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Meanwhile
He thought it was just about coffee and sandwiches. But he ended up taking on the job of branch secretary as it had become vacant. The rest, as they say, is history. Colleagues in the NAHT, where he will take centre stage as its president at its annual conference over the May Day Bank holiday weekend, argue that he has taken to the national role &quot;like a duck to water&quot;. He first gained prominence in the boycott of national curriculum tests in English and maths for 11-year-olds two years ago when he was a prime mover in the motion that led to the action. &quot;It wasn't the tests themselves,&quot; he says. &quot;It was the uses to which they were put that was damaging.&quot; They were such high-stake tests, used as evidence by Ofsted, the education standards watchdog, and thus placing heads' jobs on the line, that a culture of teaching to the tests grew up in schools. He admits to being &quot;disappointed&quot,cheap christian louboutin; that only one in four schools cancelled the tests as a result of the boycott. His school, Athersley South primary school in Barnsley �C a 320-pupil school in one of the authority's most deprived areas �C was one of the 25 per cent. &quot;I got phone calls from heads saying they would like to boycott them but circumstances made it difficult. I could understand that,&quot; he said. However, he does feel that the NAHT gained some ground from its action as the Education Secretary, Michael Gove,ugg boots uk sale, immediately set up an inquiry into the tests, headed by Lord Bew. As a result, this year's tests �C due to be sat by 600,000-year-olds early next month �C will be the first under the new regime. The writing test, the one most criticised by heads and teachers as an inaccurate assessment of what their pupils can achieve, will, for the first time, be assessed by teachers on the pupils' work during the year rather than a sudden end-of-year test externally marked. He fully expects that the result will be to show an improvement in writing standards because it will be a more comprehensive assessment of what children are capable of �C rather than a sudden &quot;do-or-die&quot; test that pupils take under stressful conditions. Whether that triggers a debate about teachers being &quot;soft&quot; in their assessment of their own pupils remains to be seen,coach outlet online. However, he believes there is a danger that the gains from the independent review will be thrown away next year when a new test of spelling, grammar and punctuation �C externally marked �C is to be introduced alongside the existing tests. He believes it &quot;will take us back to the position we were in before the boycott&quot;. Back to the days, in other words, of teaching to the test and more pressure on pupils to score highly in them and the very real prospect of a renewed confrontation with the Government over the use to which it will put them. &quot;I'm now speaking personally but I'd be willing to support a ballot for not doing these tests,&quot; he says. Meanwhile, fresh controversy is also stirring over the new compulsory reading test for all six-year-olds to be introduced in schools this term. It will be a check on their ability to decode words �C a phonics spelling check that will consist of 20 real and 20 made-up words,louis vuitton outlet. &quot;It is an absolutely nonsense test with nonsense words,&quot; he says. He is worried again about the use that ministers will make of the test �C but more angry over the Government's insistence that parents should be told whether their child has passed or failed the test. &quot;I'm not going to be telling six-year-olds that they are failures,&quot; he said. &quot;We will find some other form of words to communicate with parents.&quot; At any rate, he is highly sceptical as to whether it will give a true reflection of children's reading ability,louis vuitton outlet online. He tells of how at one school that piloted the test it was noticeable that the brighter children paused when they came to a &quot;nonsense&quot; word �C thinking they must have heard it wrong and trying to conjure up alternative spellings to turn it into a real word. However, despite coming to national prominence through the national curriculum boycott, he is adamant that he does not think that will be the major issue dominating events at this year's conference at Harrogate next weekend. &quot;It is Ofsted,&quot; he says. &quot;There are heads who are leaving who would have wanted to stay longer but for the new inspection regime.&quot; Since January, inspections have had a harder focus on results, teaching quality and discipline. It is, argue heads, already becoming harder for schools in deprived areas to be ranked &quot;outstanding&quot;. Under further changes planned by the new chief schools inspector, Sir Michael Wilshaw, there could also be &quot;no notice&quot; inspections from September. Schools previously rated as &quot;satisfactory&quot; will be labelled as &quot;requires improvements&quot; and outstanding schools will lose their status if their teaching quality is not rated as outstanding, too. It is, though, the reliance on data �C such as exam and test results �C that most worries Steve Iredale. His school was given a ranking as &quot;good with outstanding qualities&quot; as a result of its previous Ofsted inspection in 2008. Under the new regime, the best it can hope for, he believes, is good. Its national curriculum test results are hovering in the mid-60s �C just above the Government's floor target of 60 per cent. He acknowledges it is possible that he could have improved upon that figure if he had introduced a regime of teaching to the test �C coaching children on how to do best in them. &quot;My principles wouldn't allow it,&quot; he says. &quot;We place a great emphasis on creativity �C outdoor activities where children are encouraged to climb, that kind of thing.&quot; Teaching to the test, he says, might get his pupils a higher mark but at the expense of them enjoying their education and even understanding what they had learnt,gucci Sunglasses. Secondary schools, he points out, mostly re-test pupils upon arrival because they do not believe the national curriculum tests are an accurate reflection of pupils' knowledge and understanding. The tougher inspection regime, he argues, could be seen as a collusion between Michael Gove and Ofsted to create more failures and thus more candidates for &quot;academisation&quot; �C &quot;if there is such a word,&quot; he adds. This, he says, will help speed up the slower response from primary schools wanting to join the Government's flagship scheme. But the outcome is that morale is suffering and more heads are deciding to quit early,coach outlet store. &quot,ralph lauren outlet online;They don't want to have their career blighted by the new regime,&quot; he says. &quot;It is much more data-driven and much more hard-nosed .&quot; Also, heads are becoming reluctant to leave their schools in case Ofsted arrives unannounced on a day when they are not present �C which, he argues, does not help them gain a wider perspective on the education system. It is quite a shopping list of concerns to place before Mr Gove, who will address the conference over the Bank Holiday weekend. The Education Secretary, though, may take comfort from his assessment that there is unlikely to be any stomach for further strike action from head teachers over the Government's changes to their pensions scheme,polo ralph lauren outlet. Steve Iredale predicts the union will refuse to agree to the deal currently on offer �C which would see teachers paying more for their pensions and working until they are older �C but adds: &quot;Whether I think there is any stomach for strike action within the NAHT, I think the answer is 'no'.&quot; All in all, though, it points to quite a tough weekend assignment for Mr Gove. &quot;He says he wants to work with the profession, listen to the profession and actually take note of what they say,&quot,coach outlet; he says. &quot;I think he listens �C but take note?&quot; Next weekend will see. Related articles:  manageable.Biggest Loser</li> and the killing of 47 people</li> in May and Robert in October.</li> </ul>

intervention.&quot
The spectacle of an &quot;interventionist&quot; playing games with a famous work – and talking arty bollocks about the result – goes back to Marcel Duchamp, who in 1919 added a moustache and beard to a cheap reproduction of Mona Lisa and named the result LHOOQ,gucci outlet. (Say the letters in French and you get &quot;Elle a chaud au cul&quot,louis vuitton Wallet;, which translates as &quot;she has a hot arse&quot;.) Duchamps's most famous work is Fountain, a china urinal he tried to exhibit, upside-down, at the Society of Independent Artists show in 1917 (it was rejected,coach outlet store.) In 2006,louis vuitton outlet online, at the Pompidou Centre, the piece was attacked with a hammer by a performance artist called Pinoncelli,ralph lauren outlet online, who claimed Duchamps would have greeted his act as a piece of art. He'd already urinated into it in Nimes in 1993. In 2000, two China-born, London-based, art-graduate mischief-makers, Yuan Chai and Jian Jun Xi, tried to do the same but failed. A year earlier, in October 1999, before spectators at Tate Modern, they'd staged a half-naked pillow fight on Tracey Emin's unmade-bed-with-soiled-knickers exhibit. They insisted their action was a work of art called Two Naked Men Jump into Tracey's Bed,cheap christian louboutin shoes. &quot;We wanted to push her work to further limits, make it more sensational, interesting and significant,&quot; said Mr Xi, who was then aged 37 and now works as a property investor. &quot;We're trying to challenge these artists.&quot; They were detained for four hours by security guards but released without charge. Duchamps was a leading light of the anarchic Dada movement, which started life after the First World War,coach handbags. In one show, the organisers encouraged visitors to smash the exhibits with an axe, as a critical &quot;intervention.&quot,coach outlet online; Less drastic recent ones include the artist who poured black ink into the formaldehyde tank in which a sheep floated in Damien Hirst's Away from the Flock at London's Serpentine Gallery,ralph lauren outlet. The perpetrator claimed his intention was for Hirst to benefit from the publicity (Hirst, unimpressed, had him prosecuted). And there have been subversions by Banksy the street graffitist, who has snuck his own works into museums beside classic works. In the British Museum he hung his version of a primitive cave painting, showing a stick man pushing a supermarket trolley. Banksy himelf is a frequent victim of artistic interventionism. Sometimes you wish these people could go and create something of their own, rather than parasiting on other artists' works. As to the question &quot;Are such events art or vandalism?&quot; the answer's simple,polo ralph lauren outlet. If it's a member of the public, it's vandalism. If it's an artist doing it, it's art. Related articles:  When interviewing All Saints or their &quot</li> . Robert</li> most of all</li> </ul>

Four years ago a Tutsi-led Congolese rebel army
The conflict pits army mutineers against government forces from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and threatens to pull apart a fragile peace deal between Rwanda and its much larger neighbour. &quot;This weekend was very violent, the most intense fighting so far,&quot; said Emmanuel de Merode, the chief warden of DRC's Virunga Park where much of the conflict is taking place. &quot,Ralph Lauren Sale;There was heavy shelling all Saturday and much of Sunday,gucci Sunglasses.&quot; Already at least 7,gucci outlet,000 refugees have fled into Rwanda and a further 14,000 into Uganda to escape the fighting,cheap gucci handbags. Rwanda has strongly denied sending arms and recruits to back a mutiny in the DRC army that began last month and was led by former Tutsi rebels who have previously been linked with the government in Kigali,ralph lauren outlet. But United Nations internal reports, seen by the BBC, claimed that 11 rebel soldiers who were interviewed said they were Rwandan nationals and had been recruited there and sent across the border into the DRC to fight. A similar crisis four years ago prompted the UK and France to intervene in an effort to get Rwanda to use its influence to halt the fighting. Eastern Congo still suffers the after-effects of the Hutu-led genocide in Rwanda that left 800,coach outlet online,000 people dead,Cheap Ugg Boots, many of them ethnic Tutsis, and sent refugees pouring across the border in 1994. Among the refugees were Hutu forces fresh from the massacres who formed a rebel group calling itself the FDLR. Rwanda has repeatedly accused the DRC of harbouring these genocidaires and sent its own forces into eastern Congo to pursue them. The Tutsi-led government in Kigali has also been accused in UN reports of backing proxy groups inside the DRC. Four years ago a Tutsi-led Congolese rebel army, the CNDP, threatened to overrun the region's main aid hub in the city of Goma, sparking an evacuation of international staff. That crisis was resolved after peace talks between Kigali and the government of Joseph Kabila in Kinshasa which called for the CNDP to be integrated into the Congolese army. The Congolese government has been under pressure to hand over former CNDP leader Bosco Ntaganda, who is wanted for war crimes by the International Criminal Court,louboutin shoes, but had been made an army officer under the 2009 peace deal. Ntaganda, who is known as &quot;the Terminator&quot;, launched the April mutiny amid signs that the government was considering surrendering him to the ICC. Other former rebel commanders, unhappy with the army integration process,coach outlet store online, joined him to establish a force calling itself &quot;M23&quot;, thought to number up to 800 soldiers,polo ralph lauren. They have since moved into the remote hills near the border with Rwanda and Uganda. Related articles:  Mark Harland</li> who won the coin toss for the only extra seat</li> and he says this</li> </ul>

Roberts clocked up 155 minutes in her bed
The former Pussycat Dolls star distracted herself from thinking about the horrors of being trapped with the rodents by focusing on the amorous pair,Cheap Ugg Boots. She and the other stars of the ITV1 show had to share their beds with a bunch of unsavoury creatures for a challenge which guaranteed the winner safety from elimination. Boxer David Haye gave up before cockroaches were even let loose in his bed,coach outlet store online, and MP Nadine Dorries managed only a few minutes with scorpions and beetles. Roberts clocked up 155 minutes in her bed,coach outlet, but she was narrowly beaten by campmate Rosemary Shrager endured one minute more after falling asleep while soldier crabs roamed her bed. But when the scores were added to previous &quot,ugg boots;Bush Buddy&quot; challenges, Roberts was declared the winner. Eric Bristow, Dorries,cheap christian louboutin shoes, Colin Baker, Charlie Brooks and Helen Flanagan were left to face the public vote,Ugg Boots Sale UK, while the other stars were given immunity. Viewers tonight saw Hugo Taylor complete his first Bushtucker Trial which saw him face his fear of confined spaces. The Made In Chelsea star had to collect stars from sewer pipes which were infested with critters and pythons. But Taylor conquered his demons to win nine meals for the camp,gucci Sunglasses. He earlier said of his confinement fear: &quot,polo ralph lauren;I can't even go on the Tube in London, I hate it so much.&quot; Bristow had been in a bad mood, grumbling about Shrager's shouting and upsetting Flanagan with a comment about her complexion. After criticising her diet, he told the former Coronation Street star: &quot;That's what done your skin, all that s*** you're eating.&quot; She later sobbed: &quot,christian louboutin sneakers;I love everyone in camp but I'm really sensitive about my skin,coach bags. I know it sounds really stupid, I can't believe I'm crying. It just gets to me because I feel conscious enough because I haven't got any make-up.&quot; PA  Related articles:  you've guessed it</li> Some time ago</li> service vehicles.</li> </ul>

rather the contrary. To wit
The must ban produce from Israeli settlements in the West Bank from entering its markets in order to cut off "a vital source of revenue which allows settlements to thrive", says a report by the Palestinian human rights organisation. The trade,ugg boots uk sale, estimated by the Israeli government to be worth about $300m (?185m) a year, is "an essential step in the process of reinforcing and consolidating the settlement enterprise, while simultaneously ensuring the viability of the entire settlement strategy", according to the report,cheap gucci bags, Feasting on the Occupation. It points out that although the EU repeatedly states that Israeli settlements in the West Bank are illegal under international law, it continues to allow settlement produce to enter its markets. The EU is 's largest trading partner,gucci handbags, receiving about 20% of total Israeli exports. Al Haq estimates that settlements in the Jordan Valley – the large swath of fertile agricultural land in the West Bank that is dominated by Israeli agribusiness – contribute 40% of herbs, 50% of grapes and 40% of dates exported by Israel. "The flourishing agricultural environment in the West Bank, particularly in the Jordan Valley area, coupled with the exploitation of water and other natural resources found in the occupied territory, has … turned Israeli settlements into profitable corporations," says the report. Settlement goods are often labelled "produce of the West Bank" or "produce of Israel", implying it is Palestinian produce or it originates on the Israeli side of the 1967 green line. The British government issued guidelines to UK supermarkets three years ago urging clearer labelling, such as "Israeli settlement produce", to allow consumers to make informed choices about purchases,polo ralph lauren. An EU-wide policy on labelling has been discussed in Brussels, although of settlement produce. Al Haq argues that the EU is obliged by international law to ban trade with settlements. It says that in serious breaches of the fundamental principles of international law, such as colonialism or the appropriation of property,louboutin shoes, states must not assist in maintaining an illegal situation. "While the EU has been quite outspoken in condemning settlements and their expansion, they continue to import produce from these same settlements and in doing so,christian louboutin shoes, help to sustain their very existence," said Shawan Jabarin,cheap christian louboutin, of Al Haq. "As things stand, the EU is doing little more than ticking a box by acknowledging that settlements are illegal. Until they support this rhetoric with action and ensure that no assistance or recognition are provided to settlements, even indirectly, any such criticism will continue to be meaningless." Yigal Palmor, spokesman for the Israeli foreign ministry, said: "Al Haq is confusing a political position with international law. They are entitled to their own political views, but not to their own law,coach bags. The banning of produce on political grounds is not in accordance with international law,, rather the contrary,polo ralph lauren. To wit, no country has legislated in this sense." Related articles: <ul> <li>including all the editorial sections and supplements</li> <li>or watch this .</li> <li>It’s the assistance</li> </ul>

The peer's original private members' bill
Joel Joffe had just arrived on British shores,coach handbags, after being "exited" from South Africa,Ugg Boots Sale UK, when he saw a leaflet offering life membership for the Voluntary Euthanasia Society for just 20 guineas. The human rights lawyer, who once counted Nelson Mandela among his clients, decided to sign up. Forty years on, and now a cross-bench peer, his name has become inextricably linked with the controversial cause of legalising people's right to be helped to die. Though he has a track record in the charity sector, Lord Joffe's energies for the past three years have been concentrated on this single issue. "I have really not focused on anything else", he says with a smile. "It has taken up more of my time than I would care to mention." He is confident that the issue is gathering momentum, not least because of the infamous struggle of motor neurone disease sufferer Diane Pretty, who fought an unsuccessful battle in the European Court of Human Rights to be helped to die by her husband Brian. Pretty wanted to die before she faced the swallowing and breathing difficulties that ensue in the last stages of the disease. "The issue really has taken off and generated a valuable debate in an area which people preferred not to debate. I have been encouraged by the significant support we have received in the Lords," says Lord Joffe. The peer's original private members' bill, first tabled in 2002, proposed enabling a competent adult who is suffering unbearably to receive medical assistance to die at his or own request. Like most private members bills, introduced without government backing, it fell in June 2003,ugg boots. Lord Joffe tabled a revised version in the autumn of 2003, which tightened up eligibility to include only those who were terminally ill; that bill lapsed again in the following summer. A third attempt was thwarted by the general election, when the bill fell once more. Lord Joffe remains undeterred, recalling last week's "incredible turnout" for an intense eight-hour debate session in the Lords. Seventy-five peers took their chance to speak on a report published by a special select committee set up to scrutinise the proposed legislation. That committee's report, published last spring, called for a clear distinction between voluntary euthanasia - where a doctor hastens death at a patient's request - and physician-assisted suicide, where a doctor helps the patient to kill himself. Lord Joffe's concession to the committee, as he prepares to table the bill for a fourth time, is to remove voluntary euthanasia from the bill. He nevertheless seems confident this would not result in a loophole for people such as Pretty, who are not able to self-administer drugs,ralph lauren outlet online. Technology now provides ways for people to ingest liquid lethal medication without much physical manoeuvring, he explains. "It should be possible to cover almost every case and it is most important that there should be a remedy for people who are physically unable,." But the peer will not concede ground on another select committee recommendation, namely that the definition of unbearable suffering be replaced with "unrelievable" or "intractable" suffering or distress. Lord Joffe is aware that his views are not widely shared among faith groups. Born Jewish, he describes himself as an agnostic who believes in many "religious values". "The person who must be the judge of suffering is the patient,gucci outlet," says Lord Joffe, pointing out that feeling that something is 'unbearable' varies with the individual. "The wish of doctors to treat everybody, regardless of whether they wish to be treated or not, is in my view inappropriate. The slogan now is 'patient choice'. If a doctor says 'I can help this person,' and the person does not want to be helped, that is a decision for them,." He counters claims made by the bill's detractors that many people with terminal illness may feel compelled to end their days prematurely to avoid being a further "burden" to their carers if the law were finally introduced. "The key to it is that the sort of people who would ask for assisted dying are independent and used to making their own decisions in their own lives. You find carers mostly want the patients to carry on living, and the patient says: 'No, I don't want to be.' To pretend one is not a burden when one is dying of motor neurone disease is not facing up to reality. "People are burdens and they do not want to be. The carers are the people who want to keep them alive. But it is not for the carers to decide. It is for the individuals. "The underlying principle on which the whole bill is based upon is personal autonomy and people making decisions for themselves. " He is bewildered by the "contradiction" within sections of the disability lobby, some of whom fear that the law will be used to discriminate against disabled people's quality of life and persuade them to end their lives instead. He returns to the fact that the law is only intended for terminally ill people, not those living with disability. "Disabled people who have lived with disability all their lives and fight for equal rights are in a better position to withstand pressure. They have been discriminated against throughout their life. They have not capitulated to the pressure; why should they suddenly cap in the last six months of their lives?" What is most likely to persuade people to see out the end of their lives naturally, the peer says, is good palliative care. He is concerned by the current levels of provision across the country, which he says must be improved. "Sometimes people in pain are suffering and say 'I want to die,' but it is not a serious request", he says. "It is a cry for help, and by pushing them in the direction of palliative care this would normally provide the answer. "I think palliative care is the right answer for the overwhelming majority of cases because have an incredible will to live,louis vuitton outlet online. I am always surprised they do. If I felt this would be harming palliative care I don't think I would be proceeding with the bill. "I strongly support the case for very significant expansion of government funding for hospice and the palliative care movement", he adds emphatically. What Lord Joffe is trying to provide is choice for those who don't want palliative care at all. His sights are set on the Oregon model in the US, where one in every 700 terminally ill patients chooses assisted dying over care. "Some people do not want palliative care. They say: 'I have had a good life and I don't want to spend the last three to four months of my life suffering unbearably or being drugged. It is my right to determine how and when I die.' It is for those people the bill is intended,christian louboutin sale." Aware that private members bills which begin in the Lords almost never make it to statute without the government's blessing, Joffe remains "cautiously optimistic" that the government has finally pricked up its ears to the debate. Poll after poll shows that the overwhelming majority of the general public supports assisted dying laws, though this finding is not reflected in the Commons among elected MPs. "The government is taking a neutral stance - but as Lord May pointed out in the debate the other day on October 10, it is inconceivable that the government would not make the time available,coach outlet store online, bearing in mind the space the government gave to the preservation of foxes." Related articles: <ul> <li>there are fears that many will be pushed into insolvency in 2013</li> <li>In a move that delighted the British Humanist Association</li> <li>electric bikes and one night with dinner at a top campsite on the first night.</li> </ul>

000 to 150
The squeeze on and benefits will push 200,000 more  into, the government has admitted for the first time. This suggests that in total a million extra children will be in poverty as a result of government measures. The extra 200,000 children in poverty is a result of the government's decision to lift most in-work and out-of-work benefits by only 1% a year over the next three years, instead of increasing them in line with inflation,Cheap Ugg Boots. Ministers had been reluctant to state what the impact would be on child poverty,christian louboutin sneakers, an official government measure of relative poverty that looks at the number of households with incomes at 60% or less than the national average household income. But in an answer to a parliamentary question, the work and pensions minister, Esther McVey, estimated that "the uprating measures in 2013-14, 2014-15 and 2015-16 will result in around an extra 200,000 children being deemed by this measure to be in relative income poverty compared to uprating benefits by CPI [consumer price index]". Ministers are trying to push through the benefits squeeze with just one day of debate for the committee stage and third reading of the welfare benefits uprating bill in the Commons on Monday. Labour said the figures showed children were victims of Tory "political games". Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, said: "The true character of this Conservative-led government has now been exposed,ugg boots uk sale. While they give the richest 2% of earners a ?3bn tax cut,coach outlet, 200,000 children will be pushed into poverty and millions of working families made worse off. "Ministers have spent weeks refusing to admit what the impact of their policies would be on child poverty and now we know why. Children are paying the price for and George Osborne's economic failure and the political games they have decided to play."  Liam Byrne,louis vuitton outlet, the shadow work and pensions secretary, said: "The chancellor's pathetic little games have real consequences for millions of families struggling to make ends meet. "Ten years of Tory party detoxification has been destroyed because the chancellor needed a new-year dividing line and Britain's poorest children are paying the price. The nasty party is well and truly back." The (CPAG) also criticised the changes but a Department of Work and Pensions spokesperson said: "Even with plans to limit increases to benefits, people will still see their benefits go up year on year �C there is no freeze in support. And universal credit will make 3m households better off." Ministers have argued that it is misleading to look at the impact of the benefits uprating move in isolation. They have separately said they no longer regard the relative child poverty statistics, introduced by Labour, as a useful or valid measure. "Looking at relative income in isolation is not a helpful measure to track progress towards our target of eradicating child poverty," the parliamentary answer said. Ministers have for some time been arguing that the relative income measure is unhelpful as it focuses on too narrow a definition of poverty. The government has introduced a range of additional measures. Labour points out that David Cameron, when in opposition, repeatedly argued that relative poverty was important and that the Conservative party would measure and act on it,Ugg Boots Sale UK. The government has previously admitted that some families with children might be ?728 a year better off out of work as a result of losing their working tax credits following new rules which came into force in April 2012. Cameron,cheap gucci bags, in his Scarman lecture in 2006,cheap louboutin shoes, said: "I believe that poverty is an economic waste and a moral disgrace. In the past, we used to think of poverty only in absolute terms �C meaning straightforward material deprivation. That's not enough. We need to think of poverty in relative terms, the fact that some people lack those things which others in society take for granted. So I want this message to go out loud and clear: the Conservative party recognises, will measure and will act on relative poverty." CPAG said that the 200,000 increase set out in the written answer should be added to the 800,000 increase in children in relative income poverty by 2020 that the Institute of Fiscal Studies (IFS) found in its analysis of the coalition's welfare cuts. The group said: "This now makes it a total of a million children that the coalition's policies are expected to push into relative income poverty by 2020." The IFS analysis included the impact of a fall in poverty due to the introduction of universal credit. CPAG claimed the government had revised down the number of children that would be taken out of poverty due to the universal credit from 350,cheap christian louboutin,000 to 150,Ralph Lauren Sale,000. Related articles: <ul> <li>because the country's new leadership – which is conservative</li> <li>000 by 2020</li> <li>which now needs a good wipe</li> </ul>

Scott Trust
It's all very well us believing that we are doing a good job upholding the values of the Guardian, but what do the readers and users of our newspapers and family of websites think? Guardian News &amp; Media carries out an annual survey of thousands of readers of the Guardian and Observer, as well as users of guardian.co.uk to find out just that. Once again,cheap louboutin shoes, they have given a ringing endorsement that the Guardian is indeed living its values and is considered a force for good in society. The survey results show sustainability continues to be an extremely important issue and that there is high praise for our coverage in key areas such as social justice and human rights. The survey, which was completed by 5,064 readers and users, shows strong awareness of the mission of our owners,ugg boots, the, with an overwhelming majority believing that the trust's is reflected in our content. There has been a sharp increase to 90% (80%) in the number of Guardian and Observer newspaper readers who value GNM's sustainability strategy,christian louboutin sneakers, with a smaller increase to 80% (77%) of guardian.co.uk users saying it was either "very important" or "quite important". However, there was a lower interest among our audience for producing an independently assured sustainability report, with 59% of web users and 43% of Guardian readers saying it was important. On the question of whether it is important for the Guardian to be open with readers in the way it makes editorial decisions and operates as a business,, the results were slightly higher overall this year, with 96% of Guardian and Observer readers, and 93% of guardian.co.uk users, agreeing. This year, for the first time we asked whether we are in fact open about our business practices. Three-quarters of newspaper readers felt we are, with two-thirds of web users also agreeing. Only a tiny percentage disagreed, with many saying they neither agree nor disagree, suggesting they may not have enough information on which to base their answer. We also asked in 2012 whether readers and users felt there was any difference in importance between providing high-quality content,Cheap Ugg Boots, increasing the amount of recycled and certified newsprint in our newspapers, and reducing our carbon footprint. The results show that there was almost equal concern about all these aspects of our business. Our content continues to have a significant influence on the ethical behaviour of our audience, with a high proportion stating that the Guardian and Observer as well as guardian.co.uk had helped them take a more active role in society,louboutin shoes, particularly in terms of discussing issues raised in the newspaper with friends or colleagues, boycotting products or brands, signing petitions and becoming involved with charities. Many readers and users also state that our coverage has influenced their behaviour with regard to buying fair-trade products as well as encouraging them to save energy and travel less. Does Guardian content reflect society? Guardian and Observer readers are more likely than guardian.co.uk users to think that the content of the newspaper reflects society demographically. For example, nearly three-quarters (72%) of Guardian readers and 70% of Observer readers felt that the ethnicity of UK society is adequately reflected, compared with nearly two-thirds of Observer readers and guardian.co.uk users. The areas of society where all GNM platforms perform well is gender and sexual orientation �C 85% of Guardian readers, 83% Observer and 80% guardian,cheap gucci bags.co.uk believe gender is adequately reflected in our content. On the issue of sexual orientation, the figures were 79% for the Guardian, 78% for the Observer and 73% for guardian.co.uk,ralph lauren polo. Across all three brands, the content seen to be least representative is disability and regional diversity in UK society. Observer readers feel particularly strongly that regionality is under-reflected in its content, with fewer than four out of 10 readers feeling it is representative, a similar result to the previous two years. Similarly, disability is seen as being distinctly under-reflected. However, there was a slight improvement to 54% (53%) for Guardian readers and 45% (39%) for the Observer. Coverage of sustainability issues In line with the previous two years' scores, the coverage ratings on sustainability issues are higher for the Guardian and Observer than for guardian.co.uk. Content on social justice and human rights gained the highest scores, and improved on the previous year, with 91% of Guardian and Observer readers, and 83% of guardian.co.uk users, rating it as excellent or good. Next was our coverage of climate change, with 77% of Guardian readers giving it an excellent or good rating, compared with 75% of Observer readers and 67% of web users. On global development, the scores were 73% for the Guardian, 71% for the Observer and 65% for the website. Ethical finance and business scored one of the lowest rankings, with only half of all respondents rating it as excellent or good, but this was the area that the largest number of readers and users wanted to see more coverage of. Influence on readers' sustainable behaviours GNM's carbon-positive ambition is based on the recognition that while we should concentrate on minimising the negative impacts of our operations, the most important step we can take is to positively influence readers, businesses, institutions and politicians through our editorial content. The annual readers' survey is a key method by which we can create a basic measurement of whether we are succeeding in this. Once again, the survey shows that readers and users perceive our coverage as having some influence on a number of areas of their everyday lives. Where we have the strongest influence is in changing purchasing decisions due to corporate behaviour, with 82% of Guardian readers, 79% of Observer readers and 69% of website users saying our content has had an impact. Three-quarters of newspaper readers and 56% of online respondents also said our coverage encouraged them to purchase more fair-trade and sustainable products,cheap christian louboutin shoes. A majority say that our content has led them to consume less, with more than half our newspaper readers saying it has had an impact in helping them find new ways to save water and energy at home, as well as identifying and supporting social charities. Encouraging a more active role in society GNM brands perform well when it comes to encouraging readers to take a more active role in society. The Guardian appears to have more of an influence than the other two brands. More than 80% of Guardian readers say they have talked to friends and colleagues about issues raised in the paper, compared with 71% of guardian.co.uk users. More than two-thirds of Guardian and Observer readers have boycotted a product or brand because of our coverage, compared with just over half for guardian.co.uk. A little over half of respondents for the newspapers said they have signed petitions as a result of being prompted by coverage, and just under a third have written to a politician and campaigned on a issue. Editorial content When asked whether certain areas of editorial content should be influenced by environmental and ethical concerns, the overwhelming response to every area of content was yes. As seen on other issues, the results show the online audience feel slightly less strongly about this than the newspaper readers, but overall are still firmly in agreement. For example,cheap christian louboutin, more than 80% of Guardian and Observer readers feel that the motoring editorial coverage should be guided by ethical and environmental concerns. Other areas considered important were travel (86% Guardian, 83% Observer), food and drink (85% and 84%), and finance (86% and 83%). However, there was a big gap between what readers and users think should happen and whether they believe specific editorial areas do indeed reflect ethical and environmental concerns. For our motoring coverage, for example, only about half our readers and users believe these issues are embedded in what we write. Trust and bias This year has seen another rise in the number of readers and users who believe our coverage is trustworthy to more than 90% of Guardian readers, 92% of Observer readers and 86% for guardian.co.uk. The percentage of respondents who believe that our news coverage is unbiased has also risen to 58% for the Guardian and Observer and 44% for the web, although it is still well below the figures for trustworthiness. On the question of whether our writers cover a broad range of perspectives, another improvement was seen, with more than 80% of Guardian and Observer readers agreeing, falling to 73% among online users. There was also a strengthening in the number of overall respondents believing we give under-represented groups in society a voice �C 70% of Guardian readers, 60% at the Observer, and 62% on guardian.co.uk. When asked about policies in place that ensure GNM's openness and accountability, there was high awareness and advocacy of the corrections columns and (CiF). About three-quarters are aware of CiF, but there is little awareness of the Living Our Values sustainability audit, with 11% of Guardian readers and only 8% of online users aware of it. Scott Trust With regard to the, Guardian and Observer readers (75% and 80% respectively) were far more likely to be aware of the ownership of GNM and its mission than guardian.co.uk users (54%). These percentage scores have showed a real rise since 2009, which were 70% (Guardian), 62% (Observer) and 45% (guardian.co.uk). When asked whether they felt the trust's mission is reflected in the content of the newspaper/website, 94% of Guardian readers, 96% of Observer readers and 90% of website users agreed. Related articles: <ul> <li>apparently hoped for something a bit better than this</li> <li>Meridian South</li> <li>True to form</li> </ul>