British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was under mounting pressure on Saturday to fire his health secretary after the admission that he broke COVID-19 guidelines by kissing an employee sparked accusations of blatant hypocrisy.Matt Hancock, 42, has been at the centre of the governments fight against the pandemic, routinely telling people to follow strict rules and even welcoming the resignation last year of a senior scientist who broke restrictions in a similar manner.Hancock apologised on Friday after The Sun newspaper showed him kissing and embracing a senior aide in his office last month, at a time when it was against the rules for people to have intimate contact with a person outside their household.The opposition Labo <a href=https://www.stanleycup.com.se>stanley vattenflaska</a> ur Party also questioned whether he had broken the ministerial code: the woman, a long-time friend of Hancocks, was appointed as a non-executive director, on a taxpayer-funded salary, to oversee and scrutinise the running of his department. I accept that I breached the so <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.de>stanley isolierkanne</a> cial distancing guidance in these circumstances, Hancock said. I have let people down and am very sorry. Johnson said on Friday he considered the matter closed.But Britains leading newspapers, which all splashed the story on <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.us>stanley cup</a> their front pages, said Hancock had lost any moral authority and must go. One lawmaker in his party, Duncan Baker, called on him to resign. Mr Hancock cannot now hope to put on a straight face and tell us how to behave and seriously expect us to listen, The Sun said in i Bsxm Calais clinic has problems with opiate distribution, VA report says
AUGUSTA, Maine 鈥?In a funny and heartfelt speech Wednesday before a joint session of the Maine House and Senate, the outgoing head of the Maine National Guard, Maj. Gen. John <a href=https://www.stanleycups.at>stanley becher</a> W. Libby, <a href=https://www.stanleycup.cz>stanley cup</a> praised military members as the true 1 percent.He explained that the number of people who enlist in the armed services today represents a smaller percentage of the population than ever. He also said the U.S. has an all-volunteer war for the first time in Iraq and Afghanistan, something that everyone should remember. Seventy percent of people aged 18 to 24 are not eligible to serve; 97 percent of those eligible choose not to, he said. That means less than 1 percent wear the uniform. Libby, a Vietnam veteran, announced last month that he would step down as commissioner of the state Department of Defense, Veterans and Emergency Management and head off the Maine National Guard, effectively ending his 44-year military career.He had been formally invited by House Speaker Robert Nutting, R-Oakland, and Senate President Kevin Raye, R-Perry, to address the Legislature before he made his decision to retire, so Wednesdays remarks amounted to a retirement speech.The military address to the Legislature will now be an annual event.Libby shared with lawmakers one of his earliest experiences from when he was a plebe at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.Douglas MacArthur, the famous World War II Army general, returned to West Point in 1962 to speak to young cadets such as L <a href=https://www.stanleymugs.us>stanley website</a> ibby, who was 18 at the time