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Título: www.cnnhkids.com MiU481 www.ytcgzx.net 892VZc
Publicado por: lehan6144 en Septiembre 28, 2013, 07:17:26 am
The Fox affair is clearly a matter of public importance. But is it "of an urgent character"? Liam Fox has resigned, Adam Werritty has gone to ground and won't be wielding any influence in government circles for the foreseeable future and, as Downing Street told us yesterday, ministers will not be legislating to reform the rules about lobbying until next year. Bercow may well have decided that this did not pass the "urgent" test.2.14pm: The Electoral Commission has ruled out an investigation into Liam Fox. Here's an extract from the letter that a commission investigator sent to him.I am writing to inform you that on 17 October 2011 the Commission received an allegation that both you and Adam Werritty are regulated donees who have failed to comply with the provisions set out in the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000 in regards to the requirement to report donations to the Commission.
 He didn't say anything compelling about the economy - he ignored completely the issue about whether the government can conjure up a stimulus - and he did not have anything very personal to say either, beyond acknowledging his privileged upbringing and making a joke about his wife supposedly wanting him to stand down. It was a functional, straightforward speech, nothing crass, but nothing special either. It was a case of job done.And on the subject of job done,www.cnnhkids.com (http://www.cnnhkids.com/), I'm off. I'll be blogging again from the Labour conference on Sunday morning.Thanks for the comments.Liam Fox resigns: live coverage – Friday 14 October 20114.10pm: The defence secretary, Liam Fox, has resigned.More details soon .
12pm: The defence secretary, Liam Fox, has resigned after increasing pressure over his links to his unofficial adviser and best man, Adam Werrity. His office has just confirmed the news.In his resignation statement, Fox said he "mistakenly allowed the distinction between my personal interest and my government activities to become blurred".4.14pm: This is the second forced resignation since the coalition was formed. The first was the Lib Dem David Laws, who stepped down soon after becoming chief secretary to the Treasury over his expenses.You can see all of the Guardian's coverage of the Liam Fox story since June here.4.19pm: Tory MP Peter Bone says "it's typical of Liam to put the country first" in resigning.
 He says that firms that have not pulled out by lunchtime will be "named and shamed" (my phrase) in the Commons this afternoon.9.56am: How is the Sun covering today's story? "Loyally" is the word,www.ytcgzx.net (http://www.ytcgzx.net/), I think. Here's a flavour of their story.FORMER News of the World Editor Rebekah Brooks yesterday said she was "sickened" by allegations that a private eye hired by the paper hacked tragic Milly Dowler's phone.The News International boss vowed the "strongest possible action" if it was proved rogue operator Glenn Mulcaire had intercepted the 13-year-old's voicemail while she was missing.She branded the claims "almost too horrific to believe" as senior executives at the media company met police conducting a criminal investigation into phone hacking.
 But neither the Foreign Office nor the Ministry of Defence has anyone looking solely at subsequent reconstruction.Douglas Alexander, the shadow foreign secretary, called the revelation "startling and deeply worrying". ? Sue Cameron in the Financial Times (subscription) says Steve Hilton, David Cameron's policy guru, is getting the blame in Downing Street for "dud policies" like the Big Society and health reform.Early on there seems to have been a row over the Big Society, Mr Hilton's pet project. "Many civil servants were full of goodwill for the Big Society," says one insider. "But they've been frustrated by Hilton's inability to put it forward in a way that is do-able. Officials aren't sure what it's about.
 Cameron says he wants the government to "accelerate" its work to support parenting.And it will also intensify its programme to deal with troubled families, he says.Last December I asked Emma Harrison to develop a plan to help get these families on track.It became clear to me earlier this year that – as can so often happen – those plans were being held back by bureaucracy.So even before the riots happened, I asked for an explanation.Now that the riots have happened I will make sure that we clear away the red tape and the bureaucratic wrangling, and put rocket boosters under this programme... ...with a clear ambition that within the lifetime of this Parliament we will turn around the lives of the 120,000 most troubled families in the country.
 It is all more open and accountable than it used to be and senior officials are moved, or even retired early,marc by marc jacobs bag (http://www.ytcgzx.net/), more than they were.It is still not enough for free market enthusiasts. Here's what Andrew Haldenby of the Reform pressure group wrote after Maude's June speech. Reform wants much more radical change to the NHS and the other public services. Senior officials should be put on contract and expect to be moved or be fired when a new government comes in, Haldenby says. Michael Gove and Theresa May argued as much last year, but Maude watered down such proposals.Harold Wilson's 1974-76 Labour government first introduced political appointees, usually experts who could counter the official Whitehall policy line, but also media specialists and apparatchiks able to do political work that civil servants can't and won't do.