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« en: Septiembre 30, 2013, 07:21:08 am »
? The ruling from the Information Commissioner's Office saying the NHS risk register should be published (pdf).? Andy Burnham's press notice about today's debate.? Juliette Jowit's Guardian story about the contents of regional risk registers.? David Cameron's comments today accusing Labour of hypocrisy on this matter.1.05pm: John Bercow says there will be a seven minute limit on backbench speeches, because so many MPs want to speak in the debate.   Photograph: Anthony Devlin/PA 1.06pm: Andy Burnham, the shadow health secretary, is opening the debate.He says these are extraordinary times. The government is imposing a top-down reorganisation on the NHS. But no one voted for this.The government has given the NHS "mission impossible" because it is asking it to find cuts worth £20bn, while also re-organising it at the same time.
2.57pm: Boris now, who is heckled on his bike hire scheme and the chair has to restore order.He says he's disappointed it attracts hostility from Paddick. He defends turning to Barclays to get sponsorship, and muses how Ken could pull in funding from the private sector when he says things like "hang a banker a week", which he did last week during an after dinner speech.He challenges Ken on police numbers when he left office. And he also returns to the fares cut. This is Groundhog Day, he says.2.52pm: Ken turns to the health and social care bill. He says he fears people are going to die, and calls on the government to drop it. Quite a lot of applause there (take note,kate spade wallet sale, Messrs Cameron and Lansley).
 That part of your destiny is unpredictable."That's the spirit. As I type I have Rebekah Brooks's testimony to the Leveson inquiry on my screen in the background. Unlike Rupert Murdoch or Lord Rothermere she doesn't have a privileged background: grammar school in Warrington, but no university degree, just ambition to become a journalist. She started her News of the World career as a secretary.You don't have to like her or admire her performance in the high court to figure out how she rose to where she did among the less talented, less street-smart public school crowd, all this before The Fall. Like Andy Coulson, who appeared in court 73 a day earlier, she's a meritocrat. I only wish there were more of them and that they had both deployed their talents somewhere else.
That's fine too, it's just a different way of doing politics. Where I part company with the more idealistic champions of assorted forms of electoral reform – from the wishy-washy AV that voters rejected in last year's barely remembered referendum to full-blooded STV – is in their insistence that reform will make politics more transparent, more accountable, even more noble.It won't. That's all I want to say really, except to point out that the political intrigue in BBC4's Borgen – it means "Castle" and is Denmark's nickname for its parliament building (have I got that right?) – relies on inter-party manoeuvres at the Folketing, where it takes several parties (you need only 2% of votes to get a seat) to put together the 90-seat coalition needed to form a government.
The paradox of Britain's vulnerability to its interference is its above-average adherence to legal process and decisions, deeply rooted in history and habit. The fact that Straw faces the prospect of court action does not undermine that assertion, it confirms it.Politics live: readers' edition - Wednesday 11 AprilI'm not writing my Politics Live blog over the Easter 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 the day's political stories - just as you do when I'm writing the daily blog.
 The remaining 20 per cent (90 members) would be appointed by a statutory appointments commission on a non-party basis. There would also be 12 Church of England bishops, a reduction from the current 26 church representatives, reflecting the smaller overall size of the chamber.Under the bill, members of the reformed House would serve for 15-year terms of office, and they would only be allowed to serve for one term. Elected members would be picked using a semi-open List electoral system, giving voters the choice of voting for a party or for an individual in their region.The government is committed to ensuring that the cost of running parliament does not rise significantly. The salary,ytcgzx, staffing and administration costs of the new look House are not forecast to rise substantially and are expected to be offset by savings from reducing the size of the House of Commons.
The First Minister extended the invitation in person to the UK Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg at Dublin Castle during a one-to-one discussion before the official agenda at the British-Irish Council.First Minister Alex Salmond said:"We have a mandate to hold a referendum on the constitution and it is important that we can take forward these plans so that the people of Scotland can determine their future."The week after next,marc jacobs outlet, we will publish our consultation document for people across Scotland to discuss the terms upon which the referendum will be held."We will be carrying out a consultation involving as many stakeholders as possible, including the UK Government, in a consensual and constructive way.

 

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