BB FANS

UK Big Brother Forums






Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 769 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 ... 52  Next
Author Message
 Post subject: Re: Politics and Elections UK
PostPosted: 05 Jun 12, 16:01 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
Now is the perfect time for Liberal Democrats to wield the knife

Nick Clegg is finished. But if Vince Cable leads an anti-austerity rebellion, he can help save his party and the UK economy too
Guardian


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: Politics and Elections UK
PostPosted: 06 Jun 12, 18:40 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London


Ken Clarke condemns press lynch mob out for Lady Warsi

Complaints 'downright silly', says justice secretary, as PM defends inconsistency towards peer and Jeremy Hunt
Guardian


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: Politics and Elections UK
PostPosted: 08 Jun 12, 15:11 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
Ministers "will not flinch" from naming Tom Winsor as Chief Inspector of Constabulary for England and Wales, government sources have said. BBC


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: Politics and Elections UK
PostPosted: 09 Jun 12, 14:22 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London

Scotland Yard launches investigation into Tory 'cash-for-access' affair

Police act on fundraiser's offer that donations would buy No 10 meetings
Independent


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: Politics and Elections UK
PostPosted: 09 Jun 12, 21:16 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
MPs 'To Block Appointment Of Tom Winsor As Chief Inspector Of Constabulary' www.huffingtonpost.co.uk


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: Politics and Elections UK
PostPosted: 09 Jun 12, 21:31 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London


Greeks protest against violent neo-Nazi MP on the run

Golden Dawn spokesman who assaulted leftwing politicians evades arrest as protesters denounce fascism


Helena Smith in Athens Guardian


Thousands took to the street to demand that Golden Dawn is expelled from Greek parliament. Link to this video

Protesters across Greece poured on to the streets of cities Friday night, denouncing the "dark force" of fascism as the spokesman of the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party continued to elude arrest more than 24 hours after his extraordinary on-screen assault of two female leftwing politicians.

Nine days before fresh general elections, the fault lines in Greek society are deepening.

And late on Friday, as a police manhunt for Ilias Kasidiaris showed little sign of yielding a positive result, the divisions were on full display.

While anti-fascist demonstrators descended on public squares, supporters of Golden Dawn crammed into a hotel in Athens to hear the party's leader, Nikos Michaloliakos, rail against immigrant "scum" and the corrupt and crooked system that had brought the crisis-hit country to such a "dark place".

"There is growing polarisation. People are becoming increasingly radicalised thanks to all the rhetoric in the EU and here against the anti-austerity leftist majority and that is opening the door for Golden Dawn," said veteran activist Petros Constantinou. "We are demonstrating not only against the rise of the far right but against those who have enabled fascism to take root."

Constantinou, a tall, thin man who has spent years running an organisation that protects migrants, is, like a growing number of Greeks, convinced that it is the police who have facilitated Golden Dawn. "Without police cover and protection Golden Dawn would not have survived," he said. "And the proof of that is the failure to capture Kasidiaris.

"How is it possible that a man can do what he did in a television studio and yet manage to get away and stay on the run after a state prosecutor has ordered his arrest? The police clearly don't want to arrest him."

Dimitris Trimis, the head of the Greek journalists' association, ESEA, agreed. In a nation where physical violence is rare – and public displays of violence against women even rarer – Kasidiaris's assault on Liana Kanelli and Rena Dourou, during a live TV debate of politicians representing the seven parties that won seats in the country's inconclusive 6 May election, had clearly shocked Greeks.

All day Friday, TV channels had replayed footage showing Kasidiaris, a former commando in the Greek army, lashing out at Dourou first, hurling a glass of water in her face before turning his fists on Kanelli, the KKE communist party's spokeswoman, a former news anchor.

But his ability to evade arrest was entirely plausible, said Trimis.

"Suspicions of the collaboration between the police and Golden Dawn were confirmed at the ballot box in May," he said.

"As much as 50% of the police force voted for the party. There might be all the political will to arrest Kasidiarias. But there is a certain level of unwillingness among the police force that will stop that happening."

For years, he said, rightwing extremists had done the police force's "dirty work", mopping up migrants from the ghettoes of inner Athens in exchange for protection.

The spokesman of the Hellenic police force, Thanassis Kokkalakis, denied the accusations and said special units all over Greece were looking for Kasidiaris.

"Our belief is that he is hiding in the knowledge that the arrest warrant runs out at one minute past midnight. He doesn't want the media all over him, showing him in handcuffs ahead of the election."

Golden Dawn is widely regarded as Europe's most fanatical neo-Nazi party, going so far as to ensure that its emblem bears an uncanny resemblance to the swastika.

By playing on deep disgruntlement over the punishing income cuts and tax increases demanded by creditors in return for rescue loans, it won 7% of the vote last month – ushering the hard right's entry into parliament for the first time since the collapse of military rule in 1974. Although polls have shown its popularity dropping to as low as 3.6% as Greeks gear up for a second election, it would be enough to allow the party representation in Athens' 300-seat house.

Emboldened by the growing divisions between left and right, rich and poor, Golden Dawn has resolutely refused to condemn or even reprimand Kasidiaris for his behaviour. A party statement said the spokesman had instead been provoked by the female politicians.

"Ms Kanelli got up first ... hitting him unprovoked in the face with a sheaf of documents," it said.

The denial fits in with the neo-Nazi party's history of terrorising women, including female journalists whose photographs and passport numbers have been published in the party's weekly newspaper.

With Thursday's assault quickly followed by Golden Dawn attacks on socialist MPs campaigning in northern Greece and leftwing students at Athens' Panteion University, there are mounting concerns that the darkening mood could be a precursor of worse to come – even if Kasidiaris's explosive temper has shone a spotlight on the party as never before.

On television and radio chatshows commentators voiced fears that in a country where memories of the brutal 1946-49 civil war are still vivid, Greece could be hurtling towards a full-scale social breakdown – sparked initially by its worst economic crisis in modern times and now exacerbated by the political uncertainty engulfing the nation.

"After months of extreme hate speech, violence has climaxed," wrote the analyst Vivian Ethymiopoulou in the mass-selling Ta Nea newspaper.

"From verbal run-ins and yoghurt throwing we have officially passed to acts of personal revenge and daggers being drawn."


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: Politics and Elections UK
PostPosted: 09 Jun 12, 21:36 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London

Cameron has every reason to back Chagos Islands sovereignty


The UK has a great opportunity based on realpolitik and human rights to restore the Chagos archipelago to its rightful owners Guardian


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: Politics and Elections UK
PostPosted: 12 Jun 12, 14:26 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
Guardian
Church of England accused of scaremongering over gay marriage

Gay rights campaigners hit back at claims that introducing same-sex marriages could force church out of its wedding role




Giles Fraser Guardian
The Church of England says it is against gay marriage. Not in my name

I am furious about this ridiculous and unrepresentative statement from the Church of England on gay marriage


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: Politics and Elections UK
PostPosted: 12 Jun 12, 14:28 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London

Tory vilification campaign against the poor is so clever

David Cameron will oversee the worst child poverty record for a generation. Yet he is winning the public argument on cuts


Guardian


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: Politics and Elections UK
PostPosted: 12 Jun 12, 14:32 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London

People haven't turned to the right. They just don't vote

A new theory of choice isn't useful to politicians. The left is losing because it isn't offering policies of care and economic justice
www.guardian.co.uk


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: Politics and Elections UK
PostPosted: 12 Jun 12, 23:02 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
Liberal Democrats To Abstain On Commons Vote Over Jeremy Hunt's Alleged Breaches Of Ministerial Code Huffington post


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: Politics and Elections UK
PostPosted: 12 Jun 12, 23:20 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
PM under pressure over gay marriage Independent


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: Politics and Elections UK
PostPosted: 13 Jun 12, 17:39 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
MPs vote against Labour's Jeremy Hunt inquiry call BBC


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: Politics and Elections UK
PostPosted: 14 Jun 12, 17:35 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
A quarter of Sunday Times rich list are Tory Party donors
James Bloodworth , Independent


cameron rich list 225x300 A quarter of Sunday Times rich list are Tory Party donors


The trade union subscription to the Labour Party for an individual member is around three pounds a year, which it is possible to opt out of and which is less than half the cost of a book of First Class stamps. Conservative MPs often make the charge that the Labour Party is “bankrolled” by the unions. “More than half of Labour MPs have had their campaigns bankrolled (that word again) by the trade union threatening to disrupt the lives of millions and bring our economy to its knees,” was how Baroness Warsi scornfully phrased it in an interview with the Daily Mail during the recent fuel strike that never was.

And what of the response of Tory HQ to businessman Peter Cruddas’s claim that giving money to the Tories could prove “awesome for your business” (committing the crime of attempting to sound hip if nothing else). “Unlike the Labour Party, where union donations are traded for party policies, donations to the Conservative Party do not buy party or government policy.”

No equivocation there then.

But there is an element of truth to Tory claims. Swap the word union with the phrase “working people who voluntarily donate to a union fund that goes to the Labour Party” and you are getting closer to the truth. The Labour party is indeed bankrolled (if you’re the sort of person who insists on calling it that) by the trade union movement; but this movement (an appropriate word if ever there was one) consists of millions of working people who it is the Labour Party’s raison d’etre to represent.

Perhaps trade unionists have more in common with a greater number of the electorate than, say, those who grace the pages of the Sunday Times Rich List. For when nearly a quarter of the top 1,000 richest people in the country have given money to the Conservative Party, which they most certainly have if this year’s directory is to be believed, those claiming the problem is union funding of the Labour Party really ought to quieten down.

248 of the top 1,000 individuals featured on this year’s Rich List have financially supported the Conservative Party since 2001, with donations totalling £83.6m. The Swedish Hans Rausing food packaging dynasty were the highest placed donors on the List in 12th place, with gifts to the Tories totalling £886,000. They were followed by Sir Anthony Bamford and Family, who donated £4.7m to the Tories and who were 20th on the Rich List; the Fleming family, who donated £1.3 million and came in at number 42; and Lord Ashcroft, whose donations to the party totalled £6.1m and who was 62nd on the List. In fifth place was our good friend Peter Cruddas, who donated £1.1m to the Conservatives but who lumbered in at a proletarian 101 on the List.

So what might these individuals of contrasting fortunes be getting for their dosh?

A trade unionist might hope for at least something in return from their modest contribution to the Labour Party. A decent minimum wage for those at the bottom of the pay scale, perhaps. Or maybe a guarantee that they won’t be thrown out of work because a superior has taken a dislike to their skin colour or sexuality. He or she might trade in their three pounds in the faint, perhaps misguided hope that there will be a political party which grudgingly carries his or her hopes and dreams somewhere in its DNA. For the price of a packet of stamps, it does seem worth a try.

But what could possibly motivate Britain’s most privileged individuals to donate such large sums to the Tory Party? What might they expect in return for their generosity?

“It is clear the wealthy look to the Tory Party to protect their interests and they have been repaid with policies like the change in Income Tax, down from 50p to 45p,” said General Secretary of the GMB union Paul Kenny.

“This is not philanthropy. It’s an investment by an elite in an elite to look after their interests.”

If the Tories are to be believed, union donations are traded for Labour policies at three quid a head. Were that true, it would mean policies for the benefit of quite a few heads – there are around seven million trade unionists, after all, which is considerably more than there are candidates for the Sunday Times Rich List. Which leaves one wondering: if three pounds gets you a slight nod from the Labour leadership at conference now and then, what must the sort of sums mentioned above get you from the Government? Quite a lot, I would imagine, but for a much, much smaller proportion of the population than carry trade union membership cards.


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: Politics and Elections UK
PostPosted: 15 Jun 12, 20:51 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
The government's decision to offer a £100bn boost to banks while failing to bailout Britain's biggest independent oil refinery has been decried as "the clearest evidence possible" of double standards by the coalition. Huffington post


Top
 
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 769 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 ... 52  Next


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  
cron
Powered by phpBB © phpBB Group. All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners. Material breaching copyright laws should be reported to webmaster (-at-) bbfans.com. BBFans.com is in no way affilated with Channel4 or Endemol.