Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Why is the left so down on Obama? | Cameron’s EU speech: the questions he must answer | The deficit rises under Osborne

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22 Jan 2013

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Editor's Choice

Ten must-read blogs

  1. I loved Obama's speech unreservedly. So there
    Obama gave a well-written, brilliantly delivered, and - for the US - subversive inauguration speech. Why was the reaction of many UK progressive commentators so hysterically cynical?
    By Alex Andreou

  2. Cameron's EU speech: the questions he will need to answer
    The questions the PM will face on renegotiation, the referendum and withdrawal. By George Eaton

  3. Lewisham: the most irrational, irresponsible hospital to cut
    ETo cut this well-performing hospital would be to reward failure and punish success.
    By Rowenna Davis

  4. Why do we accept the status quo? Why, frankly, isn't Parliament Square on fire?
    How hard a person works is not and never has been proportional to a person's salary.
    By Lawrie Penny

  5. Barack Obama's inauguration speech: full text and video
    Read and listen to the US president's second inaugural address. By New Statesman

  6. Sexual inequality: in search of the female orgasm
    Male sexual dysfunction is a multi-million pound business, while women are taught that scented candles and ylang-ylang should get them in the mood. There has to be another way.
    By Rhiannon and Holly

  7. Why Cameron is giving Downing Street a political edge
    The decision to make the next head of the No.10 Policy Unit a political appointee, rather than a civil servant, shows the PM has listened to complaints from Tory MPs. By Rafael Behr

  8. Osborne is failing on his own terms as deficit increases
    The budget is floating on a raft of windfall revenues. By Alex Hern

  9. Nine Lib Dems rebel as Osborne's welfare bill clears another hurdle
    Charles Kennedy, Sarah Teather and seven others vote against bill capping benefit increases at 1 per cent for each of the next three years. By George Eaton

  10. A living wage alone won't stop runaway inequality
    As well as boosting pay for low earners, we need to tackle excessive pay at the top.
    By John Wood

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