Monday 30 June 2014

IDS dragged to Commons in censorship fight

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"David Cameron's failure to get a grip of the chaos within the Department for Work and Pensions has led to huge distress and hardship for hundreds of thousands of people and threatens to land taxpayers with a huge bill"

IDS fights FoI

Labour enters IDS freedom of information battle

IDS: Lost appeal against FoI decision

Labour enters row about Iain Duncan Smith's refusal to publish information on his universal credit scheme, with demand that he abide by a tribunal ruling and release the documents

IDS loses legal appeal to keep universal credit problems secret

IDS: Legal fight to keep universal credit documents secret

Yet more taxpayer money wasted trying to prevent publication of the universal credit risk register

Iain Duncan Smith continues to hide reports showing failure of universal credit

Comment: The ruling which reveals IDS' campaign of secrecy over universal credit

In other news...

Sun trumps politics: Majority of Brits 'would leave UK'

It's unclear why Brits would want to move abroad

Over half of Brits would emigrate to another European Union country if they could guarantee their standard of living would not fall, a poll has found.

Scottish independence campaign accused of 'bullying' after protesters target BBC

BBC accused of bias in Scottish referendum campaign

Campaigners for Scottish independence were accused of trying to bully the BBC into delivering more favourable coverage after they targeted the corporation in a protest yesterday.

Legal ruling proves the Home Office broke its promise on torture victims

Trapped: Home Office admits it doesn't know if it is detaining torture victims

The Home Office has broken its own promise on torture victims and it's admitted it in court

Labour pangs

Labour backs bill to repeal NHS reforms

Andrew Lansley faces having his NHS reforms dismantled before his eyes

Labour backs private members bill intended to repeal the competition provisions in the coalition's NHS reforms

'Dead hand at the centre': Balls rules out rail nationalisation

Balls rules out rail nationalisation

Ed Balls effectively rules out rail nationalisation from the Labour manifesto, just hours after it emerged the party's policy supremo complained of the "profound dead hand at the centre" of the party

Disabled activists fight for protest camp in shadow of parliament

Police were accused of overkill for their response to the protest yesterday

Disability protesters tried to set set up a protest camp outside Westminster Abbey last night, in a move reminiscent of the Occupy camp outside St Pauls

Governors call for end to compulsory worship in state schools with no religious character

The National Governors’ Association (NGA) today announced new policy ‘that collective worship should be abolished in schools without a designated religious character.’

The Chemical Industry Awards 2014: Winners announced

The winners of the 2014 Chemical Industry have been announced at a celebration dinner held at The Point Old Trafford, the home of Lancashire County Cricket Club.

Illegal wildlife trade debated at highest levels

Security threats, organised crime and critical losses in biodiversity were the focus of a Ministerial Dialogue on Illegal Wildlife Trade at the inaugural meeting of the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA) in Nairobi.

Resilient chemical sector to be at the heart of UK growth

The UK’s £60 billion chemical sector is fundamental to the growth of manufacturing and other activities across a range of sectors.

The Longitude Prize 2014 goes to Antibiotics, and tackling the constantly evolving global problem

MRSA Action UK are delighted that the prize fund will go towards challenging antimicrobial resistance. The hard work now really begins.

Information Tribunal orders DfE to disclose documents that led to state funding of Steiner schools

The Information Tribunal has today ordered the Department for Education (DfE) to release two documents from 2010 that helped form the policy that led to the state funding of Steiner Free Schools to the British Humanist Association (BHA).

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Friday 27 June 2014

The Week in Review: Cameron's secret skill - politics.co.uk

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Alex Stevenson writes:

It's been a tough few days for the prime minister - and one in which he's deployed his best skill as a politician. This week, David Cameron exercised the trait which might just keep him in power after 2015.

There is something fitting about Cameron being the leader of a country whose sporting teams are struggling a little at present. The prime minister is becoming the man who can take positives from humiliating defeats.

In both the two big stories of the week - the Andy Coulson guilty verdict and today's vote over Jean-Claude Juncker - Cameron has found himself on the losing side. But, somehow, he is managing to not just get away with it but even to take positives from what should be unmitigated calamities. It's quite a skill to have up your sleeve.

What makes it all the more impressive is that the prime minister's judgement has been under scrutiny this week. That is obviously the case with regard to his decision to hire Coulson, who - as Ed Miliband repeatedly pointed out - turns out to have been a criminal. It's also the case in Brussels too. The decision to take on the rest of Europe over Juncker is ultimately the PM's responsibility. He didn't have to take on this particular struggle. Now he is, and is losing it comprehensively. Is he picking the wrong fights?

It was always going to be tough for the prime minister to get his way in Europe. From the moment No 10 declared war on Juncker, everything seemed to go wrong. Angela Merkel's sudden about-turn was decisive, of course. After that the British establishment seems to have belittled itself by coming up with more and more desperate ideas to try and block Juncker's appointment. The Luxembourg Compromise, a far-fetched resort to the rulebook, proved a non-starter. Today's Telegraph headline about Juncker's drinking just seemed petty.

So it was that by the time of the summit even Cameron was forced to admit the odds were against him. His hope was that he could turn defeat into victory. But a 'veto moment' only really works when you actually, you know, veto something. Pushing a one-sided issue to a vote is just grandstanding, and everyone knows it. Still, at least it gives the PM something to take away from it.

And this is what makes the PM the man who is good at losing gracefully. He is very good at taking positives from setbacks. So it was with Coulson; the defence he offered in the face of Ed Miliband's attacks in prime minister's questions left the press scorning the leader of the opposition as much as his rival. Rebekah Brooks' acquittal meant the extent of Cameron's relationship with her became irrelevant. The apology was nearly unprecedented, but this could have been a lot worse for Cameron.

What the Coulson case revealed is confirmation of one of the PM's most interesting traits: his loyalty to his inferiors. As we saw with the furore over ex-culture secretary Maria Miller's expenses, the Cameron proved reluctant to take the decisive step even though it meant taking personal political flak. So it was with Coulson. He is, it seems, a naturally trusting sort of man. He wanted to give Coulson a "second chance". Perhaps his coming reshuffle will see other dear departed ex-ministers from the coalition given another opportunity to return to power.

Making the best of difficult situations is a useful trick. Cameron has deployed it this week after the Coulson verdict with aplomb. And now he is shoring up his support among eurosceptic backbenchers by kicking up a stink in Brussels.

It's a skill that Cameron's used before. After five years of hard work in opposition, when his big moment came he failed to win an overall majority. His response? That "open offer" to the Liberal Democrats to form a coalition. Where Labour dithered and appeared frosty, Cameron welcomed Nick Clegg with open arms. He was making the best of a bad situation - and it's kept him in power ever since.

It was tough for the Tories in 2010 and it will be no different next year. So here's a thought to cheer up any disconsolate staff in Downing Street: maybe by practising his most useful political skill this week, he'll find himself ready to use it again in hung parliament talks next year.

Monday

Coalition faces 'biggest ever' strike as demoralised local government workers revolt

Unison chief Dave Prentis has said the walkout could be bigger than the 1926 General Strike

Members of the Unison trade union have backed a one-day walkout set to be even bigger than the 1926 General Strike.

Directly elected mayors: A rare case of justified hypocrisy?

Alex Stevenson: The chancellor's gamble is that, once up and running, mayoralties will be demonstrably more democratic

The public rejected directly elected mayors - so is George Osborne wrong to propose forcing them on voters?

Why doctors should stop hating politicians

Politics is never going to be divorced from the NHS

MPs will never stop playing politics with the NHS - however much doctors want them to.

Tuesday

Coulson guilty: Cameron apologises but Miliband declares government 'tainted'

Andy Coulson, David Cameron's former head of communications, has been found guilty of phone-hacking

David Cameron's former spin doctor Andy Coulson has been found guilty of phone-hacking - but Rebekah Brooks has been cleared.

Between the lines: Cameron's counterproductive EU strategy

Jean-Claude Juncker talks with the man determined to stop him becoming president of the European Commission

It's David Cameron's boldest diplomatic move yet - and possibly his stupidest. So why is the PM making an ill-fated bid to sabotage Jean-Claude Juncker's appointment as president of the European Commission?

The first step in the criminalisation of cigarettes

Smoking: End game in sight

Finally, the anti-smoking lobby dares to reveal its final objective: a ban on adults buying cigarettes

Wednesday

PMQs verdict: Cameron uses the law as a shield, but forgets to cover his legs

Cameron takes questions at PMQs

Cameron uses the law as a shield to avoid scrutiny, but he does so with little grace

Right-to-die campaigners are wasting their time

Tony Nicklinson died naturally after losing his high court case last year

Parliament is deeply sceptical about changing the law - and might even legislate against euthanasia it if it had to.

Coulson case collapses as judge attacks Cameron

Cameron undergoes grueling PMQs over Coulson row

Remaining case against Andy Coulson ends after jury fails to return a verdict - but not before judge issues a stinging rebuke to the prime minister for nearly causing it to collapse

Thursday

IDS loses legal appeal to keep universal credit problems secret

IDS: Legal fight to keep universal credit documents secret

Yet more taxpayer money wasted trying to prevent publication of the universal credit risk register

Ghosts of WW1 haunt the Lords

A British government photo from 1916 of UK troops advancing

Amid one of the most moving debates in the Lords, a Labour peer stands up and invites Michael Gove to a fight

Grayling's tough justice is as expensive as it is useless

Show me the money: Grayling's 'tough on crime' approach is hurting the taxpayer

We know Chris Grayling's tabloid-friendly 'hang-em-and-flog-em' approach to crime doesn't work. Now we're starting to see how much it costs

Friday

Dismay as Britain accepts just 50 Syrian refugees

There are now nearly three million Syrian refugees - and the British government has let just 50 arrive in Britain

Just 50 Syrians have been let into Britain since the government abandoned its policy of refusing to accept refugees, it has emerged.

Have the SNP tamed their cybernats?

Are cybernats finally scaling back their invective?

The online tone of the referendum debate is vicious and vindictive. But the cybernats may be starting to learn that less is more

Prisoner book ban: Are the Lib Dems starting to turn against Grayling?

Clegg and Grayling speak to inmates in a prison library - the Lib Dems have stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the justice secretary over the prisoner book ban

After months of campaigning, the prisoner book ban may finally have irritated the Lib Dems

Birmingham taxpayers’ money used by Council to urge systematic discrimination against non-religious in RE

The British Humanist Association (BHA) has uncovered a pattern of systematic discrimination against the non-religious by members of Birmingham’s Standing Advisory Council for Religious Education (SACRE).

Assault on teachers' pay continues

The 1% pay award continues four years of deep cuts to teachers’ pay.

Lenders have met the 2020 interest-only mortgage commitment, says CML

The Council of Mortgage Lenders is pleased to report that mortgage lenders have successfully met a commitment they gave a year ago to contact their borrowers with interest-only mortgages.

Employers urged to build bridges with business schools

New report calls for every business graduate to undertake vital work experience as a core element of their course.

NASUWT comments on Ofsted reports on Birmingham Schools

The NASUWT will be studying the Ofsted reports in detail. Our priority is to support our members who are under great pressure and stress.

Bakers Union Leader urges Ed Miliband to end “light-touch austerity” and produce polices that appeal to core voters

Mr Draper said he had a message for Mr Miliband who has a “hell of a job” to win the general election next year.

Bakers Union president calls for a general strike against austerity and a living wage of £10 an hour

Bakers’ union president Ian Hodson calls for a general strike against UK government austerity, at the opening of the BFAWU annual conference at the Southport Theatre and Convention Centre.

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Syria refugees: Just 50 let into Britain - politics.co.uk

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"I am disappointed that after so long, so few people have been helped. These are people who may have suffered systematic torture and sexual violence, the destruction of their homes and the break-up of their families."

Friday news

Dismay as Britain accepts just 50 Syrian refugees

There are now nearly three million Syrian refugees - and the British government has let just 50 arrive in Britain

Just 50 Syrians have been let into Britain since the government abandoned its policy of refusing to accept refugees, it has emerged.

Immigration replaces economy as voters' biggest worry

Voters are now more worried about race/immigration issues than the economy

Race and immigration have overtaken the economy as the biggest issue bothering UK voters, a poll has found.

Tories slap down minister's all-women shortlist support

Ed Miliband has criticised the Tory benches for lacking enough women

Women's minister Nicky Morgan's suggestion that all-women shortlists could be considered for the Conservatives has been slapped down by the party.

Have the SNP tamed their cybernats?

Are cybernats finally scaling back their invective?

The online tone of the referendum debate is vicious and vindictive. But the cybernats may be starting to learn that less is more

Prisoner book ban: Are the Lib Dems starting to turn against Grayling?

Clegg and Grayling speak to inmates in a prison library - the Lib Dems have stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the justice secretary over the prisoner book ban

After months of campaigning, the prisoner book ban may finally have irritated the Lib Dems

Resilient chemical sector to be at the heart of UK growth

The UK’s £60 billion chemical sector is fundamental to the growth of manufacturing and other activities across a range of sectors.

The Longitude Prize 2014 goes to Antibiotics, and tackling the constantly evolving global problem

MRSA Action UK are delighted that the prize fund will go towards challenging antimicrobial resistance. The hard work now really begins.

Information Tribunal orders DfE to disclose documents that led to state funding of Steiner schools

The Information Tribunal has today ordered the Department for Education (DfE) to release two documents from 2010 that helped form the policy that led to the state funding of Steiner Free Schools to the British Humanist Association (BHA).

Right to die appeals dismissed by Supreme Court, Parliament urged to review law

A majority of judges in the Supreme Court has today dismissed the appeals of Jane Nicklinson, widow of Tony Nicklinson, and Paul Lamb.

Talis survey should serve as a wake-up call to the coalition says NASUWT

“This should act as a wake-up call for Secretary of State as it demonstrates the detrimental impact of his reforms upon teachers and ultimately on children and young people".

Freedoms and fragmentation put pupils at risk

"They are yet another example of where increased ‘freedoms’ in and fragmentation of the system lead to important statutory and good practice provisions being ignored".

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Thursday 26 June 2014

Boris aide warns mayor over water cannon - politics.co.uk

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"I don't think there is an understanding of what a powerful weapon [water cannon] are," the source said. "It's like being hit with a baseball bat. I think he will live to regret it."

Boris exclusive

Boris Johnson aide warns mayor will 'live to regret' buying water cannon

Anti-government protesters hit by water cannon in Turkey.

Growing disquiet at City Hall over Johnson's determination to acquire the weapons.

Past and present

Ghosts of WW1 haunt the Lords

A British government photo from 1916 of UK troops advancing

Amid one of the most moving debates in the Lords, a Labour peer stands up and invites Michael Gove to a fight

Cameron told to honour his drug reform past

Do you remember the time? Cameron once pushed for drug reform, but changed position in government

David Cameron comes under pressure to honour his pre-Downing Street views on drug reform, as protests are held in capitals across the world to push for a change in the law

Meanwhile...

IDS loses legal appeal to keep universal credit problems secret

IDS: Legal fight to keep universal credit documents secret

Yet more taxpayer money wasted trying to prevent publication of the universal credit risk register

Grayling's tough justice is as expensive as it is useless

Show me the money: Grayling's 'tough on crime' approach is hurting the taxpayer

We know Chris Grayling's tabloid-friendly 'hang-em-and-flog-em' approach to crime doesn't work. Now we're starting to see how much it costs

PMQs

PMQs verdict: Cameron uses the law as a shield, but forgets to cover his legs

Cameron takes questions at PMQs

Cameron uses the law as a shield to avoid scrutiny, but he does so with little grace

PMQs as-it-happened

Prime minister's questions as-it-happens: Cameron's judgement under scrutiny after Coulson verdict

David Cameron's judgement faces scrutiny in the Commons following Andy Coulson's guilty verdict yesterday

Coulson case collapses as judge attacks Cameron

Cameron undergoes grueling PMQs over Coulson row

Remaining case against Andy Coulson ends after jury fails to return a verdict - but not before judge issues a stinging rebuke to the prime minister for nearly causing it to collapse

Information Tribunal orders DfE to disclose documents that led to state funding of Steiner schools

The Information Tribunal has today ordered the Department for Education (DfE) to release two documents from 2010 that helped form the policy that led to the state funding of Steiner Free Schools to the British Humanist Association (BHA).

Right to die appeals dismissed by Supreme Court, Parliament urged to review law

A majority of judges in the Supreme Court has today dismissed the appeals of Jane Nicklinson, widow of Tony Nicklinson, and Paul Lamb.

Talis survey should serve as a wake-up call to the coalition says NASUWT

“This should act as a wake-up call for Secretary of State as it demonstrates the detrimental impact of his reforms upon teachers and ultimately on children and young people".

Freedoms and fragmentation put pupils at risk

"They are yet another example of where increased ‘freedoms’ in and fragmentation of the system lead to important statutory and good practice provisions being ignored".

HS3 proposals will significantly improve northern cities’ ability to compete with London

The Institution of Engineering and Technology has welcomed the proposals for HS3 as it represents the opportunity to reap benefits for the smaller cities in the north.

Government must do more to protect animal welfare

New polling of public, politicians and animal welfare experts highlights the need for the Government to lead the way - and identifies the plight of research animals, breeding animals and those hunted for sport as top priorities.

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