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Programación en general => Vb.net => Mensaje iniciado por: rubo9940 en Septiembre 27, 2013, 05:00:19 am
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(That last phrase is a jibe at Ed Llewellyn, David Cameron's chief of staff, who was told about a Guardian warning about Coulson but failed to pass it on to his boss.)This morning, in an interview on Sky, Nick Clegg has rejected Brown's claim. According to PoliticsHome, this is what he said.Gordon Brown talked to me at one point during those days after the General Election about News International and its influence in British politics. He didn't raise Andy Coulson specifically. He talked to me, and that's certainly my recollection, about the general problem of the influence of big media groups in British politics.9.20am: If you want to know more about what precise powers the House of Commons has to force someone to give evidence to a select committee - a subject that may be of some interest to News International lawyers at the moment - here is what may be the definitive account, from a report from a joint committee on parliamentary privilege published in 1999.
" "Of course not,kate spade wallet sale (http://www.cnnhkids.com/)," he replied. "It would be in the newspapers."Ponder it before you throw too many bricks.Politics live blog - Thursday 30 June 20118.34am: There's only one big story in town today - the public sector strike. This will almost certainly be the first of a series of walkouts which, over the next few months, could seriously damage the standing of the government, or the union movement, or possibly both. My colleagues at the strikes blog will be leading our coverage, but there will be some coverage here too. Otherwise, the main events are taking place at the Local Government Association conference, where three senior politicians are speaking. Here's the full diary for the day.7am: The polls opened in Inverclyde, where voters are electing an MP to replace the late David Cairns.
00am: We've got quite a mix today - heavy-duty geopolitics (the conference on Somalia), low-grade Commons alleged yobbery (Labour MP Eric Joyce reportedly arrested on suspicion of assault), a prime ministerial speech (on business) and yet another row about bankers and their bonuses (RBS announcing a £2bn loss,ytcgzx (http://www.ytcgzx.net/), while its employees trouser bonuses worth £390m.) It should be busy. Here's the agenda for the day.10.10am: David Cameron opens an international conference on Somalia. There are full details of the conference on the Foreign Office website and the Guardian's coverage of the conference is here.2.30pm: David Cameron speaks at the Business in the Community conference. As Patrick Wintour reports in the Guardian, Cameron will signal his determination to produce a pro-growth budget by saying he is sick of the dangerous anti-business snobbery creeping into national debate, promising his focus is economic expansion and reducing joblessness among young people.
It's not another U-turn it's a perfectly balanced package of radical reform, which is very necessary, and obviously I have to first of all discuss it in Cabinet and then explain it to my parliamentary colleagues.Technically, Clarke has a point. The government floated the 50% sentence discount idea last year in a green paper, Breaking the Cycle (pdf), and that made it clear that this was only a proposal. "We want to ensure that defendants are encouraged to plead guilty at the earliest opportunity by reducing the sentence given for an early guilty plea (the "sentence discount")," the green paper says (in paragraph 216). "We are considering whether this could be better achieved by introducing a maximum discount of up to 50% that would be reserved for those who plead guilty at the earliest stage.
At a stretch we could make it a class issue, I suppose (that's probably Spellar's gripe) and claim that those restaurant-wrecking Bullingdon Club hearties never get banged to rights by the Old Bill because Daddy can always make a phone call to the chief constable.But it's less true than it was when Evelyn Waugh wrote Vile Bodies – the chippy Sun is usually on the toffs' case, aided by social media snitches – and it's not as if substance misuse is confined to one class or even gender.I've even downed a few too many Pinot Grigios myself on occasion, though I stopped driving after doing so some years ago after an incident which might have been nasty – but wasn't – for me and fellow motorists that evening.
Q: What do you say to people who think it is quite likely that he will still be here at the end of the year?May says it may take "many months" to get rid of him. But she is confident that he will be deported.Even if the ECHR does not decide to accept an appeal, Qatada can take legal action in the UK.1.16pm: Lorraine Fullbrook, a Conservative, is asking the questions now.Q: Are you confident that Abu Qatada will be deported?Yes,kate spade outlet (http://www.cnnhkids.com/), says May.Q: Do you accept that he has to be removed lawfully?Yes, says May. When he gets deported, it is important that he remains deported. The government has to act under the rule of law.1.18pm: Labour's Steve McCabe goes next.Q: If the court decides to accept the appeal, will that mean that the legal advice you received was wrong?May says the court does not give reasons for its decisions.
Gosh, I hope the Lib Dems will stop complaining about being ignored by the media – at least for a week or two. Of course they won't stop.It's a good speech, very wholesome in many ways, full of admirable sentiments. But is it true, is it a fair description of Britain today, its problems and its urgent needs? I don't think it is, though it's a decent stab, and John Kampfner of Index puts a very positive gloss on it in an article for the Guardian's comment pages.Kampfner concludes that post-New Labour under Ed Miliband and a Cleggster-led third party have much in shared ambition, which they should work to fulfil. OK, if you say so; that's a decent enough goal too.Clegg is obviously trying to regain political ground, among party activists and the wider electorate, lost during 18 months as junior coalition partner, culminating in David Cameron's clumsy summit mis-negotiation in Brussels, which gave the Tories a brief but unsettling boost in the opinion polls.