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« en: Septiembre 30, 2013, 06:07:14 am »
? Carwyn Jones, the first minister of Wales, has told the conference that Labour will not introduce "market principles and competition" in the NHS in Wales.? Peter Hain, the shadow Welsh secretary, has told the conference that the fund launched to help the families of four miners killed in the Gleision Colliery disaster has raised £200,marc jacobs wallets,000.? A 16-year-old from Maidstone has received a standing ovation at the conference. Rory Weal told delegates: "Two-and-a-half years ago, the home I had lived in since birth was repossessed ... I owe my entire well-being and that of my family to the welfare state. That is why I joined the Labour Party. That very same welfare state is being ruthlessly ripped apart by a vicious, right-wing Tory-led Government.
 This has been a "major setback".Miliband says the Cable letter was a "devastating indictment" of the government.Unless you understand the role of government, you are never going to get a proper balanced growth across the regions, he says.That's it. The press conference is over. I'll post a summary soon.1.50pm: Here's a lunchtime summary.? Ed Miliband and Ed Balls have said that they would reverse some of the coalition's tax credit cuts by reversing what they described as a covert £1.6bn tax cut for the rich introduced by George Osborne. At a joint news conference, Balls said that Labour planned to raise £4bn from high earners by stopping people earning more than £150,000 a year getting 50% tax relief on their pension contributions.
The lines he is talking about are the Jubilee, Central, Northern, and Victoria lines.He says that automatic train control "allows trains to run closer together at higher overall speeds, increasing capacity".Driverless trains will "over time, make the system cheaper to run and cheaper to use". He adds: "It will also reduce the bargaining power of the union bosses intent on bringing London to a halt."The minimum turnout he is talking about for strike ballots is 50%. It's interesting that he frames the choice facing Londoners in a very similar way to that in which Labour nationally frames the choice between Ed Miliband's party and the Conservatives. Johnson's transport manifesto reads:The choice at this election is between investment in our transport system - or cuts in investment at the worst possible time.
 That privately run NHS hospital, Hinchingbrooke in Huntingdon, is reporting rapid improvements this morning. Who knows, it might be on to something important for NHS care. But don't expect miracles – or panaceas.Politics live: readers' edition - Tuesday 28 AugustI'm not writing my usual Politics Live blog during the summer recess, but, as an alternative, here's Politics Live: readers' edition. It's intended to be a place where you can catch up with the latest news and find links to good politics blogs and articles on the web.Please feel free to use this as somewhere you can comment on any of the day's political stories - just as you do when I'm writing the daily blog. We hope to run the readers' edition every weekday during recess, but will keep you informed in the comments thread if this changes.
 Fox is going to make a statement on the Adam Werritty affair at 3.30pm. Chris Grayling, the employment minister and a supporter of Fox's, told the BBC's Daily Politics show that he was confident the review into Fox's conduct would show that Fox did not break the ministerial code. (See 12.30pm.)? Unison has announced that more than 1m of its members will start voting on strike action next week. ? Cameron has rebuked Kenneth Clarke for saying that Theresa May's story about an illegal immigrant being allowed to say in Britain because he owned a cat was a "nonsense". Asked directly if he agreed with Clarke, Cameron said he did not. "It wasn't a nonsense example." (See 12.30pm.)? Ed Miliband has published the full list of his frontbench team following the conclusion of his reshuffle.
 Dangerous knowledge is acquired when a man named Quill comes to mapthe area: the fall ensues, andonly expulsion can follow. Thirsk's exile is decidedly spiritual, as well as physical, his world darkening and constricting asit sends him spinning out into theunknown.The most significant literary locations are often interior and psychological, as are characters' journeys. Ruth Ozeki's A Tale for the Time Being can be described as the story of a writer in western Canada who finds the diary ofa Japanese girl whom she fears drowned in the 2011 tsunami; but it is also a metaphysical exploration of the nature of time, quantum mechanics, and the boundaries of fiction. It includes a girl from the past named Nao (Now) writing her own In Search ofLost Time, the returned ghost of a kamikaze pilot, and the near-death ofSchr?dinger's cat.
20am: Mervyn King (left),cnnhkids, the governor of the Bank of England, is giving evidence to the Commons Treasury committee now. You can watch it on the parliament website. He has just warned that "buying time" in Greece (which is seen by some as a fair description of the EU's latest bailout plan) will not provide a longterm solution.Buying time appears attractive very often, because the immediate crisis appears to go away. They will get to bed earlier. They relax more. But in fact if the underlying problems have not changed, the crisis comes back in an even more severe form. And that has been the case right through the past 18 months in trying to deal with Greece, Portugal and Ireland, and indeed in the problems for the euro area as a whole, which is why I say that there are dangers in just buying time,marc jacobs outlet, because if you forget the problem and say "well thank goodness, that's gone away for a few weeks", that could be a very dangerous attitude of mind.
 And UK debt has to be paid back over a longer period of time?Clegg says the government has pulled the economy back from the brink, creating the space where it can do more to promote growth.Q: But Italy is being punished because it has not got enough growth. We've got the same problem.Italy has other problems, Clegg says. It has an ageing population.Q: Aren't you conceding then that the UK is not in the same position Italy?Clegg says that saying Britain is not Italy is a statement of the obvious.8.22am: The interview is still going on.Q: What is the Lib Dem policy on the euro?Clegg says the government is not going to join the euro this parliament.Q: Does that mean the prospect of Britain joining is over for a generation?Clegg says it is difficult to predict the future.

 

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