News In Brief
Senior Liberal Democrat Sir David Steel has taken his seat in the House of Lords amid speculation that he may go onto the front bench as deputy leader of his party's peers. Lord Steel of Aikwood is one of 21 retiring MP's promoted to the Lords in April. His sponsor peers were Lord Jenkins of Hillhead, and party colleague and frontbencher Lord Mackie of Benshie
Senior police officers, women's rights campaigners, and victims have welcomed a new law designed to combat stalkers. The Protection from Harrasment Act received the Royal Assent shortly before the general election, and the government has confirmed that it will come into force on Monday. Introduced by the previous Tory government last year, the act lays out a twin track strategy, creating new civil and criminal remedies, and introducing the deterrent of long prison sentences and big fines for offenders.
Private Finance Initiatives in the National Health Service are to be urgently reviewed. Health Minister Alan Milburn said the aim was to "prioritise the schemes currently battling for the limited private and public sector resources". MPs are being invited to make representations to ministers before final decisions are made at the end of the month on which projects are to go ahead. "Only if resources are concentrated on those schemes with the greatest need will real progress be made and schemes delivered," he said. Each scheme will be given separate gradings on need, how well the scheme fits with the PFI process and how far negotiations have progressed.
A Tory has admitted throwing a bucket of water over a former colleague in an election day bust up. Mike Keith-Smith, who campaigned for the UK Independence Party, brought the private prosecution after Conservative councillor Frank Worley threw a large bucket of water through his car window. At the time Mr Keith-Smith was shouting four-letter insults against Tory leader John Major through a hand-held megaphone, Portsmouth magistrates court heard. Mr Worley's defence lawyer said the councillor had faced "enormous provocation". This is the latest turn in a series of incidents involving the Conservative Association which saw Keith-Smith, a former member of the Association, campaign under the banner of 'Tory Sleazebusters' during the general election. The UKIP supporter's car had already driven once past Worley's home in Portsmouth, which was being used as a local committee room by the Conservatives, with Keith-Smith using four-letter words over the megaphone in references to Mr Major and Tory candidate David Martin. Worley, a councillor on Portsmouth City Council, pleaded guilty to the assault. The Chairman of the bench said it was a "foolish incident" and gave Worley a conditional discharge for six months.
The Prime Minister has unveiled plans for a powerful watchdog aimed at
putting green issues at the heart of Government.
Mr Blair's initiative was given a guarded welcome by environmental groups and
Opposition MPs, who warned that Ministers must not "backtrack" on election promises
to curb global warming at the forthcoming Earth Summit Two in New York.
The move came after Mr Blair earlier invited members of Britain's leading
environmental and countryside campaign groups to Downing Street for a 30-minute
discussion on the direction of Government policy.
|