What is Balls: Definition and 555 Discussions

Edward Michael Balls (born 25 February 1967) is a British broadcaster, writer, economist, professor and former politician who served as Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer from 2011 to 2015. A member of the Labour Party and Co-operative Party, he was Member of Parliament (MP) for Morley and Outwood, formerly Normanton, from 2005 to 2015.
Balls attended Nottingham High School before studying philosophy, politics and economics at Keble College, Oxford, and was later a Kennedy Scholar in economics at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. He was a teaching fellow at Harvard from 1988 to 1990, when he joined the Financial Times as the lead economic writer. Balls had joined the Labour Party whilst attending Nottingham High School, and became an adviser to Shadow Chancellor Gordon Brown in 1994, continuing in this role after Labour won the 1997 general election, and eventually becoming the Chief Economic Advisor to the Treasury.
At the 2005 general election, Balls was elected as the MP for Normanton (which in 2010 became Morley and Outwood), and in 2006 became Economic Secretary to the Treasury. When Brown became Prime Minister in 2007, Balls became Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families, serving until the 2010 general election; Labour were at that point defeated after thirteen years in government, and returned to Opposition. He was appointed as Shadow Secretary of State for Education under Harriet Harman and finished in third place at the 2010 Labour leadership election, triggered by Gordon Brown's resignation as Leader of the Labour Party, after which he was appointed as Ed Miliband's Shadow Home Secretary. He served in this role until 2011, when he was then appointed as Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, a role that he held until he was unseated at the 2015 general election.
Following his electoral defeat, he became a senior fellow at Harvard University Kennedy School's Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government, and a visiting professor to the Policy Institute at King's College London. He was appointed chairman of Norwich City F.C. in December 2015, a position he held until December 2018. In 2020 he was appointed Professor of Political Economy at King's College London. Balls was a contestant on series 14 of the BBC's Strictly Come Dancing, surviving until week 10, and in 2021 was the winner in BBC's Celebrity Best Home Cook.

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    Exploring Gravi Balls: The Potential Evidence for Graviton Theory

    The chromoelectric field, which acts on the color charge, is attributed to the strong nuclear force. Discrete quanta of this field are called gluons, gluons also have a color charge. Therefore the chromoelectric field interacts with itself and it can form tiny bundles of gluons that form bound...
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    Billiard balls in headon collision with one at rest

    a billiard ball traveling 4.0m/s has an elastic head on collision witha billiard ball of equal mass that is initially at rest. the first ball is at rest after the collision. What is the the speed of the second ball after the collision? [b(] Kim
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    EPR Experiment with Pool Balls

    ***EPR Experiment with Pool Balls*** First of all sorry if what I am going to ask seems crazy stupid, but it is an idea that rounds my mind since I started reading about EPR subject. As far as I've read, you can imagine EPR with photon polarization or with particle spin. So, I have imagined...
  4. C

    Calculating Final Velocity of Falling Balls

    Ok guys. I've just come back from Thanksgiving holidays and I just can't seem to grasp this concept. I have an X, Y, and t from the experiment that we did in lab today. I have a Vy of 91.2cm. I now need to calculate a VyFinal ( Vyf ). From what I have gathered the equation should come out...
  5. STAii

    Can You Solve the Riddle of the 9 Balls with Only 3 Weighings?

    Ok, here is a good riddle (waiting for a Riddles thread to be made). You have 9 balls that look totally identical. They all weight the same, except for one of them (that weight either less or more, we don't know). You are supposed to get the odd one out by using a two-sided weight scale only...
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