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Phish | 08.11 | Chicago

Words by: Cal Roach | Images by: Chad Smith

Phish :: 08.11.09 :: Toyota Park :: Bridgeview, IL

Phish :: 08.11.09 :: Bridgeview, IL

Ah, predicting of the opener, a time honored tradition that I have always sucked at. Conventional wisdom would deem Toyota Park, the lone Midwestern stop on the second summer leg, a potential sleeper show, which just means that as usual, anything at all might happen. We hadn’t seen “Kill Devil Falls” open in a while, so I suppose we were about due, and this set the tone for a show that would see all the usual 3.0 suspects rolled out. By now, Phish is entrenched in “KDF.” It’s little more than a middle-aged “Chalk Dust Torture” update, but it has already shown itself to have potential, though tonight’s version was pretty standard, tight with a couple of nice little peaks.

You could smell the “Ocelot” coming already. Both of these tunes took their eighth at-bat of the year, and while “KDF” has had a couple of monstrous outings already, I’m beginning to lose faith in “Ocelot.” It features a very indistinct, vaguely Deadheaded guitar riff and doesn’t seem to be able to break free of that lackadaisical stroll. I’m sure it will probably blast into space one of these nights, but there are far more interesting launch pads in the repertoire.

Phish got “Sample In A Jar” out of the way sort of oddly in the number two slot, then busted out “Paul and Silas” after “Ocelot” for some guy Trey had met walking down the street. And then, the debut of “Windy City,” a new Page tune. It was about what you’d expect from a new Page tune – kind of bluesy, a little adventurous with the time signatures, well-sung and with a perfunctory Trey wail in the end. Nothing mind-blowing, but it was a pleasant surprise to hear a Chicago tribute coming from Phish.

Trey Anastasio :: 08.11.09

If this brand new song was exciting for its novelty alone, “The Curtain With” was exciting in every possible way. The song took on an untouchable reverence after its sacrificial slaughter at Coventry, and having missed the Red Rocks breakout (read the review here), this one hit me like a ton of cement blocks. It’s such a gorgeous composition in itself, and it is so nice to be able to hear the “With” portion in all its aching beauty without cringing. The jam was “Reba”-esque, concise but triumphant, maybe even defiant, taken back from disgrace.

After a quick “Train Song” that felt right in its placement, we were treated to a near-epic “Gumbo” dropped for the second time since Hampton. This one was textbook, but in a good way. Post-hiatus versions generally felt tossed-off, and while this was no barnburner, the short jam was melodic and smooth and Page’s solo was comfort food. “Heavy Things” perpetuated the upbeat, spirited playing, Trey naturally taking the reins this time and turning in some top-notch licks that any spoiled tourhead knows he could pull off in his sleep.

I know there are a lot of “Time Turns Elastic” haters out there, but I’m a firm believer in this end-of-set-one placement for the song. Those who don’t dig it can get to the bathrooms early, but I am still excited to watch it mature. I think it would really benefit from a high-octane guest vocalist (sort of a requirement for most prog-rock of this caliber) to be brought out as a rarity, but for now they have to keep powering through it or it’ll never find its feet. I thought it scorched to close set one at Alpine earlier in the summer (read the review here), and tonight’s closing improv was the most adventurous we’ve seen – sort of scattered and hectic, foreshadowing the madness to come, and explosive in the end.

Before this show, I didn’t see a lot of potential for “Backwards Down The Number Line” as much more than a first-set “Heavy Things” surrogate, but it proved me wrong. After the song proper, Trey and Mike instantly grabbed a sustainable groove and took it into stratospheric rock territory, eventually backing off into low-key skronk that cranked quickly back into high gear, finally dipping into some mad Atari funk. And before it had any chance to peter out, Trey ripped into THE breakout of the show: “Carini.”

Trey & Mike :: 08.11.09

Sometimes you have an experience dreamed out in your head to its maximum choiceness, then you forget about it for a while, and then it actually happens and it’s better than you’d even conceived of. Phish has done that for me more than any other group, and that might be the crux of why I love this band so much. I never expected Mike to be just busting bomb after bomb, the glorious screech of the final chorus, and then Trey just incinerated it in one of the most frightening displays I’ve heard from him this year.

There’s no denying that “Gotta Jibboo” was a shift in character, from evil to pure joy, but as far as an individual jam it was hard to say whether Trey or Page was more glorious. However, it was such a thrill just to be wondering such things again. “Theme From The Bottom” could have been better. While Page was busy killing it, Trey completely dropped the ball in the end, and he was pretty unimaginative throughout the jam. Their trip to the dark side continued with a ferocious “Wilson.” I could get used to hearing this deep into the second set. It was no paint-by-numbers version, too. They’ve barely jammed it out at all this year, and this one got heavy fast and just oozed electricity. I guess they can still have fun with it.

Then, the cult of “2001″ got its collective wish. It’s always a joy to hear, but it definitely has lost its luster since its heyday in the mid-to-late-90s. Then came the amazing version from Deer Creek earlier in the year (read the review here), and suddenly this one was a journey and a destination all over again. This reading didn’t approach the ecstasy of Deer Creek or the weirdness of the crawling Red Rocks version (read that review here), but it was certainly sufficient.

The “Chalk Dust” that emerged from “2001″ was the best I’ve heard in ages, a simply stunning construction of sound. Mike was creative from the very beginning and he dominated the jam, luring some truly intuitive group improv from the whole band, surging as one entity from a little downtempo groove to a heady peak.

Phish :: 08.11.09 :: Bridgeview, IL

Okay, I admit it, I was hoping for “Harry Hood.” I hadn’t heard a single version from this year that I thought was really good. This version’s jam started pretty sloppy and got dangerously ambient, Trey seeming almost to lose it completely but then he started “First-Tubing” his way out of it. Page caught on quickly and the first mini-peak was very sweet. What followed was simply Page taking control, waking “Hood” up from its post-millennial stupor and destroying it. It was far from perfect, the ending completely awkward as it’s been almost every time this year, but I really felt it was a heroic effort by Page. If “The Squirming Coil” hadn’t been in the plan already, Page had just earned it. Pure bliss to end the set, like a long-lost friend, plus Mr. McConnell’s excellent solo, it was pure John Paul Jones 1977 “No Quarter” stuff. Just stunning.

The “Loving Cup” encore could’ve just as easily been sung by Page. He played a baaad piano tonight, and in one of the heaviest sets by Phish 3.0 so far. But Trey deserves a shout-out as well. Even though the sets were light on segues or lengthy thematic explorations, they were tight, bursting with energy and never boring for a second. That only happens when everybody’s on, and tonight everybody was.

Phish :: 08.11.09 :: Toyota Park :: Bridgeview, IL

Set I: Kill Devil Falls, Sample In A Jar, Ocelot, Paul and Silas, Windy City, The Curtain With, Train Song, Gumbo, Heavy Things, Time Turns Elastic

Set II: Backwards Down the Number Line > Carini > Gotta Jibboo, Theme From The Bottom, Wilson, 2001 > Chalk Dust Torture, Harry Hood, The Squirming Coil

E: Loving Cup

For more pics of this show, go here.

Phish perform next on Thursday, August 13 at Darien Lake Performing Arts Center in Darien Center, NY. Check back for live Tweets, setlists, pics and full reviews. Complete Phish tour dates available href="http://www.jambase.com/Artists/2698/Phish/Shows">here.

Keep up to speed with all things Phish at jambase.com/phish.


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Trevor Phillips: a career in crisis

Outspoken, clever, brave and possessing great strategic nous – Trevor Phillips should have been a brilliant leader of the Equalities and Human Rights Commission. So what on earth went wrong?

The idea of celebrity may not always mean much to a celebrity but there is a hierarchy to these things, and so it is that one of Trevor Phillips’s prized possessions is a photograph of himself in the company of Nelson Mandela. But it isn’t often that Phillips finds himself obliged to defer to anybody. He has status, a huge public profile and, in Lord Mandelson as well as many of the titans of New Labour, some very important allies.

A year ago, this might have been enough to guarantee his place in the governing establishment, with the agreeable side-products of wealth and reputation. Instead, with the Equalities and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) that he runs hovering close to meltdown, his reputation is under the severest attack and his career is in crisis.

Phillips presumably has the support of government, which chose to extend his contract to run the organisation for another three years when a cross-section of his commissioners were calling for his head, but he cannot even be sure of that because, as the storm has raged, ministers have stayed silent.

Sir Ian Blair, the former Met commissioner, thought that he had the security of a five-year contract but now he sits at home, writing his memoirs. These contracts are not iron-clad. With headlines depicting only turmoil, nothing can be taken for granted.

The commissioners who say they have resigned (in fact, they have chosen not to re-apply; only Phillips and his deputy Margaret Prosser had their contracts renewed) are brutally specific about the problem they see at the EHRC. Nothing to do with the scale of the task. Nothing to do with teething. Phillips, they say, is the problem. His outspokenness in comments such as, “In truth, Obama may be helping to postpone the arrival of a post-racial America and I think he knows it”; his declaration that multiculturalism is dead, that it’s time to stop branding the police as institutionally racist – comments that many say they disagree with, pronouncements they never endorsed.

Kay Hampton, one of the first commissioners to bail out and a former chair of the Commission for Racial Equality, diagnosed it thus. “Phillips’s leadership style, which is better suited to a political party than a human rights organisation, led to deep discontentment and dissatisfaction. Not surprisingly, cracks soon appeared on the commission’s board, leading to a breakdown in trust and confidence in the chair.” Bert Massie, a disability rights campaigner, also said the problem stemmed from Phillips himself. “How do you manage to alienate that number of people? It’s quite a skill.”

Stepping down at the weekend, Ben Summerskill, head of the gay rights organisation Stonewall, went further. “Trevor is a brilliant communicator, he’s a fantastic maker of television programmes, but he has not been successful in running the commission and bringing it together. We should be crystal- clear: this isn’t an issue about policies, this isn’t an issue about whether the commission should be a modern, 21st-century commission, it’s an issue about old-fashioned management.”

So far, six members of the commission’s 16-strong ruling body say they have resigned, as well as the head of its disability committee, the director of stakeholder relations and, at the weekend, his director of communications. Greg Dyke, who knows Phillips well, having watched him rise from researcher to head of current affairs at London Weekend Television, said his friend is an able administrator. “He is clever and thoughtful and rational. He has always seemed very good with people. He was liked and popular. If people now are saying that he is autocratic, I have to say that is not something I ever noticed. But he does try to get things done. In some organisations, that doesn’t always make you very popular.”

A colleague who worked very closely with Phillips during his spell in 2000 as chairman of the Greater London Authority concurs. “He was very comfortable in the role, very courageous and he took the initiative. He was always wanting to move the thing forward. Others were hemmed in by the legislation, but he would say: we are a new organisation. Let’s try this. See where it goes.”

So if the problem is not a lack of ability, and Phillips hasn’t been daunted by the scale of his role as first chair of the Equalities Commission, what has gone wrong and how can it be fixed? One pertinent question is: was it the concept of the commission itself? Certainly Phillips was one of those who voiced strong opposition to the creation of the commission at the outset, arguing that the race agenda, for which he bore responsibility at the Commission for Racial Equality, would be lost or at least blanded out by the body’s absorption into the new super-quango, merging the separate government-funded bodies that dealt with race and gender and disabilities. Initially, he backed away from any suggestion that he might run it. Effectively his arm was twisted by ministers. His U-turn lost him considerable support among black activists who felt his involvement in the campaign against the EHRC might have helped them win the argument.

Dyke thinks there is a philosophical and structural problem. “When I saw they were putting all those organisations together, I thought, there is the recipe for a nightmare. Some jobs are beyond management.”

For all that, no one has suggested any lack of commitment on the part of Phillips towards the super-quango or the all-encompassing human rights agenda. Perhaps the problems go deeper.

Phillips travelled into the political arena on the path labelled New Labour. It was a particularly uncluttered path. He declined to be the Labour party’s candidate for London mayor, choosing instead to be Frank Dobson’s deputy. When Dobson lost to Ken Livingstone, Phillips entered the London Assembly by dint of his position at the top of the Labour list for elections run using proportional representation. It was a no-sweat entree to representative politics. It didn’t have to be that way. When it became clear that Bernie Grant, then MP for Tottenham, was ailing in the years before his death in 2000, many saw Phillips as a natural heir. But, not wanting the drudge of constituency meetings, backbenches and the loss of privacy, he chose not to subject himself to the hurly burly of a byelection.

He didn’t have to. From the chairmanship of the London Assembly to the chair of the Commission for Racial Equality, he attained high-profile jobs – all within his capabilities but, crucially, all with the blessing of the New Labour establishment. New Labour was never comfortable with a race agenda, but in time he became its most tangible symbol that black people could thrive within the Blairite project. But they had to be black people who understood the vocabulary. He understood the vocabulary.

One can’t help thinking that if the complaints from commissioners are even half true, Phillips seems to have run the EHRC in a very New Labour, Blairite way – with a certainty of conviction and strength of purpose, but with no great feeling that he had to take his lieutenants with him. Commissioners complain of key statements and policy pronouncements of which they had no advance warning, and felt uneasy about some of his public positions, such as the observation he made in 2005 that Britain was “sleepwalking its way to segregation”. They hit out at deals allegedly struck without their knowledge, of government by clique.

Hampton complained that Phillips’s approach was too political, but in fact it has not been at all political in any operational sense because politicians know only too well that they need to keep potentially troublesome elements “on-side” to prevent the sort of disunity and plotting that has brought Phillips’s career to the precipice. A good politician nurtures constituents, even when they are foolish or boring, and they know that while powerful friends are a boon, a personal constituency is crucial, especially when things go bad.

Rather than political, his approach thus far would appear to have been rooted in the skills that made him a formidable journalist. Single-mindness, strategic nous, a love of impact, the courage to take the debate into uncharted territory, a certain ruthlessness. “There are two schools of thought in government and public affairs,” says a colleague who has observed him closely. “The first way says you build alliances and go slowly. The second is that you need to push ahead and let anyone who lags behind catch up. He is much closer to the second.”

This approach has brought some success, but no one writes much about that. The commission has brought 330 enforcement and litigation actions in the last 18 months alone. But was it the right approach to fuse the disparate elements of the fledgling commission? The only thing that unites the rebel factions now is their criticism of him.

If he is to survive – and increasingly even friends question whether he will – the next week will be crucial. The resignations are losing their impact, but it must be worrying for him that few of the commissioners who have been so scathing about him are themselves being criticised. By attacking him, they seem to be doing the will of their own constituents. His allies, by contrast, appear to be keeping their heads down and so are ministers who hold his fate within their gift. One more push and he could topple over. Any fresh allegation of conflict between his work for the commission – a three-day-a-week contract – and his private race consultancy Equate would see an end to him. (Commissioners and ministers were aggrieved to learn that in 2007, as Channel 4 faced criticism over racist remarks directed towards the Indian actor Shilpa Shetty on Big Brother, the station was being advised by Equate, which is 70% owned by Phillips.) Any new worries about the EHRC’s finances, which triggered concern this year from the National Audit Office, could also see him finished. Sudden death.

But if he can soldier on through the next few days, the plan is for a fresh start. A new, coherent vision for the commission, drawn up with greenskin commissioners who will pull in the same direction. Perhaps a landmark speech. Maybe it will activate a legal challenge or two; get its hands dirty. But there will also have to be a new approach from Phillips. A more measured, consensual approach that includes his lieutenants, and might well appeal on some days to the Tories and the Daily Mail, but doesn’t leave everyone else with the impression that the pendulum is stuck in an illiberal direction.

Above all, he will need to start showing an increasingly sceptical public why the commission, with its £70m budget, exists and should continue to exist. Already there is the fear that the ongoing crisis will give an incoming Cameron government the perfect excuse to kill off the commission. It needs a reputation for effectiveness, not cabaret. It needs results. “So far, he can’t point to anything substantial that it has done for anybody,” says the MP Diane Abbott. “There has been a lot of damage done to Trevor and the commission. The sooner it starts delivering for people, the better.”

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Michael Vick Reinstated By NFL

NEW YORK — Michael Vick was conditionally reinstated by NFL commissioner Roger Goodell on Monday and could play in regular season games as early as October. Vick can immediately participate in preseason practices, workouts and meetings a…

Sixth resignation at equality watchdog

Ben Summerskill steps down from equality commission, saying Phillips’s leadership style is unnerving

Trevor Phillips, the beleaguered head of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, was under further pressure today after one of the watchdog’s best known members resigned and called on Phillips to step down.

Ben Summerskill of the gay rights group Stonewall faxed his resignation to the minister for women and equality, Harriet Harman, at lunchtime today, becoming the sixth commissioner to resign from the EHRC.

He told the Guardian that Phillips’s leadership style had “unnerved” many commissioners and that the intense media scrutiny surrounding the commission meant that the time had come for him to step down as chair. Phillips’s contentious leadership was interfering with the commission’s work, Summerskill said.

“There were yet more headlines today and there comes a point when someone – particularly someone like Trevor who described himself as a politician – has to recognise that the headlines are destructive,” said Summerskill.

“I am crystal-clear that there are millions of people in this country whose lives are still disfigured by prejudice and every hour that the commission is arguing about who its chair is is an hour that is not being spent focused on changing the lives of those people.”

Summerskill’s resignation follows that of a string of commissioners including Sir Bert Massie – a leading disability rights campaigner who stood down last weekend and described Phillips’s chairmanship as “divisive” – and Kay Hampton, who resigned in March. Earlier this week, Hampton said that Phillips’s leadership style was “better suited to a political organisation rather than a human rights one”.

It has also emerged that Alun Davies, head of the disability committee, has recently resigned.

The EHRC found itself under further scrutiny on Monday after it emerged that it had spent £325,000 on re-employing seven executives who had recently left one of its predecessor organisations with generous redundancy packages.

The National Audit Office (NAO), which published a report into the EHRC, has refused to fully sign off the commission’s accounts because it had failed to get Treasury approval for the appointments.

The NAO said the commission – which grew out of the Commission for Racial Equality, the Disability Rights Commission and the Equal Opportunities Commission – “had no business strategy, no agreed organisational design, and no clear understanding of what the commission would do, and was missing important elements of effective programme management” in the run-up to its creation two years ago.

The EHRC was not immediately available for comment.

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Michael Vick Released From Federal Custody, Wants To Resume Football Career (VIDEO)

By LARRY O’DELL, Associated Press Writer

HAMPTON, Va. – Suspended NFL star Michael Vick ended his federal dogfighting sentence Monday, freeing him to lobby for a return to the field.

Vick’s attorney Lawrence Woodward told The Associated Pres…

Live – The Open

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606: DEBATE
Your thoughts on the action

To get involved use 606 or text us your comments on 81111. (Not all contributions can be used; texts charged at your usual rate)

By Sam Lyon

From Chris in Hants via text on 81111: "Regardless of today’s outcome, this championship will live long in my memory. It has been an honour watching Tom Watson! What a player!"0835: And that brings me nicely to you guys – while the lower echelons of the leaderboard flay their way from tee to green this morning, I want you lot to get involved in a big, big way. You have two options, unless you are a master of smoke signals or own a particularly reliable carrier pigeon, text me on 81111 or, from 0900 BST, 606 will open its doors for you all to natter away from the comfort of your own homes. Lovely.BBC Sport’s Rob Hodgetts on Twitter: "Gentle murmur in media tent. Fairly empty but people drifting in. Calm before the storm. Blustery day with lots of cloud but sunny patches."0831: However, while Tom Watson’s success would warm the cockles of even Victor Meldrew’s heart, headline-writers the nation over would surely love a win for England’s father-to-be Ross Fisher – and he’s only a shot off the lead after three rounds. Compatriot Lee Westwood, too, would bring a smile to everyone’s faces should he rid himself of the nearly man tag and bag a first major title – but with just six shots separating the top 26 players it really is anyone’s Open. Mathew Goggin, Retief Goosen, Stewart Cink, Jim Furyk, Angel Cabrera – the list of contenders goes on and on – where’s your money0827: So, as Darren Clarke and Mark O’Meara get their final rounds under way, let’s have a look at where we stand shall we Well you’d have to have been living under a rock these past few days to have missed the fact that Tom Watson – has anyone mentioned he’s 59 – is on the brink of history at Turnberry, and what a story it would be. Twenty six years after his last Open triumph, the great American has been tearing up trees all weekend in Ayreshire and it would be a feature-writer’s dream if he were to win here today. Not to mention an inspiring story for every dad and grandad out there – courses all over Britain will suddenly be flooded by octogenarians fuelled by the belief ‘you’re never too old to win it’. My old man has already dusted off his bag and clubs and will be chopping his way round Hainault with yours truly next week – so get your replacement window orders in early, people. From Denis Broomfield, Hampton via text on 81111: "Great golf and great comments. BUT can someone coordinate the number of times the imminent arrival of the BABY FISHER is announced The whole world now k nows about the happy event. Let us know if and when Dad leaves Turnberry. But send parents and baby our best wishes."0821: American Paul Goydos and Japan’s Ryuji Imada are the next pairing having a swing out there, and the former apes Gaunt in bogeying the first. Imada takes a par, but with all due respect I don’t suppose many will be following his duo today – except mummy and daddy Goydos and Imada maybe.From Ken, Aberdeen via text on 81111: "Hold on Mrs Fisher, I’ve £5 e/w on your man at 35-1! Good luck with the baby afterwards! Could be called Claret" From Deano in Somerset via text on 81111: "Let’s hope Watson can show that experience does count in Golf. No matter what the age! Deano in Somerset." 0812: Australian Dan Gaunt, who fired the round of the day on Friday with a 67, is the first man out and about this morning at Turnberry and unfortunately he’s showing the form of his first and third rounds rather than the second as he takes a bogey five at the first. He’s now 13 over and I’m going to stick my neck out and say Dan Gaunt will not be winning the Open. Which should prompt some kind of Lazarus-esque comeback from the Aussie, no doubt…BBC Sport’s Mark Orlovac on Twitter: "Morning. Struggled to sleep last night, huge day ahead. Had a dream about Furyk though, maybe that’s a sign. Wonder how Watson’s feeling"

Rain

0805: Now then, what’s the weather doing at Turnberry, I hear you ask. As luck would have it, one of our men at the Open, Mark Orlovac, has just rung in and says: "It’s overcast, not raining at the moment, but it’s very blowy. I can see white horses on the sea". Be warned, though, rain is forecast…0800: Watson goes out at 1420 alongside Australia’s Mathew Goggin, with Britain’s Lee Westwood and Ross Fisher teeing it up 10 minutes before. But opening proceedings on his lonesome at 0800 is another Aussie, Daniel Gaunt. 0755: Morning folks. Today’s the day when we find out ifTom Watson can become the oldest Open championin history. The veteran eight-time major winner turns 60 on 4 September, but I’ll wager the celebrations will start early if he gets his mitts on the famous Claret Jug for the sixth time


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Bank rescues could cost state £11bn

• UK Financial Investments says recovering taxpayers’ investment will be a challenge
• Fall in government stake is £6.2bn for Lloyds and £4.7bn for RBS

Bank share price performance (pdf)

The government admitted this morning that it was sitting on a loss of almost £11bn following the partial nationalisation of Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group.

UK Financial Investments (UKFI), the body that manages the taxpayers’ stakes in the two banks, said this morning that recovering the taxpayers’ investment would be “challenging”.

“Every UK household will have more than £3,000 invested in shares in RBS and Lloyds,” said John Kingman, the UKFI chief executive.

The paper losses have been incurred because RBS and Lloyds shares are trading well below the value at which the government bought into the banks. The details emerged as UKFI set out its strategy to maximise the value of its investments for the taxpayer and to eventually return the banks as strengthened institutions to full private ownership.

UKFI said it would not set any fixed timetable for disposing of the shares and expected to undertake a number of capital markets transactions over a sustained period.

“Our investee banks face significant legacy losses and the inevitable effects of the recession. Nevertheless, we believe they now have the capital resources to weather these difficulties and to emerge from the current environment with their strong franchises and profitability intact,” UKFI said.

According to the report, the Lloyds stake is worth £6.2bn less than the taxpayer paid for it, while the RBS stake is worth £4.7bn less.

The taxpayer bought into Lloyds at an average of 121p a share and RBS at 51p, but shares are trading below those levels – Lloyds at 62p and RBS at 35p – making any sale before the next general election unlikely.

Today’s annual report is a rare opportunity to hear from UKFI and the City will be examining its report closely to look for any guidance on whether any shares will be sold soon.

The body is still being run by a temporary chairman, Glen Moreno, who stepped in six months ago after Sir Philip Hampton was poached to chair RBS.

In February, the chancellor, Alistair Darling, said he expected to make a decision on a permanent replacement “in the very near future”, but City sources believe the government is struggling to find a permanent replacement for Hampton.

Moreno ran into controversy because of his links to Liechtenstein Global Trust (LGT), a private bank accused of aiding tax evasion, and is not thought to have applied for the full-time position. Kingman is a civil servant, elevated from the Treasury to take on the role of UKFI chief executive.

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