Thursday, May 30, 2013

Will Miliband back an early EU referendum? | Tories rebuked for manipulating benefit stats | Mehdi Hasan on Woolwich and foreign policy

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30 May 2013

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Editor's Choice

Five must-read pieces from the magazine

  1. With a bit of chutzpah, Miliband could rip the Tories in half over the EU. Does he dare?
    The idea of tabling an amendment to the Tory bill demanding a referendum before the next election is gaining currency in Labour ranks. By Rafael Behr

  2. Extremists point to western foreign policy to explain their acts. Why do we ignore them?
    The trigger we refuse to see is our foreign policy. By Mehdi Hasan

  3. Philip Hammond: The rise of the quiet man
    Unquestionably competent, but "a cold fish", Philip Hammond is emerging as an unlikely contender in the race to become the next Tory leader. By Andrew Gimson

  4. Town on BBC2: Welcome to the bay to nowhere
    Oh, our poor towns. What on earth have they done to deserve all this attention?
    By Rachel Cooke

  5. I nearly fell over laughing when I heard Mervyn King say there's a recovery in sight
    Are there any signs that the economy is "healing", as Osborne claims? Not many.
    By David Blanchflower

Five must-read blogs

  1. The Great Crapsby: Why Iain Duncan Smith isn't all he seems
    Like Fitzgerald's doomed, self-fictionalising hero Jay Gatsby, the Work and Pensions Secretary has constructed a personal narrative for himself that doesn't quite take in all the facts. By Sarah Ditum

  2. Grant Shapps rebuked by UK Statistics Authority for misrepresenting benefit figures
    Yet another Conservative politician is caught making it up. By George Eaton

  3. Beware the undertow on the Jersey Shore
    Governor Chris Christie's cosy relationship with Obama could turn and bite him in the Primaries. By Nicky Woolf

  4. The Secret Cuts: Part One, Social Care
    How plans to outsource social care services in Barnet will affect the most vulnerable.
    By Alan White and Kate Belgrave

  5. Will building houses solve Britain's economy?
    No, probably not. But we should do it anyway. By Alex Hern

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    Beautifully expressed through the rousing beat of the gospel choir, the community's sense of love, grief and spiritual survival will be given full voice by the Company and the London Community Gospel Choir.

    Over 500 £12 tickets for every performance. Playing 4 June - 14 August

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