Nick Clegg: Politicians should “treat people like adults”
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Nick Clegg: Politicians should “treat people like adults”
Nick Clegg has called for an end to the “mudslinging” in the debate on the AV referendum and for both sides to treat the public “like adults”.
Campaigning ahead of English council elections and the 5 May referendum, the Lib Dem leader told the BBC that voters were turned off by “personal vitriol”.
Senior Lib Dems have urged David Cameron to disassociate himself from attacks on Mr Clegg by the No campaign.
Mr Clegg also said he was standing up to the PM when he disagreed with him.
The deputy prime minister was asked by the BBC’s Political Editor Nick Robinson, who is interviewing the leaders of the three main parties on the campaign trail, whether he should publicly pick more fights with the prime minister on issues where they differ.
He replied: “I think, at election time, it is inevitable isn’t it that people want to get more tribal, they want to duff up the other side.
“It is a balance you need to strike in a coalition government because clearly we are different parties, different leaders, different values. Always have, always will be but you also need to work together in the national interest to thrash things out.
“So quite a lot of the differences and, indeed arguments, you have are necessarily arguments you have behind closed doors.”
“A local Lib Dem councillor told him that he was becoming “the butt of comedy” before asking him, to widespread applause, “can you not have a slight argument with Mr Cameron?”
Lib Dem Business Secretary Vince Cable openly criticised a recent speech by David Cameron on immigration and senior figures such as Chris Huhne and Lord Ashdown have criticised the Conservatives’ tactics during the AV referendum campaign, where the coalition partners are on different sides of the argument.
In contrast, Mr Clegg has faced claims he is not asserting his independence enough in government.
The deputy prime minister said it was inevitable that the parties would “start accentuating” their differences during an election campaign.
But he rejected suggestions the public “don’t know” where he disagreed with Mr Cameron, stressing the government’s approach would be different if it was not for Lib Dem involvement in the coalition.
“You just have to look at the things I say, week in week out, where we clearly differ.
“If you look at things the Lib Dems have brought to this government. It would not have happened without Lib Dems that we have now given a great tax break to 23 million basic rate taxpayers, that pensioners would not have got a better deal – that their pensions are going up as of two weeks ago – without Liberal Democrats. These are big differences.”
Amid claims by senior Lib Dems that opponents of changing the voting system are personalising the campaign by attacking the Lib Dem leader, Mr Clegg said the public wanted to focus on arguments over the merits of the two systems.
“I think what everyone should do on the yes campaign and the no campaign is at least treat people like adults. They do not want a mud slinging debate.”
“People know they have to answer the simple question ‘do you want the current system that produced the expenses scandal and all the rest of it or do you want something better. That is the question and frankly however much mud is slung that will remain the question until 5 May.”
No 10 has said the Conservatives’ referendum campaign is focused on pointing out the deficiencies of alternative vote and the strengths of first-past-the-post and not on attacking Mr Clegg.
But former Labour Cabinet minister Hazel Blears said opponents of AV were right to focus on Mr Clegg since he was responsible for the referendum in the first place.
“Unfortunately it is a fact that Mr Clegg has broken promises he made at the general election – tuition fees, the increase to VAT and the cuts being felt by councils across the country,” she said. “AV would ensure these types of U-turns take place time and time again.”
More than 9,500 council seats in 279 English local authorities are up for grabs on 5 May in the biggest test of public opinion since last year’s general election
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The civilian death toll has been high in Misrata, the rebels’ last stronghold in western Libya France and Italy have said they are to send small teams of military officers to advise Libyan rebels who are seeking to topple Col Muammar Gaddafi.
French officials said fewer than 10 would be sent, while Italy’s defence minister announced that 10 would go.
The UK said on Tuesday it was sending a similar team to the city of Benghazi.
Meanwhile, the UN has said the reported use of cluster munitions by Col Gaddafi’s forces in the city of Misrata “could amount to international crimes”.
“Reportedly one cluster bomb exploded just a few hundred metres from Misrata hospital, and other reports suggest at least two medical clinics have been hit by mortars or sniper fire,” UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said in a statement.
“There are also repeated reports of snipers deliberately targeting civilians in Misrata, as well as in other Libyan towns.”
Ms Pillay said the deliberate targeting of medical facilities was a war crime, and the deliberate targeting or reckless endangerment of civilians might also amount to serious violations of international human rights law or international humanitarian law.
“I urge the Libyan authorities to face the reality that they are digging themselves and the Libyan population deeper and deeper into the quagmire. They must halt the siege of Misrata and allow aid and medical care to reach the victims of the conflict,” she added.
She also urged Nato forces to exercise the utmost caution and vigilance so as not to kill civilians by mistake. French President Nicolas Sarkozy has promised to intensify the alliance’s air strikes.
Inspired by uprisings in neighbouring Tunisia and Egypt, the rebels have been fighting Col Gaddafi’s forces since February. The rebels, based in Benghazi, hold much of the east, while Col Gaddafi’s forces remain in control of Tripoli and most of the west.
Nato is currently in charge of the no-fly zone and coalition operations have been largely confined to air attacks.
British journalist James Hider in Misrata: “The rebels say they will fight until they die” (This video footage cannot be verified independently for authenticity)
On Wednesday, Libyan state television reported that Nato aircraft were bombarding telecoms and broadcasting infrastructure in several cities.
And Maj Gen John Lorimer, a spokesman for the UK Chief of Defence Staff, said that on Tuesday, RAF Tornado and Typhoon aircraft had used precision-guided weapons to attack three tanks and a vehicle-mounted artillery piece “in and around” the besieged western city of Misrata.
French government spokesman Francois Baroin reaffirmed that France had no intention of sending a military force to Libya. “We do not envisage deploying combat ground troops,” he said.
However, Defence Minister Gerard Longuet said the idea of such a deployment was “a real issue” that deserved consideration by the UN Security Council.
The BBC’s Hugh Schofield reports from Paris that in France, as in Britain, there is concern about the Libyan campaign turning into an open-ended commitment as both governments push to its limits the UN resolution endorsing the protection of civilians in Libya.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy held talks with rebel leader Mustafa Abdul Jalil in Paris The comments came as the chairman of the Libyan rebel Transitional National Council, Mustafa Abdul Jalil, met French President Nicolas Sarkozy in Paris, where he thanked the French “for their brave decision to support the Libyan revolution”.
Mr Sarkozy said the rebels had pledged to build democracy in Libya “by the ballot box, not atop a tank”.
He also pledged to “intensify the strikes”, an aide said, although no further details were given.
The British team, which like the French and Italian teams is expected to comprise about 10 advisers, is set to provide logistics and intelligence training in Benghazi.
UK Foreign Secretary William Hague said the officers would advise the NTC [opposition National Transitional Council] on how to “improve their military organisational structures, communications and logistics”, and would not be involved in any fighting.
The move complied with a UN resolution to protect civilians in Libya, which forbids foreign occupation forces, Mr Hague said.
UN Security Council Resolution 1973, passed in March, authorised “all necessary measures short of occupation” to protect civilians.
Libyan Foreign Minister Abdul Ati al-Obeidi said the presence of foreign military personnel would be a “step backwards”.
He proposed that there should be a ceasefire followed by an interim period of maybe six months to prepare for an election which would be supervised by the UN, as proposed by the African Union roadmap.
He said countries he had visited had been supportive of a suggested ceasefire and helping the humanitarian effort, but said the UK, France and Italy were being unhelpful.
Misrata, the rebels’ last stronghold in the west, has faced weeks of heavy bombardment.
Fighting was continuing on Wednesday in the centre of the city, with rebels telling Reuters that they had made some gains.
The conflict in Misrata has turned the city into a battlefield, causing hundreds of deaths. Col Gaddafi’s forces have been accused of using heavy weaponry to fire indiscriminately on civilian areas.
The Libyan government says it is trying to protect the citizens of Misrata and to help international aid organisations provide aid there.
Violence was also reported in Libya’s western mountains, where rebels said Col Gaddafi’s forces had been shelling several towns, forcing thousands of residents to flee to Tunisia, the Associated Press reported.
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Ed Miliband and Nick Clegg are campaigning for their parties in Wales Labour leader Ed Miliband and Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg will hit the Welsh assembly election campaign trail on Wednesday.
Mr Miliband will join his party’s campaign in west Wales while Deputy Prime Minister Mr Clegg visits south Wales.
Plaid Cymru will pledge support for hospital services and the Tories will focus on the economy.
All four parties have now published their manifestos for the election.
It is Mr Miliband’s first visit of the campaign for the election on 5 May, when Labour hopes to win a majority in the assembly.
Welsh Labour leader Carwyn Jones has said a “comfortable working majority” is possible.
In a visit to Wales earlier this month, Mr Clegg said the Liberal Democrats, who have held six seats in the assembly since 1999, did not relish cutting public spending, but the UK government had to sort out the country’s finances.
Plaid will promise to protect local hospitals on Wednesday. It has rejected claims from Labour that it is scaremongering over the issue.
Conservatives in south west Wales will be talking about their plans to create a more sustainable economy.
Political leaders put aside party rivalries on Tuesday to demand all votes in the assembly election are counted overnight.
Returning officers in north Wales plan to start counting the day after polls close and have resisted calls to carry out the task overnight, as other regions intend.
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European shares gain on strong corporate results
Last Updated at 09:14 ET
Market index Current value Trend Variation % variationDow Jones 12266.75 Up 65.16 0.53%Nasdaq 2744.97 Up 9.59 0.35%S&P 500 1312.62 Up 7.48 0.57%FTSE 100 6029.37 Up 132.50 2.25%Dax 7235.13 Up 195.82 2.78%BBC Global 30 5717.62 Up 55.06 0.97%
Data delayed by 15 mins
Stock markets across Europe have seen big gains following a raft of strong corporate earnings reports.
The UK’s benchmark FTSE 100 rose 2.2% to 6,024.86, fuelled by mining stocks as the price of gold reached a record high above $1,500 an ounce.
Germany’s Dax index rose by 3% and French stocks were also higher.
Companies such as Goldman Sachs, Intel and IBM reported strong results on Tuesday, with results from Apple and American Express due on Wednesday.
Shares in UK miners Xstrata and Antofagasta gained more than 3% each.
UK chipmaker Arm Holdings also gained after US rival Intel said first-quarter earnings had risen by 29% to $3.16bn (£1.95bn).
Fellow chipmakers in Europe joined the upwards trend. Germany’s Infineon rose 4% and STMicroelectronics was almost 5% higher in Paris.
Shares in UK film studio Pinewood Shepperton, the home of Harry Potter and James Bond, rose 4% after it received an approach from a possible second bidder.
Italian car maker Fiat rose 4.3% after it reported a trading profit of 251m euros, slightly above analysts’ forecasts.
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Prime Minister David Cameron has revealed he will not be wearing a morning suit to the royal wedding, but what are the pros and cons of morning dress against a lounge suit?
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Crime statistics: Falls in almost all major categories The number of crimes recorded by police in England and Wales fell by 6% in the year to end of December 2010.
All types of recorded crime fell, except sexual offences and some types of theft, up 3% and 1% respectively.
Violence recorded by police fell. But there were also contradictory figures on whether home burglaries were up or down.
The figures continue a general trend of falling crime and rising confidence in police.
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Mr Kouzaris and his university friend Mr Cooper took photos of themselves on the night they were killed The parents of one of two English men killed while on holiday in the US have said their lives have been “shattered”.
The bodies of university friends James Kouzaris, 24, from Northampton, and James Cooper, 25, of Warwick, were found in Sarasota, Florida on Saturday.
It is understood both men had been shot several times. A 16-year-old has been arrested over the killings.
Mr Cooper’s parents said he was “gentle, kind, compassionate, clever and an athlete”.
Prosecutors in Florida have said they intend to charge the arrested boy, Shawn Tyson, as an adult.
Stanley and Sandra Cooper, from Hampton Lucy, near Warwick, had been on holiday with the two men.
“As parents, our lives have been shattered, but through us and his friends and family he will live on,” they said.
Their son once worked as a tennis coach in Warwickshire and played Andy Murray in a junior tournament.
Detectives in Florida have released CCTV pictures of the two men in a Sarasota bar hours before they were killed.
They are also following up a number of leads gleaned from photographs which were recovered from one of their cameras.
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Key ANC figures have defended their youth president’s right to sing the struggle song The head of South Africa’s ANC Youth League, Julius Malema, has taken to the witness stand in a high-profile hate speech trial.
Huge screens have been erected outside the High Court in Johannesburg to allow his supporters to watch proceedings.
An Afrikaans community is seeking a ban on Mr Malema singing a controversial apartheid-era song with the words “shoot the Boer”.
“Boer” means farmer in Afrikaans and they say its use incites racial hatred.
Key figures of the African National Congress who have come to lend their support to Mr Malema have said the song is part of the ANC’s history, part of their struggle, says the BBC’s Karen Allen who is outside the court.
Far from it being a direct call to violence, they say it is a way of commemorating South Africa’s recent history, our correspondent says.
Mr Malema sang the song at a rally in Johannesburg last year, causing a row in a country where racism is still a challenge, 16 years after the end of white-minority rule.
AfriForum, an Afrikaans pressure group, brought the case against Mr Malema. The group says his actions are responsible for a spate of murders of white farmers.
Since the trial began on 11 April, key figures, including ANC Secretary-General Gwede Mantashe, have defended their youth president’s right to sing the struggle song.
“It’s about protecting a history and heritage,” Mr Mantashe told the court on Tuesday.
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The proposed increase would take the EU budget for 2012 to £117bn. A demand for a 4.9% increase in the European Union’s annual budget is “completely unacceptable”, a UK government source has said.
Ministers would “work with international partners to fight for the best possible deal for the British taxpayer”, they told the BBC.
The EU’s executive arm, the European Commission, says the rise is needed to fund existing spending commitments.
But the government has called for the budget to be capped in future.
The above-inflation 4.9% increase would take the commission’s total funding for 2012 to 132.7bn euros (£117bn).
The Downing Street source pointed out that the budget was within the framework which runs up to 2013, which was agreed to by the previous Labour administration in 2005 and meant the UK did not have a veto.
He added that, last year, the EU Commission had proposed a 6% increase, but that the UK and other EU partners had reduced this to 2.9%.
The UK, France and Germany have also proposed that the EU budget be frozen until 2020, with any increases linked to inflation.
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David Haye’s world heavyweight title unification bout with Wladimir Klitschko is set to take place on 2 July in Hamburg.
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Vladimir Putin warned against the risk of being weak and overly dependent on the outside world Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has unveiled plans to reverse Russia’s declining population.
The government will spend 1.5tn roubles ($53bn; £33bn) on raising the birth rate and extending life expectancy.
He announced the plan in a key speech to the Duma on the economy ahead of presidential elections in March 2012.
The prime minister has hinted he may seek to return to the presidency, but it is unclear whether the incumbent Dmitry Medvedev would make way for him.
Mr Putin, widely seen as the power behind the throne in Russia, stood down as president at the last election because of a constitutional limit on his term in office, and backed Mr Medvedev – a close political ally – as his successor.
The speech was seen as an opportunity for Mr Putin to outline his economic policies ahead of the presidential elections, as well as parliamentary elections due in December.
The prime minister positioned himself as a political hardliner, in contrast with Mr Medvedev who has presented a more liberal face and greater openness to the West during his presidency.
“Let’s be frank – in the modern world, if you are weak, there is always someone who will come in and unequivocally recommend which way to go”
Vladimir Putin Russian prime minister
The Russian premier, whose government has been criticised in the West for stifling democracy, once again said that political stability was more important than liberalising too fast.
“The country needs a decade of strong, calm development, without different kinds of swings, poorly thought out experiments based on at times unjustified liberalism or, on the other hand, on social demagoguery,” he said, reminding voters of the disasters of the 1990s.
Mr Putin emphasised the need for the Russian economy to diversify away from energy and mineral exports, and reduce its economic dependence on the outside world.
“The oil boom we are witnessing only underlines the need to move quickly to a new model of economic development,” he said.
“Economic weakness and sensitivity to external shocks result in threats to national sovereignty.
“Let’s be frank – in the modern world, if you are weak, there is always someone who will come in and unequivocally recommend which way to go, what policy to conduct, what path to choose.”
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In a surprise initiative, he called for “demography projects” in a country whose population has fallen 6% since the mid-90s.
“First, we expect the average life expectancy to reach 71 years,” he said.
“Second, we expect to increase the birth rate by 25-30% in comparison to the 2006 birth rate.”
Russia – which confirmed its status as the world’s biggest oil producer – has been riding high on energy prices.
The prime minister said the economy had grown by 4.4% in the first quarter of the year, making it the best performer in the G8 group of major economies.
And despite his calls for a more diversified economy, Mr Putin said the recent Fukushima disaster, and the resulting backlash against nuclear energy in Europe, would only increase demand for Russian oil and gas exports.
With oil revenues surging, he said the government would cut its budget deficit to 1%-1.5% this year and eliminate it altogether in the future.
To support economic development, Mr Putin advocated the lifting of barriers to foreign investment in “strategic sectors” in Russia.
He said the government aimed to attract $50bn-60bn in foreign capital in the coming years, compared with a rate of $40.5bn in 2010.
Addressing the pharmaceutical industry, he hinted that companies doing business in Russia may be required to invest more money in the country.
“We spend billions on orders of medical equipment from foreign companies,” he said. “I think it’s natural to state that the foreign partners would also gradually move to Russia.”
An issue of concern to many voters is inflation.
Wildfires last summer sparked shortages and sharp rises in grains and other foodstuffs.
The government was closely watching the areas affected by the fires, he said, adding that inflation would not exceed 7.5% this year.
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Ecclestone said selling F1 to a media company would restrict negotiations with rival broadcasters Bernie Ecclestone has said reports that Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation is in talks to buy Formula 1 are “rubbish”.
Sky News said the media mogul’s company could make a joint bid with Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim, who sponsors the Sauber team.
However, such a move could face regulatory hurdles and could breach F1’s own Concorde Agreement with the teams.
Mr Ecclestone told the Times newspaper: “Formula One is not for sale.”
F1 is owned by the private equity firm CVC Partners, which paid about $1.7bn for the business in 2005.
Any takeover would be subject to re-negotiating the Concorde Agreement, a commercial arrangement involving the racing teams, CVC and the sport’s governing body, the FIA.
This agreement says that the sport should be shown on free-to-air television where possible.
However, the current agreement runs out at the end of 2012, and the signatories are in the process of negotiating a new one.
The BBC currently has the broadcasting rights to F1 until 2013.
Mr Ecclestone, who runs F1 on behalf of CVC, told the Times on Wednesday that selling the business to News Corp would complicate F1’s freedom to negotiate rights to screen the sport.
“We would not sell to a media company because it would restrict the ability to negotiate with other broadcasters,” he said.
News Corp, which owns 39% of broadcaster BSkyB and is trying to buy the rest of the company, could face regulatory hurdles if it took on broadcasting rights.
In 1998, News Corp tried to buy the Manchester United football team but was blocked by the Competition Commission because of Sky’s dominance in broadcasting the sport.
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Christina Aguilera performed the song Express from her film Burlesque The X Factor has escaped censure by media regulator Ofcom over raunchy performances by Rihanna and Christina Aguilera during last year’s final.
Ofcom said it received 2,868 complaints that the pre-watershed performances were “too sexually explicit”.
But it ruled that although Rihanna’s routine “featured some gentle thrusting”, it was “suitably limited”.
It added Aguilera’s performance was justified as she was singing a song from her film, Burlesque.
Ofcom noted that Rihanna – who performed her hit What’s My Name – was largely shot at a wide angle to show all of the dancers on the stage and was done so from a distance.
It added although the dance routine had some “mildly sexual overtones”, the camera panned quickly and continuously throughout the performance, resulting in the shots of the individual dance movements being very brief.
“Ofcom was therefore of the view that, taken as a whole, the performance by Rihanna was presented in a style which would not have exceeded the likely expectations of the audience,” the regulator said.
‘Editorially justified’
For Aguilera, Ofcom said the performance taken as a whole was sexualised to some extent due to the nature of the dancers’ revealing costumes.
As it reflected the burlesque theme and storyline of the singer’s film Burlesque – which she was promoting – it was editorially justifiied, the adjudication added.
Ofcom said approximately 2,000 of the 2,868 complaints about the programme were received following coverage about the performances in a daily national newspaper reporting on concerns the show was too explicit for a family programme.
After including a number of still images of the performances that were “significantly more graphic” than the material that had been broadcast in the programme, Ofcom concluded readers would have been left with the impression the programme was more graphic than was broadcast.
Elsewhere, Ofcom found 4Music and MTV in breach of its code for protecting children from unsuitable material after they both broadcast the music video for Flo Rider’s Turn Around before the watershed.
Ofcom said it received three complaints from 4Music views and two complaints from MTV viewers about the scheduling of the video which featured female dancers in bikinis “repeatedly shaking and playfully slapping their buttocks”.
“The cumulative effect of the repeated close up images of the female dancers’ buttocks, together with some of the provocative dancing and actions in the video, resulted in the video’s imagery conveying a highly sexualised theme,” Ofcom said.
It concluded the video was unsuitable for children and as it was broadcast at various times of the day, and sufficient measures were not in place to prevent children from viewing it.
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Devices were sent to Neil Lennon (L), Trish Godman and Paul McBride QC Parcel bombs sent to Celtic manager Neil Lennon and two high-profile fans of the club were designed to cause “real harm”, according to police.
The liquid-based devices were addressed to Lennon, Paul McBride QC and former Labour MSP Trish Godman.
Strathclyde Police Det Supt John Mitchell, of Strathclyde Police, told a press conference it had been a “despicable and cowardly act”.
The devices were found at various locations in the west of Scotland.
The first suspect package was intercepted by the Royal Mail in Kirkintilloch, East Dunbartonshire, on 26 March and was addressed to Mr Lennon at Celtic’s training ground in nearby Lennoxtown.
Two days later a device was delivered to Labour politician Ms Godman’s constituency office in Bridge of Weir, Renfrewshire. Her staff were suspicious of the package and contacted Strathclyde Police.
Detectives initially treated the two parcels as “elaborate hoaxes” designed to cause distress rather than serious injury but further analysis has led to them being reclassified as “viable explosive devices”.
The third package was addressed to Mr McBride at the Faculty of Advocates in Edinburgh.
It is believed to have been posted in Ayrshire before being found in a letter box by a postal worker on Friday and taken to a Royal Mail sorting office in Kilwinning, where police were contacted.
Detectives are also investigating another package addressed to Neil Lennon which was found at a sorting office in Saltcoats, North Ayrshire, on 4 March but this has not been confirmed as an explosive device.
It is understood that specialist anti-terrorist officers are involved in the investigation but a source close to the inquiry said they were “not linking this to any terrorist organisation”.
Lennon, a 39-year-old Catholic from Lurgan, County Armagh, has endured threats, abuse and violence since joining Celtic in 2000.
In January this year bullets addressed to the Celtic manager were intercepted at a sorting office in Glasgow. They appeared to have been sent from an address in Northern Ireland.
Mr McBride is one of the highest-profile QCs in Scotland and a well-known Celtic fan, who has acted for the club and Mr Lennon on several occasions.
Ms Godman has a lower public profile than Mr Lennon or Mr McBride, but is well known in political circles as an avid Celtic fan.
Until dissolution of the Scottish Parliament last month, she was deputy presiding officer and the Labour MSP for West Renfrewshire.
On her last day as an MSP she was pictured in the Holyrood chamber wearing a Celtic football top.
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The report said the manifestos were devalued by a lack of detail on how spending commitments would be met Much of the country’s current funding difficulties are being “wished away” by politicians, according to analysis of the four main party manifestos.
Glasgow University’s Centre for Public Policy for Regions (CPPR) compares costings contained in the manifestos, against a backdrop of a falling budget.
It said the absence of detail on how spending commitments would be met devalued the documents.
One of the authors said the parties were not being up-front with voters.
John McLaren said: “Difficult decisions will have to be made after the election.”
He cited the Liberal Democrat and Conservative plans to change Scottish Water’s structure as one example of the parties releasing “substantial” funding which could be spent elsewhere.
But he said those two parties had failed to specify the level of efficiency savings it planned to make across the public sector, while Labour and the SNP had promised 2%.
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The report’s conclusion said: “Serious questions have to be asked of all of the four main parties as to whether what they have outlined in their manifestos is sufficient to meet the challenges facing them in terms of the real terms cuts to their budget over the next four years.
“Voters are entitled to be highly sceptical as to whether what they are being offered in their manifestos is actually what will happen, rather than a pale imitation of the difficult choices that await post-election.”
It said the manifestos contained a “plethora of seeming commitments and pledges”.
But it added that when the proposals were broken down they were often found to have no increased funding attached to them. In some cases it points out that the funding is expected to arise from generic efficiency savings.
“The true worth of such commitments must therefore be called into question in many cases,” the report said.
It said there was no way of accommodating for inflationary pressures or no contingencies if costs rose faster than projected.
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