Far-right Freedom party poised to win quarter of vote in Vienna election
Exit poll puts Freedom party second behind Social Democrats on 23-26%, compared with 15% in 2005Austria's resurgent far-right party is poised to win a quarter of the vote in Vienna's provincial election today, according to an exit poll.The Social Democrats under Michael Häupl, the mayor since 1994, are projected to win with 42-46% but risk losing their absolute majority. As at the national level, they are likely to turn to the third-placed conservatives if they need a coalition partner.The far-right Freedom party is projected to get 23-26% of the vote, according to the exit poll published by the state broadcaster ORF, compared with 15% in 2005.AustriaThe far rightguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds guardian.co.uk |
Arnie 'to help terminate the deficit'
Hollywood star turned politician Arnold Schwarzenegger is visiting David Cameron in Downing Street. bbc.co.uk |
U.K. Convicts Saudi Prince of Murder
Saudi Arabia's Prince Saud Abdulaziz bin Nasser al Saud was convicted of murdering one of his servants in a frenzied attack in a British hotel. online.wsj.com |
Website Claims 15,000 Unreported Iraq War Deaths
A cache of nearly 400,000 U.S. military documents from the Iraq War has indicated the existence of about 15,000 civilian deaths that were not previously documented, the publisher of the documents, WikiLeaks said. online.wsj.com |
George Bush to Mark Zuckerberg: you know what it's like to be a president
The former US leader and the Facebook boss compared notes in an hour-long talk and decided they had much in commonWhat does Mark Zuckerberg, the creator and president of Facebook, have in common with that other president, George Bush? Quite a lot, apparently.At least, Bush seems to thinks so. He spent an hour in discussion with Zuckerberg in a Facebook interview streamed live from Palo Alto on Monday night, comparing his time in the White House with Zuckerberg's leadership of the social networking site.They both, Bush said, had had to make quick and difficult decisions based on common sense. They both shared a passion for education, which Zuckerberg has recently embraced, donating $100m (£64m) to state schools in Newark, New Jersey.And they had both faced harsh criticism. "There's a lot of criticism about. You know what I'm talking about?" Bush said, looking Zuckerberg straight in the face.The Facebook chief executive has been attacked for his policies on privacy and received a less than flattering portrayal in the film Social Networking. "We haven't had criticism on the scale of a president, but we've had some," Zuckerberg said.Bush, dressed in a casual shirt and jacket and minus a tie, got brownie points among the techy audience for saying, after he left the White House, "I became a Blackberry person, and now I'm an iPad person."He also endeared himself by saying that he used Facebook to keep in touch with former administration colleagues, though he rather ruined the effect by calling it "the Facebook", seemingly unaware that Zuckerberg dropped the "the" in 2005.Bush needled Zuckerberg over his failure to complete his computer science course at Harvard. For his part, Zuckerberg heaped praise on his fellow president. "It's one of the things I've always admired about you," he said to Bush. "You've always stuck by your principles and pushed through."Bush also gave an impassioned statement against official leaks during the interview. He said leaks were "very damaging and people who leaked ought to be prosecuted".He added that the latest Wikileaks action would make it hard for the US to keep the trust of foreign leaders. "When you have a conversation with a foreign leader and it ends up in a newspaper they don't like it, and I didn't like it. A lot of these relationships depend on trust."George BushMark ZuckerbergFacebookUnited StatesInternetSocial networkingEd Pilkingtonguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds guardian.co.uk |