Ten must-read pieces from this morning's papers.
By New Statesman [1] Published 12 January 2013 1:20Ten must-read pieces from this morning's papers.
1. Britain can't pick and choose on Europe - we're either in or we're out [2] (Guardian)
Jonathan Freedland ponders Cameron's meander to the EU exit and laments.
2. Manners Mr Cameron, no more Mr Shouty [3] (Times)
The Prime Minister should define himself against the hectoring format of Wesminster politics, suggests Matthew Parris.
3. UK should welcome timely words from the US [4] (FT)
Gideon Rachman is glad the Obama administration has put in a wake-up to those in Britain flirting with EU exit.
4. A broom cupboard of ones own: why solving the housing crisis is not an impossible dream [5] (Indepndent)
A generation frozen out of home ownership will change the terms of political debate, says Ross Clark.
5. Tory Eurosceptics' impossible demand on Cameron [6] (Guardian)
Nicholas Watt analysis the Prime Ministers Brussels-bashing predicament.
6. Long after Jimmy Savile, our society normalises sexual assault and shames women into silence [7] (Independent)
Victims are blamed and women made to feel responsible for avoiding assault, writes Laura Bates.
7. Osborne not in the numbers game [8] (Scotsman)
Alf Young is appalled by Treasury complacency over dodgy inflation statistics.
8. The Man who turned amorality into an art form [9] (Mail)
Ian Birrel gets stuck right into Tony Blair's globe-trotting business affairs.
9. As Australia burns, attitudes are changing - but is it too late? [10] (Guardian)
The brutal truth about climate change is dawning down under, says Tim Flannery.
10. Treating every allegation against Jimmy Saville as a 'fact' undermines justice [11] (Telegraph)
Charles Moore is not persuaded that Operation Yewtree brings us closer to the truth.