| Did your email system distort this newsletter? Click here to see it online. To make sure emails from Politics.co.uk don’t go into your junk folder, please add us to your email contacts. To stop receiving emails such as this, please update your preferences or unsubscribe here. | |
                                                                    |                                                                                                                                                                                         |               
                                            Osborne bounces backA premature victory lap? Osborne triumphant as economy recovers       George Osborne will claim victory over Ed Balls in the battle for Britain's economic future later. In other news...Frances O'Grady's first TUC Congress speech in full       New TUC general secretary Frances O'Grady gives her first speech in charge - as Ed Miliband's union funding plans dominate proceedings in Bournemouth. Read it in full here. The 'sometimes' special relationship: Kerry and Hague gloss over Commons defeat       Britain remains a valuable partner to the United States because it "sometimes" stands up to dictators, secretary of state John Kerry has declared from the Foreign Office. Scottish government 'obsessed with independence'       The Scottish government risks looking obsessed with independence, after a new poll found most voters want them to focus on other issues instead. HS2 case based on 'absurd' assumptions, MPs warn       The government's case for the £50 billion HS2 high-speed rail line is based on "absurd" assumptions that "do not reflect real life", a committee of MPs has warned. Miliband unmoving as union funding clash nears       Ed Miliband will face down trade union bosses tomorrow in a speech set to be among the most challenging of his career, despite Unite being cleared of trying to fix the selection of Labour's next Falkirk MP.  |                                                                                     BSIA: Vacant property protection still paramount one year on from law changeLast Sunday (1st September) marked the one year anniversary of the anti-squatting law that made residential squatting a criminal offence. The milestone also saw squatters’ internet sites[1] encouraging action in order to mark the anniversary. As such, the Vacant Property Protection Group of the British Security Industry Association (BSIA) is reiterating to owners and landlords of vacant commercial properties the importance of securing and protecting their premises. BHA: Girl Guides, Rainbows, and Brownies promise to be inclusive of the non-religiousThe Girl Guides, Rainbows and Brownies are for the first time inclusive of atheists and agnostics after a new Promise comes into force today which is, for the first time, inclusive of atheists and agnostics. TACT welcomes continuing increase in adoption numbersTACT (The Adolescent and Children’s Trust) today welcomed the announcement from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), that the number of adoptions made in the UK in 2012 had risen by nearly ten per cent. This follows an increase in 2011 of six per cent. Rio Tinto loads first ship from its 290 Mt/a expansion programmeRio Tinto has achieved the significant milestone of loading the first shipment of iron ore from its expanded port, rail and mine operations in Australia. This marks the commencement of commissioning of the expansion programme, which will see overall capacity for Rio Tinto’s iron ore operations in Western Australia increase to 290 million tonnes a year. Boeing Forecasts Increased Global Demand for Airline PilotsBoeing projects the commercial aviation industry will need more than one million new pilots and technicians to support the expanding demand for new airplane deliveries over the next two decades. Voice: Speaking and listening in GCSE languages are essentialVoice: the union for education professionals has commented on the announcement by Ofqual to remove the assessment of speaking and listening from GCSE grades in English and English Language. IET: Engineering chief: more universities must share research with SMEsThe outgoing President of Europe’s largest engineering body is calling for more universities to give small and medium sized businesses open access to the intellectual property (IP) that they create. BFAWU: Strike action at Hovis (Premier Foods), WiganThe Hovis strikes are about the casualisation of the food industry and a race to the bottom. IFAW: Cameron's badger cull at odds with scienceCameron’s cull is going ahead at odds with science and common sense, says the International Fund for Animal Welfare.  |               
Monday, 9 September 2013
Osborne triumphant - Politics.co.uk
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)











No comments:
Post a Comment