RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Cameron’

Michael Douglas’s son Cameron a big-time drug dealer!!!

Oscar winning actor Michael Douglas can not be happy right now.
Cameron Douglas, Michael Douglas’s oldest son, has been arrested on a methamphetamine-dealing charge. Methamphetamine is the main ingredient used in making the street drug Crystal Meth. There has apparently been an ongoing investigation on friends of Cameron (three year investigation) and Cameron as well. Douglas [...]

Can the Internet deliver public services as well as help deliver an election victory for Cameron?

Interesting article in yesterday’s Observer by Rafael Behr on the political battleground that is the Internet. (And as a lifelong Observer and Guardian reader I was pleased to add my name to the letter in The Sunday Times in support of this excellent Sunday newspapers’ survival – though I am such a tart I’d probably [...]

Cameron Diaz ‘accepts’ fan’s marriage proposal

Hollywood star Cameron Diaz agreed to marry an unknown fan at the Comic-Con 2009 convention in San Diego, California.
While answering questions from fans at the convention, the ”What Happens in Vegas” actress was given the unexpected proposal, reports Us magazine.
“Will you marry me?” the unidentified man shouted from the crowd of thousands.
She answered: “Yes! Where [...]

Labour plans election day voting poll

Plans to hold a referendum on changes to the voting system on the day of the next general election are being considered in Downing Street as part of a ploy to expose David Cameron as a roadblock to sweeping constitutional reform.

The idea, backed by senior ministers, has come to light amid growing recriminations within the Labour party over poor campaign strategy and a lack of fresh ideas for attacking Cameron, following Labour’s thumping loss in Thursday’s Norwich North byelection.

Last night, after the Conservatives overturned a 5,000 Labour majority to win the Norwich seat by 7,348 votes, Labour MPs gave warning that, unless the party did more than peddle scare stories about possible Tory spending cuts, it faced a wipeout at the next election.

Cabinet sources have revealed that one idea being developed is to paint Cameron as a leader opposed to a wide-ranging reform of the political system that voters are demanding following the scandal over MPs’ expenses.

As part of this, plans are being considered to hold a referendum on general election day in which people would be asked to support or reject a switch from the present first-past-the-post system to a new model, under which candidates would need to have the support of at least 50% of voters to be elected.

If a majority backed change, a new method of voting called Alternative Vote (AV) could then be introduced at the election after next. Critics say first-past-the-post is unfair as it does not reward smaller parties in relation to their share of the vote and ensures the two main parties hold a virtual duopoly on power.

Government insiders say the plan would be a step towards fairer voting. But they also believe it has tactical attractions as it would force Cameron, a staunch supporter of first-past-the-post, to campaign actively against change and for a “no” vote ahead of an election.

A senior minister told the Observer: “This is around as an idea, although nothing has been decided. It is the kind of thing that could firm up in the months to come.”

Another source said: “It has the added attraction that if the Tories won power and the answer in the referendum was ‘yes’, the first act of a Cameron government would be to do something he was fundamentally opposed to, or overturn the will of the people.”

Gordon Brown has made clear that he is against a move to full proportional representation, because he does not want to break the link between MPs and their constituents. The AV system, however, would retain that link. Instead of simply marking an X on the ballot paper, voters would rank candidates on offer. If no one candidate gained a majority of first-preference votes, second preferences of the candidate who came last on the first ballot would be redistributed until someone reached the 50% threshold. Cabinet ministers favouring some form of change include Alan Johnson, Peter Hain, John Denham and Ben Bradshaw.

Willie Sullivan, from Vote for a Change, said the government had three months to show it was serious. A referendum would require legislation in November’s Queen’s speech.

“If we are going to restore faith in politics, we need more than tinkering,” he said. “The public expect a big bang reform, untainted by vested interests or political calculation. We need reform that puts the voters back in the driving seat. That means giving people a choice on whether or not we keep safe seats, jobs for life and the cheap theatre that passes for debate in our parliament.”

Last night Kate Hoey, the Labour MP for Vauxhall, said she was shocked by her party’s campaign in Norwich. “It was very negative, all about Tory spending cuts and stuff that frankly people did not believe. We have to do better than that to stand any chance at the next election.”

One senior Labour MP, Barry Sheerman, called Brown’s leadership into question, saying that the prime minister needed to reconnect with the public by the end of the summer.

“We’ve got to get our act together, and to get your act together you don’t go away for the summer and hope this all blows over,” he told BBC Radio 4′s Today programme. “The fact of the matter is we’ve got to think about how a party in government renews itself, how it does that. It’s partly a question of leadership, it’s partly a question of ideas.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


At last, Brown is getting it right

Democracy works, however imperfectly. It is a commonplace that democracies make governments responsive to the peoples’ wishes and demands. They allow for the argument, dissent and deliberation that produces better decision-making. But they do more. They have a capacity for self-correction, renewal and national reinvention. They express the deep wisdom of crowds. They force governments to confront today’s economic and social realities with today’s ideas and nostrums.

British politics – and the country – faces a democratic conundrum. The universal consensus beyond Number 10 is that an exhausted Labour government is facing electoral disaster led by a man unsuited to the task of prime ministership. The Norwich byelection result is but a harbinger of the annihilation that is to come. Gordon Brown has a habitual capacity to overclaim and dissimulate. He believed his own propaganda about escaping boom and bust and bought the neoconservative ideology that financial markets were innovatively efficient, so helping stoke a wild credit boom, a failure he still does not publicly recognise.

Worse, for a democratic politician, he is a lecturer and a bludgeoner rather than an arguer and a persuader. To argue, persuade and lead, you have to respect those with different views whether inside or outside your party. This is not his instinct; instead, he relies on a toxic inner circle to help him dispatch opponents by fair means or foul, as a lengthening list of able former colleagues is testimony. It is a tribute to the Labour party’s death wish that it has not the courage to unseat such a leader.

Other truths will surface over the next 10 months. The essence of democracy is alternative governments. After 13 years of New Labour, the country is ready for change. But the question it will and must ask is whether David Cameron’s Conservatives are the answer to Britain’s problems. To jump from the frying pan into the fire would be stupid. Brown, like the tortured heroes of Shakespearean tragedies, is complex: he has strengths that partly compensate for his all too obvious flaws. One strength is that he is assembling an array of policies that are right. This, along with his astonishing tenacity, makes it so hard for his party to junk him. And here’s the rub. The country may find it has the same difficulty.

One of the Conservative party’s problems is that it does not have the intellectual, political and philosophical wind at its back and it has no surefooted sense of what it should do as the economic and social crisis unfolds. Thus Boris Johnson’s London mayoralty in which little positive has been done. As somebody close to him acknowledged admiringly to me, Boris is the classic Tory. It is as important to occupy power, so denying its use to others, as to do anything constructive with it. That may excite Tory camp followers; others may feel that the point of power is to use it.

The size of the prospective budget deficit has given the Tory leadership a new confidence. The Conservatives’ task is to do what comes naturally: to take an axe to public spending and the regulatory arms of government like OfCom or the Financial Services Authority that displease the Tories’ natural constituencies, whether Rupert Murdoch or a stage army of City traders. Yet under Adair Turner, the FSA has begun to get serious about insider trading, investment banker bonuses and the structure of banks’ business models. Just as it gets its act together, it is to be disbanded and its powers handed to what City minister Paul Myners calls the “bookish” Bank of England, whose record of both spotting asset price bubbles and handling bank crises is dire. Thinking City people concerned about the dominance of speculative finance are shaking their heads in disbelief. Equally, Sky’s competitors and many consumers are no less dismayed that a champion of competition is to be abolished.

Giles Wilkes, chief economist of the Liberal Democrat-leaning thinktank CentreForum, writes in an excellent overview of the current crisis (“A Balancing Act: Fair Solutions to a Modern Debt crisis”) that, while it was right to be tough on public spending and public deficits in 1979, it would be disastrous today. He argues that an economy beset by large private debt, low inflation, negligible private sector demand, collapsing asset prices and a broken banking system faces very different problems to the British economy of 1979. The growth in public debt that the Tories decry has been essential to heading off a full-blown depression.

It is tragic that Cameron and George Osborne have been seduced into primitive Samuel Smiles Thatcherism. They, like Brown, are more complicated than their cartoon depictions. Both have been brave enough to ask tough questions about the priorities of British capitalism and to have tried to open up a debate about how civil society as much as the state should address Britain’s social problems. Now they have regressed to simple anti-state, budgetary conservatism at just the wrong moment.

For over the last few weeks, the subterranean balance of the deep argument has begun to swing back to Brown. As Wilkes says, he got it wrong during the boom, but his fiscal strategy is now right. Brown’s document, “Building Britain’s Future”, is only halfway there, but it is the right trajectory. It was an achievement to persuade both Nissan and Toyota to step up their investment in electric car batteries and hybrids in Britain. It is right to begin the electrification of the railways. He is right to defend the FSA. Although much criticised, Britain must afford the big deficits until the economy plainly bottoms, when it will be right both to raise taxes and then slow spending growth. But not until then. Brown is right to insist there is a fundamental difference of strategy and Osborne and Cameron would have been cleverer not to have allowed this gap to open.

Will they really risk intensifying recession? Will they risk a second financial crisis that would bankrupt the country by mismanaging financial regulation? Do they have a strategy for building the economy? Will Britain leave the EU? These are big questions and in democracies cannot be avoided. If Labour was led by a charismatic leader sure of his or her ground, it would beat this Conservative party. Even with Brown, the Tory margin of victory cannot be taken for granted. There is a deep wisdom in democracies. They tend not to elect governments who will do the wrong things.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Smack on the funny bone

Politicians under fire from satirists should never rub their bruises. The smart move is to laugh along

David Cameron has made clear that he will look around the world for new political ideas and must be tempted by an initiative being trialled in Pakistan. If President Zardari’s attempt to ban the dissemination of jokes about him – through a new cyber crimes act, targeting blog comedy, text jests and email facetiousness – were to be introduced in the UK, Channel 4 could be prevented from screening a film, revealed this week, that will recreate the events leading up to a notorious photo of Bullingdon Club members including Cameron and Boris Johnson.

This film continues a recent British tradition of attacking politicians early in their careers. Once, a leader would have had to form at least one administration before meriting a feature-length TV demolition. But Blair and Brown were picked off as aspirants and even Michael Howard, although he never became prime minister, was subjected to a peak-time comedy about a draconian home secretary aiming higher.

Although being spread through new technology, the kind of jokes that Zardari objects to have an older history: one of them – that the great leader has asked for his face to go on a stamp but citizens aren’t sure which side to spit on – was applied, for example, to Richard Nixon. Curiously, the British figure most vulnerable to the gag – Elizabeth II – has avoided it, even among republicans.

That particular line of attack has a limited shelf-life – not because of a rise in political competence but the spread of self-adhesive stamps – but the leader of Pakistan is surely doomed in his attempt to introduce a gagging order on gags and, anyway, he has perhaps over-estimated their power.

Objectively, it is difficult to argue that political satire has had much direct effect on history. Richard Nixon, though seared by comedians throughout his career, was brought down by journalism rather than jokes. And three of the most violently caricatured politicians of modern times – Thatcher, Blair, George Bush – also served the longest terms.

All political satirists must eventually reflect on this strike rate: Ian Hislop has argued persuasively that political humour is not useless simply because it fails to achieve immediate regime-change: he believes that there is a moral imperative at least to have tried. And there is also, clearly, a greatly cheering and cathartic effect for those members of the population who didn’t vote for the leader in question. A recent book anthologising jokes told in eastern Europe during the cold war touchingly showed the way in which humour can be a democratic immune system, keeping the dissident spirit alive.

Also – as the president of Pakistan’s leaden intervention has proved – there is considerable comfort in knowing that the jokes have hit home. The satirists of Nixon could do nothing about his fat mandates but they could be cheered by his visibly thin skin.

One reason that Margaret Thatcher was a more effective premier than John Major was that she showed no sign of knowing the jokes about her – and would deliver speech-written gags that she didn’t understand – whereas he liked to challenge journalists and cartoonists on whether their slights were fair. Like batsmen hit by bouncers, politicians should never rub their bruises.

The most revealing aspect of Zardari’s crackdown is that it targets the newer media. This reflects a feeling among politicians that, for the present generation of leaders, the tactics of character assassination have escalated. In fact, the gags are simply more visible: what was once spoken on street corners now leaves a cyber-trail, which Zardari has foolishly chased. But new technologies will usually defeat censorship.

In this sense, at a very small level, there is a link between Channel 4′s Cameron film and Zardari’s ban. The Conservative leader has imposed his own limits on wit by securing the withdrawal of the Bullingdon picture from public use. Opponents have got round this by recreating the photo in various ways – the TV comedy is another example.

What’s really funny about what happened in Pakistan, though, is that politicians in other countries are going to have to be tremendously good-humoured about any attacks on them because of the risk that they will be compared to Zardari.

By taking offence at jests, President Zardari has made himself a laughing stock. A man who tried to weaken political humour has demonstrated its strength. As the touchy John Major said, in a different context, if it’s hurting, it’s working. Skilled politicians know that the smart move is to join in the jokes, no matter how much they sting. Team Cameron, if it is sensible, will already be working on some wry, self-deprecating quip for their reluctant film star on the night of the Bullingdon transmission.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Cameron Sinclair: Design goes to the White House

Today Michelle Obama will host a luncheon at the White House as part of the National Design Awards. Introduced in 2000, this is an official…

The red Tory delusion

These outrider visions suit Cameron very nicely – just don’t expect him to put them into action

Political cross-dressing is familiar, but so-called Red Tories are indulging in something more like political reassignment surgery. The leading light is Phillip Blond – who clings to David Cameron’s coat-tails while shunning the Conservative creed of coming to terms with the world as it is. He damns Labour for failing to tame big business or close the wealth gap, suggesting the Tories can do better by developing the Cameroonian insight that “there is such a thing as society, but it’s not the same as the state”.

With spending cuts on the way, Cameron can only benefit from an intellectual outrider who promotes a Tory prescription that goes beyond the axe. So in January he spoke at the launch of Blond’s work at Demos, a thinktank that has been courting modernising Conservatives. It has recently been announced Blond is leaving Demos, but he continues to attract sympathetic attention for his party in naturally suspicious quarters – including in the Guardian.

Blond recently proposed “recapitalising the poor“. Even putting aside the irresistible question of how much capital the poor had in the first place, the detail is easy to pick at. Instead of blowing a hole in the government’s books, he conjectures the banking bailout will produce eventual returns for Whitehall to funnel to the dispossessed. He imagines cash-strapped councils have money to hand back to already subsidised tenants, and proposes extending means testing while railing against the poverty trap it creates.

Blond is not a policy wonk but a theologian. Treasury officials would make mincemeat of his detailed plans but, on the big ideas, he has interesting things to say. He highlights pre-1979 Tory traditions of responsibility to the community, and argues that all the main parties are beset by a narrowing liberalism, which imagines people as atomised consumers, not citizens. From that vantage point, he says, the role of small businesses simply drops out of view. He proposes rewriting competition rules, so community life can be considered alongside the price of fish in decisions about whether to license yet another Tesco.

While this policy is attractive, a Tory government would struggle to implement it, because it clashes with the big Conservative business interests. We arrive at the nub of the argument for ingesting Red Toryism with a shovel-load of salt. Clever people, of whom Blond is indubitably one, are prone to over-intellectualising politics – failing to grasp that it is a game where interests trump ideas. In the Tory party, the weightiest interest is property – not the abstract notion, but the real security of those who happen to own it.

The hold of property is not some recent aberration, dating from the Iron Lady’s protection of “our people”. Lord Salisbury saw property’s defence as his central aim – there was “always wealth”, he said. A generation later, Bonar Law promised to “leave things alone” rather than meddle in what different classes owned. Even the more conciliatory Stanley Baldwin pursued deflation, which protected rentiers at the expense of the working man. Throughout, Conservatives have stood against organised labour – which embodies the non-state mutualism that Blond is so keen on but threatens the owners of industry.

Blond ignores all of this, and so fails to comprehend what the Conservative party is – and what it is set to remain. The instinct to approach policy from the point of view of the investor means the Tories have not, as Blond urges, ditched mail privatisation. Instead it is Labour, driven by its own union interests, that has kicked privatisation into touch. Likewise, the overriding need to serve “our people” explains why the Tories remain committed to an inheritance tax cut, and why each Labour budget redistributes a little to the poor.

Inequality has remained stubbornly high despite this because forces such as de-unionisation and privatisation remain powerful. These arguably benefit consumers, but the Tories originally unleashed them at least in part because they served Conservative interests. The Red Tory idea that the party may reverse them now is delusional because – as Palmerston said – interests are eternal.

None of this means conservative intellectual attitudes lack merit – scepticism about what works, realism about human nature, and suspicion of the state have a great deal to commend them. It is also true that conservative interests can at times ally with progressive values. On personal liberty, a case can be made that the Conservatives are now the more progressive party. In the end, though, every party is hostage to its “own people”, on the question of who gets what.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Brown braced for defeat in Norwich

Tory candidate expected to win in poll triggered by resignation of MP caught up in expenses scandal

Gordon Brown is bracing himself for electoral defeat as polls opened today in the Norwich North byelection.

Labour has held the seat comfortably since 1997 but the party is expected to pay a heavy price for the MPs’ expenses controversy in the first Westminster byelection since the Commons was rocked by the scandal.

David Cameron is due to visit the constituency for the sixth time this morning, giving a final boost to a campaign seen by Conservative headquarters as an important test of the party’s ability to withstand a Labour attack based on a “Tory cuts” message.

Unusually, the votes will be counted tomorrow rather than at the close of the polls this evening, partly because staffing a daytime count is easier. This has not happened at a byelection in recent years.

The byelection was caused by the resignation of Ian Gibson, a leftwinger who quit parliament after Labour ruled that he would not be allowed to stand at the next election because he used parliamentary expenses to fund a flat which he subsequently sold at a discount to his daughter.

Gibson, who was popular in the constituency, had a majority of 5,459 in 2005, and Labour’s decision to ban him as a candidate appears to have backfired, with some voters telling the party that they will not vote for his replacement, 28-year-old Chris Ostrowski, because they think Gibson was treated unfairly.

The Conservatives seem confident of victory. But they are nervous of comparisons with the Crewe and Nantwich byelection last year, when the Tories overturned a Labour majority of more than 7,000, winning by 7,860 with a swing of 17.6%.

“Crewe and Nantwich took place against the backdrop of the abolition of the 10p rate of tax and voters were so angry that they came straight over to us. Norwich North is different because, as a result of expenses, the voters are angry with all parties,” said one senior Tory.

Chloe Smith, the 27-year-old Conservative candidate, has responded to the challenge of campaigning in a climate of scepticism about politicians by issuing her own “contract with the people of Norwich North” containing various promises on policy and expenses.

The Liberal Democrats, who were well behind the Tories in 2005, claimed yesterday that it was now a Tory-Lib Dem contest, and that Labour could come third behind their candidate, April Pond.

At the start of the byelection, Labour campaigned aggressively on the theme of “Tory cuts”, in what was seen as a dry run for the general election strategy being planned by Brown. But the Tories believe that this tactic has been unsuccessful in Norwich North because they are winning the argument on public spending nationally.

Labour’s campaign suffered a blow when Ostrowski was taken to hospital with swine flu yesterday. He was recuperating today, but cabinet ministers Andy Burnham and Alan Johnson were in Norwich North campaigning on his behalf.

“I am very confident that we can win this byelection,” said Burnham. Privately, Labour was trying to make life difficult for Cameron by suggesting that anything less than a 10,000 majority would be a disappointment for the Tory leader.

The other candidates are: Peter Baggs (Independent), Thomas Burridge (Libertarian party), Anne Fryatt (None of the Above party), Bill Holden (Independent), Laud Howling (The Official Monster Raving Loony party), Craig Murray (Put An Honest Man into Parliament), Rupert Read (Green), Glenn Tingle (UK Independence party) and Robert West (British National party).

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Cameron Diaz too scared to star in ‘The Sound of Music’ remake

American actress Cameron Diaz has revealed that she is too scared to star in a remake of the musical movie ‘The Sound of Music’, as Julie Andrews’ original performance was so incredible.
Diaz, 36, who is rumoured to be the favourite for the lead role of Maria in a new version of the classic musical film, [...]

Labour braces for byelection defeat in Norwich

David Cameron makes sixth constituency visit to exploit voter anger at banning of Ian Gibson over expenses

Voters will go to the polls tomorrow in the Norwich North byelection with Gordon Brown braced for defeat in a seat that Labour has held comfortably since 1997.

David Cameron is due to visit the constituency for the sixth time in the morning, giving a final boost to a campaign seen by Conservative headquarters as an important test of the party’s ability to withstand a Labour attack based on a “Tory cuts” message.

Unusually, the votes will be counted on Friday, rather than tomorrow night, partly because staffing a daytime count is easier. This has not happened at a byelection in recent years.

The byelection was caused by the resignation of Ian Gibson, a leftwinger who left parliament after Labour ruled that he would not be allowed to stand at the next election because he used parliamentary expenses to fund a flat which he subsequently sold at a discount to his daughter .

Gibson, who was popular in the constituency, had a majority of 5,459 in 2005 and Labour’s decision to ban him as a candidate appears to have backfired, with some voters telling the party that they will not vote for his replacement, 28-year-old Chris Ostrowski, because they think Gibson was treated unfairly.

The Conservatives seem confident of victory. But they are nervous of comparisons with the Crewe and Nantwich byelection last year, when the Tories overturned a Labour majority of more than 7,000, winning by 7,860 with a swing of 17.6%.

“Crewe and Nantwich took place against the backdrop of the abolition of the 10p rate of tax and voters were so angry that they came straight over to us. Norwich North is different because, as a result of expenses, the voters are angry with all parties,” said one senior Tory.

Chloe Smith, the 27-year-old Conservative candidate, has responded to the challenge of campaigning in a climate of scepticism about politicians by issuing her own “contract with the people of Norwich North” containing various promises on policy and expenses.

The Liberal Democrats, who were well behind the Tories in 2005, claimed yesterday that it was now a Tory/Lib Dem contest, with their candidate April Pond, and that Labour could come third.

At the start of the byelection Labour campaigned aggressively on the theme of “Tory cuts”, in what was seen as a dry run for the general election strategy being planned by Brown. But the Tories believe that this tactic has been unsuccessful in Norwich North because they are winning the argument on public spending nationally.

Labour’s campaign suffered a blow when Ostrowski was taken to hospital with swine flu yesterday. He was recuperating today, but cabinet ministers Andy Burnham and Alan Johnson were in Norwich North campaigning on his behalf.

“I am very confident that we can win this byelection,” said Burnham. Privately, Labour was trying to make life difficult for Cameron by suggesting that anything less than a 10,000 majority would be a disappointment for the Tory leader.

The other candidates are: Peter Baggs (Independent), Thomas Burridge (Libertarian Party), Anne Fryatt (None of The Above Party), Bill Holden (Independent), Laud Howling (The Official Monster Raving Loony Party), Craig Murray (Put An Honest Man into Parliament), Rupert Read (Green), Glenn Tingle (UK Independence Party) and Robert West (British National Party).

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Nicolas Cage, Cameron Diaz to star in ‘The Green Hornet’?

Nicolas Cage and Cameron Diaz are reportedly in talks with the Columbia Pictures to star in the film ‘The Green Hornet’.
Cage could play the gangster villain in the film while Diaz may be cast as a reporter and love interest, reports Variety.
Seth Rogen is expected to take up the role of the masked crime fighter.
The [...]

Cameron Sinclair: National Governors Association: It’s time for a stroll.

Today saw the opening of the 101st National Governors Association meeting in the heart of the Gulf Coast. This pow wow is not only a…

Cameron calls for help for disabled children

Tory leader speaks of red tape nightmare as he and his wife fought to get help for their son Ivan, who died in February

David Cameron today calls for the families of disabled children to be spared “the bureaucratic pain” of form-filling and assessments to get the help they need.

Life for the parents of such young people is already “complicated enough without having to jump through hundreds of government hoops”, the Conservative leader says.

In an article in the Independent, he says that a future Tory government would consider an Austrian-style system of one-off assessments by “crack teams” of medical experts to determine what assistance families need.

Cameron’s remarks are his first to directly address the subject since his disabled son Ivan, who had the neurological disorder Ohtahara syndrome, died in February. He is to address the Research Autism conference in London today.

Cameron, whose commitment to the NHS is beyond doubt, told the Guardian last year about how his contact with the health service, special schools, social and other services because of Ivan’s condition had helped to shape his political views.

But in today’s article, a hint of frustration at dealing with bureaucracy emerges. “After the initial shock of diagnosis you’re plunged into a world of bureaucratic pain. Having your child assessed and getting the help you’re entitled to means answering the same questions again and again, being buried under snowdrifts of forms, spending hours on hold in the phone queue. I am determined to make life simpler for parents,” he says.

He says he and his wife Samantha were not only “deeply shocked, worried and upset” when told of Ivan’s condition, but also “incredibly confused”. He adds: “It feels like you’re on the beginning of a journey you never planned to take, without a map or a clue which direction to go in.”

He also repeats a pledge to halt the closure of special schools and make it easier for parents to get the education they need. “So many parents get stuck on a merry-go-round of assessments, appeals and tribunals to get a statement of special needs and the extra help their child needs.

“There is a structural reason for that. The people that decide who gets specialist education – local education authorities – are the ones who pay for it. We’re seriously looking at how we can resolve that conflict of interest, so parents don’t have to enter such a huge battle for special education.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Act now over Afghanistan, says Cameron

Tory leader says the government should act to reduce the number of lives lost in war against Taliban

David Cameron today told Gordon Brown he had to provide more leadership to reduce the numbers of British lives lost in Afghanistan.

In the last prime minister’s question time before the summer recess, the Conservative leader said the government should “show greater urgency and make more visible progress” in Afghanistan and said forces needed a more tightly defined mission.

This month 15 British soldiers have died in Afghanistan, taking the death toll to 184, more than that of the Iraq war.

Cameron also accused the government of failing to provide enough helicopters. He told Brown: “The number of helicopters we have in Afghanistan is simply insufficient.” Britain had fewer than 30 in Helmand while the Americans, with similar numbers of troops, had 100.

But as he and Cameron traded quotes by military figures on the issue, Brown said: “We have done everything we can to increase the numbers of helicopters and there will be more helicopters on the ground … While the loss of life is tragic and sad, it is not to do with helicopters.” The budget for helicopters was £6bn over the next 10 years.

The prime minister added: “The purpose of our mission is very clear: to prevent terrorism coming to the streets of Britain.”

Brown said that Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president, had responded favourably to his request that the Kabul government provide more police and soldiers in Helmand. “President Karzai has promised that he will provide additional resources to do that.” After October, Britain will provide more training to the Afghan security services, he said.

The head of the British army said earlier today that more coalition troops were needed in Helmand to provide the security for its people to go back to their ordinary lives.

General Sir Richard Dannatt said that “more boots on the ground” were key to success in Helmand, though he stressed that it did not matter whether they belonged to British, American or Afghan troops.

At PMQs, Nick Clegg, the Liberal Democrat leader, accused Brown of promising lots but doing nothing on bankers’ bonuses, the recession and cleaning up parliament. It was just “business as usual”, Clegg said.

Brown said the opposition parties should go away over the summer and reflect on why they had no policies to deal with the big issues facing Britain.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds