy prime minister said: “Our overall demands: slow the pace of change, don’t give preference to the private sector and proper accountability – all of these things have been very, very handsomely met. The bill is now a whole lot better and will make sure decisions are taken in the best interests of patients. It’s been a fantastic collective effort. This is still a major reform of the NHS. We’ve never been against reform. We’ve always been in favour of the right kind of reform.” Clegg will be able to claim another win on Tuesday when Cameron agrees that amended parts of the bill will be considered at committee stage in the Commons again. But there was barely concealed anger in Downing Street over what was seen as gloating by the Lib Dems, who declared victory at the weekend. The delight among Lib Dems has alarmed Tory MPs who believe that Downing Street has wrongly caved in at a time when the Lib Dems are weak. The mood among many Tories towards the Lib Dems is said to be “sulphurous”. But Lansley has calmed the backbenchers by saying that their key red lines – that competition should be allowed and the need for a quick pace of reforms – have not been crossed. One senior Tory said. “I think I am going to bite my tongue and go along with this out of respect for Lansley.” Andrew George, one of only two Lib Dem MPs to abstain when the health and social care bill received its second reading in January, said: “There is a risk that the bill merely becomes a trojan horse to reintroduce all of the same damaging Tory policies through the back door later on.” The anger on Tory backbenches and Cameron’s language to the newly elected MPs will raise questions about whether the change in gear on the NHS marks a decisive turning point for the coalition. One Tory cabinet minister said the conflict between the Lib Dems and Tories meant that people were overlooking a decisive voice demanding changes to the NHS reforms – George Osborne. The chancellor, who was alarmed by private polling which showed that the Tories’ work in neutralising the NHS as an issue was being jeopardised by the presentation of the reforms, was highly influential in persuading Cameron to introduce the pause. The cabinet minister said: “Nick Clegg is busy claiming all the credit for effectively carrying out George’s work.” Health policy NHS Health Public services policy Andrew Lansley Conservatives Liberal Democrats Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk

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‘NHS reform is safe’ – Andrew Lansley makes private plea for Tory support

Health secretary expected to deny that altered reforms represent Lib Dem victory, claiming Tory red lines have not been crossed Andrew Lansley, the health secretary, has issued a private plea to angry Conservative MPs to stand by him as he prepares to push through a heavily amended version of his NHS reforms. The government will accept a series of changes proposed by an independent panel. But amid anger on the Tory benches at Liberal Democrat claims that they have secured a major victory by forcing Lansley to back down, the health secretary has told Tory MPs that the core principles of his reforms will remain in place. “Andrew is saying stick with me because the Tory red lines have not been crossed and his main aims – to give GPs commissioning powers and to encourage greater competition – will remain,” one Tory said. “Andrew can carry on. He will just have to move at a slower pace.” The government will put on a show of unity when David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Lansley give their formal response to the Future Forum report on the NHS reforms in a joint appearance at a London hospital. The three men will endorse the main proposals of the report, which was formally presented to the government by Professor Steve Field, the chairman of the Future Forum. These are: • The health and social care bill should be amended to ensure that the primary duty of Monitor, the health service regulator, is not to promote competition. “Monitor’s role in relation to competition should be significantly diluted in the bill,” the report said. • The membership of new GP-led consortiums, which are designed to take control of 65% of the NHS budget, should be widened to ensure there is “effective multi-professional involvement in the design and commissioning of services”. • The original 2013 deadline for the completion of the reforms should be relaxed. The new consortiums should only “take on their full range of responsibilities when they can demonstrate that they have the right skills, capacity and capability to do so”. • Private providers should not be allowed to “cherry pick” patients and the government “should not seek to increase the role of the private sector as an end in itself”. • The health secretary “must remain ultimately accountable” for the NHS, in contrast to Lansley’s original proposal in the bill which made him mainly responsible for the promotion of public health. In a letter to ministers, Field said the government had slipped up in its original plans. “We heard genuine and deep seated concerns from NHS staff, patients and the public which must be addressed if the reforms are to be progressed,” he wrote. Clegg told his parliamentary party that the Lib Dems should be proud of their efforts after their demands, tabled at their spring conference in March, were “handsomely met”. The deputy prime minister said: “Our overall demands: slow the pace of change, don’t give preference to the private sector and proper accountability – all of these things have been very, very handsomely met. The bill is now a whole lot better and will make sure decisions are taken in the best interests of patients. It’s been a fantastic collective effort. This is still a major reform of the NHS. We’ve never been against reform. We’ve always been in favour of the right kind of reform.” Clegg will be able to claim another win on Tuesday when Cameron agrees that amended parts of the bill will be considered at committee stage in the Commons again. But there was barely concealed anger in Downing Street over what was seen as gloating by the Lib Dems, who declared victory at the weekend. The delight among Lib Dems has alarmed Tory MPs who believe that Downing Street has wrongly caved in at a time when the Lib Dems are weak. The mood among many Tories towards the Lib Dems is said to be “sulphurous”. But Lansley has calmed the backbenchers by saying that their key red lines – that competition should be allowed and the need for a quick pace of reforms – have not been crossed. One senior Tory said. “I think I am going to bite my tongue and go along with this out of respect for Lansley.” Andrew George, one of only two Lib Dem MPs to abstain when the health and social care bill received its second reading in January, said: “There is a risk that the bill merely becomes a trojan horse to reintroduce all of the same damaging Tory policies through the back door later on.” The anger on Tory backbenches and Cameron’s language to the newly elected MPs will raise questions about whether the change in gear on the NHS marks a decisive turning point for the coalition. One Tory cabinet minister said the conflict between the Lib Dems and Tories meant that people were overlooking a decisive voice demanding changes to the NHS reforms – George Osborne. The chancellor, who was alarmed by private polling which showed that the Tories’ work in neutralising the NHS as an issue was being jeopardised by the presentation of the reforms, was highly influential in persuading Cameron to introduce the pause. The cabinet minister said: “Nick Clegg is busy claiming all the credit for effectively carrying out George’s work.” Health policy NHS Health Public services policy Andrew Lansley Conservatives Liberal Democrats Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk

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‘NHS reform is safe’ – Andrew Lansley makes private plea for Tory support

Health secretary expected to deny that altered reforms represent Lib Dem victory, claiming Tory red lines have not been crossed Andrew Lansley, the health secretary, has issued a private plea to angry Conservative MPs to stand by him as he prepares to push through a heavily amended version of his NHS reforms. The government will accept a series of changes proposed by an independent panel. But amid anger on the Tory benches at Liberal Democrat claims that they have secured a major victory by forcing Lansley to back down, the health secretary has told Tory MPs that the core principles of his reforms will remain in place. “Andrew is saying stick with me because the Tory red lines have not been crossed and his main aims – to give GPs commissioning powers and to encourage greater competition – will remain,” one Tory said. “Andrew can carry on. He will just have to move at a slower pace.” The government will put on a show of unity when David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Lansley give their formal response to the Future Forum report on the NHS reforms in a joint appearance at a London hospital. The three men will endorse the main proposals of the report, which was formally presented to the government by Professor Steve Field, the chairman of the Future Forum. These are: • The health and social care bill should be amended to ensure that the primary duty of Monitor, the health service regulator, is not to promote competition. “Monitor’s role in relation to competition should be significantly diluted in the bill,” the report said. • The membership of new GP-led consortiums, which are designed to take control of 65% of the NHS budget, should be widened to ensure there is “effective multi-professional involvement in the design and commissioning of services”. • The original 2013 deadline for the completion of the reforms should be relaxed. The new consortiums should only “take on their full range of responsibilities when they can demonstrate that they have the right skills, capacity and capability to do so”. • Private providers should not be allowed to “cherry pick” patients and the government “should not seek to increase the role of the private sector as an end in itself”. • The health secretary “must remain ultimately accountable” for the NHS, in contrast to Lansley’s original proposal in the bill which made him mainly responsible for the promotion of public health. In a letter to ministers, Field said the government had slipped up in its original plans. “We heard genuine and deep seated concerns from NHS staff, patients and the public which must be addressed if the reforms are to be progressed,” he wrote. Clegg told his parliamentary party that the Lib Dems should be proud of their efforts after their demands, tabled at their spring conference in March, were “handsomely met”. The deputy prime minister said: “Our overall demands: slow the pace of change, don’t give preference to the private sector and proper accountability – all of these things have been very, very handsomely met. The bill is now a whole lot better and will make sure decisions are taken in the best interests of patients. It’s been a fantastic collective effort. This is still a major reform of the NHS. We’ve never been against reform. We’ve always been in favour of the right kind of reform.” Clegg will be able to claim another win on Tuesday when Cameron agrees that amended parts of the bill will be considered at committee stage in the Commons again. But there was barely concealed anger in Downing Street over what was seen as gloating by the Lib Dems, who declared victory at the weekend. The delight among Lib Dems has alarmed Tory MPs who believe that Downing Street has wrongly caved in at a time when the Lib Dems are weak. The mood among many Tories towards the Lib Dems is said to be “sulphurous”. But Lansley has calmed the backbenchers by saying that their key red lines – that competition should be allowed and the need for a quick pace of reforms – have not been crossed. One senior Tory said. “I think I am going to bite my tongue and go along with this out of respect for Lansley.” Andrew George, one of only two Lib Dem MPs to abstain when the health and social care bill received its second reading in January, said: “There is a risk that the bill merely becomes a trojan horse to reintroduce all of the same damaging Tory policies through the back door later on.” The anger on Tory backbenches and Cameron’s language to the newly elected MPs will raise questions about whether the change in gear on the NHS marks a decisive turning point for the coalition. One Tory cabinet minister said the conflict between the Lib Dems and Tories meant that people were overlooking a decisive voice demanding changes to the NHS reforms – George Osborne. The chancellor, who was alarmed by private polling which showed that the Tories’ work in neutralising the NHS as an issue was being jeopardised by the presentation of the reforms, was highly influential in persuading Cameron to introduce the pause. The cabinet minister said: “Nick Clegg is busy claiming all the credit for effectively carrying out George’s work.” Health policy NHS Health Public services policy Andrew Lansley Conservatives Liberal Democrats Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk

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