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Posts Tagged ‘Mr Brown’

Within his reach

An extraordinary election is set to make David Cameron Britain’s next prime minister

IT WAS a short speech, but it just may have been the speech of his life. David Cameron appealed early in the afternoon of Friday May 7th to Nick Clegg, leader of the Liberal Democrats, and beyond him to the markets, to give the Conservatives a chance to form a strong, stable government. With a handful of constituency ballots still being counted, the Tories had 302 seats in Parliament at the time of his statement. They were thus set to become the largest party in the House of Commons but not to command the chamber, for which 326 seats, or something not far short, are required. Mr Cameron made a “big,comprehensive and open” offer to Mr Clegg and his party to join him in establishing a strong, stable government, outlining honestly the areas in which the two parties disagree (defence, Europe and immigration) as well as agree (educational reform, fiscal probity). Urgent negotiations continue.

After one of the strangest nights in recent British history, no clear winner has emerged from the general election held on May 6th. Gordon Brown and his Labour Party appear to be clear losers, with some 100 seats fewer than they held before Britons went to the polls. With financial markets unsettled, both at home and abroad, the question now-as was once asked in another context-is who runs Britain. Mr Clegg, for his part, has said that he thinks it right to allow the party which has garnered most support from the electorate to form a government …

Voters, meet Gordon

Britain’s prime minister produces a great political blunder

“THAT was a disaster,” said Gordon Brown after an encounter with a voter that had not gone according to the script on Wednesday April 28th. In fact the incident was nothing compared with his accidentally keeping a broadcast microphone attached to his lapel which picked up that remark, and the rest of a conversation with his aides, as they retreated to Mr Brown’s Jaguar. “They should never have put me with that woman,” he added out of the corner of his mouth, smiling and waving to the crowd all the while. “Whose idea was that?” The kicker came after Mr Brown and his team drove away: “she was just a sort of bigoted woman that said she used to be Labour.” …

The week ahead

Britain’s party leaders discuss foreign policy in a televised debate

BRITAIN’S voters have a second chance to assess the leaders of the three main parties on Thursday April 22nd. Gordon Brown, his closest challenger, David Cameron, the leader of the Conservatives, and Nick Clegg, leader of the Liberal Democrats, clash in a second televised debate, this time focussed on foreign policy. Even if he impresses, Mr Brown’s slender chance of remaining prime minister could suffer a blow the next day when figures for GDP in the first quarter are released. If the economy has grown a little, as forecasters reckon, the leader of the Labour Party may still be able to claim the credit for his careful stewardship an economy creeping out of a deep recession. Numbers showing the economy contracting again would be catastrophic for Mr Brown and the Labour Party.

Does he have what it takes?

The Conservative leader, David Cameron, is still the favourite to be Britain’s next prime minister

HE HAS led the Conservative Party for more than four years and is the man most likely to lead Britain after the general election this spring. Yet people still wonder just who David Cameron is. This is not because he hides what he does or fudges what he thinks, as those on the receiving end of countless webcameron flashes and unending policy e-mails can attest. It is, rather, that his views are not always those of either his party or, perhaps, of his age.

The Economist talked to Mr Cameron on March 29th, in the last of a series of on-the-record interviews with the leaders of the three main political parties. Though only 15 years younger than Gordon Brown, prime minister and leader of the Labour Party, he seems of a different generation, with an easy, human touch that Mr Brown often struggles to achieve. He has more obviously in common with the similarly 40-ish, six-foot-tall leader of the Liberal Democrats, Nick Clegg. But Mr Cameron is an altogether slicker number, and a far more experienced political operator. …

The other Brown

A late, and philosophical, return to American political campaigning for Jerry Brown

THE dark, floppy hair has gone, and the face is a little rounder, but otherwise Jerry Brown, at 71, looks much as he did when he slept on a futon on the floor of his office and squired Linda Ronstadt round town. He was California’s Democratic governor then, from 1975 to 1983, and on Tuesday March 2nd he officially announced that he hopes to be governor again.

Apart from a spell studying Buddhism in the east—no surprise to anyone—Mr Brown has not disappeared in the interim from California politics. He has been mayor of Oakland and is now the state’s attorney-general. He has a Jesuit education, a prodigious intellect, a fine pedigree (his father, Pat Brown, was one of the state’s best governors) and a protean political identity that allows him to become almost any sort of candidate, as needed. “Action and contemplation joined together” he said in full Zen mode last June, “is what I would call the highest path that we can follow.” …

Brown’s way forward

Britain’s prime minister, Gordon Brown, has the fight of his life on his hands

GORDON BROWN is anything but idle these days. On February 22nd, extolling the merits of Britain to representatives of 250 big companies at a Global Investment Conference in London, he was the perfect economic statesman. Two days earlier, speaking to the party faithful in Coventry, he was a gloves-off political streetfighter as, in effect, he launched the Labour Party’s general-election campaign with the slogan “A future fair for all”. Whichever version is the real Mr Brown these days, the next couple of months (an election is due by June 3rd and expected on May 6th) will be testing ones.

In an interview with The Economist on February 22nd, Mr Brown touched on four main themes. The recent recession, he said, was “the first crisis of globalisation”, and required global solutions. The financial crisis of 2008-09 was “a huge turning point…The world has had to recognise its interdependence…” The question is whether the G20 will have sufficient momentum to deal with the outstanding problems, especially the regulation of global finance. On climate change, financial stability, nuclear weapons, terrorism, we need to be capable of “pushing for and delivering global solutions”. As to Europe’s role in this, the prime minister is concerned about its sluggish economic growth and ageing population. “Europe’s got to get a growth strategy,” he says. …

Mass appeal

A stunning Republican victory in a Senate race in Massachusetts deals a blow to Barack Obama

IT WAS a sign of how bad Democratic expectations were for the Senate race in Massachusetts that the knives were out even before the polls had closed. The election, in a state where Democrats heavily outnumber Republicans (and independents account for around half of the electorate), was held to replace Ted Kennedy, a Democratic stalwart who died last year. Mr Kennedy’s last legislative priority had been to push for a health-care bill. Now Scott Brown, a Republican former model, will replace him, having won by a five-point margin. This gives the Republicans 41 seats in the Senate, enough for a filibuster to block legislation.

Martha Coakley, the Democratic candidate, was uninspired and dull. Mr Brown’s surge in the polls came when she was on holiday, believing there was little chance she could lose. She made several gaffes on the campaign, at one point implying that she had better things to do than meeting voters in the cold, later failing to recognise a legendary pitcher for the local Boston Red Sox baseball team. Her lacklustre style, against an energetic Mr Brown, failed to impress a grumpy electorate in an anti-incumbent mood. …

Too close for comfort

The Republican candidate for senator is doing surprisingly well in Massachusetts

MASSACHUSETTS is the Democratic Alabama. Republicans deride the liberal, coastal state as “Taxachusetts” and worse. It has produced two failed Democratic presidential candidates, John Kerry and Michael Dukakis, successfully portrayed as coastal cissies. It is also home to America’s most enduring Democratic dynasty: the Kennedys. Its combination of unions, intellectuals and blacks makes it one of the safest Democratic states in the country. The state as a whole does not have a single Republican member in the House or Senate.

Democrats are alarmed, then, that just before an election on Tuesday January 19th for Edward Kennedy’s old seat, polls are surprisingly close. The Democratic candidate, Martha Coakley, the state’s attorney-general, should be a shoo-in. But Scott Brown, her opponent, even had a slender lead in one opinion poll, though he was 17 points behind in another. A more recent snapshot of voters’ intentions, taken between Monday and Wednesday, now has Ms Coakley four points behind. But Mr Brown has momentum, and hauled in the better part of a $1m in an online “money bomb” fund-raiser on Monday. Barack Obama has expressed his support, but has not visited the state. This could be because his own poll ratings have fallen and are now roughly even between approval and disapproval. Calling in the president could make Ms Coakley appear desperate. …

Tax and mend

Taxes rise in Britain, as the government struggles to get public finances in order

SINCE Alistair Darling took over as Britain’s chancellor of the exchequer (finance minister) in June 2007, he has presented three big end-of-year fiscal statements. They go by the snappy name of a “pre-budget report” and are in effect mini-budgets. The previous two were showstoppers. The one he presented on Wednesday December 9th mattered for what it revealed about Labour’s priorities in dealing with Britain’s huge budget deficit.

The first statement, delivered shortly after Mr Brown had abandoned a plan to hold a snap general election, was notable for some flagrant clothes-pinching from the Conservative opposition, with an effective doubling in the tax-free limit on inheritance tax and a levy on people living in Britain but claiming “non-domiciled” tax status. The second, in 2008, was more momentous, for it owned up to the startling deterioration in the public finances, even though its forecasts were soon overtaken by even worse ones in the full budget in April this year. …

Analysis catalysis

Designers think they can teach MBAs and philanthropists a thing or two

TIM BROWN, the boss of IDEO, a consultancy that helped shape Apple’s first mouse, does not have solutions to daunting global problems such as climate change, epidemics and persistent poverty. But he believes he knows how to find them: with “design thinking”.

By design thinking, Mr Brown means the open-minded, no-holds-barred approach that designers bring to their work, rather than the narrow, technical view of innovation traditionally taught at many business and engineering schools. Firms that think like designers, he claims in a new book, “Change by Design”, stand to win huge new markets and profits. The concept may sound pat and woolly, encompassing everything from savvier marketing to radical technological leaps. Yet design thinking is winning many converts in both industry and philanthropy. …

Gordon Brown’’s handwriting shows a man in ” extreme turmoil”, says expert

A handwriting expert has said that British Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s scrawl shows a man in “extreme turmoil”.
Deborah Jaffe, a scientific handwriting analyst, examined the letter the PM penned to hero soldier’s mum Jacqui Janes.
“At the time of writing this letter, the Prime Minister is very tense and suffering a certain amount of agitation,” The [...]

Gordon Brown sends error-filled condolence letter to dead soldier’’s mum

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown left the grieving mother of a dead British soldier in disgust by sending her an error-filled letter of condolence.
The hand-written note to heartbroken Jacqui Janes about her son Jamie, 20, who was killed in a bomb blast in Afghanistan on October 5.
The letter begun with ”Dear Mrs. James” and even [...]

Chris Brown to wash cars, pick up trash as assault punishment

R&B singer Chris Brown will be washing cars, picking up trash and removing graffiti as a part of the community service ordered by court for assaulting Rihanna.
The 20-year-old star has been given five years probation and ordered to serve six months hard labour in his home state of Virginia after pleading guilty to assaulting the [...]

Lockerbie questions dog UK premier

Gordon Brown is facing further questions over the UK government’s role in the Lockerbie bomber’s release after new details about discussions emerged.

Former Foreign Office minister Bill Rammell has confirmed he told Libya Mr Brown did not want to see Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi’s die in prison.

However, he denied having discussed this with the prime minister himself.

Mr Brown has so far declined to comment on the release but the Tories say he needs to be "straight" with the public.

Conservative leader David Cameron said the UK government now stood accused of "double dealing" and called for an inquiry.

He said: "The British prime minister has got to be straight with the British people.

"For weeks he’s been refusing to say publicly what he wanted to happen to Megrahi, yet we now learn apparently privately the message was being given to the Libyans that he should be released."

‘Scottish decision’

Scottish Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill allowed Megrahi, who is terminally ill with cancer, to be freed from Greenock Prison on 20 August on compassionate grounds after rejecting his return to Libya under a prisoner transfer agreement.

Mr Brown and UK ministers have declined to say whether they supported freeing Megrahi, stressing it was a decision for the Scottish Government.

Mr MacAskill is due to defend his decision again in a Scottish Parliamentary debate later, during which the opposition parties are expected to unite to defeat the minority SNP government.

Among the documents released on Tuesday was a Libyan version of an exchange with Mr Rammell in February during which, it is claimed, he said Mr Brown and the foreign secretary did not want the Lockerbie bomber to die in a Scottish prison.

Mr Rammell, now armed forces minister, later insisted he made it clear to the Libyans during a visit to Tripoli that any decision on Megrahi had to come from Scottish ministers.

"I am unjustly convicted of a most heinous crime"

Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi

Your views on the controversy

Bomber was ‘exemplary’ prisoner

Read the Lockerbie files

Records of a meeting between Libyan Europe minister Abdulati Alobidi and Scottish officials on 12 March said: "Mr Alobidi spoke of Mr Bill Rammell’s visit to Tripoli in February and that they had discussed the matter of the prisoner transfer agreement.

"Mr Alobidi confirmed that he had reiterated to Mr Rammell that the death of Mr Megrahi in a Scottish prison would have catastrophic effects for the relationship between Libya and the UK.

"Mr Alobidi went on to say that Mr Rammell had stated that neither the prime minister not the foreign secretary would want Mr Megrahi to pass away in prison but the decision on transfer lies in the hands of the Scottish ministers."

‘Important partner’

When asked by the BBC if Mr Brown had told him that he did not want Megrahi to die in a Scottish prison, Mr Rammell replied: "No, I’ve not discussed this with the prime minister either before the event or after.

"I was responding to a specific concern that the Libyans put to me that they didn’t wish Al Megrahi to die in prison.

"In response to that in a conversation with my counterpart, I made clear that we were not actively seeking his death in prison but we emphatically, and this is what I said to him at the time, we emphatically would not intervene and it was a matter for Scottish ministers."

Other letters public by the UK and Scottish governments on Tuesday reveal UK Justice Secretary Jack Straw changed his mind about excluding the Lockerbie bomber from a proposed prisoner transfer agreement with Libya.

In a letter to Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond, on 11 February 2008, Mr Straw said Libya had become an "important partner in the fight against terrorism" and was helping to counter illegal immigration.

Megrahi was released eight years into a life sentence imposed for his part in the bombing of Pan Am flight 103 over Lockerbie in December 1988, killing 270 people.


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

Aug. 13, 2004: ‘Podfather’ Adam Curry Launches Daily Source Code

2004: Podcasting is born.
Podcast (noun): a series of audio (or video) programs delivered through a static URL containing an RSS feed that automatically updates a list of programs on the listener’s computer so that people may download new programs using a desktop application. Programs can be delivered to the listener automatically or when they choose [...]

Chris Brown Dropped By Wrigley Gum

On Thursday, Wrigley’s Gum officially severed ties with former celebrity spokesman Chris Brown. The gum manufacturer formally terminated their commercial deal with the R&B star following his guilty plea on charges of assaulting former girlfriend Rihanna last winter.
This fool is finished…..

Brown had been a spokesman for Doublemint gum and his hit song “Forever” was part [...]

TEDTalks: Gordon Brown: Wiring a web for global good

UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown was a surprise speaker in the first session of the TEDGlobal Conference in Oxford. In his news-making talk (see below),…

Human flu jab trials ‘under way’

Vaccines

Human trials of a vaccine to protect against the H1N1 swine flu virus have begun in Australia.

Vaxine and CSL have both started injecting volunteers this week, but it will be at least six weeks before the initial results are known.

Meanwhile, in the UK Gordon Brown has sought to reassure the public by saying the plans in place were "robust".

It comes as another death has been announced in the West Midlands, bringing the UK total to at least 31.

No more details are being released about the latest person to die with swine flu.

And the overall figure is likely to climb on Thursday when the Department of Health gives its weekly update. Worldwide, more than 700 people have died.

Adelaide-based Vaxine began trials Monday with 300 subjects, and Melbourne’s CSL has 240 people in its trial, which started Wednesday.

Neither firm has a contract with the UK government, which expects the first vaccine batches by the end of August.

SWINE FLU SYMPTOMS

  • 1. High temperature, tiredness and lowered immunity
  • 2. Headache, runny nose and sneezing
  • 3. Sore throat
  • 4. Shortness of breath
  • 5. Loss of appetite, vomiting and diarrhoea
  • 6. Aching muscles, limb and joint pain

Source: NHS

But Vaxine research director Nikolai Petrovsky said: "There is no guarantee any of these vaccines will work. Swine flu is a very peculiar beast, its a very different virus that we’re dealing with. But we are hopeful."

Mr Brown admitted swine flu was putting the health service in the UK under strain.

But the prime minister said some of the pressure would be relieved by the National Flu Service, which is being launched in England later this week.

The phone and internet service will allow people with swine flu to get access to anti-flu drugs without needing to consult a doctor.

Mr Brown said: "I want the public to be reassured that we have been preparing for the possibility of a pandemic for a number of years.

"The NHS is continuing to cope well, but as swine flu cases have started to increase we have needed to be able to give anti-virals more quickly.

"From the end of this week the National Flu Service will be up and running. This will free up GP and NHS time."

GPs have started to raise concerns about the number of calls they are getting about flu with every region of England apart from Yorkshire and the Humber seeing "exceptional" levels of demand.

Under contingency plans, non-emergency operations can be cancelled and doctors moved around the health service to help tackle hotspots.

It has not reached that stage yet, but ministers have been forced to set up the flu service.

Challenge

Mr Brown was speaking the day after Chief Medical Officer Sir Liam Donaldson admitted the flu pandemic was presenting the NHS with its "biggest challenge in a generation".

In the worst-case scenario, up to a third of the population could become infected this winter with as many as 65,000 deaths.

Sir Liam said coping with such huge demands would be a real test for everyone working in the health service.

• The Meningitis Research Foundation has warned the focus on swine flu risks masking other serious illnesses.

A 17-year-old from Derbyshire was admitted to hospital last week after originally being diagnosed with swine flu.

The foundation warned people to be aware of the disease as the early symptoms of meningitis and septicaemia were "very similar" to flu.

The group also said the levels of flu circulating in the UK meant that immune systems were compromised and could lead to a rise in meningitis cases. </p


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

US president sets Afghan target

A US Marine helicopter delivers supplies in Helmand province, 11 July

The increasingly deadly conflict in Afghanistan is a "serious fight" but one essential for the future stability of the country, the US president says.

Insisting that US and allied troops have pushed back the Taliban, Barack Obama said the immediate target was to steer Afghanistan through elections.

The country is due to hold a presidential vote in August.

Mr Obama spoke to Sky News as concern grew in the UK at the rising British death toll in Afghanistan.

UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown was also forced on Saturday to justify British involvement in Afghanistan.

Mr Brown said the UK’s military deployment there was aimed at preventing terrorism in the UK.

Fifteen British troops have died in the past 10 days, pushing the country’s number of deaths in Afghanistan past the number killed in action in Iraq.

‘Extraordinary role’

Speaking during a day-long visit to Africa, Mr Obama also told Sky News that the battle in Afghanistan was a vital element in the battle against terrorism.

He said the continued involvement of British troops in the conflict was necessary, right and was a vital contribution to UK national security.

US President Barack Obama in Ghana, 11 July

"This is not an American mission," Mr Obama said.

"The mission in Afghanistan is one that the Europeans have as much if not more of a stake in than we do.

"The likelihood of a terrorist attack in London is at least as high, if not higher, than it is in the United States."

He praised the efforts of all troops currently fighting the Taleban in gruelling summer heat, singling out British forces for praise when asked if their role was still important.

"Great Britain has played an extraordinary role in this coalition, understanding that we can not allow either Afghanistan or Pakistan to be a safe haven for al-Qaeda, those who with impunity blow up train stations in London or buildings in New York.

"We knew that this summer was going to be tough fighting. They [the Taliban] have, I think, been pushed back but we still have a long way to go. We’ve got to get through elections."

‘Core mission’

Since taking office in Washington in January of this year, Mr Obama has announced a troop "surge" in Afghanistan.

British soldiers carry the coffin of a comrade, 10 July

The US has said it is sending up to 30,000 new troops to Afghanistan this year to take on a resurgent Taleban. They will join 33,000 US and 32,000 other Nato troops already in the country.

He also replaced the incumbent US commander in the country, ousting Gen David McKiernan less than a year into his command.

The new US chief in Afghanistan, Gen Stanley McChrystal, has a stellar reputation from his days commanding special forces operations in Iraq.

He has been tasked with the mission of outsmarting the Taliban, who continue to win support among ordinary Afghans often caught in the crossfire of the bitter fighting.

High numbers of Afghan civilian casualties have become an issue of major concern to the US. Afghan President Hamid Karzai has regularly called on the international forces to reduce the numbers of Afghans killed in its operations.

Speaking to Sky News, Mr Obama said although forces were currently engaged in heavy fighting, new strategies for building bridges with Afghan society would be considered once the country had held its presidential election.

A young girl in Afghanistan, 10 July

Afghanistan needed its own army, its own police and the ability to control its own security, Mr Obama said – a strategy currently being implemented in Iraq, where security is being handed over to Iraqi forces.

"All of us are going to have to do an evaluation after the Afghan election to see what more we can do," the president said.

"It may not be on the military side, it might be on the development side providing Afghan farmers alternatives to poppy crops, making sure that we are effectively training a judiciary system and a rule of law in Afghanistan that people trust."

"We’ve got a core mission that we have to accomplish."</p


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

Afghan strategy ‘right’, Brown says

UK troops in Afghanistan

Gordon Brown has defended the government’s Afghanistan strategy, saying it is the right one despite a "dangerous battle" ahead.

Writing to the Commons Liaison Committee, the prime minister said the military operation was aimed at preventing terrorism coming to the UK.

There is mounting concern about the current offensive, with 15 British soldiers dying in the past 10 days.

Anti-war campaigners have claimed the conflict is "unwinnable".

The current major assault against the Taliban in Helmand aims to improve security ahead of next month’s Afghan elections. Many UK troops are fighting in the south under the auspices of Operation Panchai Palang or Panther’s Claw.

Heroin trade

Mr Brown, who will appear before this committee next week, said the Afghanistan-Pakistan border had emerged as "a new crucible of terrorism" linked to three-quarters of the most serious plots against the UK.

In the letter, he said: "So our purpose is clear: to prevent terrorism coming to the streets of Britain.

"Our security depends on strengthening the Pakistan and Afghan governments to defeat both al-Qaeda and also the Pakistan and Afghan Taliban."

He added that if the Taliban were allowed to "overwhelm Pakistan’s democracy", al-Qaeda would have "greater freedom from which to launch terrorist attacks across the world".

Mr Brown went on: "So this is a fight to clear terrorist networks from Afghanistan and Pakistan, to support the elected governments in both countries against the Taliban, to tackle the heroin trade which funds terrorism and the insurgency, and to build longer term stability."

He also paid tribute to "the fearless work of our troops" and added that despite the "tragic losses", morale remained high.

‘Nightmare’

The Stop the War coalition has announced an emergency protest in London on Monday, calling for British troops to be withdrawn from Afghanistan in light of the heavy losses.

HAVE YOUR SAY

"The British soldiers must suspend all activities in Afghanistan and come home"

Kenneth, London

Send us your comments

A group spokesman said: "The troop surge which was meant to pacify Helmand province has become a nightmare for the British army.

"This unwinnable war must stop now."

One hundred and eighty-four service personnel have died in Afghanistan since 2001, more than the 179 who were killed during the war in Iraq.

On Friday in Helmand, five soldiers from the 2nd Battalion The Rifles were killed in two separate blasts near Sangin, while a member of the 2nd Royal Tank Regiment died near Nad Ali.

A day earlier, a soldier from 4th Battalion The Rifles was killed in a blast near Nad Ali while another from Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment, attached to 1st Battalion Welsh Guards, was killed fighting insurgent forces near Lashkar Gah.

BRITISHCASUALTIES IN AFGHANISTAN MARCH 2006 – JULY 2009

  • 1: Highest monthly toll with 19 dead including 12 killed when a RAF Nimrod crashes in Afghanistan.
  • 2: British death toll reaches 100. Among the 13 fatalities in June is the first British female soldier.
  • 3: British casualties surge as major offensive against Taliban begins in the south. Many are lost to powerful Improvised Explosive Devices.

Graph showing UK deaths in Afghanistan

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