Rabu, 02 Februari 2022

'Levelling up' plan for UK unveiled by Michael Gove - BBC News

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Long-awaited plans to close the gap between rich and poor parts of the country have been announced by the government.

The strategy, unveiled by Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove, will take until 2030 and aims to improve services such as education, broadband and transport.

Boris Johnson put "levelling up" at the heart of the Conservatives' election-winning manifesto in 2019.

But Labour said the plans contained no new money and little fresh thinking.

The launch of the strategy sees the government try to return to its key policy agenda after weeks of pressure on the prime minister over reports of parties held at Downing Street during lockdown restrictions.

The government has previously launched a number of schemes aimed at boosting regional development - but has faced claims the policy lacks definition.

At the heart of the strategy is a plan to create more regional mayors, such as existing posts like Labour's Andy Burnham in Greater Manchester, or the Conservative's Andy Street in the West Midlands and Ben Houchen in Tees Valley.

Every part of England would have access to "London-style" powers and a mayor if they want it, according to the levelling-up strategy.

Mr Gove's plans would bring all existing initiatives together into 12 "national missions" and set up a system for measuring progress.

Among the 12 missions are promises to refocus education spending on disadvantaged parts of the country and eliminate illiteracy and innumeracy; bring the rest of the country's public transport up to London standards, and provide access to 5G broadband for the "large majority" of households.

Derelict urban sites in 20 towns and cities will be targeted for redevelopment, with Sheffield and Wolverhampton the first places selected.

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Analysis box by Faisal Islam, economics editor

The problem that the government seeks to solve with its 'levelling up' agenda is clear - the fact that the UK is one of the world's most geographically unequal major economies - and that has worsened over the past three decades.

The pledges on spending in the White Paper are rather limited, reflecting the fiscal situation.

There are new commitments beyond the existing Spending Review, for what the PM describes as his "defining mission".

But where a mission such as this has been achieved, for example in post-unification Germany, there have been massive fiscal transfers from rich regions to poor ones approaching one and a half trillion pounds, or £70bn a year.

The stark fact is that GDP per capita in some east German regions now exceeds that in some northern English regions.

The challenge is whether entrenched patterns of economic geography can really be changed without footing a very significant bill?

Read more analysis here.

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Many of Mr Gove's missions are existing government policies, with funds already allocated to them, but he says they will be enshrined in law for the first time.

Most of the policies in the White Paper apply to England only, but the government insists levelling up is a UK-wide initiative and it wishes to work with the devolved administrations in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland to achieve this.

The plan includes £100m of new government funding for "innovation accelerators" to boost research and development in Greater Manchester, the West Midlands and Glasgow City-Region.

Mr Gove said: "For too long our country has been over-centralised and you've had the elites in London who haven't really understood all of the problems that communities like Grimsby and Cleethorpes face.

"So there's going to be more power for local communities and also the public money, the taxpayers' money the government spends, is going to be spent closer to those communities."

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Wolverhampton street scene
Getty Images

The 12 'levelling up missions' in full

  • Increase pay, employment and productivity in all areas of the UK, with each one containing a "globally competitive city"
  • Raise public investment in research and development outside the south-east of England by 40%
  • Eliminate illiteracy and innumeracy by refocusing education spending on the most disadvantaged parts of the country
  • Increase the number of people completing high quality skills training - in England, this will mean 200,000 more people a year
  • Bring the rest of the country's public transport up to London standards
  • Provide access to 5G broadband for the "large majority" of households
  • Create more first-time homebuyers in all areas, and reduce the number of "non-decent rented homes" by 50%
  • Narrow the gap of healthy life expectancy between the areas where it is lowest and highest
  • Improve "well-being" in every area of the UK
  • Increase "pride of place", such as people's satisfaction with their town centre and engagement in local culture and community
  • Reduce murder, manslaughter, serious violence and neighbourhood crime, especially in the worst-affected areas
  • Give every part of England that wants it a devolution deal with more regional powers and simplified, long-term funding
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Labour has set out its own five-point plan for levelling up, including better broadband for towns and villages, action to tackle anti-social behaviour in city centres, and more affordable housing.

For Labour, shadow levelling up secretary Lisa Nandy said: "Ministers have had two-and-a-half years to get this right and all we've been given is more slogans and strategies, with few new ideas."

Street scene in Sheffield
Getty Images

Meanwhile, a report by the National Audit Office, which scrutinises public spending, has criticised the government for having a "limited" understanding of what has worked well when setting up its programme for regional economic growth.

It said that, by November last year, it had committed £11bn through policies to support the regeneration of towns and communities across the UK for the period from 2020-1 to 2025-6.

NAO head Gareth Davies said: "The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities has not consistently evaluated its past interventions to stimulate local economies, so it doesn't know whether billions of pounds of public spending has had the impact intended.

"With its focus on levelling up, it is vital that the department puts robust evaluation arrangements in place for its new schemes to promote local growth."

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2022-02-02 07:46:15Z
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Selasa, 01 Februari 2022

Boris Johnson: No 10 refuses to comment on fresh reports detailing lockdown parties PM allegedly attended - Sky News

Downing Street has refused to comment on reports that reveal details of lockdown parties Boris Johnson is alleged to have attended.

In new allegations this evening, two newspapers detail claims the PM attended a party in his flat and also went to two separate leaving dos.

In the pared-back report released by Sue Gray on Monday, she revealed three lockdown events in Downing Street and the Cabinet Office that had previously not been publicly known about.

These events are being investigated by the Metropolitan Police and Ms Gray gave little detail about them yesterday.

More: No 10 changes position on PM COVID fines being made public - as Tory MP calls for Johnson's resignation

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Boris Johnson says 'I will fix it'

Mr Johnson is reported to have given a speech at two of the events, according to reports in The Guardian and The Daily Telegraph.

And further details claim to place Mr Johnson in his flat during a party he has refused to comment on.

More from Politics

The three previously unknown events, Sue Gray's report says, were held on 18 June 2020, 17 December 2020 and 14 January 2021.

Asked by Sky News about the new allegations, Downing Street declined to comment.

PM 'seen going up to Mamma Mia flat party'

Following earlier reports a gathering was held in Mr Johnson's flat on 13 November 2020, the day his top adviser Dominic Cummings left, the Telegraph has now said the PM was seen heading up to his flat that evening. Mr Johnson has refused to comment on any reports.

His wife, Carrie Johnson, was reportedly there and Abba songs including The Winner Takes It All were heard, the Mail on Sunday reported.

On Tuesday, Mr Cummings claimed there were photographs of the "party" and others in the building could hear music.

Analysis: 'WhatsApp me!' Boris Johnson fights on with promises to backbenchers in wake of Sue Gray report

Boris and Carrie Johnson live in No 11 Downing Street but his office is in No 10. Pic: Andrew Parsons/10 Downing Street
Image: Boris and Carrie Johnson live in No 11 Downing Street but his office is in No 10. Pic: Andrew Parsons/10 Downing Street

'Alcohol and 20 people' while indoor mixing banned

On 18 June 2020, Ms Gray said an event at the Cabinet Office involved "the departure of a No 10 private secretary".

The private secretary is understood to be senior diplomat Hannah Young, according to The Guardian and The Telegraph.

She was Mr Johnson's lead official on home affairs policy and left to become deputy consul general in New York.

There were allegedly 20 people, alcohol was being drunk and Martin Reynolds, the PM's principal private secretary who organised the "bring your own booze" party, was there and had earlier contacted senior advisers for advice on holding the leaving do, the Telegraph said.

Regulations at the time banned indoor mixing, with the rule of six applied to outdoors.

The headquarters of the Cabinet Office in Whitehall
Image: The PM's private secretary is understood to have asked advisers if he could host a leaving do for Hannah Young at the Cabinet Office

PM 'gave speech' at military adviser's leaving do

The 17 December 2020 event, called "a gathering in No 10 Downing Street on the departure of a No 10 official" by Ms Gray, is understood to have been for Captain Steve Higham, the Telegraph said.

He was one of the PM's military and national security advisers and Mr Johnson is understood to have given a speech but, the Mirror earlier said he only stayed for a few minutes.

The day before, London had been placed in Tier 3, which meant there was no mixing of households indoors.

A police officer knocks on the door to 10 Downing Street in London, Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2022. Police are in contact with the Cabinet Office over claims the Prime Minister's aide organised a "bring your own booze" Downing Street drinks party in May 2020 during the first virus lockdown.(AP Photo/Frank Augstein)
Image: The Met Police are investigating 12 events, with three of them newly revealed on Monday

Prosecco and PM speech

Ms Gray also revealed she and the police were looking into "a gathering in No 10 Downing Street on the departure of two No 10 private secretaries" on 14 January 2021.

It is understood one of them moved on to become a senior civil servant at the Department of Culture, Media and Sport while the other is unknown.

Prosecco was drunk, Mr Johnson is understood to have attended and, the Guardian reports, he gave a speech and left after five minutes.

England was in its third national lockdown at the time, with people prohibited from mixing indoors with other households, and it came a few weeks after Christmas was effectively cancelled.

The other two events the PM is believed to have attended that are being investigated by the Met are the 20 May 2020 "BYOB" party in the Number 10 garden and his birthday on 19 June 2020 in the Cabinet room at No 10.

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2022-02-01 22:18:45Z
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Downing Street parties: No 10 changes position on PM COVID fines being made public - as Tory MP calls for Johnson's resignation - Sky News

The public would "hypothetically" be told if the prime minister was fined for breaking COVID rules, Downing Street has said - after earlier refusing to guarantee that would happen.

When asked on Tuesday morning if any fixed penalty notices would be made public as part of the Metropolitan Police's investigation into the partygate scandal, the prime minister's spokesman said it was for the Met to decide whether to reveal who has been fined.

But hours later, after being asked again, he said: "As the Met have made clear, generally speaking with Fixed Penalty Notice, individuals are not published in any way. Obviously, we are aware of the significant public interest regarding the prime minister, and would always look to provide what updates we can on him specifically."

Asked if that meant No 10 would reveal if Mr Johnson was given a fixed penalty notice, the spokesman said: "Hypothetically, yes."

Met Police defend timing of Downing Street party investigation
Image: The Met Police said it does not normally reveal the names of people it gives fines to

No 10 indicated it may not reveal the names of other officials and MPs if they are fined after the Met pointed to College of Policing guidance that says the names of people handed fixed penalty notices, the likely punishment for breaching COVID regulations, would not normally be revealed.

'We'll publish everything we can'

As No 10 decided whether it would name Mr Johnson if he was fined, the PM was in Ukraine to show the UK's support as more than 100,000 Russian troops amass at the border.

More on Boris Johnson

But the Gray inquiry and partygate reared its head, with the PM being asked if he would commit to publish the full inquiry, including the 300 images included in the probe.

"Yes, of course we'll publish everything that we can as soon as the process has been completed, as I said yesterday," he said.

Asked if the inquiry's release on Monday overshadowed his focus on Ukraine, resulting in postponing a call with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Mr Johnson said he will be talking to the Russian leader tomorrow.

Adding fuel to the fire, the PM's former top adviser Dominic Cummings said people he knows have pictures of a party inside the PM's flat on the day he left. It was reportedly a celebration of his departure.

In a question and answer session on his blog, Mr Cummings, who regularly speaks out against the PM, said there was "a chance" Ms Gray's full report could be leaked before the Met investigation is over as it will have to be circulated to lawyers and special advisers first.

He also said the "drinking culture" criticised in Ms Gray's report "is spin from the PM to try to shift blame from him".

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy attend a joint news conference in Kyiv, Ukraine February 1, 2022. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls/Pool
Image: Boris Johnson was asked a question about the partygate scandal during a news conference with the Ukrainian president

Conservative MP hands in letter of no confidence

Back in the UK, all was not rosy for the PM, as another Tory MP said he has handed in a letter of no confidence in Mr Johnson.

Peter Aldous, MP for Waveney in Suffolk, said he has written to Sir Graham Brady, chair of the 1922 Committee of backbench Conservative MPs, advising him he has no confidence in Mr Johnson as leader of the Conservative Party.

"After a great deal of soul-searching, I have reached the conclusion that the prime minister should resign," he wrote.

"It is clear that he has no intention of doing so.

"I have never taken such action before and had hoped that I would not be put in such an invidious position."

Peter Aldous is the Conservative MP for Waveney, and has been an MP continuously since 6 May 2010.
PIC:HOC
Image: Peter Aldous, the Conservative MP for Waveney, said he has handed in a letter of no confidence in the PM. Pic:HOC

He told Sky News the partygate scandal is "paralysing government" and there comes a time when you have to say "enough is enough, we need to move on with this".

Mr Aldous called Mr Johnson "a man of enormous talents" but the best thing would be for him to stand aside.

He added that if the PM had held his hands up when the stories about parties started in the autumn the public would have been more forgiving.

Mr Aldous, who has been an MP since 2010, is among a handful of Tory MPs who are understood to have handed in letters of no confidence following the lockdown events in Downing Street and Whitehall - with 54 letters needed to trigger a leadership vote.

'Positive' mood among Tory MPs as PM appears to have staved off immediate threat - Sue Gray report live

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How to replace a Tory PM

Public 'has a right to know'

Labour's deputy leader Angela Rayner said the public "has a right to know" if the PM is given a fine and said it "shouldn't be a big deal".

"An ounce of transparency shouldn't be this hard to get from Boris Johnson," she said.

Speaking after No 10's initial refusal, Sir Ed Davey, leader of the Liberal Democrats, said: "This stinks of a cover up by Number 10. Even Richard Nixon [the US president who resigned over the Watergate scandal] believed a country deserves to know whether their leader is a crook.

"Boris Johnson must come clean with the public and resign if he's broken the rules and been fined by the police."

Asked if Downing Street should say if Mr Johnson is fined by police, Tory MP and former minister Liam Fox told Sky's deputy political editor Sam Coates: "I think we should have as much information as we can put out there.

"I think it's the only way to get closure in the end."

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Key points of the Gray report

Met Police combing through 300 photos

Number 10's latest comments come after the release of a partial version of Sue Gray's report into Downing Street gatherings during COVID-19 restrictions in 2020 and 2021.

The senior civil servant said the events represented a "serious failure" and were "difficult to justify".

Facing MPs in the Commons on Monday, Mr Johnson apologised and promised a shake-up of Number 10, insisting: "I get it and I will fix it."

The Met Police is investigating 12 gatherings, including an event that happened at the Downing Street flat on 13 November 2020 and an event to mark the PM's birthday on 19 June 2020.

The force said on Monday that it has received more than 300 photos and 500 pieces of paper as part of its inquiries.

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'Taken for mugs'

Downing Street has said Mr Johnson will ask Ms Gray to "update her work" once the Metropolitan Police's investigation is finished and "he will publish that update".

Speaking to Sky News earlier on Monday, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said people who followed COVID rules "will feel like they've been taken for mugs" by the PM.

He told Kay Burley that many members of the public will have felt "anger, grief and guilt" when looking back at how they obeyed COVID-19 restrictions over the last two years and the sacrifices they had to make.

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'People feel they've been taken for mugs'

Sir Keir said Mr Johnson is "debasing the office" of PM and has "got to go" in the wake of the release of a partial version of the Gray report, which he described as being as "damning as it could be".

Also speaking to Burley, deputy PM Dominic Raab claimed Mr Johnson cannot answer specific questions about lockdown parties in Downing Street because he does not want to prejudice the police investigation.

"If he does start answering specific questions that have been referred to the police, he will be accused, in fact fairly and rightly, of prejudicing or preventing or interfering in that investigation," Mr Raab said.

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'I get argument about double standards'

He said it was right that police were now given the "time and space" to carry out their investigation.

Sir Keir said Mr Raab's stance was "nonsense" and "bordering on the ridiculous", accusing the PM of "forcing all of his frontbenchers onto your programmes and others to make complete fools of themselves, peddling these absurd defences".

Blackford defends Commons outburst

SNP Westminster leader Ian Blackford told Sky News people are "outraged by a prime minister that simply won't accept responsibility".

Speaking to Kay Burley, he said Mr Johnson has "demeaned the office and he should have gone by now".

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PM is 'stranger to the truth'

Mr Blackford was thrown out of the Commons on Monday for accusing the PM of having "wilfully misled" MPs over the partygate row.

He defended his actions as the "right thing to do", adding: "At the end of the day I've been sent to Westminster to stand up for our constituents, to lead the SNP at Westminster.

"I have to call out the PM for the charlatan that he is."

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2022-02-01 18:23:15Z
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London Playbook: Taking flight — Judgment deferred — Inside the unofficial ’22 - POLITICO.eu

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POLITICO London Playbook

By ALEX WICKHAM

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Good Tuesday morning.

DRIVING THE DAY

TAKING FLIGHT: Boris Johnson leaves his domestic turmoil behind as he flies to Ukraine today in a show of support for the country’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in the face of ongoing Russian aggression. The prime minister is heading east this afternoon and will hold talks with Zelenskiy in Kyiv — we can expect words and pictures later on. In pre-flight remarks briefed to journalists, Johnson said: “It is the right of every Ukrainian to determine how they are governed. As a friend and a democratic partner, the U.K. will continue to uphold Ukraine’s sovereignty in the face of those who seek to destroy it. We urge Russia to step back and engage in dialogue to find a diplomatic resolution and avoid further bloodshed.” The PM is also announcing £88 million of new funding to promote stable governance in Ukraine and reduce its reliance on Russian energy supplies. POLITICO’s Andrew McDonald has more.

Putin off the call: The timing of Monday’s Commons statement on Partygate meant Johnson canceled a planned call with Russian President Vladimir Putin. (The Russian Embassy clearly has someone different running its Twitter account nowadays because in years gone by they’d have lived for a moment like that.) No. 10 say they will try to reschedule. Putin and French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday held their second phone call in four days. The New York Times notes Macron’s more nuanced position on Russia compared to the steadfast approach of the U.S. and U.K., reporting: “With the retirement of the German leader Angela Merkel, Mr. Macron has sought to position himself as Europe’s chief voice in international affairs, casting himself as a NATO ally who is independent of Washington and has open channels to U.S. adversaries.”

Get well soon: Foreign Secretary Liz Truss had been due to accompany Johnson on the trip but she is isolating after testing positive for COVID on Monday evening. Truss on Monday strengthened Britain’s sanctions regime to allow the government to target Russian banks, energy companies and oligarchs if Putin does launch an invasion. POLITICO’s Cristina Gallardo has the details. Defense Secretary Ben Wallace is in Croatia today and Slovenia later this week, after visiting Hungary Monday, as he tours the region trying to deescalate tensions, Cristina texts in.

How will Johnson go down? The PM can expect a much better reception from politicians and journalists in Kyiv than he has had in Westminster recently. Kyiv’s Mayor Vitali Klitschko (yes the boxer) told POLITICO he was grateful to Johnson for his support over the past few days: “It’s very important for Ukraine to have political support from our friends — without friends we don’t survive. We are talking about delivery of defensive weapons, sanctions against aggressors — if this happens, we have a lot of leverage to stop the idea to attack Ukraine.” By contrast, Klitschko has criticized Germany’s muted response, claiming the country “has to decide which side” it is on. Kyiv media recently lavished praise on an article by Wallace on the crisis, published on gov.uk two weeks ago, that also won widespread plaudits from foreign policy experts.

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Meanwhile in New York: The U.S. and Russia clashed at the United Nations Security Council on Monday, as America accused Russia of undermining international peace and security by massing troops on the Ukrainian border. “Russia’s actions strike at the very heart of the U.N. Charter,” said U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Linda Thomas-Greenfield. “This is as clear and consequential a threat to peace and security as anyone can imagine.” Russian U.N. Ambassador Vasily Nebenzya accused the U.S. of “unacceptable interference in the domestic affairs of our state.” POLITICO’s David Herszenhorn has the story.

Latest from the White House: U.S. President Joe Biden told reporters in the Oval Office overnight: “We continue to urge diplomacy as the best way forward. But with Russia continuing its buildup of its forces around Ukraine, we are ready no matter what happens.”

Latest Russian response: Moscow has now delivered a written response to Washington’s reply to Russia’s demands for security guarantees aimed at deescalating the crisis, the Washington Post reports, though it has no details of what was in the Russian reply.

PARTYGATE FALLOUT

JUDGMENT DEFERRED: Boris Johnson appears to have survived the release of Sue Gray’s Partygate “update” without a flood of no-confidence letters triggering a vote on his position, as Conservative MPs seemingly decided to wait until the Metropolitan Police conclude their investigation before settling his fate. The pared-back Gray report was always going to fall short of accusing Johnson of breaking COVID laws, though it still contained fierce criticisms that No. 10 was guilty of a failure of leadership and its actions were “difficult to justify.” The big picture is that 12 alleged Downing Street “gatherings” are being looked at by the police, including four that Johnson was said to have attended. But for a prime minister who is fighting day by day to save his job, he made it through the partial publication of Gray’s findings without a leadership challenge materializing. The Westminster consensus this morning is that Johnson may have delayed his judgment day by months — until the moment the police decide whether he personally broke the laws he set for the nation during the pandemic.

Lifeline: In their first-class wrap of the day, POLITICO’s Annabelle Dickson and Esther Webber judge that Johnson has been handed a “lifeline of sorts” after the Met’s intervention last week blocked Gray from publishing her full findings. “Westminster is still waiting. And while Johnson may have survived Gray’s first interjection, the prime minister emerges severely weakened,” Annabelle and Esther conclude. The only question that really mattered following the Gray update was whether Tory MPs’ no-confidence letters would reach the key 54 threshold. As ever, we don’t know where they’re at and Tory politics can always change very quickly. But the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg summed up the judgment of most observers at close of play last night with her assessment that “Tory nerves seem to be calming a bit.”

Savile row: At one point on Monday afternoon, it was starting to look like events were slipping out of Johnson’s grasp. Most Tories who Playbook spoke to felt the PM misjudged his response to Labour leader Keir Starmer in the Commons, and as Tory MPs led by Theresa May piled on the opprobrium the situation did appear to be heading south. Johnson attended a meeting of his parliamentary party last night needing to dig himself out of a huge hole. “He understood he had no option but to deliver, commit to a full set of reforms and give MPs the political speech of his life,” one Tory MP told Playbook. The consensus of those present who spoke to Playbook was that he did enough to bring possible letter-writers back from the brink.

Inside the unofficial ’22: Johnson entered last night’s meeting flanked by Rishi Sunak — proof, Tory MPs concluded, that the chancellor had decided not to move against the PM — and Home Secretary Priti Patel. He spoke at the front of the room alongside 1922 committee chair and letter-counter Graham Brady, and his deputy PM Dominic Raab. Liz Truss was in the middle of the packed room just minutes before testing positive for COVID, so we are in proper superspreader event territory. “Almost the entire parliamentary party” was there as Johnson made the case to stick with him, according to one MP. The PM spoke for around 15 minutes before taking every question from MPs present for more than an hour.

Change is coming: The key development at the meeting was a new cast-iron commitment by Johnson to his MPs to listen to their views and take what they say more seriously, several Tory MPs agreed. One said Johnson made a tacit recognition that he and his Downing Street team have been high-handed in the past and not acted on their concerns about the policy direction of the government. “He realized today that the threat is real and he can’t just bluster his way through,” one MP told Playbook. Another confirmed Johnson “laid it on thick about need to change political operation.” This was what “won the room round,” the MP added. “As soon as he said that the room was immediately on his side and it was back to maximum Boris, election-winning Boris.”

What that means in practice: There was a pledge for a new system of backbench policy boards to help connect No. 10 and MPs, and Johnson announced at the despatch box earlier that he would set up a new Office of the Prime Minister with its own permanent secretary. The news from the PM that he was receiving external advice from his Australian former strategist Lynton Crosby was well-received. But backbenchers who spoke to Playbook were more interested in the PM’s promise to listen rather than the minutiae of how Downing Street would be structured. “There’s no going back from what he said. He delivered on what MPs want and therefore he is probably safe,” an MP said. An MP who is critical of Johnson told ITV’s Anushka Asthana: “There is no way we are getting 54 letters.” That shift was encapsulated by rebel Gary Sambrook’s decision to U-turn on his previous call for the PM to go.

50 shades darker: There was also relief among MPs that Johnson strongly committed to publishing the Gray report in full once the police had concluded, something he had refused to do earlier in the day. Johnson’s allies said this was the first example of him listening and reacting to MPs after backbenchers demanded it would be released in full. Former Chief Whip Mark Harper, veteran MP Julian Lewis and former minister Andrew Jones all used their speaking time in the Commons to urge Johnson to publish the full report as soon as possible. Defense committee Chairman Tobias Ellwood added his voice on Twitter, saying the PM would no longer have his support if he failed to publish the report in full. The backflip came within hours, which is pretty fast on the Marcus Rashford scale of Boris Johnson U-turns.

I will wear my heart upon my sleeve: Color of the night via the Times’ Henry Zeffman, who reports that Johnson compared himself to Othello, always seeing the best in people, unlike Dominic Cummings’ Iago.

Where this goes next: Of course, just because Johnson got to the end of the day on Monday, doesn’t mean he’s out of the woods. The Gray update focused minds that the police are looking at four gatherings that directly involve the PM, as the Times’ Steve Swinford and Oli Wright note in their splash, including one in the Downing Street flat on the night Dominic Cummings left his job. The Sun’s Harry Cole, Natasha Clark and Kate Ferguson say the cops could interview the PM and his wife Carrie any day now. A fixed penalty notice for Johnson on any one of these four could be enough to trigger a confidence vote. The Met said on Monday that they’ve been handed some 300 photos of Downing Street events, which will not go down well if they ever see the light of day. The Mail has an excellent double page spread on pages 4 and 5 laying out the parties being looked at and which ones the PM is said to have attended.

The main danger: Playbook’s reading of the 12 events being investigated by the police is still that the May 20, 2020 party — the infamous BYOB event in the Downing Street garden — is the one that is most potentially perilous for Johnson. Given the email from his Principal Private Secretary Martin Reynolds confirming it was a booze-up rather than a work event, this would appear to mean possible fines for those who attended, especially if they were aware of the situation in advance (Remember: Johnson says he wasn’t, Cummings says he was.) Then there’s the question of whether Johnson misled the House on his knowledge of the event. Even if the Met don’t whack him with a fixed penalty notice — and let’s face it that would be a pretty major decision for a senior police officer to make — the publication of Sue Gray’s full report could still contain extremely damaging new revelations.

Then there are the mutinous MPs: Another Tory MP publicly withdrew his support from Johnson on Monday, and it remains possible that many more might do so in private. Former Chief Whip Andrew Mitchell said: “I am deeply concerned by these events, and very concerned indeed by some of the things he has said from that despatch box and has said to the British public and to our constituents … I have to tell him that he no longer enjoys my support.” And red wall MP Aaron Bell added: “It seems that a lot of people attended events in May 2020. The one I recall attending was my grandmother’s funeral. She was a wonderful woman. As well as her love for her family, she served her community as a councillor and she served Dartford Conservative Association loyally for many years. I drove for three hours from Staffordshire to Kent. There were only 10 people at the funeral; many people who loved her had to watch online. I did not hug my siblings. I did not hug my parents. I gave a eulogy and afterwards I did not even go into her house for a cup of tea; I drove back, for three hours, from Kent to Staffordshire. Does the prime minister think I am a fool?”

What Labour is saying: Keir Starmer’s Commons speech on Monday was extremely strongly worded and succeeded in getting Johnson to lose his rag. The Labour leader writes in the Mirror today along the same vein: “The Prime Minister took us all for fools. He held your sacrifice in contempt. He insulted your intelligence. His latest argument is that he couldn’t possibly know if there was a party in his house or his office or if he was there when it happened — that he needs the police to tell him. But his behaviour doesn’t lessen what we have achieved as a country. It only lessens him and those who continue to parrot his nonsense. My message to the Prime Minister is simple — the British people aren’t fools. They never believed any of it. He should do the decent thing and resign. Of course, he won’t. He is a man without shame.”

TODAY IN WESTMINSTER

HOUSE OF COMMONS: Sits from 11.30 a.m. with Treasury questions, followed by any UQs or statements … and then Labour has opposition day debates on tackling fraud and preventing government waste, and on calling for a windfall tax on oil and gas producers.

Defection watch: Keir Starmer phoned Rosie Duffield on Sunday night after she said she was considering her future within the Labour Party and has taken away her concerns, Playbook’s Eleni Courea hears. As Eleni reported in September, Tory whips have made clear to Duffield that the door is open to her should she want to defect, and lots of Tory MPs have privately offered their support to her following her tweets over the weekend. But the Canterbury MP may be more attracted to the idea of sitting as an independent if she does jump ship.

WHAT THE GOVERNMENT WOULD LOVE TO TALK ABOUT: Ministers will unveil measures in the leveling up white paper today aimed at raising education standards in 55 English areas — 95 percent of which are outside London and the South East — that currently have the weakest outcomes. The paper will also contain detail of a new national mission, which will push to ensure that by 2030, 90 percent of children leaving primary school have reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths. The Guardian’s Sally Weale has a write-up.

COMMITTEE CORRIDOR: Tech Minister Chris Philp will face questions from the DCMS committee on loopholes in the draft Online Safety Bill (10 a.m.) … The environment, food and rural affairs committee hosts Environment Secretary George Eustice … and the foreign affairs committee will take evidence from Ukrainian Ambassador Vadym Prystaiko in a session on Ukraine (2.30 p.m.). Full list here.

YESTERDAY’S UK COVID STATS: 92,368 positive cases. In the last week there have been 620,109 positive cases, ⬇️ 32,570 on the previous week … 51 deaths within 28 days of a positive test. In the last week 1,838 deaths have been reported, ⬇️ 5 on the previous week. As of the latest data 15,938 COVID patients are in hospital.

HOUSE OF LORDS: Sits from 2.30 p.m. with questions on legal aid, EU imports and value for money with overseas travel arrangements for ministers … Followed by the second reading of the Commercial Rent (Coronavirus) Bill and the second day of the Nationality and Borders Bill’s committee stage.

ANOTHER UNION BUST UP: The devolved administrations have accused the government of breaking an election manifesto promise, the FT’s Peter Foster, Mure Dickie and Jude Webber report, over the distribution of the Shared Prosperity Fund that was created to distribute returned EU regional funds to the regions and nations. In 2019 the Conservatives’ manifesto pledged that the fund would “at a minimum” match the £1.5 billion a year of EU regional funds, but the Welsh, Scottish and Northern Irish administrations have all claimed they face being left hundreds of millions out of pocket after the government unveiled a fund worth an average of just £870 million a year over the next three years. Welsh Economy Minister Vaughan Gething told the FT the difference in promise and delivery represented a “straightforward breach of the manifesto pledge.”

HONG KONG’S HOMESICK EXILES: POLITICO’s Stuart Lau has a top read about the plight of newly arrived Hong Kongers in Britain, who are celebrating their first Lunar New Year away from home today. Worth your time.

**A message from Lloyds Banking Group: For many businesses the struggle to survive the pandemic is far from over. Everyday our customers are facing into new challenges, and our 1,100 business specialists are there to provide the financial and practical help companies need as they navigate the road to recovery. Our Business Recovery Hub provides practical tips and resources to support businesses, whether that be help with improving cash flow, guidance on delaying payments or adapting their business to meet ever-changing customer needs.  Find out more about how our support for businesses will help Britain recover here.**

MEDIA ROUND

Deputy PM Dominic Raab broadcast round: Times Radio (7.05 a.m.) … Sky News (7.15 a.m.) … BBC Breakfast (7.30 a.m.) … LBC (7.50 a.m.) … ITV GMB (8.25 a.m.).

Labour leader Keir Starmer broadcast round: BBC Breakfast (7.10 a.m.) … ITV GMB (7.35 a.m.) … Sky News (7.50 a.m.).

Also on BBC Breakfast: Lib Dems leader Ed Davey (6.35 a.m.) … SNP Westminster leader Ian Blackford (6.50 a.m.).

Also on Good Morning Britain (ITV): SNP Westminster leader Ian Blackford (7.15 a.m.).

Also on Sky News breakfast: Former Foreign Secretary Jack Straw (7.30 a.m.) … SNP Westminster leader Ian Blackford (8.20 a.m.) … Former Tory SpAd Mo Hussein and former Johnson adviser Will Walden (8.30 a.m.) … Standards committee Chairman Chris Bryant (8.40 a.m.) … Lib Dems leader Ed Davey (9.05 a.m.) … Former CPS Chief Crown Prosecutor Nazir Afzal (9.30 a.m.).

Also on Nick Ferrari at Breakfast (LBC): Former Johnson adviser Will Walden (8.50 a.m.).

Also on Times Radio breakfast: Former Foreign Office Minister Rory Stewart (8.15 a.m.) … Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury Pat McFadden (8.35 a.m.) … Former Conservative Party leader William Hague and former Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale (9.10 a.m.).

  • Julia Hartley-Brewer breakfast show (talkRADIO): Former No. 10 chief of staff Gavin Barwell (7.05 a.m.) … Former Tory SpAd Mo Hussein (7.20 a.m.) … COVID Recovery Group Chairman Mark Harper (8.05 a.m.) … Former Defense Minister Gerald Howarth (8.20 a.m.) … Lib Dem MP Christine Jardine (9.20 a.m.).

GB News breakfast: Tory MP David Davis (8 a.m.) … Shadow Treasury Minister Pat McFadden (8.50 a.m.).

Good Morning Scotland (BBC Radio Scotland): Lib Dem MP Wendy Chamberlain (6.50 a.m.) … Shadow Scotland Secretary Ian Murray (7.05 a.m.) … SNP Westminster leader Ian Blackford (7.35 a.m.) … Scotland Secretary Alister Jack (8.05 a.m.).

Politics Live (BBC One 12.15 p.m.): Tory MP Siobhan Baillie … Shadow Northern Ireland Secretary Peter Kyle … The Telegraph’s Christopher Hope … The Sheffield Star Editor Nancy Fielder.

The Briefing with Gloria De Piero (GB News noon): Tory MP Brendan Clarke-Smith … Shadow Leveling Up Secretary Lisa Nandy … ConservativeHome’s Henry Hill … Polling guru John Curtice.

Cross Question with Iain Dale (LBC 8 p.m.): Shadow Attorney General Emily Thornberry … Lib Dem MP Layla Moran … Unaffiliated peer Claire Fox … Business commentator David Buik.

Reviewing the papers tonight: Sky News (10.30 p.m. and 11.30 p.m.): The Observer’s Sonia Sodha and the Telegraph’s Christopher Hope.

TODAY’S FRONT PAGES

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

Daily Express: Yes PM, you got it wrong … now get it right.

Daily Mail: Now publish the whole damn thing.

Daily Mirror: Zero shame.

Daily Star: 50 shades of Gray.

Financial Times: Johnson rejects calls to quit after Gray’s scathing report on parties.

HuffPost UK: Johnson on borrowed time as Tories attack.

i: PM pleads for his job.

Metro: A failure of leadership.

POLITICO UK: How Boris Johnson saved his job and lost his premiership.

PoliticsHome: Vulnerable Boris Johnson clings on after ‘lashing out’ in his response to first Sue Gray drop.

The Daily Telegraph: PM to ask Gray for new report.

The Guardian: ‘Failures of leadership’ — Tories turn on PM over Gray report.

The Independent: ‘Failures of leadership.’

The Sun: Mamma Mia.

The Times: Police investigate PM’s four lockdown parties.

LONDON CALLING

WESTMINSTER WEATHER: ☁️☁️☁️ Light cloud and breezy. Highs of 13C.

BIRTHDAYS: Commons Deputy Speaker Eleanor Laing … Falkirk MP John McNally … Former Defense Secretary John Nott turns 90 … Former Labour MP Teresa Pearce … Former Armed Forces Minister Adam Ingram … Clean Up Gambling Director Matt Zarb-Cousin … Iceland’s Prime Minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir.

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

**On the eve of the EU-AU Summit, John Nkengasong, director of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention will join POLITICO Live’s event “The global response to the COVID-19 pandemic: hope or disillusion?” on February 15 at 4:00 p.m. CET. Will you? Register now!**

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More from ... Alex Wickham

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2022-02-01 07:26:47Z
CBMibGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnBvbGl0aWNvLmV1L25ld3NsZXR0ZXIvbG9uZG9uLXBsYXlib29rL3Rha2luZy1mbGlnaHQtanVkZ21lbnQtZGVmZXJyZWQtaW5zaWRlLXRoZS11bm9mZmljaWFsLTIyL9IBcGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnBvbGl0aWNvLmV1L25ld3NsZXR0ZXIvbG9uZG9uLXBsYXlib29rL3Rha2luZy1mbGlnaHQtanVkZ21lbnQtZGVmZXJyZWQtaW5zaWRlLXRoZS11bm9mZmljaWFsLTIyL2FtcC8

M5 closed due to police incident near Cullompton - latest updates - Devon Live

M5 closed due to collision and likely to stay shut 'for a number of hours'

National Highways has provided an update on the M5 northbound closure between junctions 29 and 28.

A statement on nationalhighways.co.uk said: "The M5 northbound is closed between J29 and J28. The link road from the A30 to the M5 J29 northbound is also closed.

"The closure is due to a collision.

"Devon and Cornwall Police are carrying out a full investigation. It is anticipated that this closure will be in place for a number of hours.

"Traffic heading to J28 is to follow the solid circle symbol via the B3181.

"Traffic heading towards Taunton is to follow the hollow square symbol - is diverted from J29, via the A30 eastbound via Honiton, continuing on the A303 to the A358 near Ilminster. Then head north to re-join the M5 at J25.

"Delays are likely on the approach to this closure, with additional journey times also expected on diversion routes."

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2022-02-01 05:00:53Z
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Senin, 31 Januari 2022

COVID-19: Health secretary Sajid Javid announces review into mandatory jabs for NHS staff - Sky News

Health secretary Sajid Javid has announced a review will be launched over plans to make COVID vaccinations mandatory for NHS staff.

Health workers in England are meant to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by April, but Mr Javid has been under growing pressure to get rid of the rule.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid meets staff in a COVID Intensive Care Unit during a visit to King's College Hospital in London
Image: Health Secretary Sajid Javid meets staff in a COVID Intensive Care Unit at King's College Hospital in London

The health secretary told MPs it is no longer proportionate to require NHS staff and health care workers to be vaccinated as a condition of deployment through statute.

He defended the policy of initially introducing mandatory COVID vaccinations for NHS and social care workers, insisting the Government "makes no apology for it".

Mr Javid told MPs there was a need to consider the impact on the workforce in NHS and social care settings, "especially at a time where we already have a shortage of workers and near full employment across the economy".

He added: "In December I argued, and this House overwhelmingly agreed, that the weight of clinical evidence in favour of vaccination as a condition of deployment outweighed the risks to the workforce.

"It was the right policy at the time, supported by the clinical evidence, and the Government makes no apology for it. It has also proven to be the right policy in retrospect, given the severity of Delta."

More on Covid-19

Speaking during a visit to the Port of Tilbury, in Essex this morning, Boris Johnson said he believes it is "absolutely clear" that NHS staff should get vaccinated.

The prime minister said: "My view on NHS workers, everybody involved in looking after vulnerable people, all healthcare professionals should get a vaccine. That's absolutely clear."

There were concerns that the sector could be left with a massive staffing crisis due to the number of workers choosing not to be vaccinated.

Both the Royal College of GPs and the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) had urged for the deadline to be postponed and the British Medical Association called for an "urgent impact assessment" on how the policy would affect staffing numbers.

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2022-01-31 18:33:42Z
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