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British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, right, makes his opening remarks as he attends the first meeting of the day of the G20 Finance Ministers Meeting held at the Treasury in central London, Saturday, Sept. 5, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown (R) and Defence Secretary Bob Ainsworth listen to questions at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London September 4, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown (R) and Defence Secretary Bob Ainsworth listen to questions at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London September 4, 2009.
View Photo »British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, right, and British Defense Secretary Bob Ainsworth, left, attend a question and answer session following a keynote speech on Afghanistan, at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, in central London, Friday, Sept. 4, 2009.
View Photo »British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, right, and British Defense Secretary Bob Ainsworth, left, attend a question and answer session following a keynote speech on Afghanistan, at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, in central London, Friday, Sept. 4, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown arrives at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London September 4, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown arrives at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London September 4, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown (C) leaves the Backing Young Britain conference in Birmingham, central England September 2, 2009. Brown promised on Wednesday to help an extra 85,000 young people to find work or training and avoid creating a "generation lost to work".
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown (R) leaves the "Backing Young Britain" conference in Birmingham, central England September 2, 2009. Brown promised on Wednesday to help an extra 85,000 young people to find work or training and avoid creating a "generation lost to work".
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown (L) arrives at the "Backing Young Britain" conference in Birmingham, central England September 2, 2009.
View Photo »BIRMINGHAM, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 02: British Prime Minister Gordon Brown arrives at Birmingham City Football Club for a 'Backing Young Britain' summit on September 2, 2009 in Birmingham, England. Brown is expected to announce a scheme to help young people into work.
View Photo »BIRMINGHAM, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 02: British Prime Minister Gordon Brown arrives at Birmingham City Football Club for a 'Backing Young Britain' summit on September 2, 2009 in Birmingham, England. Brown is expected to announce a scheme to help young people into work.
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown arrives at the "Backing Young Britain" conference in Birmingham, central England, September 2, 2009.
View Photo »British Prime Minister Gordon Brown (L) meets local officials during a visit to an Afghan police station in Helmand province August 29, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown, center, meets British soldiers at Camp Bastion in Lashkar Gah in Afghanistan, Saturday Aug. 29, 2009. Prime Minister Gordon Brown flew Saturday to the city of Lashkar Gah, where British troops have been waging a tough fight against Taliban insurgents.
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown, center, looks inside a British Army armoured vehicle at Camp Bastion in Lashkar Gah in Afghanistan, Saturday Aug. 29, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown, right, is greeted by Gen. Stanley McChrystal, left, the head of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, at Camp Bastion in Lashkar Gah in Afghanistan, Saturday Aug. 29, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown (R) meets his Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu at 10 Downing Street in London August 25, 2009. After holding talks with Brown, Netanyahu is due to meet U.S. envoy George Mitchell in London on Wednesday.
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown (L) prepares to hold a joint news conference with his Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu (2nd R) at 10 Downing Street in London August 25, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown (L) speaks to media during a joint news conference with his Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu at 10 Downing Street in London August 25, 2009.
View Photo »LONDON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 25: British Prime Minister Gordon Brown (R) speaks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at number 10 Downing Street on August 25, 2009 in London, England.
View Photo »LONDON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 25: British Prime Minister Gordon Brown (L) speaks as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu looks on during their press conference at number 10 Downing Street on August 25, 2009 in London, England.
View Photo »British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, right, bids farewell to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, outside 10 Downing Street in London, Tuesday Aug. 25, 2009.
View Photo »British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, right, bids farewell to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, outside 10 Downing Street in London, Tuesday Aug. 25, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown, right, speaks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, at 10 Downing Street, in London, Tuesday Aug. 25, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown (R) and Defence Secretary Bob Ainsworth listen to questions at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London September 4, 2009.
View Photo »Britain and the world need protection from the terrorism that starts in the Afghan-Pakistan area, which is the epicentre of modern global terrorism and has got to be dealt with.
It is great news that so many other economies are now growing, but it begs the question: why is Britain still in recession while the rest of the world recovers? Far from 'leading the world out of recession' as Gordon Brown has claimed, the evidence shows how his economic policies have failed.
I believe that next week we will see the American government and the rest of NATO coming together in a strategy that will mean we will have the forces that are necessary so we can create the space for a political solution in Afghanistan
Any doubt I had that Labour has lost touch with its roots was cast aside forever when I watched Gordon Brown cosying up to Margaret Thatcher in Downing Street
I believe that next week we will see the American government and the rest of NATO coming together in a strategy that will mean we will have the forces that are necessary
I strongly encourage the MoD to make sufficient progress on issues of concern to the families, including the undertaking given by Prime Minister Gordon Brown a week ago to explain the delays in making compensation payments.
Their misguided aim was to create terror and uncertainty in the region. The Government and the people of India were neither cowed nor provoked by these atrocities but stood resolute
Almost 11,000 people approached local authorities to seek help from Gordon Brown's delayed mortgage rescue scheme, but fewer than 100 families throughout England got any assistance
I am committed to doing everything in my power to secure an agreement that marks the decisive global shift towards combating climate change ... I believe all leaders have a responsibility to come together at Copenhagen to do this. We cannot afford to fail.
Gordon Brown's speech had a completely hollow ring to it. This is the Government that tried to cover up a deliberate policy of increasing immigration and the Prime Minister's comments show that he has no idea about how to deal with the whole question of immigration now.
In our new growth strategy I want not just hundreds but thousands of Chinese companies in Britain, and British companies in China
When I said in Brussels last week that I was proud to be foreign secretary in Gordon Brown's government, I meant it. When I said I was not a candidate for the post of high representative, I meant it
The most important driver of deficit reduction over the period ahead will be the growth performance of our economy, and the speed with which we can get unemployment down
The row came as Prime Minister Gordon Brown was pressed to say yesterday why voters in Glasgow should back Labour when the gap between the rich and poor had widened during the party's 12 years in office
I am committed to doing everything in my power to secure an agreement that marks the decisive global shift towards combating climate change ... I believe all leaders have a responsibility to come together at Copenhagen to do this. We cannot afford to fail.
The editors in Britain for instance have turned very much against Gordon Brown, who is a friend of mine. I regret it ... He's been an unlucky man. But you know, the end of 13 years of one-party rule, the idea of change is probably good.
Over recent weeks the discussion around Europe has mostly been about personalities, not policies, institutions.
The guest list in Berlin is an impressive one. Chancellor Angela Merkel is expecting numerous world leaders to attend, including French President Nicolas Sarkozy, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, among others. Surely it is an honour to be a part of it
Since January 2008, seven of the top dozen figures in al-Qaeda have been killed, depleting its reserve of experienced leaders and sapping its morale ... There is now an opportunity to inflict significant and long-lasting damage to al-Qaeda.
Labour has failed on unemployment. We desperately need to get Britain working again and make sure that a generation isn’t scarred by Gordon Brown’s recession.
Since January 2008, seven of the top dozen figures in al-Qaeda have been killed, depleting its reserve of experienced leaders and sapping its morale ... There is now an opportunity to inflict significant and long-lasting damage to al-Qaeda.
Overall there is the sense that Afghanistan is becoming for (British Prime Minister) Gordon Brown what Iraq became for (his predecessor) Tony Blair
Tonight I can report that, methodically and patiently, we are disrupting and disabling the existing leadership of al Qaeda.
Overall there is the sense that Afghanistan is becoming for Gordon Brown what Iraq became for Tony Blair: more than four in ten don't understand Britain's mission, support for the British presence there is ebbing away, and a majority have responded to the (Afghan) presidential election very negatively i...
We know that from New York, Bali, Baghdad, Madrid, Mumbai, Peshawar and Rawalpindi to London, men and women -- Muslim, Christian, Jewish, Hindu, of every faith and none -- have been victims of international terrorism
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