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Posts Tagged ‘way’

Mihal Freinquel: Sex and the City 2: More Sex, Hotter Sex, Your Sex

I’m here for you to be that person who knows somebody who knows somebody famous and get you thismuchcloser to fabulousness.

John DeCock: Creating a Long, Lasting Legacy of….Dog Poop?

Your dog will still be able to poop. You just won’t be able to create little fecal sarcophagi for your great grandchildren to deal with.

Trevor Phillips: a career in crisis

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Daniel Krotz: On The Collecting of Books

The single piece of advice I give to a prospective collector is that if a book makes you cry, collect it. I suppose that’s why I own nine copies of The Sun Also Rises.

Jill Schlesinger: Wall Street: Lessons Not Learned

While many are celebrating “The Recession is Over!” I’m not feeling great joy. Don’t misunderstand me–I want the economy to find its footing and for…

Iceland clears first EU membership hurdle

Iceland cleared the first hurdle on the way to becoming a European Union member on Monday. EU foreign ministers agreed to pass its membership application on to the bloc’s executive for a technical evaluation.

Jay Michaelson: The Emptiness of Anger

Fighting it doesn’t work, but paradoxically, once you accept the anger, it’s easier for it to pass. This, I think, is a taste of freedom.

Maria Rodale: Top 10 Places I Want to Travel to Before I Die

I am going to share my list of the top 10 places I want to go to before I die (in no particular order, although I hope dying comes last).

Susan Boyle to get ‘statue honour’

Susan Boyle might be honoured with a statue in her hometown of Blackburn.
The West Lothian Council is considering building a statue in honour of Susan Boyle, which could become an attraction for tourists flocking her hometown.
Provost Tom Kerr is looking forward to meeting the 48-year-old singer to find a way to recognise her achievements, said [...]

Off with their lordships

Just because No 10 wants a little expert help is no reason to grant outsiders a lifetime in ermine

It is hail and farewell time around Whitehall. Hail to Baron Sugar of Clapton, but farewell to Baron Darzi of Denham, not to mention Baron Carter of Barnes. Let the great big world keep turning without you, Baron Malloch-Brown of St Leonard’s Forest. And cheerio Baron Jones of Brum (though you’ve been gone quite a while already).

The last four were the leaders of Gordon Brown’s new pack, trailblazers for his government of all the talents. But now it’s the government of all the exits. Digby Jones vanished in under a year, talking about his “dehumanising, depersonalising” time as a junior functionary. Mark Malloch-Brown and Ara Darzi did rather better, notching two years apiece – until this month. Stephen Carter, Lord Broadband, wins the palm for a headlong transition. Appointed to a ministerial post in the Department of Culture, Media and Sport, October 2008: announced resignation, June 2009.

More comings and goings than Manchester City in the transfer window. More drama than an absurd BBC Trust meeting trying to decide whether Lord Hired of Fired can play apprentice finder in an election season. More dilemmas of a wholly ridiculous kind: first, why do talented outsiders wither and die in ministerial smog? But second, why do we have to give these chaps a job for life – attendance money, expenses, office costs, title – to sign them up for a few bare months of public service? What have they done to deserve decades of squirming in ermine?

Now, of course, it’s not quite possible yet to guess where the new, independent fees office will finally pitch their lordships’ expenses, beyond daily subsistence of £82.50 a day. Perhaps the four barons just departed won’t attend, won’t claim, won’t want to play the game at all. But it’s still a great game, eternal membership of a club that leaves the Garrick standing.

But why, pray, is it necessary to offer such enduring beneficence in order to get a little specific on board? There’s no reason for Downing Street not to add a noted surgeon or distinguished UN official to the team: reinforcements both sensible and necessary. A Commons full of professional members – no second jobs, no experience of life outside Central Office or some trades union HQ – isn’t likely to throw up much in the way of ministerial talent.

And this is a bind that will grow worse if David Cameron gets his way and reduces the number of MPs. Do we trust the people we elect to govern us? No: and we’re not exactly awed by them either. The wellsprings are running dry – and the true need for constitutional change has never been clearer.

Why go through the flummery of titles and bounteous cash flowing the wrong way in order to import expert ministers to do expert jobs? Why pavilion them with phoney baronies if they can just turn up in the Commons, make statements, answer questions and do the normal thing? Why pension them off to the Lords, where expense streams always run and nothing is truly proactive (or particularly democratic)? Let Mr Carter arrive, appear at the Commons dispatch box as requested, do his stuff – and then go back to being plain Steve again.

That’s the submerged logic of the new constitutional reform bill as tabled. What No 10 gives, life peers can henceforth shuck off. What heredity bestows no longer matters. But, why then deem that any of it matters? Choose a pragmatic version of the American cabinet system, fit for modern purpose. Spare Lord Mandelson months thinking up his title. Leave Lord Adonis in the right traffic lane. Impose no legacy for groaning generations to come. Here’s a very modest proposal that abolishes mindless contortions and futile cost. Watch Mark MB junk that upper house hyphen. Call My Lord Darzi just Dr once more. Lord Suralan, you’re terminated. That’s what you might call real reform.

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


Jarrett: Chicago-Staffed White House Not The City’s ’51st Ward’

In Washington, the relationships among the key players in government are subject to speculation and fascination over whether there is a “Chicago way” in the six-month-old Obama White House.

More on Barack Obama

Kevin Grandia: Debunking Another Climate Change Crock: What’s Up with Anthony Watts? [video]

The Watts Up With That readers spend too much time — and too little science — trying to prove that climate change is nothing to worry about. In this video Peter Sinclair thoroughly debunks Watts and his pseudo science.

Willie Geist’s Week In Review: Parliamentary Brawls, The Taco Bell Dog And The Birthers (VIDEO)

With just days to go before the premiere of his own show this Monday at 5:30AM, Willie Geist presented his customary Week in Review countdown on Friday’s “Morning Joe.”

His top three stories of the week were:

3. “Awkward Man-Wrestling”: A no…

Donna Schaper: God Is Still Spanking….Lou Dobbs? Sargent Crowley?

For many people, God is not still speaking. God is still spanking. Setting up too high a bar. Telling us we are bad. God is…

Neha in hurry to US !!

Now a days Neha have not seen on the big screen.Reason is she is ready with her 5 releases out of which one is international project.
For the premiere of the Bollywood movie Neha is ready to leave for US onAugust 1 .In this movie she is playing a role of indian girl called Lalima.Neha excitedly [...]

Jim Watkins: I Swear This Has To Stop

In a place like New York City, where people are packed together so closely that private conversations can become community events, I see very little concern about having bad language overheard.

Art Brodsky: Lifting The Curtain on Verizon’s Washington Lobbying

When one company comes to Congress with a plan that can be changed at a whim, public officials shouldn’t praise it.

Victoria Lautman: Facebook ‘Friends’ and the Gentle Art of Summer Poaching

My guess is that anyone with over 1,000 Facebook “friends” will probably accede to pretty much anyone. Hear that, Jeff Koons? You might be ignoring me, but I’m down with Damien Hirst.

Karen Finney: The Conversation We Need to Have

The incident in Cambridge comes on the heels of a number of incidents over the past several months that reminded us of the unfinished business race and prejudice in our country.

Craig and Marc Kielburger: No News Isn’t Good News

There’s not much new about the genocide in Darfur. For six years now, the conflict has uprooted over 2 million people. The United Nations estimates…