Archive for the 'daily roundup' Category
Mar
18
2008
To mention it once again, I continue - since the hyperlinks which they broke when they redesigned their website continue to be broken, and I have received no response to requests for them to sort it out. I have added this paragraph to the Daily Roundup template.
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Comment
Max Hastings (Comment is Free) - The Iraq experience has laid bare the limits of raw military power
The next US president must reject the juvenile Bush vision, reach out to Iran and seek justice for the Palestinian people
AC Grayling (Comment is Free) - Precious liberty
As civil liberties come under ever greater pressure, it is time we exposed the old lie that says the innocent have nothing to fear
News
BBC (BBC)
- Devolved policing crucial - Bush
President George Bush has stressed the importance of devolution of policing for Northern Ireland.
BBC (BBC) - Over 108,000 in detention in UK
More than 108,000 people are being held in detention in Britain, amounting to two in every 1,000, a survey suggests.
BBC (BBC) - Extent of secret links between government and IRA revealed
The full extent of a secret 20-year back channel between the British government and the IRA is revealed today by Tony Blair’s former chief of staff, who declares that the peace process might never have been possible without the link.
Economist (Economist) - Adam Smith - The economist’s house is on the (free) market
IN MOST countries it would have been marked by a fanfare of press releases and a long roll of fund-raising drums. Not in Scotland. This week Edinburgh’s city council put on the market the house where Adam Smith spent his last 12 years, from 1778 until 1790. Advertisements in the property sections of local newspapers seek offers in excess of ?700,000 ($1.4m) for a 17th-century house of historical interest, but fail to point out its connection with the father of modern economics.
Telegraph (Telegraph) - Bryony Gordon
Toytown was left reeling at the weekend when Mr Plod announced to a packed press conference that he was investigating resident fox Basil Brush for making racist slurs against Rosie and Jim, the famous ragdoll travellers.
Alex Pell (Times Online) - Hey, Facebook, just let go of me
Joining the networking site is easy but closing down your potentially embarrassing account is not
Times (Times Online) - IOC finds no reason to hide pollution risks
Organising body says that tests have revealed that air quality will be good enough to compete in.
Scotland
BBC (BBC) - Row over ambulance complaint rise
The Scottish Ambulance Service has defended its performance after figures showed that the number of complaints had more than doubled in three years.
Christopher Martin-Jenkins (Times Online) - Ryan Sidebottom fulfilling promise for England
Six years shalt thou labour and on the seventh have thy reward. Thus might one paraphrase a familiar biblical text to summarise the rise, fall and rise again of Ryan Sidebottom, the left-arm fast bowler with the Charles II curls who has become England’s key to success in New Zealand.
Wales
BBC (BBC) - Assembly building success story
The Welsh Assembly’s new home was built broadly on time, on budget, and reached the highest environmental standards, a financial watchdog has concluded.
Tags: daily roundup, the skinny, matt wardman, wardman wire, mattwardman, independent newspaper
Mar
13
2008
To mention it once again, I continue - since the hyperlinks which they broke when they redesigned their website continue to be broken, and I have received no response to requests for them to sort it out. I have added this paragraph to the Daily Roundup template.
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Iraqi Interpreters
Deborah Haynes (Times Online) - Iraqi interpreters and families prepare for new lives in Britain
Iraqis who risked their lives working for Britain have been cleared to resettle in the UK, with the first families expected to arrive next month, The Times can reveal. The first wave will include seven former interpreters who have met the strict criteria for resettlement and have chosen to come to Britain. Many others have accepted cash payments to stay in Iraq or decided to resettle in a neighbouring country such as Jordan or Syria.
Comment
Jeff Jarvis (Comment is Free)
- A smothering embrace - Bebo
AOL - which is paying $850m for the social networking site, the other Facebook - is where innovations go to die. Remember Netscape? Bought for $4.2bn and now dead.
News
BBC (BBC) - All MP claims may be published
The Commons has been ordered to publish details of the claims of 14 MPs under Freedom of Information laws. Sources say all claims may be published by December.
Economist (Economist) - US Election - The scrap is getting uglier
THE Democratic race for the presidential nomination has settled into a pattern. Barack Obama gains momentum, and is nearly crowned the winner. Then Hillary Clinton wins a high-profile contest and makes a comeback, before Mr Obama builds up steam yet again. Mrs Clintons latest resurrection came with big wins in Texas and Ohio. But now Mr Obama is back. Over the weekend he won a caucus in Wyoming and on Tuesday March 11th he emerged as victor at a primary in Mississippi. He won both by margins of over 20 points.
Deborah Summers (Guardian) - Brown dampens Mandelson hopes of second term at EUGordon Brown last night moved to quash the hopes of Peter Mandelson of staying on as EU trade commissioner, despite suggestions earlier this week that the feud between the pair was diminishing and Mandelson was prepared to serve a second term.
Elissa Gootman (NYT) - For Bronx Schools Dancers, the Moves Are Irish
With a student body that is 71 percent Hispanic and 27 percent black, Public School 59 does not seem an obvious home for a thriving Irish dance troupe. And when Caroline Duggan first arrived from Dublin at age 23 to try her hand as a New York City public school music teacher, it wasnt. Many of her students had never heard of Ireland. Why, they wanted to know, did she talk funny?
Rosa Prince (Telegraph) - Revealed: what MPs can claim on expenses
The John Lewis list was released under the Freedom of Information Act after weeks of pressure. The list of allowances is used by finance officials to pass or reject MPs’ expenses claims for decorating their second homes and buying household items. Until recently it was kept secret even from MPs who were not given formal guidance on how much they could spend on individual items. It shows that MPs are allowed to spend £10,000 for a kitchen and £6,000 to install a new bathroom. Air conditioning units, beds, food mixers and rugs are all allowed, while carpets and wood flooring can be bought at £35 per square metre.”
James Bone (Times Online) - Prostitute Ashley Alexandra Dupre behind Eliot Spitzer sex scandal cashes inAshley Alexandra Dupr, a struggling singer, uploaded a new track to Amie Street, an online music-seller, hours after she was exposed as the prostitute Kristen talking on tape about the disgraced Eliot Spitzer.
Suzy Jagger (Times Online)
- Father and daughter team duped 15,000 pensioners out of £35mAround 15,000 British pensioners are thought to have been duped out of more than $70 million (£35 million) by a father and daughter team working an aggressive investment scam in Florida.
Scotland
BBC (BBC) - Salmond’s Trump action cavalier
First Minister Alex Salmond took a cavalier approach to his involvement with Donald Trump’s £1bn Scottish golf resort, a parliament committee said.
BBC (BBC) - High heels spark car parking rowA councillor said she has been denied free parking that would save her walking half a mile in her high heels for meetings with the public.
Wales
BBC (BBC) - Inquiry into stabbed vicar deathA heath watchdog is examining why a man with paranoid schizophrenia who stabbed a vicar to death was not identified as a threat.
Tags: daily roundup, the skinny, matt wardman, wardman wire, mattwardman, independent newspaper
Mar
13
2008
Today “Parliamentary Roundup Thursday” gains another report. In addition to Sadie’s “Westminster Watch” report, today Will Patterson - who writes the J Arthur MacNumpty blog and contributes to the Scottish Roundup - has done the first weekly roundup with news from the Holyrood Parliament.
For now I’m calling the column “Holyrood Herald“, but we may come up with a better name (suggestions are welcome).
Over the next several weeks a roundup from the Welsh Parliament (”Senedd Scan“?) will be added, and I’m working on similar roundups from Stormont and Brussels/Strasburg.
The Roundup of the Papers will be out in the early evening today, and will be - shall we say - idiosyncratic.
As a final note, I have added mobile websites to the Scottish Politics and Welsh Politics blog aggregators, and to the Comment from the Senedd Welsh Assembly AM Comment “blaggregator”. The links are, respectively,
http://m.politics-scotland.co.uk/
http://m.politics-wales.co.uk/
http://m.senedd.me.uk/
These are experimental at this stage, so there may be some glitches - and I welcome comments.
Tags: daily roundup, holyrood herald, will patterson, mobile phone political feeds, scotland, wales
Mar
10
2008
To mention it once again, I continue - since the hyperlinks which they broke when they redesigned their website continue to be broken, and I have received no response to requests for them to sort it out. I have added this paragraph to the Daily Roundup template.
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Comment
Mail (Daily Mail) - Sultry in sequins: Holly looks just like Toon sex symbol Jessica Rabbit
It’s another week and another plunging neck line for controversial Dancing on Ice presenter Holly Willoughby. Clad in a daring, curve-hugging scarlet gown, the glamorous star, who is becoming famous for her revealing style of dress, resembled racy cartoon character Jessica Rabbit.
Philip Webster (Times Online) - Petrol price rises and penalties for gas-guzzlers as Chancellor Alistair Darling goes green
He will give tax incentives to companies that opt for greener vehicle fleets. And in a further move to show his green credentials Mr Darling will announce that Britains first five-year carbon budget, setting out the way independent experts believe that the country should meet the target of reducing emissions by 60 per cent by 2050, will be published next year alongside the main Budget
Ed Pilkington (Guardian) - Bush vetoes move to ban water torture
President George Bush maintained his collision course with the Democrats in Congress over the use of torture when he wielded a rare presidential veto on Saturday to block legislation that would have banned the CIA from applying force when interrogating terror suspects.
News
BBC (BBC) - Clegg urges new political system
Nick Clegg says he will never join a Labour or Tory cabinet, but will push instead for a new type of government.
BBC (BBC) - Pienaar view: Clegg looks comfortable
After a trying week, Nick Clegg has come through his first party conference looking surprisingly comfortable - almost relaxed - in the role of leader.
Philip Johnston (Telegraph) - Britain must not betray the Commonwealth
How many of us any longer feel an affinity to the billion or more people who belong to this extraordinary comity of post-colonial nations? Quite a few, I suspect, especially to those with whom we share a common kinship.
William Rees Mogg (Times Online) - And for our next lie . . . the great EU betrayal
The facts about the Lisbon treaty are relatively simple, but the implications are deeply disturbing. In May 2005, the Labour Party won a general election on a manifesto that included a commitment to hold a referendum on the European constitutional treaty.
BBC (BBC) - I did smash Sinn Fein - Paisley
Speaking on the BBC1’s Andrew Marr Show, he said Sinn Fein could no longer be true republicans because they were in part of the British government.
Gordon Brown (FT) - Time for the third act in public sector reform
Time for the third act in public sector reform
Louise Story (NYT) - To Aim Ads, Web Is Keeping Closer Eye on You
A new analysis of online consumer data shows that large Web companies are learning more about people than ever from what they search for and do on the Internet, gathering clues about the tastes and preferences of a typical user several hundred times a month.
Scotland
BBC (BBC) - Info requests centre on politics
Ministers and councils have been the subject of almost two-thirds of requests to the Scottish Information Commissioner, a report has revealed.
BBC (BBC) - Information act hailed a success
The rate of freedom of information appeals in Scotland is double that in England, it has emerged.
Wales
BBC (BBC) - Concern at cross-border services
Patients and politicians in Wales have voiced concern about devolution eroding the shared use of public services such as health with England.
Tags: daily roundup, the skinny, matt wardman, wardman wire, mattwardman, independent newspaper
Mar
08
2008
To mention it once again, I continue - since the hyperlinks which they broke when they redesigned their website continue to be broken, and I have received no response to requests for them to sort it out. I have added this paragraph to the Daily Roundup template.
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Comment
Henry Porter (Comment is Free) - Why I told Parliament: you’ve failed us on liberty
After a celebrated two-year campaign to protect our freedoms, The Observer’s Henry Porter was called last week to give evidence to a panel of peers and MPs assessing whether a Bill of Rights is necessary for Britain today. Here is his impassioned submission
Mail (Daily Mail) - Cambridge University sex attack victim did NOT want fellow student punished
It took a jury just two-and-a-half hours to clear 23-year-old Cambridge University graduate Jack Gillett of sexually assaulting a fellow student after a night of drinking. She claimed that after they kissed he had repeatedly ignored her pleas to stop as he pulled off her clothes in his room and pinned her to the ground and groped her. But the judge questioned why the case had ever been brought to court. Here a close friend gives a compelling insight into how the 22-year-old woman found herself in a judicial process she could not halt and the motives behind her reporting the case. For legal reasons she must remain anonymous " Sara is not her real name ”
Antonio Maria Costa (Guardian) - Every line of cocaine means a little part of Africa dies
The UN’s drugs tsar denounces celebrities such as Amy Winehouse for adding to the misery of already vulnerable countries
News
BBC (BBC) - Thatcher resting at London home
Baroness Thatcher is resting at her London home after spending the night in hospital undergoing tests.
Economist (Economist) - Chinese art-buyers are in overdrive
FEW of the international specialists who deal in Asian art could have predicted the outcome of the main sale of the season at Christies in London last November. Of the ten most expensive lots, eight went to Chinese buyers, including an early 15th-century Song porcelain flask that was not in the best condition.
James Politi in Washington (FT) - Obama wins Wyoming Democratic caucus
Mr Obama clinched 59 per cent of the vote in Wyoming, against 40 per cent for Mrs Clinton, with 96 per cent of precincts reporting. Both candidates had campaigned in Wyoming ahead of Saturdays caucuses, the latest contest in the increasingly bitter battle to face Republican John McCain in the US presidential election in November.
Paul Harris in New York (Guardian) - The most powerful people in American politics
Their email accounts are full and their phones are ringing off the hook. They are the superdelegates - the 795 Democratic bigwigs who will now decide whether Obama or Clinton will become their party’s candidate for president
STEVEN LEE MYERS (NYT) - Bush Veto of Bill on C.I.A. Tactics Affirms His Legacy
Mr. Bush vetoed a bill that would have explicitly prohibited the agency from using interrogation methods like waterboarding, a technique in which restrained prisoners are threatened with drowning and that has been the subject of intense criticism at home and abroad. Many such techniques are prohibited by the military and law enforcement agencies.
Obituary
Telegraph (Telegraph)
- Carol Barnes
After a year as a radio reporter with the BBC, she joined ITN two years later. Her early assignments as a reporter included the return from exile of the Iranian spiritual leader Ayatollah Khomeini in 1979 and, two years later, the Brixton riots (which Barnes covered while seven months pregnant with her daughter).
Scotland
BBC (BBC) - Talks over scrapping council tax
Talks have taken place between the Scottish Government and the Liberal Democrats over scrapping the council tax in favour of a local income tax.
Tags: daily roundup, the skinny, matt wardman, wardman wire, mattwardman, independent newspaper
Mar
08
2008
To mention it once again, I continue - since the hyperlinks which they broke when they redesigned their website continue to be broken, and I have received no response to requests for them to sort it out. I have added this paragraph to the Daily Roundup template.
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Comment
Jakob Illeborg (Comment is Free) - Danish doormats
The Swedes were supposedly wiping their feet all over Denmark - thanks to Ikea. But no one had checked the facts
Global Muslim networks - How far they have travelled (Economist)
A Turkish-based movement, which sounds more reasonable than most of its rivals, is vying to be recognised as the world’s leading Muslim network
Clare Dyer (Guardian) - Medical tests after rape may be handed to NHS
Responsibility for the medical examination of rape victims may be taken away from police and handed over to the NHS, amid concerns that services in some parts of the country are short-changing victims and contributing to the low conviction rate for rape.
Joanna Bourke (Times Online)
- Mini-skirt or burka - my choice
What is it about the way women dress that excites so much fury? In Johannesburg, a young woman was recently stripped, sexually assaulted and paraded naked by a group of taxi operators as punishment for wearing indecent clothes.
News
BBC (BBC) - Lib Dems plan tax for super rich
Lib Dem treasury spokesman Vince Cable says he wants to end the “ridiculous anomaly” which sees the owners of homes worth millions paying only council tax.
Ian Urbina (NYT) - To Revive Hunting, States Turn to the Classroom
When David Helms was in seventh grade, he would take his .22-caliber rifle to school, put a box of ammunition in his locker and, like virtually all the other boys, lean his rifle against a wall in the principals office so he could start hunting squirrels as soon as classes let out.
Roya Nikkhah (Telegraph) - Local council to buy out doomed post offices
Essex county council is set to become the first local authority to take over the running of post offices that have closed.
Lucy Bannerman (Times Online) - Forced marriage fear prompts a national count of missing girls
Ministers have called on local authorities to carry out immediate checks in 15 areas that have been identified as forced-marriage risk zones, after it emerged that 33 girls had vanished from the school roll in Bradford alone.
Obituary
Andrew Roth (BBC)
- Lord Pym of Sandy
After long and frequent battles with Margaret Thatcher in the privacy of cabinet, Francis Pym’s final defeat came at a pre-election press conference in 1983. Then foreign secretary, Lord Pym of Sandy, who has died aged 86, dared to contradict the prime minister in public. He said he would be satisfied with a majority of 50 to 100, while Thatcher proclaimed the sky as her limit.
Scotland
BBC (BBC) - E-count causes vote result delay
Electronic counting should not be used in Scottish elections until improvements to the system are made, the Electoral Commission has said. It comes after a council by-election declaration was delayed by more than 12 hours after a technical fault. The same counting software was used for the Cambuslang East count as that used in last May’s chaotic Holyrood election.
Wales
BBC (BBC)
- Six Plaid AMs to refuse pay rise
Six of Plaid Cymru’s 15 assembly members say they will refuse to take an inflation-busting 8.3% pay rise.
Tags: daily roundup, the skinny, matt wardman, wardman wire, mattwardman, independent newspaper
Mar
07
2008
To mention it once again, I continue - since the hyperlinks which they broke when they redesigned their website continue to be broken, and I have received no response to requests for them to sort it out. I have added this paragraph to the Daily Roundup template.
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Comment
Victoria Brittain (Comment is Free)
- Spanish practices
The collapse of Spain’s extradition case against el-Banna and Deghayes should lead to an official British acknowledgement of their innocence
Guy Herbert (Comment is Free) - The politics of identityThe Labour ID card schedule, announced today, makes a mockery of the joined-up government it is supposed to embody
Economist (Economist) - Why the Grand Canyon has been floodedFloods once raged through the canyon every year. Snow from as far away as Wyoming would melt and swell the Colorado river to a flow that averaged around 1,500 cubic metres (50,000 cubic feet) a second. Every eight years or so, that figure rose to almost 3,500 cubic metres. These floods infused the river with sediment, carved its beaches and built its sandbars.
Telegraph (Telegraph) - If Livingstone loses London, he will have only himself to blame
The formidable political machine that is Ken Livingstone has started to leak oil. London’s mayor has not yet broken down, but his pistons are no longer pumping quite so freely. A nasty noise is emanating from City Hall engine, as friction over corruption allegations tests Team Ken’s mettle.
David Cameron (Telegraph) - Do not ignore feelings over post office closures
Post Offices provide much needed services for millions of vulnerable people in this country, particularly the elderly, and Labour has been closing almost 10 a week since 1997. Post Offices often provide the only community service in rural areas and the strength of public protest against closures is being ignored by this Government.
News
Norma Cohen in London (FT)
- Companies face bigger pensions risk levy
Companies with pension schemes heavily reliant on risky investments such as equities will pay far higher premiums to the Pension Protection Fund under proposals to be unveiled this year.
Duncan Campbell and Ian MacKinnon in Bangkok (Guardian) - Lord of war arms trafficker arrestedIf Viktor Bout did not exist, a thriller writer would have invented him. A former Russian lieutenant, he became one of the world’s biggest arms dealers, flying his ancient Soviet planes into battlefields from Liberia to Afghanistan. His clients have included the Taliban and the US government, African warlords and the UN.
NYT (NYT) - Party Donations Show G.O.P. Edge
The Democratic National Committee ended 2007 nearly flat broke, with cash of $2.9 million and debts of $2.2 million. Since then it has raised some money, paid down debt and managed to put $3.7 million in its piggy bank. This compares, however, with $25 million that the Republican National Committee has in cash on hand, after having raised $97 million since the beginning of 2007.
Christine Buckley, Grainne Gilmore and Miles Costello (Times Online) - The British status as a financial leader is under threat, Alistair Darling is cautionedIn separate warnings, the CBI and the ABI said that if the Government made hasty changes to banking regulation and pushed ahead with changes to rules on capital gains tax and nondomiciled workers, the financial services sector and the countrys reputation would be damaged.
Nick Ray/The Times (Times Online)- Grudging GPs give in and agree to open evenings and weekends
Family doctors have reluctantly decided to open in the evenings or at weekends after being bulldozed into an agreement by the Government. GPs accepted a set plan to work extra hours but 98 per cent of those in a poll said that the Government method of negotiation was not acceptable and that their hand had been forced.
Wales
BBC (BBC)
- Assembly members get 8.3% pay rise
Welsh assembly members are set to receive an inflation busting pay-rise of 8.3%, bringing their salaries more in line with MPs at Westminster.
Tags: daily roundup, the skinny, matt wardman, wardman wire, mattwardman, independent newspaper
Mar
04
2008
To mention it once again, I continue not to link to the Independent - since the hyperlinks which they broke when they redesigned their website continue to be broken, and I have received no response to requests for them to sort it out. I have added this paragraph to the Daily Roundup template.
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Comment
Economist (Economist) - Simba Makoni is getting up steam
President Robert Mugabe may face a real challenge in the election on March 29th
Guardian (Guardian) - Can you do me a quick cow head?From Damien Hirst to Mark Wallinger, many major artists now rely on legions of helpers. How do they feel about their often uncredited roles? Patrick Barkham reports
Mikhail Gorbachev (Times Online)
- Memo to Medvedev: democracy counts
Russia has elected a new president. I voted, and I urged not only my friends and family but all citizens of Russia to go to the polls and cast their ballots - despite the fact that the result was predictable, even programmed.
News
BBC (BBC) - Paisley to quit as first minister
Northern Ireland first minister Ian Paisley is to stand down from the post in May, he has announced. He also said he would be resigning as leader of the DUP, a party he has led for almost 40 years. He will continue as MP and MLA for North Antrim. “
BBC (BBC) - Fire chiefs plea on flood rescues
Scotland fire chiefs believe their service should be the single agency in charge of flood rescues.
Joanna Chung and Jennifer Hughes (FT) - FSA cold calling in insider trading clampdown
Traders and investors are being cold-called by the City regulator in its latest bid to gather evidence of potential insider dealing crimes.
James Rossiter (Times Online) - Chancellor Alistair Darling to close loophole in finance deals based on ShariaThe Government brought in changes to the stamp duty regime three years ago amid concern that homeowners opting for Sharia-compliant mortgages were paying stamp duty twice. The 2005 Budget brought in measures to correct this anomaly but inadvertently created a tax avoidance opportunity that property developers have rushed to exploit. More than ?1 billion of commercial property deals over the past two years have escaped stamp duty at 4 per cent.
Chris Brooke (Times Online) - Dozens of missing schoolchildren feared forced into arranged marriagesDozens of children are missing from school amid fears they have been forced into arranged marriages, it was revealed yesterday. In Bradford, 33 children remain unaccounted for after being off school for at least two months with no explanation.
Obituary
AP (NYT)
- Dungeons & Dragons Co - Creator Dies at 69
Gary Gygax, who co-created the fantasy game Dungeons & Dragons and is widely seen as the father of the role-playing games, died Tuesday morning at his home in Lake Geneva. He was 69.
Scotland
MARTYN McLAUGHLIN (Scotsman) - Pulling plug on water monopoly
Whether it is a newsagents in the Shetland Islands, or a major housebuilding concern in Edinburgh, tens of thousands of Scottish businesses will have the right to choose their water and sewerage suppliers from the beginning of next month.
Telegraph (Telegraph) - Questions over ?1,500 tax subsidy for Scots
In a move expected to reignite tensions between the Westminster and Edinburgh parliaments, Mr Brown has told Alistair Darling, the Chancellor, to look again at the Barnett formula. Downing Street confirmed last night that the review - which could end the much-maligned formula - had been ordered to inform the debate. Mr Darling will present its findings in the next few months.”
Wales
BBC (BBC)
- Plea to legalise flags on platesA campaign calling on the UK Government to allow national flags such as the Welsh dragon to be displayed on car number plates has been launched.
Tags: daily roundup, the skinny, matt wardman, wardman wire, mattwardman, independent newspaper
Mar
02
2008
To mention it once again, I continue not to link to the Independent - since the hyperlinks which they broke when they redesigned their website continue to be broken, and I have received no response to requests for them to sort it out. I have added this paragraph to the Daily Roundup template.
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Comment
Nick Cohen (Comment is Free) - The awful squeal of fundamentalism
Authoritarians seeking to extend repression have always drawn innocents into manufactured crises. None was more innocent than Jacques Barrot, who, in 2005, helped trigger a wave of death when he entered the Frrench annual pig squealing contest at the Pyrenean village of Trie-sur-Base.
Economist (Economist) - New Russia president - The name is Dmitry
His record is more mixed. A lawyer from St Petersburg, Mr Medvedev has been by Mr Putin’s side for most of his professional life, even running his presidential campaign. In 2000, when Mr Putin became president, his protg became his deputy chief of staff, and later a deputy prime minister.
NYT (NYT) - The Office as Architectural Touchstone
How much longer can any of these postwar corporate centers " perfect embodiments of a moment in history when cities began to feel pestilential, when suburban flight grew easier on the interstates and when faith in Americas corporate power was unshakable " maintain the architecture and landscaping that made them such landmarks?
Telegraph (Telegraph) - St David’s Day: Top 10 Welsh links
Damian Noonan trawls the web for the best links into the red dragon’s lair
News
Gaby Hinscliff (Guardian) - Cameron vow on women ministers
Tory leader risks wrath of his MPs by pledging to give a third of senior government jobs to females
Dominic OConnell (Times Online) - Pentagon tanker order brings British aerospace boom
BRITISH aerospace firms were celebrating an order bonanza this weekend, after EADS, the parent company of Airbus, won a $35 billion (?18 billion) Pentagon contract for tanker aircraft.
Times Online (Times Online) - Barnstorming Obama plans to pick Republicans for cabinet
As he jets across two key states whipping up the support that could finish off Hillary Clinton this week, the Democratic frontrunner is already mapping out a government of all the talents. Our writer joins him aboard Obama One
Scotland
John Knox (BBC) - Hubble, bubble, toil and trouble
The ancient art of witch-pricking is enjoying a revival in Holyrood.
BBC (BBC) - Adverts target organ donor rise
A TV advertising and poster campaign aimed at encouraging more people to donate their organs is to be launched by the Scottish Government.
BBC (BBC) - Smith rejects UK gun laws review
Home Secretary Jacqui Smith has rejected Scottish Government calls for a review of firearms laws.
BBC (BBC) - Stephen makes partner plea to SNP
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Nicol Stephen has urged the Scottish Government to work with his party to scrap council tax.
Economist (Economist)
- From geeks to greens
Executives are switching in droves from the computer industry to clean-technology firms. Do they have what it takes to succeed?
Sport
David Walsh Chief sports writer (Times Online) - The Big Interview: Jonny Wilkinson
Englands star stand-off has cast off the demons that drove him to the top of the game " and to the depths of despair
Wales
BBC (BBC) - Tories celebrate their success
Do not expect any big policy announcements from the Welsh Conservatives at their conference in Llandudno this week - as they “celebrate their success”, as they like to put it.
Tags: daily roundup, the skinny, matt wardman, wardman wire, mattwardman, independent newspaper
Mar
01
2008
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Comment
Giles Fraser (Comment is Free)
- Intimations of mortality
We have lost the art of plain speaking when it comes to death - and that is not healthy for children
Naomi Klein (Comment is Free) - It is no slur to be called a Muslim
The turban photos affair was a missed chance for Obama. If he really is to repair the world, he must tackle this Islamophobia
Economist (Economist) - Whorehouses and American nostalgia
MY DAD, who lived a long good life, always used to tell us kids that a town without a whorehouse was a stupid place in which to live. So wrote one woman in a letter to Helenas daily newspaper in 1973. Montana may not want to bring back its old brothels, but everywhere I went, there seemed to be one or two on the list of things to see.
News
BBC (BBC)
- MPs apologise for motorbike error
The influential Commons Public Accounts Committee of MPs has apologised to motorcyclists after wrongly suggesting 40% of motorbikes were untaxed.
BBC (BBC) - Political quakes hit parliament
The magnitude of this earthquake only really emerged inside the House when Labour’s David Winnick suggested that reform of the expenses for MPs, under Mr Speaker, was not really going fast enough.
Guardian (Guardian) - Provinces pay price for green Olympics
Reservoirs around Beijing are being tapped to flush out the foul, polluted waterways in the centre of the city and to fill the fountains and keep the grass green in the Olympic park. Meteorologists are even firing silver iodine crystals into the clouds to induce rain.
NYT (NYT) - In 2008 Politics, Rhode Island Defies Its Size
For the first time anyone can remember, this small state is relishing its role in the presidential primary cycle.
Scotland
BBC (BBC)
- Holyrood will not give back powers
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Nicol Stephen has said his party would oppose any UK Government move to take powers from Holyrood.
BBC (BBC) - MSPs vote to scrap endowment fee
Students will no longer have to pay the graduate endowment fee when they finish university, after MSPs voted to abolish the charge.
Sport
Times Online (Times Online)
- Timely Andrew Strauss century cements Test place
Andrew Strauss was a relieved man after hitting a timely century for England on a rain-hit final day of the last warm-up match for the Test series with New Zealand.
Wales
BBC (BBC)
- ?15m plan to aid Menai economy
The Welsh Assembly Government says it wants to see an economic hub of industry and tourism for Anglesey and Gwynedd based around the Menai Strait.
Feb
29
2008
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Blogs
Economist (Economist) - Montana’s problem with new drivers’ licences
Montana is larger than Germany or Japan"around 150,000 square miles. But the cities are small and scattered widely across the state, and this time of year the roads tend to be icy and treacherous.
Comment
Ali Eteraz (Comment is Free) - The prophet and politicsThe Prophet Muhammad was the first person to establish an Islamic state - and he should have been the last
NYT (NYT) - For Obama, a Taste of What a Long Battle Holds
If Mr. Obama becomes the Democratic presidential nominee, he is sure to face an onslaught from Republicans and their allies that will be very different in tone and intensity from what he has faced so far.
Ben Macintyre (Times Online) - The Arts as Religion
Art is our new secular religion. Just look at the motives of the criminal and the benefactor
News
BBC (BBC) - The most spied upon people in Europe
Germany’s highest court has ruled that spying on personal computers violates privacy, but governments across Europe are under pressure to help their security services fight terrorism and organised crime. Here, BBC reporters give a snapshot of the extent of surveillance across Europe.
James Mcintosh (FT) - Hedge Fund Implodes
One of Londons most successful hedge funds imploded Thursday when Peloton Partners put the assets of its $2bn flagship fund up for sale and froze its remaining fund after geared mortgage bets left it unable to meet lenders demands.
Guardian (Guardian) - McLaren rally round unsackable Dennis after Italian police raidsMcLaren last night dismissed rumours that their chairman Ron Dennis could be fired in the wake of the continuing Italian criminal investigation into the team’s involvement in the acquisition of confidential Ferrari design information.
Richard Tyler (Telegraph)
- Sting in the tail of CGT changes
The Government has decided on the most severe way of introducing its new capital gains tax regime by insisting on a controversial measure that will catch thousands of Britain’s most successful entrepreneurs who have already sold businesses.
Scotland
BBC (BBC) - Clegg sets target for Lib Dem MPsThe Liberal Democrat leader is to set his party the task of doubling its tally of Scottish MPs within six years.
BBC (BBC) - Trump disappointed over inquiryThe US tycoon Donald Trump has described as disappointing the decision to hold a public inquiry into his ?1bn golf resort application.
Wales
BBC (BBC)
- Best practice of E.coli butcher
A butcher at the centre of an E.coli outbreak had featured in an Welsh Assembly Government publication promoting local businesses.
Feb
26
2008
Here is today’s roundup of stories. The lead story this morning is about the earthquake which wobbled my chair at 12:56am.
Fran Yeoman (Times Online) - Earthquake hits Britain, 5.3 magnitude
Britain was shaken by a huge earth tremor at 12.56am this morning which was felt by people from Yorkshire to the South Coast.
Comment
Martin Kettle (Comment is Free)
- Talking TurkeyThere is no more fascinating country in Europe at this moment than Turkey, so why do we know so little about what’s going on there?
News
BBC (BBC) - Assessing Cameron’s Sharia speech
Much of his speech in fact, which discussed the need to strengthen British identity, sounded enormously similar to some of Gordon Brown’s previous statements. And unusually, the Conservative bloggers have not bitten at this story so far. It is rare for them not to dissect a major speech from the party’s leader, but this time perhaps they feel it has all been said.
BBC (BBC) - Lib Dem ordered out of EU debate
Lib Dem frontbencher Edward Davey has been ordered out of the Commons, after angry protests to the deputy speaker.
Economist (Economist) - An IPO for Visa - Play your cards right
On Monday February 25th Visa said that it would soon go ahead with an initial public offering (IPO) of around half of its shares, which might raise as much as $18.8 billion. Given the dark mood at most of Americas leading financial institutions what has motivated Visa to embark upon what would be, by a comfortable margin, Americas biggest IPO?
FT (FT) - Olympics water diversion threatens millions
The diversion of water to Beijing for the Olympics and for big hydropower projects threatens the lives of millions of peasant farmers in Chinas north-western provinces, according to a senior Chinese government official.
Vikram Dodd and Nicholas Watt (Guardian) - Terror remands over 28 days will be rare, minister tells rebel MPsAs the government prepares for a battle over its anti-terrorism bill, the Home Office minister Tony McNulty said the new powers would only be triggered on exceptional occasions.
NYT (NYT) - Oil Hits a High; Some See $4 Gas by Spring
Gasoline prices, which for months lagged the big run-up in the price of oil, are suddenly rising quickly, with some experts fearing they could hit $4 a gallon by spring.
Kaveh Solhekol (Telegraph) - Fast cars, models and . . . QPR: In life, you need to be happy
Flavio Briatore wants to get married and settle down one day, but for the time being the 57-year-old is happy running a Formula One team, owning a football club and dating a supermodel.
Scotland
Brian Taylor (BBC) - More sorrow than angerThe justice committee of the House of Commons had sojourned to Edinburgh to find out how this devolution business is getting on. (Or at least five committee members - three of them Welsh - plus associated clerks.) It was an intriguing occasion. Dignified not solemn, polite but incisive, detailed but ultimately, and inevitably, inconclusive. At least at this stage.”
Wales
BBC (BBC)
- Calls to axe park planning powerThere are calls for Brecon Beacons National Park to be stripped of the power it has to grant planning permission after long-running concerns.
Blogs
Nick Robinson (BBC)
- I’ve caused a stirIf you ladle it out, you’ve got to take it, as the old saying goes.
Feb
26
2008
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Comment
Madeleine Bunting (Comment is Free) - Secularists have nothing to fear from women wearing headscarves
Separation of church and state should not preclude the assertion of religious identity - as Turkey is learning
Polly Toynbee (Comment is Free) - One last chance to resist the temptations of gamblingThere is an important social difference between letting people seek out a harmful pursuit and thrusting it at everyone
Rowan Williams (Guardian) - It is adults, not young people, who are a public menaceThe sight of young people gathering on streets and in shopping centres is one of the things that can create alarm or suspicion in adults, who think such groups are going to be abusive or extreme in their behaviour. But today’s report from the Good Childhood inquiry ought to challenge many popular misconceptions about young people and our shared public space.
Andrew o’Hagan (Telegraph) - A care home and dark secrets in Jersey
Stuart Syvret, who served as Jersey’s health minister until recently, was ousted after making claims about excessive punishments being meted out at a children’s institution. Someone, somewhere - or powerful groups of someones - didn’t seem to want allegations from that world to get out.
News
BBC (BBC) - City hits back over super casino
Senior councillors have now said they would seek a judicial review if the casino plan does not get the go-ahead.
BBC (BBC) - Speaker denies harming Parliament
Commons Speaker Michael Martin has dismissed claims that his review of MP expenses is taking too long and causing damage to Parliament’s image.
Economist (Economist) - Internet - Facebook fatigue
THE number of Britons logging on to Facebook has fallen for the first time, according to Nielsen Online, an internet-metrics firm. In January, 8.5m unique users caught up with friends and colleagues, down by 5% from December. Facebook has added 712% more users in Britain since January 2007 and it appears that a natural plateau has been reached: Bebo and MySpace hit their user peaks in mid-2007. People may also be turning to more specialised sites, such as LinkedIn, a professional-networking site. America has already seen growth slacken.
NYT (NYT) - Pieces of Texas Turn Primary Into a Puzzle
When Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton issued her gunslingers invitation to Senator Barack Obama recently, challenging him to meet me in Texas, the question many people here asked was, Which one?
Times (Times Online) - Secret report reveals massive MEP fraud
Chris Davies, the Liberal Democrat who revealed the existence of the internal audit, said: I dont think it will be made public because the poachers are in charge of the game park. MEPs might introduce reforms after the next elections when half of them have changed because it is just too embarrassing for them now.
Obituary
Economist (Economist)
- Steve Fossett, adventurer and record-breaker, was declared dead on February 15th, aged 63
In his 30s Mr Fossett had typed out a list of things to do that included, rather than putting up shelves or going to the gym, doing all the World Loppet cross-country skiing marathons, swimming the English Channel and climbing the highest mountain on each continent. He did them all, except for climbing Everest, for which he found he did not have the patience. But he also took part in the Le Mans 24-hour car race, the Boston Marathon and the Iditarod dog-sled race in Alaska.
Scotland
BBC (BBC)
- Cheap island ferry plan launched
Ferry fares on some sailings to the Western Isles could be slashed by a pilot project to be launched by the Scottish Government on Tuesday.
Wales
BBC (BBC)
- AM cleared in standards inquiryA Labour AM has been cleared of misuse of the Welsh assembly’s postal service to send leaflets to party members.
Feb
19
2008
Here is todays roundup of stories.
Download audio file (20080219-wardman-wire-daily-roundup.mp3)
News
Mail - The ‘conspirators’: Those involved in Diana and Dodi’s ‘murders’ - according to Al Fayed
Mr Fayed yesterday detailed his belief that some of the most senior figures in the country had been involved in Diana and Dodi’s “murders”.
Times Online - It’s official: the Landfill Prize Top 10
From oh-so-clever toothbrushes to an infant care timer. What you said you could really live without
Times Online - ‘Barely trained paralegals will be forced to take CPS cases to trial
Plans are due to go ahead for thousands of trials a year to be prosecuted by non-lawyers, even though the paralegals themselves say that they are insufficiently trained, The Times has learnt.
Economist - The road to e-democracy
E-government is only the beginning
BBC - Prescott warns critics off China
Former deputy prime minister John Prescott has rounded on China’s critics, saying relations cannot be allowed to sour over the Darfur issue.
NYT - With Oil Prices Rising, Wood Makes a Comeback
After years of steep decline, wood heat is back, with people flocking to dealers to buy new wood stoves, wood boilers and stoves that burn pellets made of wood byproducts.
Comment
Telegraph - How can MPs get rid of a turbulent Speaker?
We live in different times, but history serves as an indicator of just how difficult it is for the Commons to rid itself of a Speaker in whom it has lost confidence.
Guardian - NHS chief accused of eroding hospitals’ independence
David Nicholson, the NHS chief executive, was accused of breaking the law by issuing instructions to foundation hospitals that infringe their independence.
Comment is Free - Fascism on film
Brazilians should be ashamed at the success of Tropa de Elite, a film which dehumanises the victims of police torture
Scotland
BBC - Wildcat population to be surveyed
Walkers in the Highlands are being asked to help discover the true numbers of one of Britain’s most secretive creatures - the Scottish wildcat.
Wales
OurKingdom - Will Morgan deliver on the promise which sunk the rainbow coalition?
Just when Gordon Brown concedes theres a very strong case for a review of Scottish devolution, the man he appointed to represent Wales around the Cabinet table has been downplaying expectations of refreshing the Assemblys powers.
Tags: daily roundup, wardman wire
(more…)
Feb
15
2008
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Download audio file (20080215-wardman-wire-daily-roundup.mp3)
Comment
Faisal al Yafai (Comment is Free) - More cartoons, please
Offence is good, but it’s important to keep things fresh. Here’s how the Danes could have done it better
Economist (Economist) - Faith, law and democracy - Defining the limits of exceptionalism
The right of faiths to run their own affairs and regulate the lives of their adherents has recently become controversial"because of fear of Islam
Iain Dale (Telegraph) - For all our sakes, Boris Johnson must win
Ken Livingstone is displaying all the signs of being the political equivalent of a paranoid schizophrenic. He is paranoid about his rival for the London mayoralty, Boris Johnson.”
News
BBC (BBC)
- Cuts threaten UK intelligence
A reduction of 121 posts has been proposed for the Defence Intelligence Staff (DIS) which analyses information from GCHQ, MI6 and the MoD.
BBC (BBC) - UK-US extradition deal attacked
The UK’s extradition laws have been attacked as unfair in the wake of the Appeal Court ruling that a wrongly accused pilot can claim compensation. If Lotfi Raissi were held under current rules he would have been extradited to the US, the Lib Dems and the human rights group Liberty have said.
BBC (BBC) - Islam critic asks for protection
Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the former Dutch MP and outspoken critic of Islam, has appealed to the EU to create a fund to help protect people in her position.
NYT (NYT) - Signs in Kenya of a Land Redrawn by Ethnicity
Kenya used to be considered one of the most promising countries in Africa. Now it is in the throes of ethnically segregating itself.
Sky (Sky) - NHS Workers Lie Over Qualifications
A third of NHS Trusts have identified healthworkers using fake CVs or lying about criminal convictions, according to research seen by Sky News.
Times (Times Online) - The carbon-zero future for new homes
By 2016 every new home built in Britain will be carbon-zero. Some of these homes will be in ten new eco-towns (comprising between 5,000 and 20,000 homes) to be created by 2020.
Obituary
Economist (Economist)
- Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
Thirty years earlier the maharishi, who had studied maths and physics at Allahabad University, had calculated that one person practising the transcendental meditation he promoted could induce virtuous behaviour among 99 non-meditators.
Scotland
BBC (BBC)
- Governments row on bomber future
The Scottish and UK Governments have clashed over the future of the convicted Lockerbie bomber Abdel Basset Ali Al-Megrahi.
Wales
BBC (BBC)
- Labour MP is given police apology
The chief and deputy chief constables of North Wales Police have apologised to Wrexham MP Ian Lucas over comments in a BBC Wales TV documentary.
Feb
13
2008
There won’t be a roundup today, as I am spending the morning working on an exclusive story coming out on the Wardman Wire at around midday.
Feb
12
2008
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Download audio file (20080212-wardman-wire-daily-roundup.mp3)
Lead
Francis Eliott (Telegraph) - Users face Net ban in crackdown on pirates
Internet service providers (ISPs) will be legally required to take action against users who access pirated material, The Times has learnt. Ed Vaizey, the Shadow Arts Minister, said: David Cameron called on the internet providers to address this issue last summer. The credibility of the Governments latest threat is undermined by the fact that ministers have spent so many years dithering on whether to legislate.”
Comment
Economist (Economist) - Kenya diary - Flash point
Mr Szapary circles around, and we see other crowds outside the prison, the Catholic church, and small groups moving along with weapons in hand towards the gates of some of the flower farms. Mr Szaparys farm looks to be untouched.
When we land, he calls his managers. One has taken shelter in the prison, too scared to leave, the other is on a boat in the lake. Mr Szapary tells him to make for Crescent Island, which has a grass airstrip. He gets back in his plane and flies off. Alone, I call the Catholic priest in town and get on with my reporting for the day.
News
Times (BBC) - Warning of ‘Jeremy Kyle’ future
A lack of father figures is creating a Jeremy Kyle generation of men with little chance of work and a high rate of criminality, the Tories have warned - Chris Grayling
John Carvel, Social Affairs Editor (Guardian) - Pioneering 45-minute treatment for diabetes holds prospect of cure
Cell transplants approved for type 1 patients on NHS
Treatment may end need for insulin injections
NYT (NYT) - Mortgage Crisis Spreads Past Subprime Loans
As home prices fall and banks tighten lending standards, people with good, or prime, credit histories are falling behind on their payments for home loans, auto loans and credit cards at a quickening pace, according to industry data and economists.
Sky (Sky) - Designs Of The Year
The symbol for the congestion charge extension in west London is on the shortlist for best international designs of the year.But does is really deserve its place and what about the other contenders?
Robin Perrie (Sun) - eBay axe bids on scarves
INTERNET auction site eBay last night banned Manchester United fans from selling commemorative Munich disaster scarves " and accused them of profiting from human tragedy.
Times (Times Online) - China accused as space shuttle spy is arrested in FBI swoops
A former Boeing engineer was arrested in the United States yesterday for allegedly stealing space shuttle secrets for China, in a case likely to put further strain on relations between the two nations.
Obituary
Steve Clemons (Comment is Free)
- Remembering Tom Lantos
The US congressman, who died today of cancer at age 80, was a crusader for human rights who came to favour a new approach to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
Scotland
BBC (BBC)
- Number of female inmates doubles
The number of female prisoners in Scotland has doubled in the past 10 years, a prison inspection has found.
Wales
BBC (BBC) - Drinking culture crackdown plans
It will pinpoint those who drink to excess and do not believe they have a problem, and will also target the young and binge drinkers in particular.
Feb
11
2008
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Download audio file (20080211-wardman-wire-daily-roundup.mp3)
Comment
Economist (Economist)
- What role for sharia in the West?
STEEPED in a culture of emollience, gentility and the avoidance of hard arguments, the English established Church has little knowledge of how to handle public opinion when it suddenly finds itself in the eye of a gigantic storm. And, for better or worse, the countrys politically-active Muslims are capable of showing much greater deftness and sophistication.
David Ward (Guardian) - Attacks on fire crews increasing, says union
Attacks on fire crews dealing with blazes have become a recreational activity in parts of Britain, firefighter leaders claimed today.
Nick Cohen (Guardian)- Why Tom Cruise would love our courts
If Anonymous has his or her way, hundreds of demonstrators will launch the London Scientology Raid on the Scientology British HQ this morning. He or she is promising an EPIC to show that we actually give a damn and whoever he or she is, the British Anonymous isn’t alone.
News
Jane Little (BBC)
- Super-delegates come to the fore
It is increasingly likely that the two candidates will go to the August Convention with neither having reached the magic number of 2,025 delegates to clinch the nomination.
NYT (NYT) - Between States, Hard Feelings Over a Rocks Place
Some Ohioans say the rock is an important piece of Portsmouth history and should be put on display. Some Kentuckians say the rock is an important piece of Kentucky, period, and should be returned. And some in both states say: Ive been distracted by war, recession and a presidential campaign, so forgive me. But are we fighting over a rock?
Sky (Sky) - Striking Writers Pen Hollywood Ending
Striking Hollywood writers appear to be finally ready to go back to work after their union representatives endorsed a deal with the major studios.
Martin Fletcher (Times Online) - Al-Qaeda leaders admit: We are in crisis. There is panic and fear
Al-Qaeda in Iraq faces an extraordinary crisis. Last year’s mass defection of ordinary Sunnis from al-Qaeda to the US military created panic, fear and the unwillingness to fight. The terrorist group security structure suffered total collapse.
Scotland
BBC (BBC)
- Return to fold call for Berwick
An unofficial vote is taking place in the English borders town asking locals whether they want to switch from England to being part of Scotland.
Wales
BBC (BBC) - Morgan to quit on 70th birthday
First Minister Rhodri Morgan has revealed he will stand down around his 70th birthday on 29 September, 2009.
Feb
08
2008
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Download audio file (20080208-wardman-wire-daily-roundup.mp3)
Comment
Alan Johnson (Comment is Free) - Thinking about the unthinkable
A proposal to help eliminate global poverty raises several questions, but is far from being an eccentric policy
Economist (Economist) - How America and Europe own each other
A NEW REPORT by the American Chamber of Commerce to the European Union offers a useful reminder that behind all the hoopla about China, India and other emerging economies, ties between the rich nations of the western world go very deep indeed.
Economist (Economist) - Russia revives a vicious lie
In the past six months no fewer than four different outlets have revived the outrageous falsehood that it was the Nazis, not the Soviets, who murdered 20,000 captured Polish officers at Katyn in 1940. That Stalin-era lie, enforced at gun-point in post-war Poland, viciously aggravated the original crime. It was buried in 1990, with solemn Kremlin support.
Guardian (Guardian) - So can Boris pull it off? And do the Tories really want him to?
Now some Tories close to leader David Cameron are convinced Johnson can win the race, although some believe that could be a mixed blessing.
Sky (Sky) - BAFTA Awards
The film industry is eagerly anticipating the Baftas - and so is Sky entertainment correspondent Matt Smith. Here’s his guide to who could be walking away with an award.
Francis Charig (Telegraph) - My escape from BA038 was damn fun
The announcement for us to evacuate the plane was made calmly and was a surprise to me. I doubt if you’ve had to go down a chute before but it was damn fun; I would have loved to have had another go but we were being taken well away from the plane to safety.
News
BBC (BBC) - MP fury over EU vote campaign
A Labour MP has clashed angrily with EU treaty referendum campaigner Derek Scott in a BBC radio interview.
Jonathan Fildes (BBC) - Knee dynamo taps people power
US and Canadian scientists have built a novel device that effortlessly harvests energy from human movements.
Times (Times Online) - Scotland Yard ready to deliver its findings on Benazir Bhutto assassination
Scotland Yard risks inflaming the heated preelection political atmosphere in Pakistan today when it delivers its report on the assassination of Benazir Bhutto.
Andrew Norfolk (Times Online) - Lawyers forced to repay millions taken from sick miners compensation
Law firms that grew rich by exploiting sick miners are to be forced to repay tens of millions of pounds that they wrongly sliced from their clients compensation.
Scotland
BBC (BBC)
- Turn of tide on fire crew attacks
Assaults on firefighters in Scotland are gradually decreasing, according to the Fire Brigade Union (FBU), though attacks in England continue to rise.
Wales
BBC (BBC)
- Low house price boost for valleys
Fewer people are moving away from the south Wales valleys and more are setting up home in the area because of lower house prices, it is claimed.
Blogs
BBC (BBC)
- Milk with your iPod?
The fact that MPs can claim expenses of ?250 without a receipt has already been greeted with widespread incredulity. The fact we learnt today is likely to be greeted with even more. MPs can, apparently, also claim ?400 a month for food without receipts.
Feb
07
2008
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Download audio file (20080207-wardman-wire-daily-roundup.mp3)
Comment
Jeff Jarvis (Comment is Free) - Perhaps I should join the cult
Super Tuesday: Compare and contrast the Obama and Clinton victory speeches last night and you see the essential difference is oratory not issues
Economist (Economist) - Surveillance states
PRIVACY is a thorny issue. And the level of intrusion by the state in the private lives of its citizens differs from country to country. In recent years terrorist threats have driven many governments to enact laws that erode privacy. Technological advances have made this job all the easier. Countries with fewer enemies, or less cash, tend to afford their citizens more privacy. The result is that the world is becoming a less private place, though not necessarily any safer.
News
BBC (BBC) - UK navy to end goat experiments
The Ministry of Defence says it will abandon deep-diving experiments which involve inducing decompression sickness in live goats.
BBC (BBC) - Tories bid to transform Lottery
They say that since 1998 ?3.8bn for the National Lottery four good causes has been diverted to fund government priorities like health and education.
FT (FT) - SocGen faces US investigation
The US Securities and Exchange Commission is looking at whether Socit Gnrale violated US securities laws as it unwound and revealed its 4.9bn loss from the Jrme Kerviel allegedly rogue derivatives trades, the Financial Times has learnt.
Guardian (Guardian) - Serbia PM blocks EU pact in protest over Kosovo declarationThe Serbia nationalist prime minister yesterday blocked the signing of a landmark pact between Belgrade and the EU in an attempt to delay the secession of Kosovo.
NYT (NYT)
- For Jarvik Heart Pioneer, Drug Ads Raise Questions
Dr. Robert Jarvik is best known for the artificial heart he pioneered more than a quarter-century ago. Since then he had toiled in relative obscurity " until he began appearing in television ads two years ago for the Pfizer cholesterol drug Lipitor.
Sky (Sky) - Will Ipswich Accused Give Evidence?
Jurors are waiting today to discover whether a forklift truck driver accused of murdering five prostitutes in Suffolk will give evidence at his trial.
Catherine Philp (Times Online) - CIA admits waterboarding of terror suspectsIt was a good day to bury bad news. As millions of Americans were glued to the most exciting presidential race in living memory, the Bush Administration admitted publicly for the first time that it had used the simulated drowning technique of waterboarding on terror suspects in its custody.
Christine Seib and Siobhan Kennedy (Times Online)
- Northern Rock faces 2,400 job cutsAs many as 2,400 jobs could be cut from Northern Rock over the next three years, managers of the troubled bank said yesterday, as they outlined their plan to rescue the Rock.
Scotland
BBC (BBC) - MSPs agree to pass Scots budgetThe Scottish Government’s budget has been passed with Conservative support, after ministers made several last-minute concessions.
BBC (BBC) - Trump team denies sleaze claims
Donald Trump’s spokesman, George Sorial, told a Holyrood inquiry that the organisation was very offended by the claims of special treatment.
Wales
BBC (BBC)
- Garden’s ?1.9m debt is wiped out
Deputy First Minister Ieuan Wyn Jones said it was a one-off grant to put the ?43m garden on a sound financial footing to attract private investment.
Blogs
Cassilis (Cassilis)
- This weeks Think Tank Roundup…
I mentioned below that I’d try and introduce a weekly roundup of all the most interesting things coming out of the leading UK / US think tanks. I find I spend more & more time reading those sorts of things rather than blogs so I might as well share what I find.
Feb
06
2008
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Download audio file (20080206-wardman-wire-daily-roundup.mp3)
Comment
Geoffrey Wheatcroft (Comment is Free) - Lament for the disarmer
We may have been naive, but I do not regret my CND days. Fifty years on, where are our heirs?
Mary O’Hara (Guardian) - Bridging the gap
Fed up with having no voice on issues that affect them, a group of campaigners with dementia are making themselves heard in the corridors of power.
Carl Mortished (Times Online) - Do not be taken in by the oil giants and their billions
Do not be fooled; this pumped-up industry is impoverished, both in performance and opportunity. Beset from all sides, by inflation, weak operations and lack of opportunity, the oil majors have reverted to Plan A - cut the costs and raise the dividend.
News
BBC (BBC) - Review backs intercept evidence
An independent review into the use of intercept evidence in court cases will conclude that it can and should be allowed, the BBC has learned.
BBC (BBC) - Mobiles not brain cancer risk
Mobile phone use does not raise the risk of brain tumours, a Japanese study suggests
Economist (Economist) - The day after Super Tuesday
Muddle for the Democrats, but John McCain pushes close to the Republican nomination
Mail (Mail) - Four MP couples caught cashing in on taxpayer-funded housing allowances
Four husband and wife couples in the Commons are cashing in on taxpayer-funded housing allowances by claiming twice for the same home.
NYT (NYT) - Voting Goes Smoothly in Most Places
Despite long lines, confusion among poll workers and scattered computer malfunctions, there were no reports of widespread problems Tuesday as voters showed up in record numbers to cast ballots for their preferred presidential candidates.
The Sun (The Sun) - Army runs out of machine guns
British troops desperately need 400 of the jumbo 0.5in calibre heavy machine guns " the weapon most acutely missed.
Franics Elliott and Philip Webster (Times Online) - Juries should hear wire tap and e-mail evidence, says review
Gordon Brown will announce the findings of an independent review today that will open the door to the use of intercept evidence in court.
Scotland
BBC (BBC)
- Budget showdown after quit threat
The Scottish Government ?30bn budget faces a crucial vote after First Minister Alex Salmond threatened to quit if MSPs do not support the plans.
Wales
BBC (BBC)
- Extra cash for Welsh newspapers
An extra subsidy pot of ?200,000 a year for Welsh language newspapers and magazines has been announced by the Welsh language minister.
Blogs
(Brass Neck) Telegraph
- Dromey faces online challenge
Brassneck understands that Labour’s Treasurer, Jack Dromey, is to face a challenge from Mark McDonald, a human rights barrister and associate editor of the Labour Home website. The site, which is backing McDonald’s challenge, hopes to use the internet to reconnect the party to grassroots by enabling members to have their say and question McDonald through online polling and live forums.
Feb
04
2008
Here is today’s roundup of stories.
Download audio file (20080204-wardman-wire-daily-roundup.mp3)
Comment
NYT (NYT)- It is Super Bowl Ad Time
Many commercials that appeared during Super Bowl XLII took a satiric tack, spoofing movies, television shows, video clips, celebrity misbehavior and more.
Phlip Johnston (Telegraph) - Labour has turned police into pen-pushers
The mobile reassurance unit that most people want is a bobby on the beat; and yet despite 40,000 more police officers than there were in 1970, they see fewer of them than ever.
News
BBC (BBC) - Brown unaware of bugging letter
Downing Street says it has no evidence that the PM received a letter from the Conservative Party warning that an MP’s conversations may have been bugged. Mr Ahmad faces no charges in the UK but is awaiting a decision from the European courts to discover if he will be extradited to the US, on suspicion of running websites raising funds for the Taleban.
Patrick Barkham (Guardian) - Hackers declare war on Scientologists
Actor’s video clip forced off YouTube, say activists
Church hit by sabotage of website and day of protest
Mike Pflanz (Telegraph) - Refugee aid threatened amid Chad fighting
One of Africa’s biggest aid operations, which is keeping 370,000 refugees alive, was in jeopardy when Chad’s capital was engulfed in fighting”
Times (Times Online) - Day trip to Auschwitz for pupils from every school
Two sixth-formers from every school in England are to visit Auschwitz to learn abou