With negotiations looking more hopeless than ever, a modified version of Mitch McConnell’s backup plan is starting to get some serious traction, reports the Wall Street Journal . Conservatives originally swatted down McConnell’s idea—basically giving President Obama the ability to raise the debt ceiling by $2.4 trillion over the…
Continue reading …Gay rights supporters are hailing this as a big win in California: Public schools will be required to teach the accomplishments of gay Americans under a measure signed into law yesteray by Gov. Jerry Brown, reports the Los Angeles Times . The San Francisco Chronicle says it’s the first such law…
Continue reading …Chief executive resigns after intense criticism from parliament and public as Rupert Murdoch apologises to Dowler family Rebekah Brooks finally resigned as chief executive of News International as the phone-hacking scandal engulfing News Corporation led Rupert Murdoch to issue an abject apology for what he described as “serious wrongdoing”. Less than 24 hours after insisting the company had made only “minor mistakes” in handling the crisis, a contrite Murdoch arranged a private meeting with the family of Milly Dowler and issued a full-page apology in every national newspaper for his company’s behaviour. The dramatic turn of events came 10 days after the Guardian first revealed that private investigators working for the News of the World had hacked into the phone of the murdered girl during a police investigation into her disappearance. The subsequent outrage and other evidence of wrongdoing has led to the closure of the 168-year-old newspaper, the scrapping of the Murdoch bid for BSkyB and the arrest of several former NoW executives. Downing Street admitted that David Cameron hosted Andy Coulson at Chequers in March two months after his resignation as the Downing Street director of communications. Labour accused the prime minister of an “extraordinary lack of judgment” in extending an invitation to Coulson, who was arrested last week. The former NoW editor denies any knowledge of phone hacking. The fallout from the scandal is placing intense pressure on Sir Paul Stephenson, the Met police commissioner. Cameron is said to be furious that Stephenson did not tell him he had hired Neil Wallis, the former NoW deputy editor arrested this week, to advise him on media relations. Stephenson has been asked to explain himself to Theresa May, the home secretary. It was unclear what had prompted the Murdochs to accept the resignation of Brooks, a 22-year veteran of the company, after steadfastly standing by her in the face of calls for her to go from the leaders of all the main political parties, including the prime minister. It is understood, however that the decision was not done overnight. Her departure was planned with military precision during a series of family summits and transatlantic phone calls with shareholders over the last few days. The resignation comes just four days before she is due to appear before parliament alongside Rupert and James Murdoch, chairman of News International, to answer questions about the scandal. In her resignation statement, Brooks said she wanted to clear her name as well as the company’s and focus on all “current and future inquiries”. She added: “The reputation of the company we love so much, as well as the press freedoms we value so highly, are all at risk.” Hours after this statement, Rupert Murdoch met the parents and sister of Milly Dowler in a hotel in central London. “He was very humbled and very shaken and very sincere,” said Mark Lewis, the Dowler family lawyer. “I think this was something that had hit him on a very personal level and was something that shouldn’t have happened. He apologised many times. I don’t think somebody could have held their head in their hands so many times and say that they were sorry.” Lewis said Milly’s parents, Sally and Bob, and her sister, Gemma, had told Murdoch his newspapers “should lead the way to set the standard of honesty and decency in the field and not what had gone on before”. Murdoch had replied that the News of the World’s actions were “not the standard set by his father, a respected journalist, not the standard set by his mother”, Lewis said. In a full-page apology in the Guardian and other newspapers today, the News Corp boss says: “We are sorry for the serious wrongdoing that occurred. We are deeply sorry for the hurt suffered by the individuals affected. We regret not acting faster to sort things out.” Such an admission represents a volte face after Murdoch praised the company’s handling of the scandal in his first interview on the issue, given to one of his own newspapers, the Wall Street Journal. The printed apology also suggests that the company will do more to atone for the mistakes of the past. “I realise that simply apologising is not enough,” he writes. “In the coming days, as we take further concrete steps to resolve these issues and make amends for the damage they have caused, you will hear more from us.” In his own statement to staff at News International, which still owns the Times, the Sunday Times and the Sun, James Murdoch admitted that the company had made mistakes but praised “one of the outstanding editors of her generation”. Brooks is to be replaced by the head of Sky Italia, Tom Mockridge. Downing Street welcomed her resignation, which relieved some of the pressure on Cameron, who in effect called for her to go last Friday. But the prime minister’s spokesman said Brooks should still give evidence to the media select committee next week. He said of the resignation: “He thinks it’s the right decision. He said the other day he would have accepted her resignation.” No 10 hopes that releasing details of the prime minister’s contacts with the media and setting out the full scope of the judge-led inquiry will relieve the pressure on him as he attempts to regain the initiative. The prime minister hopes to finalise the membership of the inquiry and agree its terms of reference by the end of next week. But Labour believes that he will continue to face pressure until Coulson’s position is clarified. News International Phone hacking Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Jane Martinson Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Voters are growing more likely to vote for a Republican challenger over Obama, as a generic “Republican candidate” opened a 47%-39% lead, according to a new survey by Gallup . Obama had a slight advantage in May, thanks largely to the killing of Osama bin Laden, but Republicans pulled slightly ahead…
Continue reading …Colin and Chris Weir from Ayrshire win £161m – UK’s biggest ever jackpot When you have just discovered that you are as rich as Croesus, a small toast is in order. So, in the early hours of Wednesday, Chris Weir broke the habit of a lifetime and cracked open a bottle of wine. “I don’t even drink, so that shows you how excited we were,” said Weir, 55, a former psychiatric nurse, as she and her husband, Colin, 64, revealed themselves as the UK’s biggest ever lottery winners with Tuesday’s EuroMillions jackpot of £161m safe in their bank. Initially, they had not wanted to go public with their win. But they realised that they would have had to tell lies and hide their news from those around them, and they wanted to be able to enjoy the moment and all that it meant. “We are not flashy people,” said Chris. “We are not celebrities and we hope that once we have shared our good news we will get some time to go back to being us.” The retired couple from Largs, in Ayrshire, now better off than the Marquess of Bath, and just a few million short of David and Victoria Beckham’s vast fortune, said they were still struggling to come to terms with their newfound wealth but were not daunted by it. “We are not afraid of this,” said Chris. “It seems mammoth; it seems absolutely fantastical. When I woke up on Tuesday morning everything was ordinary. I woke up on Wednesday morning and the whole world was totally different for us … We’re not scared of it. It’s going to be fantastic and it’s going to be so much fun.” The Weirs’ £161m prize, the biggest ever in the EuroMillions draw, came after a series of rollovers. The previous biggest winner, also from the UK, scooped £113m in October and chose to stay anonymous. The prize is 50% more than the amount Scotland collects in taxes every month and equivalent to 0.16% of Scotland’s GDP. Married for 30 years, the Weirs have both suffered from ill-health and appeared in front of the press yesterday at a hotel near Falkirk walking with the aid of sticks. For many years, Colin was a carer for his wife. Their two adult children, Carly, 24, a photography student, and Jamie, 22, who works at a call centre, were also stunned by the win. Unable until now to afford their own cars, both offspring have signed up for driving lessons. The Weirs plan to buy their children homes, and Chris will replace her Suzuki car. Colin, however, is happy with his old car because it is reliable and he does not see the need for a new one. A keen football fan who follows Barcelona, he may see fit to get a box at the Camp Nou stadium to watch his team play. They plan to travel. The Great Wall of China, Uluru – formerly Ayers Rock – in Australia, Cambodia and Taiwan are first on their list. They like their three-bedroom villa in Largs with its nice views, so have no immediate plans to move, but would consider a second or maybe even third home. They realise, said Chris, that their great wealth brings them great responsibility, and plan to use some of the money for good causes. “There are things that we are passionate about but we need to temper that with looking at what is the best way to do the most good,” she said. “We need to do that in a measured, planned way. It would be very easy to throw money at people. “I worked in the public sector all my life and I know what distress people have. I want to do things in a way where the benefit goes to the people who really need it.” Although regular players of the lottery, the Weirs did not watch the lottery programme on Tuesday evening, but Chris checked the numbers at midnight on her way to bed. Out of five lucky dip lines, the fifth was the winner. She checked it numerous times, and Colin did likewise, unable to believe what they were seeing. “The Camelot line was closed for the evening but we couldn’t sleep,” said Chris. “We sat up. We were so buzzed. We were so full of adrenaline we couldn’t sleep. We couldn’t really do anything except sit. We talked to each other about how absolutely amazing this was. We were tickled pink with the whole notion of winning so much money.” National Lottery Scotland Kirsty Scott guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Across the Arab world, protesters show fury at the resistance to change shown by interim authorities as well as old regimes The historic revolutions that have rippled through the Arab world this year were in danger of eclipse on Friday night as protesters returned to the streets to profess their disgust at how the movement is being stymied by regimes old and new. Six months after the Arab spring claimed its first dictator, the main squares of Cairo and Tunis were again alive with protest, teargas and fury at the resistance to change shown by interim authorities. In Syria activists said at least 19 people had been killed in the latest crackdown against protests that have convulsed the country for more than four months. At least seven people were killed in Yemen amid a political limbo that appears no closer to resolution. And in Jordan a heavy security presence policed pro- and anti-reform demonstrations which turned violent. The scenes served as a reminder that following the euphoria of the Arab spring, little concrete progress towards reform has been made. Elections in Tunisia and Egypt have been postponed. Offers of reform in Yemen and Syria have been rejected as inadequate. Egypt Thousands of demonstrators descended on public squares around the country to offer a “Friday of final warning” to the ruling military junta, amid fears that the revolution which toppled Hosni Mubarak is being betrayed by conservative forces. Rallies and hunger strikes were reported from Alexandria on the Mediterranean coast all the way down to Luxor in the south and Suez in the east, with the main focus once again on Cairo’s Tahrir Square where a large sit-in is now over a week old and shows no sign of ending. Protesters accused the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), which assumed power in the aftermath of Mubarak’s fall and promised to make way for a democratically-elected civilian government later this year, of stifling revolutionary demands and working to shield elements of the old regime from grassroots political change. “As many have been saying on Facebook, the relationship between the people and SCAF is the same as the relationship between a wife and a husband who she knows is being unfaithful,” said Shady Alaa El Din, a demonstrator in Tahrir. “She tolerated it at first in an effort not to destroy the family and hurt the children, but eventually she realised the husband doesn’t really care about the family at all, so now she has dropped her act and is taking him on directly,” he added. “At first we lied to ourselves, we wanted to believe they were with us. But now the street has woken up and it is saying to SCAF ‘we are the rulers, and you follow our orders – not the other way round. We are the fucking red line, you do not cross us.’” In common with most protesters, El Din was infuriated this week by an address from SCAF spokesman General Mohsen El-Fangari, in which he warned against those seeking to “disrupt public order” and adopted a tone reminiscent of Mubarak in his final speeches to the nation. Pressure is now mounting on interim prime minister Essam Sharaf, who appears unable or unwilling to force through meaningful policy changes in the face of the generals’ intransigence and is now being urged to resign by many of his original supporters. Tunisia For anyone new to the Tunisian capital, it was almost as though the past six months had never happened. Balaclava-wearing riot police armed with batons, teargas launchers and dogs squared up against a small crowd of demonstrators who had gathered to express a sentiment widely felt in the city: that the revolution has run into the sand, stymied by a caretaker administration that they say has done little to implement revolutionaries’ demands. The central government square or Qasbah was protected by coils of barbed wire and armoured vehicles, as demonstrators waving Tunisian flags chanted “peaceful, peaceful”. Then the trouble started. The first gas canister spewed a thick white smoke and was quickly followed by many others. Protesters ran for cover into dark shadows against a white gas screen. Two men held their ground, kneeling bare-chested and facing the charging police. A third stopped a canister that whirled past, picked it up and threw it back at police lines. As the fumes dispersed, the demonstrators returned, their numbers now swelled into the hundreds. Some began pelting police with small rocks. “The people who tortured me are still there,” said Malek Khudaira pointing at the ministry where he was held for 10 days during the uprising that toppled the former dictator Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali. “How can I feel there is change and it’s a full revolution if everything is the same, I see those torturers walking in the streets every day.” For hours a game of attack and counter attacked ensued. Demonstrators would march, police would fire hails of canisters into their midst. One man in black trousers, white shirt and sunglasses stood facing the police when they fired a small canister point blank at his belly. He fell where he stood. Others helped him away. The organisers labelled the event as “the Qasbah 3″. Number 1 was the uprising that toppled Ben Ali and forced him to flee and number 2 was the sit-in that toppled the first caretaker government a month later. Syria Activists reported at least 19 deaths across Syria and dozens of injuries as people gathered for the main weekly prayers, which have been used as a launching pad for dissent for more than four months. Heavy clashes took place in parts of the capital, according to activists and state media, who offered widely diverging accounts. At least seven protesters were shot dead in neighbourhoods of Damascus as some of the largest crowds since the uprising poured on to the streets. Security forces have generally used batons and teargas in Damascus to avoid inflaming protests in the heartland of the regime’s power. Elsewhere, scores of wounded were reported in the cities of Aleppo, Deraa, Idleb and Homs. Syrian officials again blamed armed gangs for the violence – an indirect reference to Islamists who it claims are trying to ignite sectarian chaos. However, activists said unarmed demonstrators were again attacked by soldiers firing live rounds. The use of violence has been unpredictable, changing by week and location. In Homs, one resident in the well-off neighbourhood of Inshaat said security forces appeared to be trying to avoid deaths. “They have been shooting but seemed to be aiming at the legs rather that the heads.” Two of the biggest protests took place in Hama and Deir Ezzor, on a day when activists estimated that up to 1 million people may have openly defied the regime nationwide. Jordan Ten people, mostly journalists, were injured on Fridaywhen Jordanian police tried to intervene in clashes between pro-reform demonstrators and government supporters in Amman. Hundreds of protesters calling for political changes and an end to corruption gathered in the centre of the capital but it was not clear whether they would ignore official warnings against holding a sit-in of the types seen in Egypt and Bahrain. Jordan has seen sporadic unrest since January but only on a small scale. Opposition demands – supported by youth groups, civil society organisations and Islamists – are for changes within the framework of the Hashemite monarchy. King Abdullah has pledged to pursue reforms that would allow the formation of future governments based on an elected parliamentary majority but gave no date. The slogan “the people want the reform of the regime” was in striking and deliberate contrast to demands elsewhere for the “overthrow” of rulers. The Amman protest was held with a heavy security presence, with police, gendarmerie and special forces surrounding the area, the Ammon News website reported. Rallies for reform and against “rampant corruption” also drew hundreds of demonstrators in the southern cities of Tafileh, Maan and Karak, and in Irbid and Jerash in the north. Arab and Middle East unrest Egypt Middle East Africa Tunisia Syria Jordan Ghaith Abdul-Ahad Jack Shenker Martin Chulov Ian Black guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …A pair of planes crashed at Boston’s Logan Airport last night, injuring at least one woman. A large Delta 767 with 204 passengers was preparing to take off when its wing sliced through the tail of a smaller plane on a taxiway, the Boston Globe reports. Dozens of emergency vehicles…
Continue reading …Royal Brompton says plans to reduce the number of hospitals carrying out children’s heart surgery are ‘fundamentally flawed’ The Royal Brompton hospital in London has won permission for a judicial review of what it argues are “fundamentally flawed” NHS plans that threaten to close its children’s heart surgery unit. The hospital stands to lose its unit under proposals to reduce the numbers of hospitals carrying out children’s heart surgery from 11 to six or seven. Experts agree that children will be safer if heart surgery is concentrated in fewer, larger units where surgeons are more experienced. But the proposals put forward by the “Safe and Sustainable” NHS review, run by a joint committee representing all primary care trusts, have outraged the Royal Brompton, which is one of three hospitals in London undertaking this very specialised surgery and the only one earmarked for closure in the capital. Their services would be merged into those of Great Ormond Street and the Evelina children’s hospital. The Royal Brompton and Harefield NHS Foundation Trust has now been granted permission to proceed to a full judicial review later this year by Mr Justice Burnett at the high court. It argues that the process leading to the public consultation (which has just ended) on a number of different closure options was fundamentally flawed. “This is extremely good news, first and foremost for patients,” said Bob Bell, chief executive of the trust. “We have always supported the principle that all babies and children who undergo heart surgery deserve the best possible care, but decisions about the future of such vital services have to be made on the basis of sound, objective evidence and the decision-making process must, of course, be entirely transparent. These conditions were not met by those responsible for this review.” However, the trust did not succeed in getting the reorganisation stopped in its tracks. Mr Justice Burnett said it “is desirable for the joint committee to continue its work of improving paediatric cardiac surgery for the nation”. It was with “some hesitation” that he agreed that the Brompton had an arguable case, he said. The Brompton claims that the decision to reduce London centres from three to two was not based on any evidence, but was an attempt to ensure London shared “the pain of closure” with other units around the country. The trust also argues that it was not represented on the decision-making body, while the other two London centres were. It says its results are very good and that closure of the heart unit would have a damaging impact on its other services, including adult heart surgery. Hospital reorganisation plans are invariably hard fought and the Brompton is not the only centre to campaign against the proposed closure of its children’s heart surgery unit, but it is the only one to take legal action. Others have sent in mass petitions and MPs from Leeds succeeded in obtaining a debate on the floor of the House of Commons. There have been 70,000 responses to the public consultation exercise, including 20,000 text messages. Jeremy Glyde, programme director for Safe and Sustainable, said: “The rationale for change is supported by medical experts, professional associations and leading national heart charities. Pooling expertise will help the NHS make further improvements to patient outcomes and deliver a truly excellent service.” An independent panel would now look into the Brompton’s claim that other services would be damaged if the children’s heart unit closed, Glyde said. NHS Public sector cuts Health Public services policy Public finance Sarah Boseley guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The Obama administration says repeal of the “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” policy is going smoothly—but it wants a court to reinstate the ban on gays in the military as soon as possible. For a little while anyway. The Justice Department filed a motion yesterday asking a federal appeals court…
Continue reading …A is for “average,” especially at American colleges and universities today—a stunning 43% of all grades in the United States are now A’s, according to a new report on grade inflation . That’s up from just 15% in 1960 and 31% as recently as 1988, notes the Economix blog at…
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