Monday, May 21, 2012

Euro referendum..

Monday, May 21, 2012
David Cameron has announced there's going to be a referendum on the Euro. No don't get too excited, not here, in Greece.

Having calmed down after his excitement at Chelsea's victory in the Champions League on Saturday, the prime minister has issued an ultimatum to the Greek people that fresh elections must decide once and for all whether the country stays in the eurozone.

Former Cabinet ministers Lord Mandelson and Tessa Jowell will kick off a potentially dramatic week at the Leveson inquiry.

The peer witnessed Rupert Murdoch's links with the governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown at close quarters, while Jowell settled a phone hacking case against the media mogul's News International for £200,000 last year.
Ministers, Journalists And Hunt Adviser To Give Evidence At Leveson
Miliband Calls For Social Mobility
Ken Clarke: Europe's Banking System Already 'In Tatters'
Tony Blair 'May Return To Domestic Politics'
Ed Miliband Overtakes David Cameron In Polls For First Time
BLOG POSTS
Angela Eagle: New Session Same Incompetence
Two years into government, after 13 years in opposition (or in the case of the Liberal Democrats almost a century) you would have expected a Queen's Speech packed with ideas. Ministers would have spent months battling it out to have their legislation included in the government's packed programme.
Carla Buzasi: The Week That Was: A Childish Endeavour
Who'd be a mother these days? Forget the exhaustion of broken sleep, it's all the arguments and wrangling over what's right and wrong that looks most painful. In a week when expectant mothers were told they should actually be dieting rather than eating for two and when celebrity mothers were told they "owed" it to their fans to lose their baby weight, David Cameron saw fit to announce the launch of a new government-backed website offering free parenting advice.
Bob Morgan: Party Politics With a Power of Arrest
People are going to be asked to elect Police Commissioners in England and Wales for the first time in November this year. This is a remarkable change in how the Police are run in this country and we are told it is to make the Police more accountable to the people they serve.
Richard Lloyd: The Government Needs to Green Up its Act
Too many of the government's policies - from the carbon floor price to the £11 billion smart meter fiasco - are likely to prove ineffective at reducing energy consumption while consumers foot the bill.
Robert Odaly: Signs of Softening on Greece, But Too Little Too Late
Following the failure on 15 May of the Greek president's last-ditch attempt to put together a parliamentary majority willing to back a government of unity, Greece is heading for another general election, probably on 17 June, the outcome of which is unlikely to reassure financial markets.
Advertisement

You have received this Huffington Post UK newsletter from AOL (UK) Limited, who provides the Huffington Post UK.
You can choose to stop receiving these emails at any time, by updating preferences on your account page.
Privacy Policy  |  The Huffington Post UK is provided by AOL (UK) Limited.
© AOL (UK) Limited its affiliates and licensors.
AOL (UK) Limited, Shropshire House, 11-20 Capper Street, London, WC1E 6JA.

If you believe this has been sent to you in error, please safely unsubscribe.

Copyright © Breaking News Best Site News | Designed With By Blogger Templates
Scroll To Top