Jumat, 14 Mei 2021

Gordon Brown's emotional rally against the SNP's healthcare 'lie' unveiled - Express

Former Prime Minister Gordon Brown has launched a new campaign to keep the Union together by appealing to the voters of “Middle Scotland”. Mr Brown said his two-year-old thinktank "Our Scottish Future" was being converted into a “campaigning movement”. He said it would put “the positive, progressive and patriotic case for Scotland in Britain”, and urged people to join it.

The group will make the case for a "reformed" UK, Mr Brown said, and target the 40 percent of Scots who he believes are not strongly committed to either the Union or independence.

Mr Brown’s comments come in the wake of Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon leading the SNP to a landslide fourth term in office on a manifesto pledge to hold another independence referendum.

It is not a surprise the former Prime Minister would intervene in the debate.

Mr Brown played a prominent role in the lead-up to, and the aftermath of, the 2014 Scottish independence referendum, campaigning for Scotland to stay in the UK.

Seven years ago, in a surprisingly personal address to Labour activists in Glasgow, Mr Brown used his NHS connections to dismiss the idea that Scotland's health service was slipping towards privatisation under Westminster rule.

He said former Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond's party was not "telling people the truth" on the subject and urged Scots across the country to "nail the SNP lie" on the NHS.

The speech, branded by some commentators as the most emotional of the referendum campaign, was delivered at the Labour Party's Glaswegian HQ.

During his time in the media spotlight, Mr Brown rarely discussed his children, choosing instead to keep his private life away from the cameras.

In 2002, while Mr Brown was Chancellor, his baby daughter Jennifer Jane died in an Edinburgh hospital.

She was just 10 days old.

Discussing a new timetable for extra powers that would have been delivered to the Scottish Parliament after a No vote, the former Labour leader explained why the NHS would have been protected if Scotland stayed in the UK.

JUST IN: Nicola Sturgeon's independence dream shattered as bid deemed 'risky'

The former Prime Minister said: "I love Scotland. I love the National Health Service. I was born into the National Health Service. I grew up in the National Health Service.

"When I lost the sight of my eye and faced the prospect of going blind, my sight was saved by the National Health Service.

"When my daughter died, it was a result of not being able to do anything to save her life and my respect for the National Health Service grew as a result of the experience that Sarah and I had.

"Do you think that I or anybody else who cares about the National Health Service would stand by and do nothing if we thought the National Health Service was going to be privatised in Scotland and its funds were going to be cut? Would we stand back and do nothing without a fight? Of course not!"

Mr Brown said Labour had "built", "developed" and "funded" the NHS, unlike the SNP, and added that only Mr Salmond's party could have privatised Scotland's health service.

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He said independence would mean Scotland walking away from the £1billion health funding boost it enjoyed thanks to Westminster's system of funnelling money to where it is most needed.

The intervention came with many on the pro-UK side furious at the SNP's "scaremongering" on the NHS, especially the suggestion Scotland's health service was under threat from Westminster privatisation.

Mr Brown also defended the new devolution timetable, saying it had cross-party support and would reassure Scots that "change" was coming after a No vote.

Mr Salmond had dismissed the new timetable as a "panicked" move by Westminster and pledged to protect the NHS's "free at the point of use" principle in an independent Scotland's written constitution.

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2021-05-14 19:05:00Z
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COVID-19: Glasgow and Moray to remain in Level 3 amid new cases linked to Indian variant - Sky News

Glasgow and Moray will remain in Level 3 amid concerns a new surge of COVID-19 cases in Scotland is being driven by the Indian variant of the virus.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said on Friday that these areas will remain at Level 3 of Scotland's five-tier system of coronavirus restrictions for a week until a further decision is made at the end of next week.

She said the situation in Glasgow is causing even more concern than Moray, with initial research suggesting the outbreak could be being driven by the Indian variant.

It comes as the rest of Scotland drops to Level 2 restrictions on Monday, meaning cinemas, theatres, concert halls and stadiums can open across the rest of the nation - but not in Glasgow and Moray.

Live COVID updates from the UK and around the world

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Some things you can do at Level 3:

• Meet in groups of up to six from two households in an indoor public place such as a café, pub or restaurant

• You can meet in groups of up to six from six households outdoors, in a private garden or a public place like a park or an outdoor area of a café

• Under 12s do not count towards the total number of people or households meeting outside but do count towards the household numbers indoors

• You can travel anywhere in Scotland and can stay in holiday accommodation - but you should not stay in someone else's house

At Level 2, you can meet socially in groups of up to:

• Six people from three households in your home or theirs - and can stay overnight

• Six people from three households in an indoor public place like a café, pub or restaurant

• Eight people from eight households outdoors

Glasgow has now overtaken Moray as Scotland's coronavirus hotspot, with an epidemiologist warning the country is seeing a "loss of control" of the pandemic in some areas.

Figures published on Friday showed there were 80.4 cases per 100,000 people in Glasgow in the seven days to 11 May - surpassing Moray where there were 68.9.

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Tuesday: Sturgeon announces lockdown easing in Scotland

Moray experienced a rise in cases that started in April and it had the highest rate in Scotland in recent days.

The spike in infections in Glasgow could include the Indian B.1.617.2 variant, public health experts claim.

Epidemiologist Dr Deepti Gurdasani warned it would be early to lift restrictions.

She also called for action to prevent the situation from worsening following concerns about the spread of one of the new Indian variants of the virus north of the border.

Dr Gurdasani told BBC Radio Scotland's Good Morning Scotland programme: "The idea is certainly premature, in fact the government should be considering the opposite.

"In Scotland as a whole we've actually seen the number of new cases double in the last week, and while the cases are so low it's hard to see exponential rises.

"This is what early exponential rises look like and we're seeing loss of control of the pandemic in many parts of Scotland, and the situation is likely much wider and other places will follow unless action is taken to actually prevent this and pre-empt this now."

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In the past 24 hours, Scotland has recorded two COVID deaths and a further 215 cases, according to the latest Scottish government figures.

It brings the total number of deaths in the country since the beginning of the pandemic to 7,664.

A total of 228,908 have tested positive for the virus and the daily test positivity rate is 1.3%, up from 1.2% the previous day.

Of the 215 new cases, 110 were in the NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde health board area.

This was followed by 37 in NHS Lothian, 21 in NHS Lanarkshire, 16 in NHS Fife and 15 in NHS Grampian - which covers Moray.

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2021-05-14 17:15:00Z
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Northern Ireland: Edwin Poots beats Sir Jeffrey Donaldson to succeed Arlene Foster as DUP leader - Sky News

Edwin Poots has been elected leader of the Democratic Unionist Party in Northern Ireland.

He succeeds Arlene Foster who announced her resignation, following an internal revolt over her leadership.

Mr Poots, 55, who has held several Stormont portfolios, is currently Northern Ireland's agriculture minister.

He does not intend on succeeding Mrs Foster as First Minister of Northern Ireland and will nominate another DUP candidate.

After the result was announced Mr Poots spoke about the resilence of people in Northern Ireland.

"It's that resilience that we are going to go forward and make Northern Ireland a good place." he said.

"This party has been the authentic voice of unionism and will continue to be the authentic voice of unionism under my leadership."

More on Arlene Foster

Arlene Foster stands down as the leader of the DUP.
Image: Arlene Foster announcing her resignation as the leader of the DUP

It was a close contest between Mr Poots and the party's Westminster leader, Sir Jeffrey Donaldson MP.

Sir Jeffrey represents the more pragmatic wing of the party and Mr Poots the more ideological.

The new leader-elect has courted controversy in the past over his strongly-held views on evolution and homosexuality.

Edwin Poots is also running for leader
Image: Mr Poots, 55, has held several Stormont portfolios

As health minister, he tried to maintain a ban on gay men donating blood and opposed adoption by same-sex couples.

Many will view this as a victory for the more traditional wing of the DUP but there was another dimension to this contest.

Both candidates had pledged to reform the party and reconnect the leadership with the grassroots.

He is under pressure to take a harder line on the Northern Ireland Brexit Protocol than his predecessor did.

 Sir Jeffrey Donaldson
Image: Rival Sir Jeffrey Donaldson lost the race to lead the DUP

Some Unionists want to end co-operation with the Irish government over the Irish Sea border.

But that would be considered a breach of the ministerial code and could collapse the devolved government.

His first challenge will be to reunite the party without further dividing the power-sharing administration.

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2021-05-14 16:50:38Z
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Glasgow protesters praised for blocking UK immigration officers - Al Jazeera English

Hundreds of Glaswegians rallied in the Scottish city on Thursday to win the temporary release of two men who had been detained by British immigration officers, earning widespread praise from activists, experts, the refugee community and some sections of the media.

Video footage from the scene in Kenmure Street showed two men emerging from the back of a van belonging to the United Kingdom’s Home Office, which sets the country’s immigration rules, hours after the pair had reportedly been detained from an apartment in the local area.

The Home Office said the men had been detained over “suspected immigration offences”.

But about 200 protesters prevented immigration officials from carrying the men away by surrounding the vehicle and blocking its exit path.

One demonstrator climbed under the van to stop it from moving, while others nearby stood and sat in the road. Some protesters chanted, “These are our neighbours, let them go.”

The demonstration forced a standoff with the immigration officials and Police Scotland, who were called to the scene at about 10am local time (09:00 GMT).

After about seven hours, the Scottish police force decided to release the men on bail, pending investigation.

They said they wanted “to protect the safety, public health and wellbeing of all people involved in the detention and subsequent protest”.

Large gatherings are currently banned in Scotland as part of coronavirus lockdown measures.

‘Heroic act of resistance’

Many celebrated the protesters’ efforts, with some calling the demonstration a “heroic act of resistance” against the Home Office and UK immigration laws, which have long been criticised by human rights groups as unduly harsh and unfairly implemented.

The National newspaper in Scotland, which supports the idea of Scottish secession from the UK, ran with a provocative front-page headline: “Glasgow 1, ‘Team UK’: 0 – People power forces despicable Home Office to back down.”

Under successive Conservative Party governments determined to make the UK a “hostile environment” for undocumented migration, rules have been tightened over the past decade.

Others described the protest as a “fantastic display of community solidarity”.

Sharing a video of the men’s release, one Twitter user said: “When us humans put our minds to it, we are capable of such gorgeous acts of solidarity.”

Another added: “This is incredible. A brutal deportation prevented by quick-thinking and courageous neighbours. Truly inspirational.”

Many social media users also criticised UK Home Secretary Priti Patel and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservative Party government.

“Events in Glasgow yesterday and widespread support for both protesters and victims across the UK are a useful reminder, that there are an awful lot of great, decent people in this nation who hate Priti Patel’s … hateful anti-migrant policies,” one Twitter user said.

Another said: “People power at its best! Well done the people of Glasgow. Priti Patel this is what humanity looks like.”

‘Hostile environment not welcome here’

Thursday’s scenes also gained the attention of several prominent Scottish politicians, exposing a deepening divide between the country’s devolved government, led by First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, and Johnson’s administration.

Sturgeon, who wants to wrest immigration powers from Westminster, welcomed Police Scotland’s actions in releasing the two men and blamed Johnson’s government for what she called a “dangerous situation”.

Sturgeon, whose Scottish Parliament electoral district includes the area where the incident took place, also said she had complained to UK officials and asked them to avoid such situations in the future.

Her pro-independence Scottish National Party, which won the largest number of seats in an election for the Scottish Parliament last week, has campaigned for Scotland’s government to receive powers to grant immigration visas.

“No assurances were given – and frankly no empathy shown – when I managed to speak to a junior minister earlier,” she said in a statement.

Humza Yousaf, the devolved Scottish government’s justice secretary, tweeted: “I am pleased Police Scot intervened on public safety & health grounds to release individuals involved. But let me be clear, the Hostile Environment created by UK Govt is not welcome here.”

But the Home Office said it would continue with its plans to speed up deportations of “those who have entered the UK illegally” as part of its so-called New Plan for Immigration.

“The UK government is tackling illegal immigration and the harm it causes, often to the most vulnerable people by removing those with no right to be in the UK,” a spokesperson for the department said in a statement. “The operation in Glasgow was conducted in relation to suspected immigration offences and the two Indian nationals complied with officers at all times.”

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2021-05-14 12:11:33Z
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Kamis, 13 Mei 2021

EU 'will' allow Sturgeon's independent Scotland in: 'This is nothing like Catalonia' - Express

The Scottish National Party (SNP) and Scottish Greens won a total of 72 seats in Holyrood on a record turnout for the Scottish Parliament elections of 63 percent – 10 percent higher than on average for a Scottish Parliament election. The election victory is an urgent issue for one union – the UK – but it may also pose important questions down the line for another: the EU. Both parties stood on a platform of an independent Scotland joining the bloc.

However, Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon would have to overcome many hurdles before she could secure membership.

After winning Indyref2, Scotland would need to apply to join the bloc again under Article 49 of the Treaty of the European Union.

New members can only be allowed into the bloc through an unanimous vote from the existing member states and an independent Scotland would undoubtedly ruffle feathers.

Spain is struggling with secession demands itself, from Catalonia, so many believe it is unlikely to support a newly independent state.

Scotland could be rejected by Brussels due to its current deficit of seven percent of GDP, unless it adopted a strict austerity programme from the EU as well as potentially adopting the euro.

In an exclusive interview with Express.co.uk, though, Professor Michael Keating, dismissed such claims, arguing the EU would welcome Scotland, as "it is nothing like Catalonia".

He said: "There is no reason why Scotland could not join.

"If the UK accepted it, then Spain would accept it.

"That's logical for them because they say, 'It is different from Catalonia if Scotland seceded.'

"It's in their interest to say that it's the business of the UK.

"They have a constitution and their constitution says Catalonia cannot leave.

"Scotland is different.

"Unilateral secessions are completely different matters."

In another interview with Express.co.uk, though, Mar Aguilera Vaqués, professor of constitutional law at the University of Barcelona, argued that if Scotland becomes independent, it would be treated in the same way as Kosovo by the Spanish government.

JUST IN: Le Pen's aide baffled by Barnier's presidential bid

She explained: "We had a football match.

"Spain against Kosovo and there was the biggest scandal.

"On Spanish television they wrote Kosovo in lower cases because Spain doesn't recognise its independence."

Ms Aquilera Vaqués added: "I guess it would be the same for Scotland for sure...

"They don't want to replicate what is happening here with Catalonia."

Catalonia is one of Spain's wealthiest and most productive regions and has a distinct history dating back almost 1,000 years.

Its desire for independence stretches back decades.

Three years since its government’s failed attempt to unilaterally declare independence, Catalonia has somewhat disappeared from international headlines.

However, while its institutions are unlikely to pose any serious new threats to Spain’s stability, the political situation in the autonomous region is far from normalised.

Several pro-independence politicians are currently in jail or in exile, violent protests regularly break out in the streets, and the ‘war of flags’ continues on the balconies of Catalonia’s towns and cities.

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Ahead of the Scottish independence referendum in 2014, ex-Spanish leader Mariano Rajoy told his government that he believed an independent Scotland could only apply to join the EU from outside the organisation as a new state, as he warned against regions of Europe embarking on “solo adventures in an uncertain future”.

While Mr Rajoy’s government was facing an election in late 2015, before Scotland formally sought to become independent, the Spanish politician’s words were seen as an effective veto on immediate Scottish entry to the EU.

Speaking at a joint press conference with former French president, François Hollande, Mr Rajoy said: “It’s very clear to me, as it is for everybody else in the world, that a country that would obtain independence from the EU would remain out of the EU, and that is good for Scottish citizens to know and for all EU citizens to know.”

Mr Rajoy said EU treaties “apply only to member states that have agreed and ratified them, and if a part of one member state cleaves from the member state, it converts itself into a third party with relation to the EU”.

He added: “That is the law and that law applies.

“In no way does it benefit our European regions and our citizens to propose divisions or solo adventures in an uncertain future in which the exit points may seem clear but the destination is unknown.”

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2021-05-14 00:00:00Z
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ITV National News: Second vaccine doses could be brought forward as Indian variant cases double - ITV News

ITV News Science Editor Tom Clarke reports on the measures being used to stamp out the Indian variant


Second doses of coronavirus vaccines for eligible groups could be brought forward and surge testing will be deployed after cases of an Indian Covid variant more than doubled in the past week in the UK.

The government announcement came after Public Health England (PHE) data published on Thursday showed there are 1,313 cases of the B16172, also known as VOC-21APR-02 variant in the country, up from 520 the previous week.

The cases are largely in the north west of England, with some in London.

Surge testing has already been deployed in Bolton and will soon begin in Formby on Merseyside after cases were detected in the areas.

The Department of Health said increased genomic sequencing and enhanced contact tracing was also take place in affected areas.

There are fears the Indian variant could be more transmissible than the Kent variant which is currently the dominant strain in the UK.


ITV News Science Editor Tom Clarke reports on the data released today which shows this variant is more transmissible than the Kent variant

The Indian variant does not appear to have yet led to an increase in deaths and hospitalisations.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the government is "monitoring the situation very carefully and will not hesitate to take further action if necessary".

He urged anyone who lives in an area of the country where surge testing is taking place to get a test in a bid to stop the spread of any variant.

Earlier on Thursday, the prime minister refused to rule out local lockdowns in a bid to combat new coronavirus strains, after saying he is "anxious" about the "variant of concern" first identified in India.

Boris Johnson said there's no evidence to suggest any delays to England's roadmap out of lockdown are needed, but admitted there "may be things we have to do locally".

He said there are a "range of things" the government could do to protect Britons from the Indian variant and ministers "will not hesitate" to act.

Speaking at a primary school in Ferryhill, County Durham, Mr Johnson said: "At the moment, I can see nothing that dissuades me from thinking we will be able to go ahead on Monday and indeed on June 21."

Asked if local lockdowns were possible, Prime Minister Johnson said: “There are a range of things we could do, we want to make sure we grip it.

“Obviously there’s surge testing, there’s surge tracing.”

He added: “If we have to do other things, then of course the public would want us to rule nothing out. We have always been clear we would be led by the data."



Dr Susan Hopkins, Covid-19 Strategic Response Director at PHE, said: "Cases of this variant are rising in the community and we are continuously monitoring its spread and severity to ensure we take rapid public health action.

"We need to act collectively and responsibly to ensure that variants do not impact on the progress we have all made to drive down levels of Covid-19 and the increased freedom that brings."

It is thought the Indian variant of coronavirus is the main contributor to the country's deadly new wave of coronavirus, though experts in the UK believe current coronavirus vaccines do protect against it.

The variant B16172 was first detected in India in March.

It is one of three related variants of the virus. The other two variants - called B16171 and B16173 remain classified as "variant under investigation"

Concerns about the variant come as Public Health England revealed that Covid-19 case rates have increased slightly across most regions of England.

In the North West the rate was 32.6 cases per 100,000 people in the seven days to May 9, up from 25.5 the previous week, while in the East Midlands it increased from 23.1 to 29.8 over the same period.

Slight increases were also recorded in the East of England, London, North East and South-West, which had the lowest rate at 13.1, up from 12.2.

Yorkshire and the Humber recorded the highest rate at 40.5 cases per 100,000 people, down slightly from 42.5 in the previous week.



Number 10 said local lockdowns would not be imposed through the tier system, which was previously employed in England to apply different restrictions to different areas.

“There are no plans to reintroduce tiering measures, like I say we have got a raft of measures available to us which are already in place, with regards local testing, surge testing and tracing.”

Despite concerns about the Indian variant, the PM said he is "optimistic" about the UK getting back to normality.

Asked if masks and social distancing would soon be a thing of the past, Mr Johnson said: “I think we have to wait a little bit longer to see how the data is looking but I am cautiously optimistic about that and provided this Indian variant doesn’t take off in the way some people fear, I think certainly things could get back much, much closer to normality.”


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2021-05-13 21:06:32Z
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Greensill lobbying: Every chance David Cameron will be hauled back before MPs to answer more questions - Sky News

It was always going to be a long and painful afternoon for David Cameron. And it couldn't have been much worse.

But he didn't help himself by being evasive, long-winded and giving some answers to questions that will be challenged and disputed.

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Greensill paid 'far more' than PM salary

The overwhelming impression that anyone who sat through nearly four hours of questions by MPs on two House of Commons committees will have formed, was that he was a former prime minister who wanted to cash in and make money.

He looked shifty as he refused several times to reveal how much he was being paid by financier Lex Greensill, leaving Mel Stride, the normally mild-mannered Conservative MP who chairs the Treasury Select Committee, visibly annoyed.

Mr Cameron was forced to admit to Labour's tenacious Dame Angela Eagle that he enjoyed the perk of free flights to Cornwall, to visit his holiday home, in Mr Greensill's private jet.

More on David Cameron

So even though he wouldn't admit receiving a millionaire's pay cheque from the Australian tycoon, it was revealed that he lived the millionaire lifestyle of private jets and shares - not share options, he stressed - that the super-rich take for granted.

At one point Mr Cameron spoke of potentially earning the sort of salary a top bank pays to some other former prime ministers. Who could he have meant? Obviously, Tony Blair's million-dollar salary with JP Morgan.

Listening to Mr Cameron and reading between the lines, while he didn't mention Mr Blair by name, he gave the impression that he envies the post-Downing Street financial earning power and the status as a global elder statesman of his Labour predecessor.

Heir to Blair? Clearly, you wish, Mr Cameron.

The first hearing of the afternoon, with the Treasury Committee, began badly for Mr Cameron.

He annoyed Mr Stride with his lengthy, self-justifying and long-winded opening statement, which obviously wrecked the committee's planned timetable.

His statement also included the remarkable claim that "lobbying is a necessary and healthy part of our democratic process".

Unbelievable. When he was the future once, Mr Cameron condemned "the far-too-cosy relationship between politics and money" and said lobbying was "the next big scandal waiting to happen".

Predictably, it was the formidable Labour MPs on the Treasury Committee who drew blood.

As well as admitting the private jet perk to Dame Angela, he didn't deny her claim that if Greensill had succeeded he would have become a multi-millionaire.

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Cameron questioned over messages sent to ministers

But the most brutal Labour onslaught on Mr Cameron came from Rushanara Ali, the Treasury Committee's smiling assassin, whose style of questioning was unfailingly polite, but her words packed a knock-out punch.

His reputation was "in tatters" and he was "known as Teflon man", she said.

Mr Greensill was "using and exploiting" him, but the former prime minister "turned a blind eye to things that were blindingly obvious", she told him.

"Well, obviously, I take a different view," Mr Cameron said calmly, refusing to be goaded into losing his temper.

It was a calm, disciplined performance throughout, even if it was shifty.

Then, in a dramatic finale to a pulsating hearing, Ms Ali hit back: "You should have known better. You were the future once."

And Greensill, she said, was "acting like a con artist".

But while it was Labour MPs spearheading the attacks on Mr Cameron in round one of his battering, it was two old bruisers from the Tory right - knights of the shires Sir Bernard Jenkin and Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown - who led the onslaught in round two, at the Public Accounts Committee.

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The pair, banished to the back benches during the Cameron years, hammered Mr Cameron on the "revolving door" of ex-ministers cashing in and conflict of interest.

Then another Tory right-winger, ex-UKIP leader Craig Mackinlay, came up with some colourful language, denouncing Greensill as an "oddball sort of whizz-bang scheme" and declaring: "I wouldn't have touched this with a barge pole, personally."

All afternoon, plenty of questions went unanswered and plenty of answers raised further questions.

For instance, Mr Cameron claimed his contacts with Chancellor Rishi Sunak and Health Secretary Matt Hancock were public knowledge.

Well yes, but only because the Financial Times and The Sunday Times exposed them.

And bizarrely, he blamed "spellchecker" on his phone for a text message in which he appeared to show advance knowledge of an interest rate cut.

In a Commons debate last month, several Labour MPs called Mr Cameron "dodgy Dave", an insult first used by Dennis Skinner some years back.

The documents released to the Treasury Committee suggested he was more like "desperate Dave", however. Dame Angela said his actions were more like stalking than lobbying.

But by managing to appear dodgy, desperate and shifty all at the same time, there's now every chance Mr Cameron will be hauled back before MPs to answer more questions very soon.

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiiQFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9ncmVlbnNpbGwtbG9iYnlpbmctZXZlcnktY2hhbmNlLWRhdmlkLWNhbWVyb24td2lsbC1iZS1oYXVsZWQtYmFjay1iZWZvcmUtbXBzLXRvLWFuc3dlci1tb3JlLXF1ZXN0aW9ucy0xMjMwNTY5M9IBjQFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9hbXAvZ3JlZW5zaWxsLWxvYmJ5aW5nLWV2ZXJ5LWNoYW5jZS1kYXZpZC1jYW1lcm9uLXdpbGwtYmUtaGF1bGVkLWJhY2stYmVmb3JlLW1wcy10by1hbnN3ZXItbW9yZS1xdWVzdGlvbnMtMTIzMDU2OTM?oc=5

2021-05-13 19:59:58Z
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