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David Beckham: I’d love to play for Team GB at the 2012 Olympics

The LA Galaxy star may seek an ambassadorial role rather than coach when his playing career comes to an end The sun is beating down on the Home Depot Centre, the grinding routine of training is over for another day and David Beckham is making his way to the side of the pitch, looking every inch the modern‑day American superstar. Outside, on Avalon Boulevard, there are already photographers gathering, just as they do every day when Beckham has

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With the “Standard American Diet” producing ever more heart disease, diabetes, and cancer, it’s time to tax junk food and subsidize vegetables, writes Mark Bittman in the New York Times . “Right now it’s harder for many people to buy fruit than Froot Loops,” he says, suggesting sweetened drinks, like soda,…

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Cadel Evans won the Tour de France today, becoming the first Australian to capture cycling’s most prestigious title. The 34-year-old Evans crossed the finish line on the Champs-Elysee at the end of the largely ceremonial final stage. He had virtually secured the title with his ride in the time trial…

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John Boehner was a late addition to Fox News Sunday today, and painted a two-step deal as the only alternative left. “It’s not physically possible to do all of this in one step,” Boehner told Chris Wallace, advocating a short-term fix through early next year; President Obama has vowed to…

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Gay marriage continues to make huge strides in the nation, as is clear across New York state today . Now if only gay divorce could catch up. As NPR explains, same-sex couples who split often run into a world of legal hassles unknown to their hetero counterparts. The problem usually involves…

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Amy Winehouse seemed “out of it” just 24 hours before her sudden death, mom Janis Winehouse tells the Sunday Mirror, prompting her mother to believe her death “was only a matter of time.” Nevertheless, the elder Winehouse says “her passing so suddenly still hasn’t hit me,” recalling that the British…

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Washington’s hyper-partisan gridlock is far worse than the usual political squabbling; in fact, this political breakdown “could be as corrosive to the political system as the possible financial default looming could be to the economy,” writes Dan Balz in the Washington Post . Voters have chosen divided government “because the public…

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New York says ‘I do’ to gay marriage – in pictures

Hundreds of gay and lesbian couples wed on the day New York state legalises same-sex marriage

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Olympic chief calls for ‘mandatory’ funding for local sports facilities

Local authorities must protect budgets, says Lord Moynihan, as drive to get more people playing sport falters The chairman of the British Olympic Association , Lord Moynihan, has called on the government to make local authority spending on recreation facilities mandatory to bring about a “sea change” in faltering attempts to boost the number of people playing sport as an Olympic legacy. With just over a year to the London Games, Sport England and the government have admitted they are highly unlikely to hit the target set by the previous administration of getting 1 million more people playing sport at least three times a week by 2013. “Local authorities should be mandated to provide recreational facilities, as they are in Scotland, rather than it being the first thing to go in difficult economic times,” said Moynihan, a former Conservative sports minister. “That should be one of the components of an overall sports legacy programme. We need to leave a sports legacy of a different magnitude from the one we had before we were awarded the Games.” Heavy cuts to local authority budgets have raised fears that non-statutory leisure budgets will be among the first to be hit, more than cancelling out any increased investment linked to the Games. Lord Coe, chairman of the London organising committee, helped win the Games for London on the back of a series of promises about the legacy they would leave. In addition to regenerating east London and inspiring young people through sport, the government resolved to boost the number of active adults. Labour set a target of 1 million more playing sport three or more times a week, and a further million engaging in more physical activity by 2013. Sport England was charged with delivering the first of those missions. More than halfway through the four-year period covered by the Whole Sport Plan , in which £480m is being invested through sports governing bodies, the figure has gone up by just 100,000. The number of people playing no sport at all has continued to increase. “It’s important to have a target, but it’s precise numerical character is not that important, because this is not going to be achieved by lots of little steps,” said Sport England’s chief executive, Jennie Price. “It’s creating that critical mass and momentum.” Price said that she believed the approach could still bear fruit if it reached a tipping point, but only if more sports followed the lead of cycling and netball and fundamentally rethought their approach. “It has to be participant-led. They can do this, but they have to do it now in order to maintain confidence in their ability to deliver.” The sports minister, Hugh Robertson, said: “I don’t think we should be under any illusion whatsoever that this is going to be a very tough ask. It’s trying to do something that no other Olympic city has achieved.” He added: “What you’re seeing now is partly the teething problems of a new system and partly the fact that we underestimated how long it would take to turn this ship around. We are discovering that the hard way.” Seventeen sports have seen a decrease in the number of people participating once a week since 2007-08, while only four – athletics, mountaineering, netball and table tennis – have recorded a statistically significant increase. The Football Association , the Rugby Football Union and the Lawn Tennis Association have all launched mass participation schemes in an attempt to shift their stalled figures. If they do not, the government has said their funding will be severely cut from 2013. In a bid to tackle the failing participation legacy scheme, a new £135m strategy dubbed Places, People, Play was announced last autumn. Price said it was too soon to say whether the Whole Sport Plan investment had failed. ” We created a very different sort of system in which we said here is the money and here are the very specific results we want. It took a while for the governing bodies to realise we meant it – and also to realise what they needed to do.” Sport England’s review Basketball : Has “struggled to address the decline in weekly participation among young people aged between 16 and 19″. Recently had its funding award docked for failing to deliver. Cricket : Faces a “significant challenge” to achieve its 2013 participation target, with the number of adults playing the game in gradual decline. But satisfaction among those playing cricket continues to increase and more women are playing. Cycling : Provides “some of the best examples of a national governing body working hard to understand and satisfy its customers” with mass participation initiatives such as Skyride . Football : The FA “is not currently on track to achieve its four-year target for growing participation”. Its new Just Play initiative will be critical. Netball : An “excellent example of a governing body taking a participant-centred approach to its work”. Has “developed a really significant understanding about what current and former players want from the game”. Rugby union : Recently had its funding docked for missing targets, must focus on small sided, tag and touch rugby alongside the traditional 15-a-side game if it is to grow participation. Swimming : “Has failed to generate growth in swimming participation and needs to continue to improve its activities.” Needs to focus on converting infrequent swimmers into weekly participants. Tennis : “The next six months are critical if the LTA is to reverse the downward trend in weekly tennis participation and maintain current levels of investment.” Olympic Games 2012 Sport politics Sebastian Coe Local politics Conservatives Labour Communities Health Local government Owen Gibson guardian.co.uk

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US debt crisis threatens global markets as Congress is locked in blame game

Congressional talks fail to make progress after Obama’s fall-out with House leader John Boehner Democrats and Republicans are locked into a dangerous game of seeing who will crack first over the national debt crisis, with the White House warning that the next few days could be stressful for world markets and Americans. With time running out, congressional leaders from both sides met on Saturday after the dramatic collapse of negotiations between Barack Obama and the House Republican leader, John Boehner, on Friday. But the congressional talks broke up late on Saturday night after failing to make progress. The White House chief of staff, Bill Daley, interviewed on Sunday on CBS, predicted that the next few days will be tense. “In the end, we may have a few stressful days coming up – stressful for the markets of the world and the American people.” In an effort to reassure markets reopening after the weekend, he claimed he was confident a deal would be reached before the 2 August deadline. The White House refused to discuss what contingency planning is taking place in the event no compromise. Obama is no longer directly involved in the negotiations following the sudden deterioration in his relationship with Boehner, who, in a breach of Washington etiquette, refused to return the president’s phone callson Friday. But Obama will remain engaged behind the scenes, and has left his diary for Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday virtually clear. The Republicans and Democrats have been trying to ensure the other will be blamed by voters if it all goes wrong. The Republicans accused Obama, when a deal was close on Thursday night, of adding extra bits, in particular tax rises. Democrats blame a hard core of Republicans in the House elected last year with Tea party support. The Democratic leader in the Senate, Harry Reid, labelled the Republicans as intransigent. “Their unwillingness to compromise is pushing us to the brink of a default on the full faith and credit of the United States,” he said. The business secretary, Vince Cable, broke the unwritten rule of non-intervention in other countries’ domestic disputes on Sunday by describing diehard Republicans as “nutters”. Cable, appearing on the BBC’s Andrew Marr show, said: “The irony of the situation at the moment, with markets opening tomorrow morning, is that the biggest threat to the world financial system comes from a few right-wing nutters in the American Congress rather than the eurozone.” Until now, market traders had appeared confident that agreement would eventually be reached but US legislators fear that, following the collapse of talks on Friday, there could be the first signs of panic when Wall Street opens on Monday as well as other markets round the world. According to the US Treasury, America has to raise its $14.3tn (£8.77tn) debt ceiling by 2 August or risk defaulting for the first time. Economists warn a default will have a catastrophic impact worldwide. The Treasury secretary, Tim Geithner, attempted to calm the markets by insisting the debt ceiling will be raised, telling ABC News that it was unthinkable that there would be a time when the US could not pay its bills. Geithner said that congressional leaders were working on a compromise package on Sunday to try to forestall any panic. But Boehner, in a Fox News interview, did not indicate that a compromise was near and instead blamed Obama. “I know the president’s worried about his next election. But my God, shouldn’t we be worried about the country?” He said he planned to announce details of legislation on Sunday based on a Republican plan that would provide a short-term solution. Democrats are unlikely to support it. The White House countered that it was not interested in a short-term solution but wanted a “grand bargain”, a 10-year-plan for reducing the country’s burgeoning debt by cutting spending and raising taxes. Daley said that a short-term fix would fail to reassure the markets because the business world is looking for evidence that America is going to take long-term measures to reduce its debt. Obama and Boehner were close to a deal on Thursday night that would have cut spending by $3tn, mainly through spending cuts but also through $800bn in tax rises. Boehner claims that Obama, in an act of bad faith, tried at the last minute to add $400bn in tax rises and so he walked away. The Democrats claim Boehner walked away because he could not sell the package to Tea Party Republicans opposed to any tax rises. US Congress US economy Global economy Stock markets Market turmoil Barack Obama Democrats Republicans John Boehner Tea Party movement US politics United States Vince Cable Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

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