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Minus the Bear: Fall Tour

OMNI OUT NOW; TOUR STARTS OCTOBER 18 IN EUGENE, OREGON


Minus the Bear

Minus the Bear are thrilled
to embark on a new headlining tour due to the overwhelming demand by fans and several months of sold-out tour
dates. Beginning October 18 in Eugene, OR, the Seattle based quintet will head out in continued support of their
latest album, Omni. The tour will also include a performance at this year’s Voodoo Music Festival
in New Orleans on October 31.

In addition, Minus the Bear will join Jimmy
Eat World
for a European tour this November, which will include performances at this year’s Reading, Leeds and
Rock En Seine festivals. Tour dates below.


September 30 Pablove Foundation Benefit @ The Crocodile Seattle, WA
October 16 Festival Corona Capital Mexico City, MX
October 18 WOW Hall Eugene, OR
October 19 Regency San Francisco, CA
October 20 Downtown Brew San Luis Obispo, CA
October 21 Rio Theatre Santa Cruz, CA
October 22 The Wiltern Los Angeles, CA
October 23 Rialto Theatre Tucson, AZ
October 24 Sunshine Theatre Albuquerque, NM
October 25 Jake’s Lubbock, TX
October 26 Marquee Tulsa, OK
October 27 Stubb’s Austin, TX

October 28 House of Blues Dallas, TX
October 29 House of Blues Houston, TX
October 31 Voodoo Festival New Orleans, LA


With Jimmy Eat World:


November 3 Melkweg Amsterdam, Netherlands
November 4 Ancienne Belgique Brussels, Belgium
November 5 Docks Hamburg, Germany
November 7 E-Werk Koln, Germany
November 8 Huxleys Berlin, Germany
November 9 Tonhalle Munich, Germany
November 13 UEA Norwich, UK
November 14 Academy Bristol, UK
November 17 St. George’s Market Belfast, Ireland
November 18 Tripod Dublin, Ireland
November 19 Barrowlands Glasgow, Scotland
November 21 HMV Institute Birmingham, UK
November 22 Academy Manchester, UK
November 23 Brixton Academy London, UK

Minus the Bear
Tour Dates

::
Minus the Bear News
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Minus the Bear
Concert
Reviews


Gogol Bordello World Tour

GOGOL BORDELLO SET FOR INTERNATIONAL TOUR

Gogol Bordello

The gypsy punk band Gogol Bordello, whose live shows have Entertainment Weekly dubbing them “the world’s most perfect festival band,” will headline an international mini-festival of their own, the Casa Gogol Tour, an evening’s worth of insurgence from the multi kulti revolution, launching April 18 in Montreal.

The North American leg of the Casa Gogol Tour follows Gogol Bordello’s appearance at the 2010 Tibet House Benefit Concert in New York and the band’s major tour of Australia in late March and April.

All dates on the Casa Gogol Tour will feature a full-on Gogol Bordello headline concert as well as sets by bands and DJs in simpatico with the group’s mission.

North American dates on the Casa Gogol Tour run from April 18 through May 1 and will include sets by Slavic-punk-band DeVotchKa, East Village punk troubadour Jesse Malin and St. Mark’s Social, electro-anarchists Tres Leches Afterparty Sound Crew and special surprise guest appearances.

Select dates on the European leg of the Casa Gogol Tour will include sets by the VMA-winning Brooklyn punk-dance duo Matt & Kim, Mariachi El Bronx (the musical alter-ego of the hardcore punk band The Bronx) and Tres Leches Afterparty Sound Crew.

Casa Gogol is crossing America, and then the Atlantic, to celebrate the upcoming release of Transcontinental Hustle, the avidly-awaited fifth studio album from Gogol Bordello. Produced by Rick Rubin, Transcontinental Hustle is the first Gogol Bordello studio album since 2007′s SUPER TARANTA! inspired the rarest of accolades, an “A+” from Robert Christgau, the Dean of American Rock Critics, who called them “the world’s most visionary band.”

Gogol Bordello Tour Dates

02/26/10 Fri Carnegie Hall New York, NY

03/28/10 Sun West Coast Blues ‘n’ Roots Perth, AU

03/30/10 Tue Billboard Melbourne, AU

03/31/10 Wed The Metro Melbourne, AU

04/02/10 Fri The Hi-Fi Brisbane, AU

04/04/10 Sun East Coast Blues & Roots Music Fest Byron Bay, AU

04/05/10 Mon East Coast Blues & Roots Music Fest Byron Bay, AU

04/18/10 Sun Metropolis Montreal, QC

04/20/10 Tue The Sound Academy Toronto, ON

04/21/10 Wed Royal Oak Music Theatre Royal Oak, MI

04/23/10 Fri Congress Theater Chicago, IL

04/24/10 Sat First Avenue Minneapolis, MN

04/25/10 Sun First Avenue Minneapolis, MN

04/28/10 Wed House of Blues Boston, MA

04/29/10 Thu Rams Head Live Baltimore, MD

04/30/10 Fri Rams Head Live Baltimore, MD

05/01/10 Sat Electric Factory Philadelphia, PA

05/07/10 Fri Hammersmith Apollo London, GB

05/08/10 Sat Manchester Academy Manchester, GB

05/09/10 Sun Glasgow Academy Glasgow, GB

05/10/10 Mon University of East Anglia (UEA) Norwich, GB

05/11/10 Tue Birmingham Academy Birmingham, GB

05/15/10 Sat Long’l'rock Festival Longirod, SWI

05/16/10 Sun Tollhaus Karlsruhe Karlsruhe, GER

05/18/10 Tue Elysee Montmarte Paris, FRA

05/19/10 Wed Bikini Toulouse, FRA

05/21/10 Fri La Riviera Madrid, ES

05/22/10 Sat Razzmatazz Barcelona, ES

05/24/10 Mon Estragon Bologna, IT

05/25/10 Tue Alcatraz Milan, IT

05/26/10 Wed X-tra Limmathaus Zurich, SWI

05/27/10 Thu Gasometer Vienna, AUS

06/01/10 Tue The Paradiso Amsterdam, NL

06/02/10 Wed Docks Hamburg, GER

06/03/10 Thu Astra Berlin, GER

06/04/10 Fri Rock IM Park Nuremburg, GER

06/06/10 Sun Rock Am Ring Festival Nuremberg, GER


Passion Pit: Spring Tour Dates

PASSION PIT ANNOUNCE SPRING TOUR DATES

Passion Pit

2009 was a whirlwind year for Boston’s Passion Pit. They were nominated for an MTV VMA for their video “The Reeling”, won Best Album from Boston’s WXPN, and topped Pitchfork, Stereogum, NY Post, NPR, Paste Magazine, Boston Music Award, Popmatters and many more end of year lists in 2009.

After amazing stops at Lollapalooza, Bonnaroo, Austin City Limits, Monolith, Treasure Island, Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel Live, Passion Pit kicks off 2010 with three of the fastest moving sold out shows at NYC’s Terminal 5 and a Spring Tour.

Passion Pit Tour Dates

01/15/10 Fri Mt. Smart Stadium Auckland, NZ

01/17/10 Sun Parklands Gold Coast, AU

01/20/10 Wed Metro Theatre Sydney, AU

01/22/10 Fri Olympic Park Showgrounds Sydney, AU

01/23/10 Sat Olympic Park Showgrounds Sydney, AU

01/25/10 Mon Corner Hotel Melbourne, AU

01/26/10 Tue Flemington Racecourse Melbourne, AU

01/29/10 Fri RA&HS Showgrounds Adelaide, AU

01/31/10 Sun Claremont Showgrounds Perth, AU

02/04/10 Thu Club Quattro Osaka, JP

02/05/10 Fri Duo Music Exchange Tokyo, JP

02/06/10 Sat Harajuku Astro Hall Tokyo, JP

03/01/10 Mon Le Botanique Brussels, BEL

03/03/10 Wed Bristol Academy Bristol, GB

03/04/10 Thu Leeds Metropolitan University Leeds, GB

03/05/10 Fri Manchester Academy Manchester, GB

03/06/10 Sat ABC Glasgow, GB

03/08/10 Mon University of East Anglia (UEA) Norwich, GB

03/09/10 Tue Nottingham Rock City Nottingham, GB

03/11/10 Thu HMV Forum London, GB

03/13/10 Sat Olympia Theatre Dublin, IR

03/26/10 Fri Ultra Music Festival Miami Beach, FL

03/28/10 Sun The Town Ballroom Buffalo, NY

03/29/10 Mon Pullo Center York, PA

03/30/10 Tue House Of Blues Cleveland, OH

03/31/10 Wed Newport Music Hall Columbus, OH

04/02/10 Fri Congress Theater Chicago, IL

04/03/10 Sat Turner Hall Ballroom Milwaukee, WI

04/04/10 Sun First Avenue Minneapolis, MN

04/05/10 Mon Beaumont Club Kansas City, MO

04/07/10 Wed Ogden Theatre Denver, CO

04/08/10 Thu In The Venue Salt Lake City, UT

04/10/10 Sat McDonald Theatre Eugene, OR

04/11/10 Sun Commodore Ballroom Vancouver, BC

04/12/10 Mon Roseland Theater Portland, OR

04/14/10 Wed Freeborn Hall Davis, CA

04/15/10 Thu The Warfield San Francisco, CA

04/24/10 Sat Vanderbilt University Nashville, TN

04/30/10 Fri World’s Fair Park Knoxville, TN

05/01/10 Sat Bowdoin College Brunswick, ME


Noah and the Whale Tour & Album Stream

Noah and the Whale Embark on October Headline Tour Supporting Their New Album
NPR Music Offers “Exclusive First Listen”

Noah and the Whale

Noah and the Whale embark on an October headlining tour supporting their new album and its accompanying film The First Days of Spring, out October 6 on Cherrytree/Interscope. They will kick things off at L.A.’s famed Roxy venue on October 20 playing select cities across the U.S. before ending the tour with a special event to be announced soon. In addition, there will be a number of intimate screenings of the film in select cities.

The U.S. release and tour come on the heels of the August 31 U.K. release where the album debuted in the Top 10 and was met with an overwhelming response: NME 9/10 – “…Spiritualized-tinged grandiose beauty,” The Sunday Times 4/5 – “…a masterpiece,” 4/5 Q Magazine – “breathtakingly beautiful,” 4/5 MOJO – “Breathtakingly ambitious.” In addition, the band performed this past August on the main stages of Reading and Leeds, where they shared the bill with Radiohead, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Bloc Party and Vampire Weekend.

In 2008, chief singer and songwriter Charlie Fink first began thinking of making an album that was also a film, and as he sees it, vice versa. The First Days of Spring was recorded in London and New York with producer Emery Dobyns (Patti Smith, Antony & The Johnsons) and the film was shot on location in London and Surrey with an ensemble cast that includes model Daisy Lowe. The film can be seen as a companion piece to the album, as a visual version of it, or as a piece of work in its own right but this decision is one which Noah and the Whale have decided to leave up to the listener and viewer.

NPR Music is currently streaming the entire new album, one week ahead of its official release. The First Days of Spring is available for free, on-demand listening now through October 6 at npr.org/music, as part of the site’s “Exclusive First Listen” series.

Tour Dates

10/01/09 Thu Oxford Academy Oxford, GB

10/02/09 Fri Koko London, GB

10/04/09 Sun Waterfront Norwich, GB

10/05/09 Mon The Junction Cambridge, GB

10/07/09 Wed Concorde 2 Brighton, GB

10/08/09 Thu The Rockhouse DERBY, GB

10/10/09 Sat Exeter Phoenix Exeter, GB

10/11/09 Sun Komedia Bath, GB

10/12/09 Mon Princess Pavilion Falmouth, GB

10/14/09 Wed Leadmill Sheffield, GB

10/15/09 Thu Oran Mor Glasgow, GB

10/16/09 Fri Birmingham Academy Birmingham, GB

10/20/09 Tue The Roxy Theatre West Hollywood, CA

10/22/09 Thu Swedish American Hall San Francisco, CA

10/24/09 Sat Crocodile Cafe Seattle, WA

10/25/09 Sun Doug Fir Portland, OR

10/29/09 Thu Lakeshore Theater Chicago, IL

10/30/09 Fri The Pike Room Pontiac, MI

10/31/09 Sat Horseshoe Tavern Toronto, ON

11/07/09 Sat Debaser Stockholm, SE (w/ Phoenix)

11/08/09 Sun Brew House Gothenburg, SE (w/ Phoenix)

11/09/09 Mon Rockefeller Oslo, NO (w/ Phoenix)

11/10/09 Tue Vega Copenhagen, DK (w/ Phoenix)

11/12/09 Thu Docks Hamburg, GER (w/ Phoenix)

11/13/09 Fri Ringlokschuppen Bielefeld, GER (w/ Phoenix)

11/14/09 Sat E-Werk Cologne, GER (w/ Phoenix)

11/15/09 Sun Theatre Fabrik Munich, GER (w/ Phoenix)

11/17/09 Tue Zapata Stuttgart, GER (w/ Phoenix)

11/18/09 Wed Cocoon Frankfurt, GER (w/ Phoenix)

11/20/09 Fri Alte Feuerwache Mannheim, GER (w/ Phoenix)

11/21/09 Sat Huxley’s Berlin, GER (w/ Phoenix)


Train robber Biggs awaits release

Ronnie Biggs

Great Train Robber Ronnie Biggs is preparing for his formal release from prison after being granted freedom on compassionate grounds.

Biggs is severely ill with pneumonia and Justice Secretary Jack Straw approved his release on Thursday after being told he is not likely to recover.

The Ministry of Justice is expected to sign-off Biggs’s licence conditions later, granting his formal release.

The 79-year-old – in a Norfolk hospital – is said to be "over the moon".

Biggs’s son Michael told the BBC he was "absolutely delighted" Mr Straw had reversed his decision on his father’s parole, which he had refused last month.

Speaking outside Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital on Thursday night, Michael Biggs said common sense had "prevailed".

"I’ve just been able to spend some time with my father and he, in his own words, it took him a long time using a spelling board, but he is over the moon," he said.

"We are very hopeful that my father will be able to survive the next few days.

"I’m just very hopeful that my father can have another few months ahead of him in his life"


Biggs’s son Michael

How the robbery unfolded

Profile: Ronnie Biggs

Send your comments

Michael Biggs

"My father, at present, is not capable of walking, is not capable of reading, writing, speaking – he cannot eat or drink."

Last month, Mr Straw said the 79-year-old should not be granted parole as he remained "wholly unrepentant" about his involvement in the 1963 robbery of a mail train.

However, on Thursday Mr Straw said: "The medical evidence clearly shows that Mr Biggs is very ill and that his condition has deteriorated recently, culminating in his readmission to hospital.

"His condition is not expected to improve. It is for that reason that I am granting Mr Biggs compassionate release on medical grounds."

The inmate of Norwich Prison, who was serving a 30-year sentence, was taken to hospital in June suffering from a chest infection and was readmitted on Tuesday.

Michael Biggs explained his father was "completely incapable of re-offending".

"He has rehabilitated himself inside and outside of prison," he said.

"All I can say is we are extremely happy at the moment.

"I’m just very hopeful that my father can have another few months ahead of him in his life."

The decision means Biggs will spend his 80th birthday on Saturday as a free man, although his condition means he will be unable to celebrate his release.

Timeline: Ronnie Biggs

In pictures: Life on the run

Who were the robbers

Ronnie Biggs

The three Prison Service staff who remained watching him overnight will be withdrawn later, once the licence for his release is finalised.

If his condition were to improve, Biggs would be transferred to a nursing home in Barnet, north London, near his son’s home.

Biggs, originally from Lambeth, south London, was a member of a 15-strong gang which attacked the Glasgow to London mail train at Ledburn, Buckinghamshire, in August 1963, and made off with £2.6m in used banknotes.

The train’s driver Jack Mills suffered head injuries during the robbery.

Biggs was given a 30-year sentence, but after 15 months he escaped from Wandsworth prison, in south-west London, by climbing a 30ft wall and fleeing in a furniture van.

He was on the run for more than 30 years, living in Australia and Brazil, before returning to the UK voluntarily in 2001 in search of medical treatment.

He was sent to Belmarsh high-security prison on his return before being moved to a specialist medical unit at Norwich prison.


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

Politics today

Today’s newspapers say it all about the current political landscape and the interaction of the main parties in conversation with voters.
The Conservative’s rightly win praise for their “primary” experiment in Totness, where all 68,000 eligible constituents were engaged and given a postal vote in the selection of the local Tory candidate (and next MP). [...]

Tories can’t wait to make cuts, says Darling

Alistair Darling accused the Conservatives today of “almost wallowing” in the prospect of making deep cuts in public expenditure if they win the next general election and promised he would set out Labour’s own spending priorities before polling day, so that voters would have a clear choice.

The chancellor spoke as David Cameron, the Conservative leader, confirmed the Guardian’s weekend report that the Tories are preparing for a decade of retrenchment. He admitted his party could no longer afford to reverse either Labour’s 50p income tax rate on top earners immediately or to fulfil its pledge to abolish family inheritance tax.

“It’s incredibly daunting, the scale of the challenge and the mess that is being left in terms of the economy and, particularly, the budget balance. I mean it really is a daunting prospect,” Cameron said on BBC1′s Andrew Marr Show. “And that’s why I’ve said, you know, I can’t remember an opposition leader who in opposition has looked the British public in the eye and said ‘you know we are going to cut public spending, we have to do that’.”

In line with his strategy of highlighting his party’s openness – evident in shadow Treasury chief secretary Philip Hammond’s “pain and brickbats” admission in Saturday’s Guardian, Cameron said voters were “crying out actually for someone who’s going to lead them and who’s going to say ‘right, we’re all in this together’.”

The chancellor adopted a different approach to the “hard choices” ahead on tax-and-spending. With the Hammond interview in mind, he said that over the past few days some senior Tories had been “almost wallowing in the prospect of making cuts here, there and everywhere”.

All the parties should now set out their spending priorities “underpinned by values and principles” so that voters could decide whose mandate they should endorse to govern them until 2015, Darling said. “I think there is a distinction between people, if you like the slash and burn mentality, and those who believe that public spending actually can make a difference to the fabric of this country.”

Gordon Brown was still the man with “the values (and) commitment” to win the election despite Thursday’s drubbing at the Norwich North byelection, he said.

A handful of Labour MPs have called for a change of leader since the Conservative Chloe Smith, 27, took the Labour seat on a 16% swing. Brown told the Sunday Mirror: “We’ve got to show that we are a disciplined party getting on with the work of government. I think people are very clear that we’ve got a task ahead. We’ve got work to do to prepare for the autumn.”

Darling claimed international support for Labour’s response to the recession and said the VAT cut from 17.5% to 15% had been right, despite costing the Treasury £1bn a month. It would also be right to restore it next year as conditions eased, he said, a crucial distinction for Labour which claims the backing of leading economists in saying that cuts designed to balance the budget would repeat the mistakes of the 1930s if imposed before the economy was growing steadily again.

For his part Cameron stressed the need to cut deeply and soon, not least to persuade the City that it is safe to finance huge government borrowing, a Tory priority.

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


Wealthy elderly turn backs on seaside havens

Newly retired move to cultural cities or the shires

God’s waiting rooms are undergoing a transformation. For decades, many of Britain’s coastal towns have been synonymous with blue rinses, bingo and tea dances. Places such as Bournemouth, Eastbourne and Worthing have been seen as retirement havens for generations of pensioners, keen to take the sea air just as their Victorian predecessors used to.

But according to an analysis of demographic data, many of today’s wealthier pensioners are turning their backs on traditional retirement destinations with a “grey influx” into upmarket towns and cities in some of the UK’s most sought-after inland locations – such as in the Cotswolds, and parts of Hampshire and Kent.

The shift is driven by an increase in the number of people reaching retirement age, coupled with rising levels of wealth. In 1945, life expectancy at birth for men and women was 63 and 68 respectively. In 2009 it is 78 and 82.

The dramatic increase in the number of over-65s means that by 2019 there will be 2.4 million more than today. But the traditional coastal retirement resorts, which grew to meet burgeoning demand from the postwar middle classes, have not been able to accommodate the demographic shift.

Research from Experian, the consumer research and credit rating agency, charts the trend. Changes to its giant Mosaic database – which divides the UK population into socioeconomic and lifestyle groups – show a much larger proportion of older people moving to the most desirable parts of the country, often funding this by selling their mortgage-free homes. And where coastal destinations were once the vogue, many are now looking to inland market towns, historic cities and major cultural destinations.

“People want to spend more of their retirement in the country, in areas of attractive scenery,” said Richard Webber, visiting professor of geography at University College London, who helped develop Mosaic. “And they are choosing to live a long way from London and other major population centres.”

Webber said around half of those reaching retirement age choose to carry on living in their own home, or at least in the same area. But of those with above-average wealth, around 60 per cent choose to live somewhere else. Half of these now select less traditional retirement destinations.

“A lot more older people want to retire to places of historic importance, places that have orchestras and festivals,” said Webber. “They’re looking at historic market towns and cities, places like Bath and Cheltenham, cathedral cities and university towns where there are beautiful buildings.”

The new pensioners

As a result of its extensive social mapping of the UK, Experian has identified five new types of retiree.

Beachcombers

This group reflects the growing trend for the middle-class retired to select smaller communities, many on the coast or a river, rather than larger resorts. Popular destinations: Barnstaple, Newport (Isle of Wight), Carmarthen, Inverness, Kendal, Newton Abbot.

Balcony downsizers

Higher-status retired people in their 70s and 80s, who live in privately owned or leasehold apartments in purpose-built blocks of flats suitable for those too fragile to cope with the upkeep of houses and gardens. Popular destinations: Worthing, Boscombe, Edinburgh, Southend-on-Sea, Barnet, Kingston upon Thames.

Golden retirement

People with accumulated assets, who pick prestigious retirement communities. They lead busy social lives, drive and garden. Popular destinations: Exeter, Southampton, Poole, Chichester, Norwich, Canterbury and Ipswich.

Bungalow quietude

Retirees with modest pensions, living in older-style bungalows, often in less well-off areas unattractive to younger families. Popular destinations: Blackpool, Rhyl, Scarborough, Plymouth, Nottingham, Peterborough, Newcastle upon Tyne, Lincoln, Leicester.

Country-loving elders

People on comfortable incomes living in former farms or older-style properties in quiet villages and market towns. Popular destinations: Truro, King’s Lynn, Hereford, Carlisle, Shrewsbury.

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


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.

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Cameron condemns Labour tactics

• Conservative victor has 7,000-plus majority
• Tory leader says Brown ‘should learn lesson’

David Cameron accused Gordon Brown of running an “utterly despicable” campaign in Norwich North today as he celebrated a byelection victory that saw the Conservatives winning what was a safe Labour seat with a majority of more than 7,000. The Tory leader claimed that Labour had told “untruth after untruth” about opposition spending plans in the contest, which was triggered by the resignation of Ian Gibson after he was banned by his party from standing at the general election because of the way he used parliamentary expenses.

Chloe Smith, who at 27 becomes the youngest MP in Britain, took the seat with a swing from Labour to the Tories of 16.5%. Gibson had a majority of more than 5,000 at the last election and Norwich North has been Labour for 45 of the last 60 years.

Smith took nearly 40% of the vote, although when the result was declared at lunchtime on Friday it was clear that she had picked up fewer votes than the Conservative candidate did in 2005. Labour’s Chris Ostrowski, who was struck down with swine flu in the final 72 hours of the campaign – his wife Katie delivered his speech at the count – got just 18% of the vote, although he managed to see off a challenge from the Liberal Democrats. They had hoped for second place but got 14% of the vote and third place.

The campaign started after the Conservatives declared that they might have to cut public spending in most government departments by 10% after the general election, and Labour attacked Smith aggressively on this issue. One Labour leaflet suggested that the Tories could close up to 10% of schools in the country, and another said the Tories were “threatening to do away with free TV licences and bus passes for the elderly”.

This Cameron, on a celebration visit to Norwich, condemned Labour’s tactics in the strongest terms.

“I have seen a Labour campaign in this byelection that I would describe – and I choose my words carefully – as utterly despicable. If you look at what they said about us it was untruth after untruth,” he said. “Labour should learn a lesson … in this campaign where less than one in five people in a Labour-held constituency came out to vote for the Labour party, that this country has had enough of Gordon Brown’s dividing lines, has had enough of Gordon Brown’s misleading claims about his opponents, has had enough of Gordon Brown’s claims about Tory cuts and Labour investment and all the rest of that rubbish.”

Tory strategists believe that Brown was using the byelection to road-test a “Tory cuts” campaign and that the result shows that this approach does not work.

The byelection was also the first to be held since the controversy about MPs’ expenses erupted. The Tories believe their victory proves that main-party candidates such as Smith, who made transparency a key feature of her campaign, can still see off the threat from independents and minor parties in an era of public scepticism about politicians.

Brown said the result was “disappointing” for Labour but that local factors were to blame. “The voters were clearly torn between their anger and dismay at what has been happening over MPs’ expenses, something that we are trying to clean up, and at the same time the support for the former MP, the Labour MP Ian Gibson who was very popular,” he said. Brown also pointed out that all the main parties attracted fewer votes than they did in the seat in 2005.

The defeat seems unlikely to reopen the debate about Labour’s leadership, at least in public and in the short-term. David Miliband, the foreign secretary, said today: “Everybody understands that the byelection reflects some unique circumstances. It is not evidence for the need of a change in the Labour leadership.”

The Liberal Democrat leader, Nick Clegg, said Brown’s “ham-fisted treatment of a popular MP” had resulted in “disaster for Labour”.

According to a Press Association analysis, Cameron would be swept into 10 Downing Street with a Commons majority of 218 if the result was repeated across the country at the next general election.

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Cameron hails ‘historic’ win for Tories in Norwich North

Public has had enough of Gordon Brown, says Tory leader as he congratulates his newest MP, 27-year-old Chloe Smith

David Cameron today hailed the Tories’ byelection victory in Norwich North as a “historic” result for his party and insisted it showed that the public had “had enough” of Gordon Brown.

On his seventh visit to the constituency since the contest began, the Tory leader heaped praise on his newest MP, 27-year-old Chloe Smith, for turning a Labour majority of 5,000 into a majority of more than 7,000 for the Conservatives.

“This in a seat that has been controlled by Labour for 45 of the last 60 years,” he said.

Cameron added: “We have seen an absolutely historic victory in Norwich North. It shows this country has had enough of Gordon Brown’s dividing lies. This country has had enough of misleading claims about opponents. This country has had enough about misleading claims about Tory cuts.”

Cameron spoke after his party inflicted a humiliating byelection defeat on the prime minister.

In the first electoral test in a Westminster seat since the MPs’ expenses scandal rocked the House of Commons, Smith won the Norfolk seat with a majority of 7,348 and became the youngest MP in the Commons.

Labour’s defeat, in a seat held comfortably by the party since 1997, is the fifth byelection blow Brown has suffered since he took over at No 10.

If the result was repeated across the country in a general election, the Tories would be swept to power with a Commons majority of 218.

The Tories would have 434 MPs, with Labour on 107, the Liberal Democrats 79, and others 30.

Responding to the news, the prime minister admitted it was a disappointing result but said no party could take a “great deal of cheer” from it because all three of the main parties had lost votes.

“The Conservative vote went down, the Liberal vote went down; only the fringe parties saw their votes going up,” he said.

“I think it’s a lesson that we have all got to observe. We have got to clean up Westminster politics and we are doing that. But we have got to keep our eye on what is important to people and that is the economic recovery.

“We’ve got to deal with all problems that arise. That includes swine flu, where we’re acting in a calm, organised and ordered way to deal with the problem and help people in every part of the country.”

Cameron visited the constituency six times during the campaign, which was triggered by the resignation of Labour’s Ian Gibson following the MPs’ expenses scandal. The popular MP had a 5,459 majority at the last election in 2005.

Following today’s count, Smith won with a total 13,591 votes. Labour’s Chris Ostrowski, who missed the final days of campaigning due to swine flu, received 6,243 votes and the Liberal Democrat candidate April Pond came third with 4,803 votes.

The UK Independence party pipped the Greens to fourth place by 4,068 votes to 3,350.

The 16.49% swing from Labour to the Conservatives at Norwich North was just short of the 17.61% at last year’s Crewe and Nantwich byelection.

Turnout was 45.88% – down almost a third on the 2005 general election figure of 61.09%.

Labour supporters are thought to have stayed at home in protest against the party’s treatment of Gibson, who stood down as an MP after Labour ruled that he would not be allowed to stand for the party at the next election because he had used parliamentary expenses to fund a flat that he subsequently sold to his daughter at a discount.

In her acceptance speech, Smith paid tribute to her predecessor, saying he was a “strong, independent” voice. She pledged to represent the people of Norwich North with the same honesty and conviction as he had.

“I will be a tireless champion for local people,” she said. “You have invested great responsibility in me. It will be an honour to serve you and I will not let you down.”

Ben Bradshaw, the culture secretary, insisted that the party had been right to take tough action against MPs over their expenses despite today’s result.

Jo Swinson, the 29-year-old Liberal Democrat MP had held the unofficial title of “baby of the house” until today.

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Labour fears third place in Norwich North byelection

Tories look on course to overturn 5,459 majority, with Labour locked in battle with Lib Dems for second place

Gordon Brown was today bracing himself for the possibility that Labour could be pushed into a humiliating third place in the Norwich North byelection.

As counting began in the first election since the MPs’ expenses scandal rocked Westminster, the Conservatives look on course to overturn the 5,459 majority won in 2005 by Ian Gibson, with Labour locked in a battle with the Liberal Democrats for second place.

David Cameron has visited the constituency six times during the campaign, underlining the opposition’s determination to snatch the seat for its candidate, Chloe Smith.

The election in the Norfolk seat, comfortably held by Labour since 1997, was caused by the resignation of Ian Gibson. But with turnout at 45% – down almost a third on the 2005 general election figure of 61.09% – Labour supporters are thought to have stayed at home in protest against the party’s treatment of Gibson, a popular local figure.

Gibson quit after Labour ruled that he would not be allowed to stand at the next election because he had used parliamentary expenses to fund a flat that he subsequently sold to his daughter at a discount.

Some voters told the party they would not vote for his would-be replacement, 28-year-old Chris Ostrowski, who is recovering from swine flu, because of the way Gibson was treated.

One Labour insider said: “The Conservatives are trying to play down what is happening but I think the reality is that Labour is in a fight with the Lib Dems for second place.

“The turnout has been poor in traditional Labour areas and I think the reality is that the Tories have taken the seat.”

Green sources also said the Conservatives were set for victory.

But a Green party spokesman said: “We are still confident of claiming our best result in a byelection.”

The Tories were confident that Smith, 27, would win, but were downplaying comparisons with the Crewe and Nantwich byelection last year, when the party overturned a Labour majority of more than 7,000, winning by 7,860 with a swing of 17.6%.

“Norwich North is different because, as a result of expenses, the voters are angry with all parties,” one senior Tory said.

Brown acknowledged Labour could suffer at the ballot box and attempted to focus the blame for any poor performance on the “unique” circumstances of the election.

“We are the only political party that has taken as dramatic action as suspending people from the membership of the parliamentary Labour party, and we have done that in a number of cases where we thought that what has happened has been unacceptable,” he said at his Downing Street press conference on Wednesday.

“I hope people who are Labour voters will come out and vote Labour, but I think people do understand the uniqueness of this byelection resulting from the parliamentary events that came before.”

But senior Labour MP Tony Wright accused Brown of making an error by punishing Gibson in an effort to appear “tough” on MPs caught up in the expenses scandal.

Wright, the chairman of the Commons public administration committee and a friend of Gibson’s, told BBC2′s Newsnight: “I do think he was badly treated. I think there were people in the House of Commons who did far worse things than he did.

“I think he was a victim of a moment when all the parties, and all the party leaders, were falling over each other to show how tough they were being.

“One of the fascinating paradoxes of this election is that, if Ian had been standing, a victim of the expenses scandal in this first election since we had the expenses row, he would have walked it by a mile.

“This is another election where people want to kick the politicians and they will kick, particularly, the politicians in power.

“This is different from when you come to a general election, which we will have in about 10 months’ time, where people have to choose a government.”

To compound Labour’s difficulties, its candidate, Chris Ostrowski, was forced to abandon the campaign trail in the run-up to polling day after collapsing with a bout of swine flu and being taken to hospital. He is staying away from the count but his wife is expected to be there in his place. The Liberal Democrats, who were well behind the Tories in 2005, claimed the byelection would be a Tory-Lib Dem contest and that Labour could come third behind their candidate, April Pond.

If either Ostrowski or Smith wins the seat, they will become the youngest MP at Westminster.

The unofficial title of “baby of the house” is currently held by the 29-year-old Liberal Democrat Jo Swinson.

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Guardian Daily: MPs attack Balls over Sats

Ed Balls, the children’s secretary, was partly to blame for last year’s Sats fiasco, according to a report by MPs on the children, schools and families select committee. Barry Sheerman, who chairs the committee, says government interference caused confusion in the body responsible for regulating the exam system.

Although Labour is widely expected to lose today’s Norwich North byelection, chief leader writer Julian Glover says the result is hard to predict.

Hamid Karzai has refused to take part in tonight’s televised debate between candidates in next month’s Afghan presidential election. As Jon Boone reports from Kabul, Karzai’s support is slipping away, to the consternation of western diplomats.

Topless sunbathing is in decline
in its spiritual home, France. Our Paris correspondent Angelique Chrisafis says younger Frenchwomen don’t share the traditional view of going topless as being synonymous with feminism and rebellion.

Martin Wainwright reports from a stately home in Yorkshire, where a cache of rare gramophone records was discovered by a keen-eyed visitor.


‘Healthy’ fat could lead to bowel disease

Consuming too much of polyunsaturated fat could lead to inflammatory bowel disease, according to a new study.
Scientists believe that a high intake of linoleic acid may be implicated in a third of ulcerative colitis cases.
Linoleic acid is a naturally occurring essential fatty acid, present in a variety of foods, including the oils of seeds and [...]

Brown braced for defeat as Norwich North byelection count begins

• Turnout was expected to be well down on the 2005 general election
• A senior Tory source predicted a “tight finish” with just 40% of the electorate casting their vote

Gordon Brown is bracing himself for defeat in the Norwich North byelection as counting begins in what will be the first electoral test since the MPs expenses scandal rocked Westminster.

The byelection in Norwich North, comfortably held by Labour since 1997, was caused by the resignation of Ian Gibson, who quit 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.

The Tories were confident that their candidate, Chloe Smith, 27, will win today, though were 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%. “Norwich North is different because, as a result of expenses, the voters are angry with all parties,” said one senior Tory.

Indeed turnout was expected to be well down on the 2005 general election of 61.09%. A senior Tory source predicted a “tight finish” with just 40% of the electorate casting their vote.

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 would not vote for his would-be replacement – Chris Ostrowski, 28, who is recovering from swine flu – because they think Gibson was treated unfairly.

Gordon Brown acknowledged the party could suffer at the ballot box and attempted to focus the blame for any poor performance on the “unique” circumstances of the election.

“We are the only political party that has taken as dramatic action as suspending people from the membership of the Parliamentary Labour Party and we have done that in a number of cases where we thought that what has happened has been unacceptable,” he said at his Downing Street press conference.

“I hope people who are Labour voters will come out and vote Labour but I think people do understand the uniqueness of this by-election resulting from the parliamentary events that came before.”

But Senior Labour MP Tony Wright accused Brown of making an error by punishing Gibson in an effort to appear “tough” on MPs caught up in the expenses scandal.

Wright, chairman of the Commons Public Administration Committee and a friend of Gibson’s, told BBC 2′s Newsnight: “I do think he was badly treated. I think there were people in the House of Commons who did far worse things than he did.

“I think he was a victim of a moment when all the parties, and all the party leaders, were falling over each other to show how tough they were being.

“One of the fascinating paradoxes of this election is that if Ian had been standing, a victim of the expenses scandal, in this first election since we had the expenses row, he would have walked it by a mile.”

He said: “This is another election where people want to kick the politicians and they will kick, particularly, the politicians in power.

“This is different from when you come to a general election, which we will have in about 10 months’ time, where people have to choose a government.”

David Cameron has made a series of high-profile visits to the city in a sign of the party’s determination to overturn the 5,459 majority won by Gibson in 2005.

Smith 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, have claimed that it is a Tory-Lib Dem contest, and that Labour could come third behind their candidate, April Pond.

If either 28-year-old Ostrowski or his Smith wins the seat they will become the youngest MP at Westminster.

The unofficial title of “baby of the House” is currently held by the 29-year-old Liberal Democrat Jo Swinson.

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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).

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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).

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UK’s swine flu death toll reaches 30

15-year-old girl in ‘hotspot’ Glasgow latest victim

Britain’s death toll from swine flu reached 30 today when a 15-year-old girl from Glasgow was confirmed as the latest victim of the pandemic, which has claimed the lives of more than 700 people worldwide.

The teenager, who is not being named at her family’s request, died a week after being admitted to the Royal Hospital for Sick Children in Glasgow. Like most of the previous victims, she had other underlying medical conditions.

The girl is the fourth fatality from Glasgow, which is one of the UK’s swine flu “hotspots”. Her death raises fresh fears that the virus, while relatively mild for most people, can be more dangerous for children.

Nicola Sturgeon, the Scottish health secretary, said: “The tragic death of this young girl is devastating for her family and friends, and I’d like to express my sincere condolences. As we have seen in previous cases, this patient was suffering from underlying health conditions and her death should not cause alarm among the general population.”

The first person outside the Americas to die from swine flu was also a Scot from the Glasgow area, a pregnant mother of three, Jacqui Fleming. She died on 14 June, soon after giving birth prematurely to her fourth son. He later died from unrelated complications.

Meanwhile, the London schoolgirl widely reported to have been killed by swine flu, Chloe Buckley, actually died from septic shock linked to her tonsilitis, it was revealed today.

Dr Simon Tanner, regional director of public health for London, said: “A postmortem has concluded that six-year-old Chloe Buckley died of septic shock on 9 July as a result of a tonsilitis infection caused by the streptococcus A bacterium. Chloe was also found to have the swine flu H1N1 virus.”

However, swine flu was “a significant contributory factor” in the death earlier this month of Bedfordshire GP Dr Michael Day, the coroner’s final report has found. The 64-year-old doctor also suffered a blood clot to his lung and had heart disease and high blood pressure.

The global death toll from swine flu has more than trebled in the last month, World Health Organisation figures show. More than 700 people worldwide have now died after contracting the virus, the WHO said today, a big increase on the 231 deaths announced on 22 June and the 429 fatalities confirmed on 6 July.

WHO spokeswoman Aphaluck Bhatiasevi said school closures were possible measures countries may want to adopt to try to slow the virus’s spread.

Some church leaders in the UK and abroad have decided to stop offering communion wine during services, fearing that it could cause the virus to spread. In New Zealand, the Roman Catholic church has banned priests from placing communion wafers on the tongues of worshippers, while Chilean authorities last night prompted protests after they suspended a northern religious celebration.

New figures due out tomorrow from the Royal College of GPs will show a huge rise in the number of people in England who are contacting their GP with symptoms of influenza-like illness. Labour’s candidate in the Norwich North by-election, Chris Ostrowski, is being treated for suspected swine flu in Norfolk and Norwich hospital.

People whose holiday plans are ruined by swine flu will still need a GP’s certificate for proof of illness before claiming from travel insurance, the insurance industry insisted today. Talks between the Association of British Insurers (ABI) and the Department of Health (DH) are ongoing.

The ABI has been studying website and hotline guidance due to be made available this week through the government’s new National Pandemic Flu Service.

When launched it will effectively enable any caller or internet user to self-diagnose and request Tamiflu. Such a prescription will be not sufficient proof of illness, however, an ABI spokeswoman confirmed today.

The new service is intended to take pressure off GPs and allow them to treat more urgent cases while letting those with swine flu receive antiviral drugs. But the hotlines will be staffed mainly by people who are not medically qualified.

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Labour candidate treated for swine flu

Chris Ostrowski, who is standing for Labour in the Norwich North byelection, taken to hospital 48 hours before polling day

Labour’s candidate in this week’s Norwich North byelection is being treated for suspected swine flu, the party said today.

A spokesman for the Norwich North Labour campaign said: “We can confirm that Chris Ostrowski is being treated for a suspected case of swine flu.

“This was confirmed by doctors at the Norfolk and Norwich hospital after Chris felt unwell and was taken there earlier today. He collapsed at home and was taken to hospital by ambulance.

“Chris is receiving world class care from an excellent team of doctors, nurses and staff. Clearly, our priority is to ensure that nobody falls ill from swine flu unnecessarily and we will follow the medical advice and take every precaution necessary.”

Labour is widely expected to lose Thursday’s contest, caused by the resignation of sitting MP Ian Gibson after the party’s expenses panel excluded him from standing at the next election.

The Tory candidate, Chloe Smith, is the favourite to take the seat, overturning Labour’s 5,459 majority from the 2005 poll.

Smith said in a statement: “I’m extremely sorry to hear that Chris has been taken ill this morning. One of my campaign team had a suspected case of swine flu two weeks ago so I know just how horrible it can be.

“I’d like to send Chris my best wishes and I hope he will make a speedy recovery.”

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