7pm WATCH: The Telegraph's Jeremy Warner explains why the S & P downgrade is so dangerous to the French economy
5pm Teatime newslinks: The debate over child benefits and the €urozone crisis top today's teatime newslinks
3.45pm Columnist Andrew Lilico: For a family on £80,000, Child Benefit is a tax rebate
3pm Local government: Council byelection results from yesterday
2.30pm ToryDiary: "The Prime Minister's Saudi visit exposes him to the charge of hypocrisy – and, most crucially, such a stance compromises the diplomatic successes of the Foreign Office under William Hague." Cameron's visit to Saudi Arabia undermines William Hague's call for Islamic democracy in the Middle East
1pm ToryDiary: Liam Fox should write a blog
12.30pm Local government: Hackney heroine joins board for new free school
Noon ConservativeHomeUSA newslinks: Romney responds to attacks on his business record
10.30am Joseph Willits on Comment: Thatcher and Reagan: Whose approach to ageing are we more comfortable with?
ToryDiary: Michael Gove floats shocking proposal in Daily Mail interview today
Columnist Bruce Anderson: Miliband is mere comic relief. Labour should promote Dan Jarvis.
Mark Lancaster MP on Comment: Has the Territorial Army had sufficient training to be deployed as the Government envisages?
Local Government:
Cameron signals a rethink of proposals to scrap child benefit for higher earners
"Cameron admitted that the current proposal had been criticised for its “unfairness”. There was a “cliff edge issue” which meant that some families would be stripped of benefits. He insisted that the Government was prepared to “look at the way” the child benefit was due to be cut and suggested that a new system might be proposed in the Chancellor’s March Budget. For the Prime Minister to acknowledge that the proposal is being reconsidered because it is seen as unfair will be considered significant two months before the publication of Mr Osborne’s plans" - Telegraph
Cameron "could accept the Lords’ amendments, avoid the nasty headlines – safe in the knowledge that British employers can bus in whoever they like … To accept the amendments would save plenty of political grief. But for Duncan Smith, this is more about saving lives than saving money. He says this is his last job in politics, a cause for which he was campaigning in opposition for many years. And if enacting reform means that he will be portrayed as cruel and heartless, then so be it" - Telegraph
> Yesterday WATCH: Nick Clegg: "We need to change the welfare system to bring it back to its original purpose"
Gove tells the Mail that he wants incompetent teaching staff to be sacked within nine weeks, and will announce plans to do so today
"The proposals, to be unveiled today, will trigger a storm of protest from education unions. Only a handful of teachers have been struck off for incompetence over the past decade, suggesting it is all but impossible to get thrown out of the profession. Mr Gove said: ‘You wouldn’t tolerate an underperforming surgeon in an operating theatre, or a underperforming midwife at your child’s birth" - Daily Mail
In the same interview, he defends wife Sarah Vine over her column about cosmetic surgery which links Louise Mensch to Jordan – Daily Mail
William Hague: We have to accept the choices made by countries in the Arab Spring to vote for Islamic parties "and work with the governments they elect"
“It is true that parties drawing their inspiration from Islam have done better at the polls than secular parties and there are legitimate concerns about what this will mean . . . We must respect these choices while upholding our own principles of human rights and freedom and urging the highest standards. Trying to pick winners would fatally undermine faith in our intentions and our support for democracy. In standing up for the right of peoples to choose their own representatives at the ballot box, we have to accept their choices and work with the governments they elect.”
Cameron makes his first visit to Saudi Arabia, where he will discuss changes in the region, trade and human rights - Guardian
If Scotland becomes independent, it may have to join the €uro says Osborne
"Mr Osborne said: “Alex Salmond has himself said he’d want Scotland to join the euro and you have to ask yourself is that the currency you want to be joining at the moment? That’s a question that the Scottish people are going to have to ask themselves.” Pressed to say clearly if he would let an independent Scotland keep the pound, Mr Osborne replied: “Alex Salmond has said Scotland should join the euro. That means giving up the pound” - Telegraph
Scotland news:
Dominic Raab MP: Britain should offer Scotland a generous proposal which guarantees democratic rights for the Scottish, and terms which are fair to Britain
"Rather than fighting on the back foot to save the Union, it’s time to make a big, open and comprehensive offer which combines stronger democratic rights for the Scottish people with terms that are fair to Britain. That way we can put the Union on a sustainable basis for the long term" - Telegraph
Other Scotland comment:
Theresa May gives the green light for pubs to stay open until 1am to celebrate the Queen's Diamond Jubilee
"Pubs are set to open until 1am on Friday June 1 and Saturday June 2 to mark the Diamond Jubilee. But last night there were calls for late-night extensions across the whole four-day Bank Holiday weekend. British Beer and Pub Association chief executive Brigid Simmonds said: "Friday and Saturday are great to get the party started — but it's a shame extra hours won't apply on Sunday and Monday." – Sun
The British Medical Association warns that high risk life-saving procedures may dissapear from the NHS if medical cover is privatised - Guardian
Philip Collins: Ed Miliband's plan for Britain: Be more like Germany - Times (£)
Scotland Yard are to interview Jack Straw and other ministers in the Blair Government, over their alleged role in human rights abuses in Libya - Independent
The Archbishop of York, John Sentamu warns that “the nation’s humanity is at stake" unless the elderly are protected from Government cuts - Telegraph
And finally … ‘Haitch Ess Two’: Quentin Letts says Justine Greening may want to tactically avoid saying using 'haitch', which "sets southern teeth on edge" given that most opposition to high speed rail "comes from Home Counties voters" - Daily Mail
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