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Vince Cable lives to fight another day in the Coalition
Vince Cable remains in the Coalition government – despite his comments that he had “declared war on Murdoch”, writes Political Editor Gary Gibbon.
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After secret recordings reveal government ministers are privately “uneasy” about some policies, Gaby Hinsliff asks where does freedom of information end, and too much information begin?
It was when Vince Cable slouched into Number 10 wearing Twickenham’s version of John Wayne’s Stetson that you realised he was in trouble. Peter McHugh writes on the new Cablegate.
Media analysts tell Channel 4 News that Business Secretary Vince Cable’s remarks about Rupert Murdoch make it more likely his bid to take over BSkyB will go through.
Vince Cable remains in the Coalition government – despite his comments that he had “declared war on Murdoch”, writes Political Editor Gary Gibbon.
The government will desperately not want to be seen to be bending the knee to Murdoch. He was amongst the first callers on David Cameron when he entered No. 10 but he came in by the back door and he’s a man politicians prefer to court in private not in public.
The Coalition has “bent over backwards” to keep Vince Cable in Government despite his comments that he had “declared war on Murdoch” over News Corp’s deal to take over BSkyB, writes Gary Gibbon.
David Cameron and Nick Clegg have sung the praises of Coalition Government and backed Vince Cable, despite his comments to reporters that he had the “nuclear option” of walking out if pushed too far.
The Coalition has “bent over backwards” to keep Vince Cable in Government despite his comments that he had “declared war on Murdoch” over News Corp’s deal to take over BSkyB, writes Gary Gibbon.
It says a lot, that we have learnt more about what brought down RBS from a US diplomatic cable leaked to an Australian than we have from British probes.
Liberal Democrat Cabinet Ministers are set to support the Government’s plan to raise university tuition fees after Business Secretary Vince Cable says he is “collectively responsible” for the policy.
The latest secret US diplomatic cables to be released by the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks have revealed harsh criticism of the British forces in Afghanistan.
A senior Lib Dem tells Gary Gibbon that getting its MPs in line over the tuition fees vote is like “herding frogs”, as Business Secretary Vince Cable says he may abstain and students protest again.
Vince Cable has told the Commons that he is hesitating about Lord Browne’s suggestion of no cap on tuition fees.
Gary Gibbon looks at what’s behind Vince Cable’s excursion into anti-capitalist rhetoric…and how it might go down at the Lib Dem conference Glee Club.
Economics editor Faisal Islam analyses Business Secretary Vince Cable’s principles – and whether they pose a threat to his participation in the coalition government.