Kamis, 26 Mei 2022

Boris Johnson's chief of staff brushes off partygate as reason 'logical' cost of living measures are on way - Sky News

Boris Johnson's chief of staff has brushed off the suggestion that a new package of cost of living help is timed to deflect attention from Sue Gray's partygate report.

Steve Barclay said that the government did not control when the report - laying bare drunkenness and partying in Downing Street - was published and that it was responding to Ofgem's forecast that typical annual bills would rise to £2,800 this autumn.

Mr Barclay said the prime minister was appalled by the contents of the 37-page report into behaviour at Number 10 during lockdowns - and had been personally apologising after the findings showed security workers and cleaners were poorly treated.

Politics live: Rishi Sunak to reveal more help with rising cost of living

His comments came hours before an expected announcement by Chancellor Rishi Sunak of hundreds of pounds more in help for households struggling with rising bills partly paid for by a multi-billion pound windfall tax on energy companies.

Until now, the government has been resisting Labour's call for a windfall tax, claiming that it will deter investment - though over the last couple of weeks the language from Mr Sunak and other senior ministers has softened, suggesting that the option was on the table.

Asked about the timing of the announcement the day after the Sue Gray report, Mr Barclay told Sky News's Kay Burley: "No, it's because we've had the Ofgem guidance.

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"On the Sue Gray report - we don't control the timing of that... indeed the timing of that is shaped by the Met Police investigation.

"What we've always said is... we wanted to see from the Ofgem guidance what the full impact would be in the autumn on families so that we can get the design of that package right so it's absolutely logical.

"We've had that guidance this week from Ofgem, that is why the chancellor's coming forward today."

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Partygate: PM refuses to resign

The timing was also governed by the fact that parliament was about to go into recess, Mr Barclay said.

He claimed that Labour's proposal for a windfall tax "would have deterred investment" though did not set out specifically how Conservative plans might differ.

Mr Barclay said the government recognised the "huge pressure coming for families" to add to the squeeze already being felt.

"We need to be in a position to have targeted support to those families... in terms of paying for that... we need to do that in a way that doesn't deter investment."

Ofgem's chief executive Jonathan Brearley told MPs earlier this week that he was writing to the chancellor to set out the expectation that an increase in the energy cap this October would see typical energy bills rise from £1,971 to about £2,800.

That 42% increase would add to the 54% increase in April.

But the exact scale of the autumn hike will not formally be announced by the energy regulator until August.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer had on Wednesday mocked Mr Johnson over the timing of the expected package of help, saying: "What is it about the Sue Gray report that first attracted him to a U-turn this week?"

On the partygate report - which set out details including staff fighting and being sick after late night drunken parties - Mr Barclay said: "The prime minister was appalled to read that... Like him, I was shocked."

He said the PM "wouldn't have seen" emails and messages detailed in Sue Gray's report such as one from a special adviser asking staff not to be "walking around waving bottles of wine" at a time when a press conference was finishing.

Explaining why the prime minister felt it right to attend leaving dos for Number 10 staff at a time when others could not say goodbye to dying loved ones, he said: "Because they were already in the building.

"They were already working in tight-knit groups. They were already there."

Asked whether Mr Johnson tells lies, Mr Barclay said: "No he doesn't."

Labour's shadow levelling up secretary Lisa Nandy told Sky News she hoped that a windfall tax would be announced today.

"Several times over the last few months the prime minister has taken action when he's been in real trouble in order to distract from the trouble in government," she said.

"We would very much welcome some action on the cost of living. For months now the chancellor has been telling us it's not possible to have a windfall tax on companies that made record profits."

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2022-05-26 07:19:47Z
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Rabu, 25 Mei 2022

Andy Murray hits out at 'madness' of Texas school shooting as 21 die in massacre - Daily Record

Scots tennis ace Andy Murray has reacted with fury after 19 children and two teachers were killed in a US school massacre.

The 35-year-old, who is a survivor of the Dunblane massacre, took to social media after the gunman opened fire at Robb Elementary in Uvalde, Texas.

A shooter, identified by US law enforcement agencies as 18-year-old Salvador Ramos, was killed by responding police officers.

He had reportedly posted images of semi-automatic rifles on the social media platform Instagram before carrying out the attack.

Murray branded the incident "f****** madness" in a response to a tweet from TalkTV presenter Piers Morgan, who delivered a plea to his 7.9 million followers for action on US gun laws.

Andy Murray has hit out at the "madness" of the latest US mass shooting
Andy Murray has hit out at the "madness" of the latest US mass shooting

Morgan had written on Twitter: "14 schoolchildren and a teacher at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas have been shot dead by an 18-year-old gunman. Absolutely horrendous.

"I don’t know what else to say about these endless US gun massacres - it’s for Americans to resolve but where is the will?"

Murray responded: "F****** madness", accompanied by an angry emoji.

The tennis champion was nine years old and a pupil at Dunblane Primary when youth club leader Thomas Hamilton walked into the school with four legally-owned handguns on March 13 1996.

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Hamilton - who had been accused of inappropriate behaviour towards young boys - killed 16 children and a teacher, and injured 15 others before turning the gun on himself.

It remains the deadliest mass shooting incident in the UK and led to an immediate and drastic overhaul of British gun laws that saw most private handgun ownership banned.

Murray has not spoken at length about his memory of the massacre - but has revealed in the past he knew Hamilton as a child.

He opened up about the incident in 2019 for an Amazon Prime documentary Andy Murray: Resurfacing, that followed his recovery from a serious hip injury.

A total of 21 people have been killed in Uvalde, Texas
A total of 21 people have been killed in Uvalde, Texas

But the tennis star could not speak about the incident face-to-face, instead leaving a voice note for director Olivia Cappuccini.

He said: "You asked me a while ago why tennis was important to me. Obviously I had the thing that happened at Dunblane. When I was around nine.

"I am sure for all the kids there it would be difficult for different reasons.

"The fact we knew the guy, we went to his kids club, he had been in our car, we had driven and dropped him off at train stations and things.

"Within 12 months of that happening, our parents got divorced.

"My feeling towards tennis is that it’s an escape for me in some ways. Because all of these things are stuff that I have bottled up.

"I don’t know because we don’t talk about these things. They are not things that are discussed."

The Robb Elementary shooting came just days after another massacre at a supermarket in Buffalo, New York, that was reportedly racially motivated.

How to get the latest crime news with the Daily Record

The Daily Record and Sunday Mail have always been at the forefront when it comes to reporting crime in Scotland.

But did you know all the ways you can stay informed of the top crime and courts headlines?

We share live crime news and exclusive court stories as well as features and columns on historical cases, keeping our readers informed and updated across the country.

Alleged perpetrator Payton Gendron, 18, is in police custody. US media reported that he disseminated a racist manifesto across message boards prior to committing the mass slaying, which he streamed via the gaming platform Twitch.

Both incidents have sparked renewed calls for tighter gun controls across the US, which infamously enshrines citizens' "right to bear arms" in its written constitution.

The school shooting has also been compared to the Sandy Hook and Parkland tragedies in 2012 and 2018, which saw a combined 43 people shot dead.

The Associated Press reports that US President Joe Biden has called for new restrictions on firearms - but faces opposition from pro-gun representatives in the country's two legislatures.

US President Joe Biden has appealed to lawmakers to clamp down on guns
US President Joe Biden has appealed to lawmakers to clamp down on guns

In an emotional address to the nation from the White House on Tuesday, Mr Biden pleaded for action to curb gun violence after years of failure - and blamed firearms manufacturers and their supporters for blocking legislation in Washington.

He said: "When in God's name are we going to stand up to the gun lobby? Why are we willing to live with this carnage? Why do we keep letting this happen?

"These kinds of mass shootings rarely happen anywhere else in the world - why?

"The idea that an 18-year-old kid can walk into a gun store and buy two assault weapons is just wrong.

"I'd hoped when I became president I would not have to do this, again."

Biden, who has lost two of his children - son Beau, who died of a brain tumour, and daughter Naomi, who died in a car crash at the age of one - made an emotive appeal to pro-gun legislators.

He added: "To lose a child is like having a piece of your soul ripped away.

"There's a hollowness in your chest. You feel like you're being sucked into it and never going to be able to get out.

"It's time we turned this pain into action."

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2022-05-25 09:45:54Z
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London Playbook: Biden vs. gun lobby — Gray day — Throw a windfall tax on the table - POLITICO Europe

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Presented by MSD.

POLITICO London Playbook

By ALEX WICKHAM

PRESENTED BY

MSD

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Good Wednesday morning.

BREAKING OVERNIGHT: U.S. President Joe Biden delivered an emotional address to the American people in which he vowed to defeat the gun lobby following a horrific mass shooting at a school in Texas that killed 19 children and at least two adults. The children were aged between seven and 10.

Biden words: “How many scores of little children who witnessed what happened — seen their friends die as if they’re in a battlefield, for god’s sake. To lose a child is like having a piece of your soul ripped away. There’s a hollowness in your chest. When in God’s name are we going to stand up to the gun lobby? … I am sick and tired of it. We have to act. And don’t tell me we can’t have an impact on this carnage.”

The shooting came … 10 days after a racist mass killing in Buffalo, New York, which saw 10 people murdered in a predominantly Black community. It is nearly 10 years since the Sandy Hook elementary school shooting that killed 26 people. “Since then, there have been over 900 incidents of gunfires reported on school grounds,” Biden said in his address — an almost incomprehensible statistic.

Former President Barack Obama tweeted: “Our country is paralyzed, not by fear, but by a gun lobby and a political party that have shown no willingness to act in any way that might help prevent these tragedies.”

Full story: My POLITICO U.S. colleagues have the full details.

**A message from MSD: We know that the NHS is still grappling with COVID-19, and working flat out to recover waiting lists and maintain vital services. It is therefore crucial that the UK reduces demand on the NHS from vaccine-preventable diseases like chickenpox as much as possible. Find out more here.**

DRIVING THE DAY

GRAY DAY: It’s finally here. Nearly six months after the first Partygate revelations landed in the Mirror in November last year — followed by a tumultuous period of leaks, denials and apologies, a drip-drip of hugely damaging revelations, and a chaotic police investigation that saw Boris Johnson and Chancellor Rishi Sunak fined for breaking COVID laws — civil service arbiter Sue Gray is expected to at last publish her report into lockdown parties at Downing Street. The BBC confirmed last night that Gray would hand the final copy of her findings to No. 10 today. Here’s how the prime minister’s judgment day will play out …

Expected timeline: Gray’s report should go to No. 10 this morning … It will then be published on the Cabinet Office website for the world to see … Johnson faces Labour leader Keir Starmer at Prime Minister’s Questions at noon … The PM will then make a statement to the Commons responding to the report, where he is likely to offer another groveling apology … Johnson has a meeting with the 1922 committee of Conservative backbenchers scheduled for 5 p.m. … And he will also hold a press conference to address the public — timing of that TBC.

TGIF: Tuesday night’s BBC Panorama with Laura Kuenssberg gave an indication of the sort of scenes we might see described in today’s report. Insiders who were present at the regular “wine time Fridays” told of “bottles lying around parts of the building, bins overflowing with rubbish and empties left on the table,” and “dozens of staff crowded together, and parties going so late that, on occasion, some ended up staying in Downing Street all night.”

Perhaps the most troubling new line … in the program for the government is the suggestion that a Downing Street security guard was mocked for attempting to break up the gatherings. “I remember when a custodian tried to stop it all and he was just shaking his head in this party, being like, ‘This shouldn’t be happening.’ People made fun of him because he was so worked up that this party was happening and it shouldn’t be happening.”

Not another one: The Mirror’s Pippa Crerar matches much of the reporting and also reveals a new photo of another alleged party that was apparently not investigated by Gray or the police. The pic shows wine bottles and donuts on a table to mark the departure of another senior aide, and is accompanied by a WhatsApp message sent by one official on the day saying: “Time to open the Covid secure bar.” Separately, Crerar hears No. 10 aides sent emails to Gray and her team in the last 24 hours ahead of the report’s publication.

Look away now: ITV’s Anushka Asthana reports that three people will be identified in new photos in Gray’s report: Johnson, Sunak and Cabinet Secretary Simon Case.

What will Johnson say? The Mail’s Jason Groves says the PM will adopt a “masochism strategy” with a triple apology to parliament, the public and his own MPs.

So what happens next? Wavering ministers and officials will be on resignation watch after the report is out. The Indy’s Anna Isaac has got hold of a Downing Street “planning document” that appears to be preparation for the resignation of Case, the government’s top civil servant. Isaac writes: “The drafted letter notes Mr Case’s contributions during the Covid-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine. It also notes he took on the role from Sir Mark Sedwill in September 2020, when the country was in the midst of facing Covid, its greatest challenge since World War Two.” Case has been tipped to resign in the papers since the weekend so this is obviously a major flashpoint today.

Coates vs. Cabinet: If there are going to be any ministerial resignations in protest at Partygate, today might be the day. Enjoy Sky’s Sam Coates heckling Cabinet ministers on their way into Downing Street yesterday with Grade-A-troll-level questions including: “Did you lie at the despatch box, prime minister? Would you defend anything at all, Grant Shapps? Is Partygate embarrassing on the world stage, foreign secretary? Are you being loyal to save your job? Do you think a future prime minister would make you foreign secretary? Did Boris Johnson lie at the despatch box, Nadhim Zahawi, or would you prefer to succeed him as prime minister? Has Boris Johnson got a better grip on the government than you had on the foreign office last year? [to Dominic Raab.]” It’s easily the best minute of TV you’ll watch all week.

Letter watch: The key question as ever comes down to whether Tory MPs will use this moment to send letters of no confidence to 1922 committee Chair Graham Brady. The Telegraph’s Chris Hope reckons three more letters have been submitted since the local elections earlier this month. One rebel Tory speculates the letters are now in the high 40s. Remember, 54 letters are needed to trigger a confidence vote. Politics Home’s Adam Payne reports numerous Tory MPs have their “pens poised” for when the Gray report drops, and that several have consulted their colleagues about submitting letters of no confidence to Brady once it lands.

Don’t forget the Met: You would have thought the Met would be unlikely to reopen their investigation, having hardly covered themselves in glory first time round, though anything is possible. The Guardian’s Vikram Dodd and Aubrey Allegretti hear from sources inside the Met expressing bewilderment that officers decided not to fine Johnson over the toast photo event. One police source tells the paper: “There’s a lot of questions to answer. I’m baffled … I think it is blindingly obviously evidence of a breach. The least you would do is question the individual. If I had been responsible for the investigation I’d have to be convinced why the photo did not show a breach.” London Mayor Sadiq Khan has written to the Met seeking a “detailed explanation” of how they came to their Partygate conclusions.

Then there’s the privileges committee … which the Times‘ Henry Zeffman, Oli Wright and Steve Swinford say want to take evidence from both Johnson and Gray, including over their mystery meeting two weeks ago to discuss the handling of the report.

Court of public opinion: If Tory MPs decide not to move against Johnson, it is voters who will make the ultimate judgment. A Savanta poll for the Indy today finds 66 percent of the country want Johnson to resign if he is heavily criticized in today’s report. Andrew Woodcock has the story.

COST OF LIVING CRISIS

THROW A WINDFALL TAX ON THE TABLE: It appears Downing Street will attempt to swiftly move the narrative on from Partygate, with the much-anticipated and hotly contested cost of living package now due as soon as Thursday. The BBC’s Chris Mason says Johnson invited “a bunch of economists into see him” in recent days to debate what to do. Sky’s Sam Coates says Johnson and Sunak will meet today to thrash out the details of the package. Several senior Lobby journalists are reporting that the announcement could be tomorrow. As Coates notes, this will inevitably provoke accusations of a “dead cat,” but the government will say it has to act now. On Tuesday, Ofgem said the energy price cap was likely to rise by another £800 to £2,800 in October.

Deal done, here we go: In their epic Telegraph splash, Ben Riley-Smith, Tony Diver and Martin Evans say Sunak “has concluded that a one-off windfall tax on oil and gas companies is justified.” The Treasury is finalizing the plans, the paper says, and the tax could be directly linked to the amount of investment each company delivers. The policy has been subject to widespread opposition within government, not least from the PM, and the Telegraph also reports that Policing Minister Kit Malthouse pointedly called for lower taxes at Tuesday’s Cabinet.

Will electricity generators be whacked? No, says ITV’s Robert Peston, after the FT revealed HMT was considering dragging them in. The Treasury said no decision had been made.

What will it be spent on? A Sunak ally told Playbook last night that his “singular focus was on helping the most vulnerable.” Peston says the package will provide £10 billion of support, speculating that this could come in the form of an effective one-off £1,000 payment to the 10 million poorest households.

Mix and match: The Times‘ Steve Swinford and Oli Wright also have the £10 billion figure and at “70-80 percent” of the funding will be targeted at the poorest, via increases in the warm homes discount and winter fuel allowance. They also suggest council tax could be cut. Interestingly, they say there are also some “universal” measures under consideration, including a VAT cut on energy and fuel. No. 10 and No. 11 remain at odds on this policy, the Times reports, with the former in favor and the latter opposed.

Split approach: The Sun’s Jonathan Reilly reckons the proceeds of the windfall tax will “likely to be split between a relief for billpayers through council tax cuts and changes to Universal Credit, as well as investment in domestic nuclear and wind energy production.” Harry Cole says Johnson scolded his Cabinet and said they were too young to remember the economic pain of the 1970s.

Expect a PMQs quip … somewhere about Pippa Crerar’s story in the Mirror that Sunak paid £10,000 out of his own pocket to fly by helicopter to a Tory dinner in Wales at the weekend.

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TODAY IN WESTMINSTER

HOUSE OF COMMONS: Sits from 11.30 a.m. with Wales questions, followed by PMQs at noon … After any UQs or statements, MPs will run through the remaining stages of the Product Security and Telecommunications Bill.

NEW RULES: The Commons Standards Committee unveils its proposed new code of conduct for MPs and rules on lobbying this morning in the wake of the Owen Paterson scandal. The recommendations are that MPs should not face a ban on second jobs but there should be “an outright ban on MPs providing paid parliamentary advice, consultancy or strategy service.” The BBC has more details. Read the report here.

STRESSMINSTER: My colleague Esther Webber has the scoop on a new report on working life at Westminster which sheds a light on the stress and abuse faced by many staffers. More than a third of parliamentary workers interviewed by the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) said working in Westminster has a negative impact on their mental health … 33 percent had experienced conflict at work in the last 12 months … and of those, 22 percent said they had been undermined or humiliated, 10 percent said they had been verbally abused or insulted, while others reported instances of sexual harassment and one case of sexual assault.

Speaker’s corner: The CIPD survey was commissioned by the All-Party Group for Compassionate Politics with the support of Commons Speaker Lindsay Hoyle, who stressed: “I want parliament to be a good place to work — where we feel respected, supported, have a good work-life balance and the right training, and is free of discrimination, bullying and harassment.” He underlined his commitment to holding a speaker’s conference to look at parliament’s working practices “as soon as possible.” Multiple parliamentary officials suggested to Esther its terms should be set before summer recess — so MPs will have to make a call on whether to include controversial proposals for an external HR service. Full write-up here.

RAIL STRIKES: Members of the RMT union have voted in favor of rail strikes this summer. Of the 16 train operating companies balloted, 13 voted to strike — although there is some positive news for the government in that GTR — the largest operator by employees, which runs the Thameslink, Great Northern, Southern and Gatwick Express services — did not vote to strike. RMT boss Mick Lynch tells the Mirror’s Dan Bloom that blackouts, fuel shortages and empty shelves are a “realistic possibility if the dispute continues and we have to escalate the action.” Labour’s Shadow Rail Minister Tan Dhesi would not be drawn on whether the opposition would back the strike action, speaking to Talk TV’s Tom Newton Dunn last night.

RUSSIAN CONTRACTS CLAMPDOWN: Leveling Up Secretary Michael Gove is laying a statutory instrument today so councils in England can terminate their contracts with businesses linked to Russia and Belarus. A government source tells Playbook: “Businesses with links to Putin’s barbaric regime should not benefit from taxpayers’ money. These measures will be another tool in our arsenal to strangle Putin’s war machine.” It is believed around 100 such contracts exist.

TIMING: Tory Chair Oliver Dowden is meeting MPs in Leicestershire today to unveil his plan to win the next election: holding the Tories’ 80 most marginal seats, and gaining another 20 from opposition parties. Sure there won’t be anything else on the agenda. The Telegraph’s Chris Hope has the story.

COST OF LIVING SCOOP: Government proponents of a cut to U.K. tariffs to help with the cost of living crisis are now suggesting a temporary cut for just six or 12 months, POLITICO’s Emilio Casalicchio reports. The Cabinet has split on the proposal, with proponents including Brexit Opportunities Minister Jacob Rees-Mogg coming up against the Department for International Trade, which insists a cut would reduce British negotiating leverage in trade talks. Introducing the measure on a temporary basis is seen as a compromise that might be palatable to both sides.

GOVT OF ALL THE OUTSOURCING: The U.K. is effectively outsourcing post-Brexit border checks to the EU until its future border plans are in place, Emilio writes.

GREEN LIGHT FOR GENE-EDITED CROPS: The government will later today introduce its much-anticipated bill which would allow gene-edited food to be sold in England, marking the biggest break with EU rules since Brexit. Gene-edited technologies entail more precise and targeted changes to DNA than traditional genetic modification techniques, but are currently regulated in the EU under the same strict law. As POLITICO’s Cristina Gallardo reports, the government argues that gene editing will allow for the development of crops more resistant to pests and diseases, therefore reducing the need for pesticides and herbicides, including controversial chemicals such as neonicotinoids.

Here comes the union bust-up: The SNP — historically opposed to any genetic modification technology — Scottish government has warned it remains “wholly opposed to the imposition” of this legislation and “will not accept any constraint on the exercise of devolved powers,” a spokesperson said. The Welsh government has also indicated it will stick to its precautionary approach toward genetic modification. Northern Ireland is obliged to align with EU single market rules on food and feed, which includes matters related to gene editing and GMOs, under the terms of Britain’s exit from the EU.

TRUSS VISIT: Foreign Secretary Liz Truss is in Belfast today meeting businesses and business groups to discuss the U.K. government’s red and green lane proposals on customs between Northern Ireland and Great Britain.

HEALEY SPEECH: Shadow Defense Secretary John Healey is giving a speech to Chatham House where he will argue that the government has left Britain’s Armed Forces with “weakened foundations” after a decade of decline and must reboot defense plans to respond to new threats to our security following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Register for the event here.

Committee corridor: The home affairs committee will look at the government’s 10-year drugs strategy with Carol Black, the government’s independent adviser for drugs (10 a.m.) … The government trade deal with New Zealand is under the microscope at the international trade committee (10 a.m.) … Prisons Minister Victoria Atkins will be scrutinized on efforts to improve British prisons at the justice committee (1.30 p.m.) … The Treasury committee will question the leadership of the Payment Systems Regulator on card charge increases from Mastercard and Visa (2.15 p.m.) … Top senior journos Katy Searle, Caroline Wheeler and Cristina Nicolotti Squires will discuss reporting of women in parliament at the women and equalities committee (2.30 p.m.) … COP26 President Alok Sharma is up at the environmental audit committee (3 p.m.) … and the joint committee on human rights will host Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi for a session on historic adoption practices (3 p.m.).

Lords: Sits from 3 p.m. with questions on rising energy bills, new IT systems for border checks on goods and evacuation plans for disabled residents in high-rise buildings … Followed by the second reading of the Procurement Bill.

UKRAINE UPDATE

DIGEST: Fighting continues to rage in Ukraine’s east, where Moscow is attempting to encircle the cities of Severodonetsk and Lysychansk … The BBC’s Jeremy Bowen has a report from the front line in Luhansk in the Donbas region, where the Ukrainian General Staff says the Russians appear to be concentrating their forces for another push … Hungary’s Viktor Orbán has declared a state of emergency due to the war in Ukraine, allowing his government to assume emergency powers … and the EU’s Russian oil ban is hanging by a thread because Hungary is blocking it.

STATE OF THE UNION

NI IS CHANGING: The proportion of people in Northern Ireland claiming an “exclusively Irish not British” identity has been growing since the Brexit referendum, and there’s a strengthening of nationalist identity among respondents, even compared with 2020, according to the results of a survey shared exclusively with POLITICO’s The Ex Files newsletter. The findings from the NI Life and Times Survey also show that an equal proportion of respondents (38 percent) believe that the U.K. will exist in 20 years time as believe that there will be a united Ireland by then. More than six in 10 people now say that they believe Brexit makes a united Ireland more likely.

This means … Following the election to the Northern Ireland Assembly on May 5 “nationalists feel the wind in their sails and unionists are increasingly doubtful about the surety of the union,” said Katy Hayward, a sociologist at Queen’s University Belfast and one of the researchers involved in the study. “What is different now is that future stability between the two depends fundamentally on the U.K.-EU relationship.” The survey will be discussed at an U.K. in a Changing Europe event tomorrow.

MILESTONE: Nicola Sturgeon is now Scotland’s longest serving first minister, having today overtaken her predecessor Alex Salmond with a total of seven years, six months and five days.

**A message from MSD: Although chickenpox is a mild disease for most, infections still have a material impact on the NHS. The UK sees over 650,000 cases of chickenpox each year, leading to around 125,000 GP appointments and 5,600 hospitalisations. Chickenpox is a vaccine-preventable disease, meaning that these impacts could be avoided – but the UK is yet to leverage this opportunity. With COVID-19 set to continue putting the NHS under pressure in the months and years ahead, we must make use of every available tool to mitigate the wider impact of vaccine-preventable disease. It is time now to Stop the Spots and reduce the avoidable strain that this common childhood disease places on the NHS. To find out more, visit https://stopthespots.co.uk/home/ (The Stop the Spots campaign has been initiated and funded by MSD. The content of the campaign has been provided by MSD. Job number GB-NON-05951).**

MEDIA ROUND

Environment Secretary George Eustice broadcast round: Times Radio (7.20 a.m.) … Sky News (7.30 a.m.) … LBC (7.50 a.m.) … ITV GMB (8.30 a.m.) … talkTV (8.45 a.m.) … GB News (tbc).

Also on Good Morning Britain: RMT General Secretary Mick Lynch (7.25 a.m.).

Also on Kay Burley (Sky News): Former No. 10 spinner Alastair Campbell (7.05 a.m.) … Shadow Treasury Minister James Murray (8.05 a.m.) … Former head of the Civil Service Bob Kerslake (8.20 a.m.) … Crossbench peer Simon Woolley (8.35 a.m.).

Also on Nick Ferrari at Breakfast (LBC): Pulse Clean Energy boss Paul Massara (7.10 a.m.) … Former Russian PM Mikhail Kasyanov (7.40 a.m.).

Also on Times Radio breakfast: President of the Country, Land & Business Association Mark Tufnell (7.15 a.m.) … Standards committee Chairman Chris Bryant (7.35 a.m.) … Former head of the Civil Service Bob Kerslake (8.05 a.m.) … Angela Knight, former chief executive of Energy UK and former economic secretary to the Treasury (8.15 a.m.).

Also on Julia Hartley-Brewer breakfast show (talkTV): Former Lib Dem leader Vince Cable (8.05 a.m.) … RMT Assistant General Secretary Eddie Dempsey (8.30 a.m.).

The Briefing with Gloria De Piero (GB News 11.50 a.m.): Tory MP Kevin Hollinrake and Labour MP Margaret Hodge.

Tonight with Andrew Marr (LBC 6 p.m.): Labour MP Margaret Beckett (6.30 p.m.).

Cross Question with Iain Dale (LBC 8 p.m.): Tory MP John Penrose … Labour MP Rachael Maskell … The Telegraph’s Olivia Utley.

Peston (ITV and Twitter 10.45 p.m.): Shadow Domestic Violence Minister Jess Phillips.

Reviewing the paper’s tonight: Sky News (10.30 p.m. and 11.30 p.m.): The Mirror’s Kevin Maguire and the Mail’s Andrew Pierce.

TODAY’S FRONT PAGES

(Click on the publication’s name to see its front page.)

Bloomberg: Glencore pleads guilty to decade of bribery and manipulation.

Daily Express: It’s ready! Rishi’s rescue plan for millions.

Daily Mail: Rescue deal for cost of living ‘in days.’

Daily Mirror: Why did PM deny it? We knew parties broke rules.

Daily Star: Party animals — Insiders reveal all the juicy details.

Financial Times: Energy groups tumble as Sunak races to finalise windfall tax plan.

HuffPost UK: A dead cat for big dog?

i: Fuel bills to climb by £800 as price cap rises again.

Metro: All-nighter parties at No 10.

POLITICO UK: U.K. outsources post-Brexit border checks to EU.

PoliticsHome: MPs have ‘pens poised’ on no confidence letters as Boris Johnson braces for Sue Gray report.

The Daily Telegraph: Windfall tax within days as PM seeks to throw off partygate.

The Guardian: Sunak’s cost-of-living scramble as energy bills forecast to hit £2,800.

The Independent: No 10 staff reveal culture of drinking and parties.

The Times: Windfall tax will fund help for poor families.

LONDON CALLING

WESTMINSTER WEATHER: ☁️☁️☁️ Dry and cloudy. Highs of 18C.

BIRTHDAYS: Former Paymaster General Geoffrey Robinson … Former Foreign Office Minister Alistair Burt … Tory peer Gloria Hooper … Lib Dem peer Mike Storey … and former Labour spin doctor Alastair Campbell.

PLAYBOOK COULDN’T HAPPEN WITHOUT: My editor Zoya Sheftalovich, reporter Andrew McDonald and producer Grace Stranger.

SUBSCRIBE to the POLITICO newsletter family: Brussels Playbook | London Playbook | Playbook Paris | EU Confidential | Sunday Crunch | EU Influence | London Influence | AI: Decoded | Digital Bridge | China Direct | Berlin Bulletin | D.C. Playbook | All our POLITICO Pro policy morning newsletters

More from ... Alex Wickham

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2022-05-25 06:32:32Z
CBMicWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnBvbGl0aWNvLmV1L25ld3NsZXR0ZXIvbG9uZG9uLXBsYXlib29rL2JpZGVuLXZzLWd1bi1sb2JieS1ncmF5LWRheS10aHJvdy1hLXdpbmRmYWxsLXRheC1vbi10aGUtdGFibGUv0gF1aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cucG9saXRpY28uZXUvbmV3c2xldHRlci9sb25kb24tcGxheWJvb2svYmlkZW4tdnMtZ3VuLWxvYmJ5LWdyYXktZGF5LXRocm93LWEtd2luZGZhbGwtdGF4LW9uLXRoZS10YWJsZS9hbXAv

Selasa, 24 Mei 2022

Ava White: Boy guilty of murdering girl, 12, in Snapchat row - BBC

Ava White
Family handout

A boy who stabbed a schoolgirl in a row over a Snapchat video has been found guilty of her murder.

Ava White, 12, was fatally stabbed in Liverpool city centre after a Christmas lights switch-on on 25 November 2021.

The 14-year-old, who cannot be named for legal reasons, told Liverpool Crown Court he accidentally stabbed her in self-defence.

He had pleaded guilty to possessing an offensive weapon but was convicted of murder after a trial.

Mrs Justice Amanda Yip told the boy that in light of the verdict, he would face a life sentence, but she was still to decide "what the shortest amount of time that you will have to serve in custody is".

Knife which was used to stab Ava White
PA Media

The court heard Ava and her friends became involved in an argument with the teenager and three of his friends after the boys recorded Snapchat videos of her group.

The boy told the jury he heard one of Ava's group threaten to stab his friend if he did not delete a video of Ava.

He claimed he had wanted to "frighten her away" and had not meant to stab her.

Ava's friends said the boy "grinned" after attacking her in School Lane before fleeing.

The court heard he then discarded the knife and took off his coat, which was later found in a wheelie bin.

Shortly after, CCTV showed him and his friends in a shop where the boy took a selfie and the group bought butter, which he said was for crumpets.

He then went to a friend's home and when his mother contacted him to tell him police wanted to speak to him, he told her he was playing a computer game.

The youth was arrested at about 22:30 GMT, a few hours after the stabbing, and initially told his mother he was "not going the cells".

He told police he had not been in the city centre, but in later interviews, he went on to blame another boy for the stabbing.

Tribute to Ava White on screen
Reuters

He told the court he had lied to police because he thought he would "get away with it", adding: "I was scared I was going to go to jail."

The boy admitted possessing the knife, which the court heard had a blade measuring 3ins (7.5cm), but denied murder and an alternative charge of manslaughter.

The jury heard edited transcripts of five police interviews carried out in the days following his arrest.

Following legal discussions, the jury was not told that in one interview, he told an officer to "shut up" and called him a derogatory term, while in another, he referred to "smoking weed".

The jury delivered its verdict after deliberating for two hours eight minutes, with one jury member wiping away a tear as they were discharged by Mrs Justice Yip.

More than 20 members of Ava's family cheered as the verdict was passed, while the boy, who was appearing on video-link, had his head in his hands.

Adjourning the case for sentencing on 11 July, the judge told the boy that "in light of the jury's verdict, I think you know I can only impose a life sentence, but what I have to do is decide what the shortest amount of time that you will have to serve in custody is".

Balloons released
PA Media

Speaking outside court, Det Supt Sue Coombs said Ava's mother, father and sister were "completely devastated".

"Since that dreadful night they have suffered immeasurable grief and sadness," she continued.

"It has been heartbreaking for them to witness Ava's final moments during this court process."

The detective thanked the members of the public, retail staff and medics "who did everything they could to try save Ava's life".

Liverpool Mayor Joanne Anderson said the city council's thoughts were also with Ava's family and friends.

"We can only hope that the verdict brings them some comfort," Ms Anderson added.

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2022-05-24 15:56:11Z
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Sadiq Khan demands Met explain why Boris Johnson escaped second party fine - The Times

Sadiq Khan has escalated his row with the Metropolitan Police by demanding the commissioner explain why Boris Johnson was not fined for attending an illegal party.

Khan wrote to Sir Stephen House, the acting commissioner, to ask for information about the Met’s approach to the Downing Street parties investigation. The force had rejected his request for transparency earlier today.

The mayor wants House to report to him with details of Operation Hillman’s decisions about individuals and the rationale behind how fines were issued. He said that the Met should make more information public and reassure Londoners, warning that trust and confidence in the police was being “further eroded by this lack of clarity”.

The Met is under pressure to explain why the prime minister was

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2022-05-24 15:15:00Z
1442427318

Windfall Tax News Hits UK Utility Stocks Like EDF, SSE, Centrica (CNA) - Bloomberg

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. Windfall Tax News Hits UK Utility Stocks Like EDF, SSE, Centrica (CNA)  Bloomberg
  2. Rishi Sunak reportedly considering windfall tax on electricity generators  The Guardian
  3. Windfall tax could help pay for the poorest five million to get an increase in benefits  The Telegraph
  4. Windfall taxes are a betrayal of Conservatism  The Telegraph
  5. Sunak orders plan for windfall tax on electricity generators  Financial Times
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2022-05-24 10:58:37Z
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Senin, 23 Mei 2022

Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe reveals she was forced to sign 'false confession' before leaving Iran - Sky News

Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe has said she was forced to sign a "false confession" in front of a UK government witness before she was allowed to leave Iran.

The British-Iranian hostage survivor described the act, which was captured on camera, as "dehumanising".

She said she expects Tehran to use it against her in the future.

While "under duress", the 44-year-old charity worker claimed she was forced to admit to spying allegations made by Iran after they detained her for six years - a charge she and the UK denied.

She said she was taken to the airport by the Revolutionary Guards without seeing her parents on the day in March when she was to be freed.

"Instead I was made to sign the forced confession at the airport in the presence of the British government," Ms Zaghari-Ratcliffe told the BBC.

She was then told by the Iranians that the UK had settled a historic £400m debt dating to the 1970s.

More on Nazanin Zaghari-ratcliffe

"They told me that 'you won't be able to get on the plane'. And I knew that that was like a last-minute game because I knew they were... they told me that they have been given the money," she said.

"So what is the point of making me sign a piece of paper which is incorrect? It's a false confession."

Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe also told the BBC's Emma Barnett that a British official was present at the time she signed the document.

"The whole thing of me signing the forced confession was filmed," she said.

"It's a tool. So I'm sure they will show that someday."

The revelation comes after her husband Richard Ratcliffe alluded to "mistakes made at the end" of the ordeal in Iran.

Speaking earlier this month after his wife's first meeting with Prime Minister Boris Johnson since her release, Mr Ratcliffe said: "I think there are lessons to learn, there is a wider problem.

"We talked about the mistakes made at the end. It was rough at the end, and I think, when Nazanin is ready to talk about it, that is something that we need to go through."

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Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe meets PM

Meanwhile, at a press conference following her release in March, Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe said it had taken the government far too long to pay the multimillion-pound debt to Iran, which helped secure her release.

She said although she could not be happier to be home, "this should have happened six years ago".

Following the remarks, she received significant backlash online from people saying she should be grateful, but Downing Street was quick to defend her.

Boris Johnson's official spokesman said: "Clearly someone who has been through something like Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe has should not get any abuse.

"As a UK citizen, she is rightly able to voice her opinion on any topic she wishes."

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2022-05-23 12:03:22Z
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