Friday, 8 January 2016

Ekwunife Defects To APC Before Fresh Poll

A former Senator, who represented Anambra Central Senatorial District before her election was annulled by a court, Uche Ekwunife, has defected to the All Progressives Congress, APC, from the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP.

Mrs Ekwunife, in an interview with Channels Television on Friday, said she defected because thesenatorial primaries were shifted indefinitely by her former party, the PDP in protest over the arrest of the National Publicity Secretary of the party, Olisa Metuh.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) had on Tuesday, January 5, arrested the National Publicity Secretary of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Mr Olisa Metuh.
A statement issued by the Special Assistant to Mr Metuh stated that he was arrested on Tuesday morning at about 10:00AM at his home by four officials of the EFCC and was taken away in an unmarked white Hiace bus.
The statement added that the officials told the opposition party spokesman that he was being invited on a friendly note to answer questions at the anti-graft agency’s headquarters in Abuja.
Mrs Ekwunife added that since the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) said there could not be fresh candidate for the election, shifting the primaries, where she would have been endorsed for the exercise, might affect her candidacy under the PDP.
According to her, she decided to take a walk to the APC to actualise her ambition.
Mrs Ekwunife added that she is returning to the Senate to complete her contract with the people in her  senatorial district.
The Appeal Court sitting in Enugu, the Enugu State capital, had on December 6 ordered the INEC to conduct a fresh election in the district within 90 days.
Delivering the judgment, Justice Datijo Yahaya said that the election of Mrs Ekwunife on March 28, 2015, did not meet the prescription of the Electoral Act.

Mrs Ekwunife had contested alongside the APC candidate, Senator Chris Ngige, who is now the Minister of Labour and may not be vying for the Senatorial seat.

All The Glitz And Glamour From The 2016 Glo CAF Awards

Last night was the much anticipated Glo CAF awards and various Celebrities stepped out in style for the occasion.


Below are all the glam:























Ben Carson asks Iowa fifth graders, ‘Who’s the worst student?’ and kids single out their classmate in front of crowd

Dr. Ben Carson, shown at a Wednesday event in Panora, Iowa, accidentally singled out a fifth-grade boy when the Republican presidential candidate invoked a common refrain of his campaign.



Flailing Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson stumbled his way into the role of bully at an event in Iowa Thursday.

Carson asked a class of fifth graders, “Who’s the worst student?” and over a half-dozen kids pointed to their classmate in front of a crowd of 500 people in Cedar Rapids, The Des Moines Register reported.

The neurosurgeon turned candidate chuckled with those in attendance but explained, in a frequently used refrain, that his fifth grade class in Detroit had labeled him the “dumbest person in the world.”

Carson later met with the boy subjected to the finger-pointing, Seth of the Isaac Newton Christian Academy, and urged him to become a neurosurgeon, too, The Hill reported. The boy told reporters his feelings weren’t hurt.

Carson has plummeted to fourth place in Iowa’s GOP primary at 9% after leading the field at 29% on Oct. 31, according to a Real Clear Politics survey of Iowa polls. His campaign manager and communications director resigned late last month.

Wednesday, 6 January 2016

Boyega up for Bafta Rising Star title

Star Wars actor John Boyega is one of five new faces who will be in the running for the Rising Star Award at the Bafta Film Awards next month.
The Londoner, who plays Finn in Star Wars: The Force Awakens, faces competition including Fifty Shades Of Grey actress Dakota Johnson.
Brie Larson, who appears in new drama Room, and Kingsman: The Secret Service actor Taron Egerton are also nominated.
They are joined by Bel Powley, from 2015's The Diary Of A Teenage Girl.

                  (L-r) Brie Larson, Taron Egerton, Dakota Johnson, John Boyega and Bel Powley

John Boyega

The London-born 23-year-old has already risen very far, very fast, having found global fame as a rebellious Stormtrooper in the new Star Wars adventure.
Before that, he had played just one lead film role, in 2011's action comedy Attack the Block, plus smaller parts in TV shows like 24: Live Another Day and BBC Three's Becoming Human.
He is due to appear opposite Tom Hanks and Emma Watson in the film adaptation of Dave Eggers' novel The Circle later this year.Before that, he had played just one lead film role, in 2011's action comedy Attack the Block, plus smaller parts in TV shows like 24: Live Another Day and BBC Three's Becoming Human.
He is due to appear opposite Tom Hanks and Emma Watson in the film adaptation of Dave Eggers' novel The Circle later this year.

Taron Egerton

The 26-year-old shot onto the radar after playing Eggsy, Colin Firth's protege in spy caper Kingsman, winning him the best male newcomer title at the Empire Awards.
Before that, he played Edward Brittain in Testament of Youth, the adaptation of Vera Brittain's wartime memoirs, and is now set to play the leads in a biopic of skier Eddie "The Eagle" Edwards and a new version of Robin Hood.

Dakota Johnson

The daughter of Melanie Griffith and Don Johnson and the granddaughter of Tippi Hedren, Johnson comes from a distinguished Hollywood dynasty.
She had parts in The Social Network, the 21 Jump Street remake and Fox sitcom Ben and Kate before landing her most high-profile role, as Anastasia Steele in the Fifty Shades trilogy.

Brie Larson

She may officially be a rising star, but the 26-year-old Californian already has a long list of screen credits including Short Term 12, Trainwreck, 21 Jump Street, Don Jon and The Spectacular Now.
She is now a favourite for this year's best actress Oscar for playing a woman held captive role with her young son in the big screen adaptation of Emma Donoghue's novel Room.

Bel Powley

Powley, 23, from London, began her career in CBBC series MI High and played Bianca in TV sitcom Benidorm.
She graduated to feature films last year, playing Minnie in coming-of-age drama The Diary of a Teenage Girl and Princess Margaret in A Royal Night Out.
Film fans will be able to vote for their favourite and the winner will be announced at the Bafta Film Awards in London on 14 February.
Previous winners include James McAvoy, Kristen Stewart, Tom Hardy and Jack O'Connell.

What do Republicans think about America's messy tax system?

ASK Republicans how best to reform taxes, and they will inevitably mention Ronald Reagan. In 1986 the Gipper slashed levies on earnings; the highest income-tax rate tumbled from 50% to 28%. At the same time, Reagan simplified taxes by closing loopholes and killing off exemptions. Today’s Republican presidential contenders would dearly love to repeat the trick. But they have given up a key ingredient in the recipe. The 1986 reform cost nothing, mainly because taxes on businesses went up. In stark contrast, today’s Republican tax plans are jaw-droppingly expensive.
American taxes are a mess. There are seven different rates of federal income tax, up from three after Reagan’s reform (in Canada there are four; in Britain, three). Endless exemptions and deductions cost just over 7% of GDP. These distort incentives and benefit mainly richer folk, but are hard to keep track of because their cost stays off the government’s books. Filling in tax returns takes the average non-business filer eight hours and costs $110 every year. By one recent estimate, the inconvenience costs of filing add up to 1.3% of GDP.
Business taxes are no better. At 39%, the tax on corporate profits is the highest in the OECD. In reality, businesses pay less because of a whirlwind of incentive-distorting exemptions. Want to invest in America? Issue shares to finance your project, and your marginal tax rate ends up at 38%. Load up on risky debt and the rate plummets—in fact, you will benefit from a 6% subsidy. Across industries, average tax rates range from 40% for making software to 15% for building mineshafts. The World Bank and PricewaterhouseCoopers, an accounting firm, ranks America’s tax system 53rd in the world, wedged between Jordan and Vanuatu. It takes American businesses 87 hours, on average, to pay their taxes; in France it takes just 26 hours.
Tax reform, then, is essential, and Republicans have embraced the cause. Among the presidential candidates, Jeb Bush has proposed the most detailed plan, and is cheered on by a crew of right-leaning economists. One thing keeping the plan on the shelf is that Mr Bush lags behind in the polls. But thanks to its detail—and the scrutiny poured on it as a result—it is a useful benchmark.
Mr Bush rightly wants to reduce the number of income tax bands, to three. In doing so, though, he calls for a whopping reduction in the top rate of income tax to 28%, from 39.6% today. Mr Bush would slash the corporate tax rate to 20% and all but abolish the tax incentive to borrow. Today, if a firm buys a new computer or piece of machinery, it can knock the cost off its tax bill only incrementally as the new equipment loses value; but under Mr Bush’s plan it could deduct the full cost up-front. That should encourage investment.
The plan is hugely expensive. Before accounting for its economic effects, it would cost $6.8 trillion, or 2.6% of GDP, over a decade, according to the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Centre, a think-tank. About two-thirds of the bill comes from income-tax cuts. Cuts for high-earners are costly, because the highest-earning 1%—who would see a 12% increase in after-tax income under the plan—produce almost half of income-tax revenues. By 2026 the $715 billion annual cost of the plan exceeds the projected budget for national defence.
The plan would wrench on purse-strings that are already stretched. By 2025 government health-care and pensions programmes will have nearly 60% more beneficiaries than in 2007. Mr Bush, like most Republicans, wants to increase rather than cut defence spending. And non-defence day-to-day spending has already been slashed by 22% in real terms since 2010.
Mr Bush’s plan, then, looks unachievable. Incredibly, though, it is one of the most modest in the pack. Donald Trump, who tops opinion polls, wants to cut income taxes still further; under his plan, the top rate of tax falls to 25%. Whereas Mr Bush would nearly double the standard deduction, the amount that can be earned before paying income tax Mr Trump would quadruple it. The Donald would cut business taxes more aggressively, too. Though he talks about raising taxes on hedge-fund managers by removing the “carried interest” provision, Mr Trump’s cuts to income tax are so deep that the provision barely matters. In all, reckons the Tax Policy Centre, Mr Trump’s plan is almost 40% more expensive than Mr Bush’s.
Must be funny
Where to look for realism? Marco Rubio offers more modest income-tax cuts, but would eliminate most taxes on capital gains and company dividend payments. Many economists view these taxes as inefficient. Yet capital is mostly the preserve of the well-off: only a fifth of adults who earn less than $30,000 tell pollsters they have stockmarket investments, compared with nearly nine in ten who earn more than $75,000. Citizens for Tax Justice, an advocacy group, reckons Mr Rubio’s plan would make the pockets of the top 1% of earners bulge more than Mr Bush’s would.
Ted Cruz has the boldest plan. The Texan senator promises to replace all income taxes—including payroll taxes which fund Social Security and Medicare payments—with a 10% flat tax. Business taxes would be replaced with a value-added tax of 16%. This plan is roughly as expensive as the Bush plan, before accounting for its economic effects, according to the Tax Foundation, a right-leaning think tank. But it would be still more generous to the highest earners, as value-added taxes are less progressive than income tax.
The candidates all say their plans will increase economic growth, boosting tax-revenues and dramatically bringing down costs. Mr Bush’s cheerleaders say his plan will add 0.5 percentage points to growth each year, knocking two-thirds off the so-called “static” cost. Mr Trump claims—with a straight face—that his plan is revenue-neutral.
Done right, reforming and simplifying taxes would boost growth. Yet the gargantuan cost of the plans comes from tax cuts for high earners, and the evidence that these help the economy is patchy. Crucially, whether tax cuts boost growth depends on how they are paid for. If they cause deficits to gape larger, tax cuts will weigh on growth rather than support it, by gradually pushing up interest rates.
There is better evidence that tax cuts for businesses help the economy. But that does not mean they would pay for themselves—as Mr Trump suggests—or make up for expensive giveaways elsewhere. The best evidence suggests that taxes on dividends, which Mr Rubio would abolish, have no effect at all on investment. More than most proposals, Republican tax plans are articles of faith.