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Tory summer party drew super-rich supporters with total wealth of £11bn
01 Tuesday Jul 2014
Posted in Politics 💼 🗳 🪖
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Tory summer party drew super-rich supporters with total wealth of £11bn
05 Wednesday Sep 2012
TEMPLATE ANALYSIS
Well, it wasn’t exactly revolutionary – the same faces remain in all the key positions except perhaps controversially in Transport, where Justine Greening known for her opposition to another Heathrow runway is replaced by someone called Patrick McLoughlin.
That move, which could well be ruthless, drew immediate condemnation from the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, (pictured above) who said that the “mad” plan for another runway was now underway.
Apart from the moving of the Culture Secretary to Health and getting rid of the hapless Baroness Warsi little has changed.
Those who booed at George Osborne as he appeared at the Paralympic games will see that the man who has been blamed by many and praised by some is still sitting at the heart of government- as the Chancellor of the Exchequer.
And they will also see that Jeremy Hunt (pictured below) has replaced Andrew Lansley at Health because the latter was not percieved to be a good communicator when it came to the government plans for the NHS.
So, all this can only mean the cuts will continue, as the government searches for new sources of business which now almost certainly means a third runway at Heathrow.
Posted by The Template News, Current Affairs and Sport Website | Filed under Politics 💼 🗳 🪖
12 Saturday May 2012
Posted in Analysis 🙌, Breaking News 📺 🎙🗞, Comment, Financial 💷 💲 🏦, Politics 💼 🗳 🪖, UK
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Austerity, Cameron, Coalition, david cameron, Distant Echoes, Food banks, Nayab Chohan, NayabChohan, NayabChohanLIVE, Nick Clegg, Politics 💼 🗳 🪖, Template News
ANALYSIS
What a difference a day makes, or in this case a month or so.
As David Cameron and some one called Nick Clegg – where are you my friend? – celebrate two years since they appeared under the sun in the Downing St garden all smiles before the press, the Conservatives are lurching from crisis to crisis.
Admitting that they got wrong when they scrapped the jets ordered by the last government for this country’s two aircraft carriers.
They did of course make a big issue of this at the time.
Gordon Brown’s government had mismanaged the economy and wasted public money and the spending £5bn on jets that this nation did not need proved their point.
Well, Britain hit double-dip recession territory within the time frame predicted by Brown – that despite the radical cuts to the public sector announced by Chancellor George Osborne. This news opened the whole country’s eyes to the coalition’s claims to having a credible economic plan and they still want to have a go at welfare, education and health.
Don’t underestimate the magnitude of the defeat at the local elections – David Cameron did not win the general election outright and has just seen his party wiped out everywhere except in London, where the Mayor bucked the trend though he lost heavily in the London assembly.
So, as Jeremy Hunt faces calls to stand down against a backdrop of a Leveson inquiry that is appearing to be more damaging to Cameron and those former Murdoch employees around him, who include his Education Secretary Michael Gove, the question is what next on the rocky road to May 2015?
04 Monday Jul 2011
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Asif Ali Zardari, Cameron, david cameron, Distant Echoes, England, Nayab Chohan, NayabChohan, NayabChohanLIVE, Pakistan, Pakistan and Democracy, Politics 💼 🗳 🪖, Template News, UK, Zardari
David Cameron had an unsual visitor over the weekend.
I say unusual because he says that he is the democratically elected President of Pakistan, and yet I have still to find a single Pakistani who says that he ever voted for Asif Ali Zardari.
When Pakistan is mentioned in the press, and that is by no means just in the western press, the words ‘troubled’, ‘on the brink’ and ‘descent’ are often accompanied as usual descriptions. Pakistani national identity is not very strong, it is claimed, by no less a person than the former Balouchistani rebel, Ahmed Rashid, who has really come of his own since the events of that dark Tuesday in the year 2001.
Yet, a casual conversation with any Pakistani wil tell you other wise.
It is widely believed that the root cause of terrorism in Pakistan is America and India. Ametica’s standing as a friend is belied by the CIA-sponsored drone attacks that continue to this day and by the fact they appear to have carte blanche when it comes to their dealings with Islamabad. Go further, to the north west – to the so called tribal areas, a name that was out of date when it was first used by the colonial power of Great Britain – and those people, a thousand of whom were killed by drone strikes last year, will tell you that the Great Power that says that it is their country’s friend is aiming break up their nation, so that they can seize the atom bomb with the long term aim of a war with first Iran and then finally with that emerging Great Power that is China.
Listening to this, reminds me of the time when The Ottoman Empire – which Pakistan does bear some resemblance to – was making its mind up with regards to which was its real friend, the emerging power of Germany or that of Great Britain. Then, there were many warnings from their former allies of the dangers of allying itself with the dreaded Kaiser.
Pakistan’s relationship with China is solid, however America believes that there is always a price to be paid for such closeness to the much feared People’s Republic.
That may be the case, but for the moment, the people of Pakistan – a large proportion of whom are below the age of 25 – have to live through the everyday cycle of violence, bombings, whilst having watch to politicians of the calibre of President Asif Ali Zardari jet around the world to meet democratically-elected politicians like David Cameron.
Posted by The Template News, Current Affairs and Sport Website | Filed under Analysis 🙌, Asia 🌐, Comment, International News, Politics 💼 🗳 🪖, UK