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Publicado por: lehan6144 en Octubre 08, 2013, 07:50:45 am
3pm: David Lidington, the Europe minister, gives evidence to the Commons European scrutiny committee on the Eurozone.4.15pm: Cameron hosts a press conference at the end of the Somalia conference with Ban Ki Moon, the UN secretary general.As usual, I'll be covering all the breaking political news, as well as looking at the papers and bringing you the best politics from the web. I'll post a lunchtime summary at around 1pm and another in the afternoon.If you want to follow me on Twitter,kate spade wallet sale (http://www.cnnhkids.com/), I'm on @AndrewSparrow.And if you're a hardcore fan, you can follow @gdnpoliticslive. It's an automated feed that tweets the start of every new post that I put on the blog.   Photograph: Richard Gardner/Rex Features 9.
 Thirty minutes after taking it for her first time (while working in England at the age of 22) Sarah was happier than she'd ever been. "Don't you just wish it could stay like this forever?" she told her friends,something they still laugh about today. Now,cnnhkids (http://www.cnnhkids.com/),working as a public health professional,she says it's not uncommon to hear her colleagues talk about doing the same thing.The hysteria surrounding these deaths,Sarah believes,is misplaced. "No one deserves to die just because they want to experiment or have some fun and were unlucky to get like a bad batch of pills," she says. "The U.S. drug policy and public opinion tends to get stuck on this ‘drugs are bad' kind of moral crusade,when there are practical things we could be doing to make them less harmful for people.
? Andrew Grice in the Independent says George Osborne is seriously considering Nick Clegg's "tycoon tax" proposal. (On Monday the Financial Times said Osborne was not looking at the idea.)Mr Clegg floated the idea of a "tycoon tax" at the weekend but it appeared to have been shot down by critics in his own party and scepticism at the Treasury. However, the issue was discussed on Monday by the Coalition's key decision-making body, the Quad: Mr Cameron, Mr Osborne, Mr Clegg and Danny Alexander."A minimum tax rate is still on the table," one Whitehall source said yesterday. Mr Clegg is said by colleagues to be confident of seeing some progress on his idea in the Budget. One option is for Mr Osborne to announce a study into whether a "tycoon tax" would work in Britain.
Of course, if Labour do establish such a body, they will then have to decide who runs it. As the Les Ebdon row shows, that in itself would be a highly political decision.10.16am: Here's the Press Association story about today's borrowing figures.Hopes the government will hit this year's borrowing forecasts were boosted today after figures revealed it enjoyed its highest surplus for four years in January.The Office for National Statistics said the Government recorded a net surplus of £7.8 billion excluding interventions such as bank bailouts, up £2.5 billion on the previous year and its biggest figure since January 2008.January is traditionally a bumper month for tax returns, which was helped by its bank levy, while expenditure was brought down by the Government's ongoing austerity measures.
Thatcher's economic vision was supposed to be meritocratic. She did want to see social mobility. And that was one of the reasons she was so popular with what were patronisingly called "the aspirational working classes." But her model for meritocratic social mobility was predicated upon the value of cutthroat individualism. This ideology was most notably summed up in her controversial claim that "there is no such thing as society." For her,it was each man for himself. The role of the state was merely to provide physical security from external threats and to engineer a fair playing field for the battle of cutthroat individualism. But what she didn't seem to realize was that this set of ethics was deeply incompatible with her strident nationalism.
 "They put me through the trenches to get that role. But we had no idea it would become a franchise or a hit. To this day,I still have people come up to me and say,‘I watched Step Up six times today.’"When she married Tatum in 2009,she decided to keep her last name but also take his. "I thought it sounded better," she says. "That’s not a very mature reason." The two are still partners in work. They started a production company,Iron Horse Entertainment,that made Magic Mike,based on Tatum’s days as a stripper in Florida. Dewan-Tatum says she’d visit the set and watch the steamy dance scenes as they were unraveling. "I really didn’t know how people were going to react to Magic Mike," she says,"because there hasn’t been a movie like it.
 And Team Obama’s Sesame Street spot is going to backfire. They saw one on Monday,when Romney delivered a foreign policy address at the Virginia Military Institute,saying: "t is the responsibility of our president to use America's great power to shape history—not to lead from behind,leaving our destiny at the mercy of events." President Barack Obama reacts during a campaign event in San Francisco,California on Oct. 8,2012. (Carolyn Kaster / AP Photo)And they likely will be reminded again on Thursday at the vice presidential debate that Romney picked a serious reformer and thinker as his running mate.Consumers can choose from hundreds of channels today,including dozens for kids.
 And today we're going to hear from Damian Green, the immigration minister, and Dame Helen Ghosh, permanent secretary at the Home Office. You may feel that you are starting to know more than you ever wanted to about the internal mechanics of UK border control, but we like to report the big stories thoroughly here and I'll be covering the Green/Ghosh hearings in detail.There's lots of other politics on the agenda too. Here's the full agenda for the day.9am: The cabinet meets.9.30am: Public sector borrowing figures are published.9.45am: The committee on standards in public life publishes its report on party funding. As Patrick Wintour reports in the Guardian today,ytcgzx (http://www.ytcgzx.net/), all three main parties are going to reject its call for parties to receive more state funding.