Rabu, 09 November 2022

Nursing union RCN expected to announce biggest-ever strike - Sky News

The Royal College of Nursing is expected to announce today that nurses have voted to take strike action in many parts of the country.

Some hospitals, not all, will take action, it is believed.

The strike ballot among more than 300,000 members of the RCN was the biggest in the union's 106-year history and marks the first national action over a pay dispute.

An RCN spokesperson told Sky News: "Our strike action will be as much for patients as it is for nurses - we have their support in doing this.

"As we begin action, politicians in every part of the UK will be challenged to back their nursing staff and understand the strength of public support."

Although the details of the strike action are yet to be determined, patients are likely to face disruption to operations and appointments.

The union is campaigning for a pay rise of 5% above inflation.

More on Health

Oliver Dowden, the chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster, previously told Sky News that the government has "well-oiled" contingency plans in place for dealing with any strike by nurses.

In the event of industrial action, the NHS would prioritise the most essential services, he said.

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Patient confronts PM on pay for nurses

Recent analysis showed an experienced nurse's salary has fallen by 20% in real terms since 2010, the union said, adding that nurses are working the equivalent of one day a week for nothing.

The RCN said there are record nursing vacancies and in the past year 25,000 nursing staff around the UK left the Nursing and Midwifery Council register.

Read more:
More than 15,000 ambulance workers to vote on strike
Higher pay offer for nurses unlikely to be put on the table

The NHS could also be in line for a further tightening of budgets as Jeremy Hunt, the chancellor, faces the challenge of tackling a £50bn hole in public finances.

Last month Therese Coffey, the health secretary at the time, said the government is "not anticipating" having to put a higher pay offer for nurses on the table as they voted on strike action.

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2022-11-09 06:54:42Z
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Gavin Williamson: Rishi Sunak faces questions following resignation - BBC

Sir Gavin Williamson smiles as he walks down a street

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is facing questions about his judgement following the resignation of cabinet minister Sir Gavin Williamson after bullying claims.

Mr Sunak is set to face MPs at Prime Minister's Questions and is expected to be asked when he learned the full details of the allegations.

Sir Gavin is accused of abusive behaviour towards fellow MPs and civil servants, though denies any wrongdoing.

Labour said the episode has shown "poor judgement and leadership" by Mr Sunak.

Sir Gavin was appointed minister without portfolio after Mr Sunak, a close political ally, won the Tory leadership just two weeks ago.

Complaints against him first emerged when The Sunday Times published a series of expletive-laden texts he sent last month to then-chief whip Wendy Morton.

In the texts, he appears to complain about not having been invited to the Queen's funeral, and seemingly accuses Ms Morton of "rigging" ticket allocations against MPs not "favoured" by then-prime minister Liz Truss.

He reportedly warned Ms Morton "not to push him about" and said that "there is a price for everything".

A senior civil servant later told the Guardian that, during his time as defence secretary, Sir Gavin told them to "slit your throat" and, on another occasion, to "jump out of the window".

On Tuesday, his former deputy, Anne Milton, also claimed he had behaved in a "threatening" and "intimidating" way towards MPs while serving as chief whip.

Ex-Conservative Party Chair Jake Berry has said he told Mr Sunak about Ms Morton's complaint on 24 October, the day before Sir Gavin's appointment.

No 10 has said the prime minister "knew there was a disagreement" but that he didn't know the "substance" of the messages until they were published by the Sunday Times.

Sir Gavin has been reported to the MPs' bullying watchdog, the Independent Complaints and Grievance Scheme, over his WhatsApp messages to Ms Morton.

The Guardian has reported that the civil servant from the ministry of defence has also lodged a complaint with the body.

Speaking on Monday, Mr Sunak said the language used in the texts was "not acceptable", but asked if it amounted to bullying said it was "right" to let an independent complaints process conclude.

Sir Gavin's resignation marks the third time he has been forced from government. In 2019, he was sacked as defence secretary after allegedly leaking sensitive information related to Huawei's potential involvement in the UK's 5G network.

Later that year, he was made education secretary by Boris Johnson, but in 2021 was removed over his handling of A-level exams during the Covid pandemic.

Speaking on BBC Two's Newsnight, deputy Labour leader Angela Rayner called Sir Gavin's appointment last month "astonishing" and said it showed "poor judgement and lack of leadership and weakness" on the part of the prime minister.

She said Sir Gavin should stand down as an MP if the bullying claims are proven. "There is no place for bullies in parliament," she said.

David Lammy, shadow foreign secretary, told BBC Radio 4's Today Programme that Sir Gavin's behaviour was "repellent, odious and unacceptable" and questioned why he had been appointed to a ministerial position in Mr Sunak's government.

"He appointed him as some sort of enforcer - apparently because this is the way he behaves," Mr Lammy said.

"We really should have an account of why he came back into government - it's not clear in the first place why this individual was knighted for services to this country."

Liberal Democrat deputy leader Daisy Cooper said: "Rishi Sunak has serious questions to answer about why he appointed Gavin Williamson, then stood by him instead of sacking him.

"His promise to lead a government of integrity has now been left in tatters."

In his resignation letter, Sir Gavin said he refuted the "characterisation" of the claims "about my past conduct" but felt they had become a "distraction from the good work the government is doing".

He added that he had apologised to the recipient of the text messages and would comply with the complaints process to "clear my name of any wrongdoing".

He later tweeted that he would not be taking any severance pay, traditionally given to ministers when they leave office.

In reply, Mr Sunak said he accepted the resignation "with great sadness" and thanked Sir Gavin for his "personal support and loyalty".

"Your commitment to successive Conservative governments and the party over the years has been unwavering," he said.

Mr Sunak is also facing pressure over why he reappointed Suella Braverman as home secretary just weeks after she was forced to resign for breaking ministerial rules by sending an official document to a fellow MP from her personal email.

Opposition figures have again accused him of keeping her in the cabinet as part of an agreement to ensure her support for his position as prime minister.

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2022-11-09 07:58:08Z
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Selasa, 08 November 2022

Just Stop Oil protests affect M25 and Dartford Crossing - BBC

Protestors in EssexEssex Police

Widespread disruption has affected the M25 for a second day running after protests at multiple locations.

The Dartford Tunnel was closed after Just Stop Oil activists staged protests at Thurrock in Essex, while further actions took place in Hertfordshire, Kent and Surrey.

Essex Police said someone climbed a gantry at junction 31 on the northbound carriageway at about 07:00 GMT.

Just Stop Oil said it had about 15 supporters at "multiple locations".

Several arrests have been made by different police forces.

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Essex Police

Earlier, Essex Police said the protests would cause "major disruption" to motorists using the M25 to drive from Kent into Essex via the A282 Dartford Crossing.

Both tunnels of the northbound crossing were closed earlier, but one reopened at about 08:45, with the second one reopening by 09:30.

Essex Police said due to officers "proactively patrolling the M25", a woman was arrested within 90 minutes of being spotted on the gantry.

Ch Supt Simon Anslow said: "I completely understand the anger and frustration and want to assure people we are working hard to prevent these criminal acts and to respond as quickly as we can where they take place.

"We have mobilised a significant amount of resources... resources which should be tackling knife crime, helping investigate sexual and domestic offences, and responding to burglaries."

The Metropolitan Police (Met) said teams trained to safely remove people who attached themselves to a structure, including those at height, had been used.

The affected locations were:

  • Essex - Junction 27 (Epping), Junction 30 (Lakeside) and Junction 31 (Dartford Crossing)
  • Herts - Junction 20 (Kings Langley), Junction 21a (Bricket Wood, Junction 22 (London Conley) and Junction 26 (Cheshunt)
  • Kent - Junction 1b (Dartford)
  • Surrey - Junctions seven (M23) to eight (Reigate), junctions eight to nine (Leatherhead), Junction 11 (Chertsey) and Junctions 12 (M23) to 13 (Staines)
  • London - Junctions 14 to 15 (Slough)
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

Just Stop Oil activists said about 15 of its supporters were on gantries at "multiple locations".

It said in a statement that the action was to "demand that the government halts all new oil and gas licences and consents".

As part of that statement, Charlotte Kirin, a 53-year-old social worker and parent from Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk, said: "In order to survive, we need to take action to stop new oil and gas."

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

Hertfordshire Police said it had responded to reports of "protest activity" at junction 20 (Kings Langley), junctions 21a (Bricket Wood) and junction 22 (London Colney) of the M25.

It had closed some lanes for officers to assess the situation, it added.

Essex Police arresting a protestor
Essex Police

Surrey Police said it had dealt with protesters who climbed on to motorway gantries on the M25 between junctions seven (for the M23) and eight (Reigate), eight and nine (Leatherhead), and junctions 12 (M3) and 13 (Staines). A number of arrests were made.

QEII Bridge at Dartford
Construction Photography/Avalon

Traffic flows were expected return to normal in Surrey, the force added.

Kent Police said two protesters had been arrested at junction 1b (Dartford) of the M25. The force said the motorway remained open, but motorists faced delays following the protest on the Essex side of the Thames estuary.

The Met said it was working with neighbouring forces "following further protest activity targeting the M25 this morning".

It said eight people had been charged with conspiracy to cause a public nuisance, after being arrested on Sunday, following attempts to cause disruption on the M25.

Essex Police said three people were charged with intentionally or recklessly causing a public nuisance, after being arrested at junctions 27 and 30 on Monday.

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2022-11-08 11:36:00Z
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Former One Direction star Zayn Malik writes to PM over free school meals - BBC

Zayn MalikGetty Images

Zayn Malik has called on the prime minister to "give all children living in poverty" a free school meal.

In a letter to Rishi Sunak, the ex-One Direction star says he relied on free school lunches as a child in Bradford.

He writes that children are stealing food from canteens "because they are so hungry but can't afford to buy lunch".

He is backing a Food Foundation campaign calling for all children in households on Universal Credit to be eligible for free school meals.

The charity estimates 800,000 children in England live in poverty but do not qualify for free school meals.

Although Malik, now known simply as Zayn, is not an ambassador for the charity, he said he felt compelled to write to the prime minister and to share his own experiences.

He wrote: "These children are suffering from lack of concentration, some even resorting to stealing food from school canteens because they are so hungry but can't afford to buy lunch.

"They are also feeling shame which is directly impacting their physical and mental health.

"I know what that shame feels like, I have seen it first-hand, as growing up in Bradford, I relied on free school meals."

He is the latest famous name to support wider access to free school meals, joining England football star Marcus Rashford and celebrity chef Jamie Oliver.

Oliver has previously said he believed investing in free school meals for children would help the economy.

He said: "The reality is, if you speak to the best minds in economics, in the country, in the world, they will tell you that if you output healthier kids, you're going to have a more productive, more profitable country."

Teaching organisations claiming to represent a million teaching staff, governors and school trustees across the UK have also backed the campaign.

They warned not expanding eligibility to all Universal Credit households "would undermine all the great efforts of the education workforce to tackle inequalities".

Zayn hopes his letter convinces the government to include a free school meal for all children living in poverty as part of the Autumn statement on 17 November.

The government has previously said it has already expanded access to free school meals more than any other in recent decades.

It has warned that the Feed the Future campaign has under-estimated the cost of expanding the scheme.

The government has said that, during term time, the government "provides more than 1.6 million free school meals, providing pupils from the lowest-income families with a free, nutritious lunchtime meal".

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Who is eligible for free school meals in England?

About 1.9 million children in England are eligible for free school meals, the government says, 22.5% of all pupils.

All infant-school pupils are eligible but children in Year 3 and above must live in a household receiving income-related benefits, with an annual income - after tax and not including welfare payments - no higher than £7,400.

About 40% of people who claim universal credit already have jobs and may earn above this threshold.

In Northern Ireland, the threshold is £14,000.

Scotland and Wales have recently committed to offering free school meals to all primary pupils.

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2022-11-08 07:22:12Z
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Senin, 07 November 2022

Channel crossings deal with France in final stages, says No 10 - BBC

French President Emmanuel Macron strides towards Prime Minister Rishi Sunak ahead of their meetingStefan Rousseau/PA Images

Talks on a deal with France over small boat Channel crossings are in the "final stages", No 10 has said.

The comment came as Rishi Sunak had his first meeting as prime minister with French President Emmanuel Macron.

Following the meeting, Mr Sunak said there was "not one simple solution" to tackling the number of people crossing the Channel in small boats.

But he said there was an opportunity to work closely with European countries on illegal migration.

More details would be set out in the coming weeks, he added.

The Elysee Palace said the two leaders agreed "to advance coordination to face the challenge of irregular migration".

The meeting with Mr Macron took place on the sidelines of the COP27 climate summit in Egypt.

Mr Sunak said he had also been talking to other European leaders, and was leaving with "renewed confidence and optimism that working together with our European partners, we can make a difference, grip this challenge of illegal immigration and stop people coming illegally".

However, he told broadcasters this was a "complex issue and it's not one simple solution that's going to solve it overnight".

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said the UK needed to work "upstream" with France to stop people-smuggling across the Channel.

So far this year, almost 40,000 people have crossed the Channel in small boats - the highest number since figures began to be collected in 2018.

A number of Conservative MPs raised concerns about the issue during an urgent question in the Commons.

Lee Anderson, who represents Ashfield in Nottinghamshire, said sourcing accommodation for "illegal immigrants" left a "bitter taste" when so many of his constituents could not get council housing.

Instead of blaming France and "lefty lawyers", he asked: "When are we going to go back and do the right thing and send them straight back the same day?"

Several other Tories also raised concerns about the suitability of hotels in their constituencies for accommodating migrants.

The government has blamed an increase in the number of crossings for overcrowding at an asylum processing centre in Manston, Kent.

At one point at the end of last month there were believed to be around 4,000 migrants at Manston - despite the centre being designed to accommodate only 1,600 people on a temporary basis.

On Monday, Immigration Minister Robert Jenrick said the numbers at Manston were now below 1,600 again.

Mr Jenrick also said the government wanted to stop using hotels to home migrants, telling MPs it was "not sustainable for the country to be spending billions of pounds a year on hotels".

He suggested "luxurious" accommodation could be a pull factor for those considering crossing the Channel and the government may instead use "some larger sites to provide decent but basic accommodation".

Labour MP Bell Ribeiro-Addy hit back at the minister's use of the word "luxurious". She said the hotels she had visited were "dire" with families living in "cramped conditions" and suffering from an infestation of bedbugs.

Last month, MPs on the Home Affairs Committee were told that the UK was spending £7m a day on hotels for asylum seekers, including groups such as Afghan refugees fleeing the Taliban.

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Suella Braverman, who was reappointed home secretary by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak last month, has denied ignoring legal advice or blocking the use of hotels to ease the pressure at Manston.

Asked whether Ms Braverman had made the situation at Manston worse, Mr Sunak said she was making sure the numbers at the site were reduced "and we're making very good progress on that".

Earlier Grant Shapps said Manston was "tipping into becoming an unofficial detention centre" when he briefly served as home secretary last month.

He told BBC Breakfast he received "very clear advice" during his six days at the Home Office, after the resignation of Ms Braverman over data breaches in the final days of Liz Truss's premiership.

He said there were concerns people were "unintentionally being detained", which would not be legal.

Mr Shapps, who is now business secretary, said he was keen to ensure the government remained within the law and made changes to the operation of the site "to ensure that it wasn't a detention centre", while also moving people out.

He added: "Those are decisions that I very quickly made. Actually, the home secretary subsequently has continued to make the same changes to make sure that those numbers are brought down."

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Analysis box by Nick Eardley, political correspondent

The big question Suella Braverman faces is whether she did enough to ensure the government was complying with the law at Manston.

Several people close to the process have said she did not take the action required to make sure people were moved on from the temporary facility quickly.

Ms Braverman has denied blocking the procurement of hotels. But Grant Shapps has just potentially opened a can of worms.

He says he got very clear advice about Manston, and that there were concerns about people being unintentionally kept for too long, thus acting outside the law.

Mr Shapps also talked about having to "rectify" the situation when he took over.

This raises more questions for the home secretary about whether she took all the action she needed to.

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2022-11-07 20:31:36Z
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Business Secretary Grant Shapps hints at autumn budget windfall tax expansion on energy firms due to 'unexpected profits' - Sky News

Business Secretary Grant Shapps has hinted that the government may extend the windfall tax on oil and gas companies in this month's autumn budget as it tries to stabilise the UK's public finances.

Speaking to Sky News with just 10 days to go before the government's fiscal plans are unveiled, Mr Shapps said: "I mean, it is the case that because fuel prices have been so high, there have been unexpected profits, of course.

"But I think it's important that we do carry on investing in making sure not on fossil fuels, but on the renewable energy as well, that we've we've got the capacity, we've got the ability to get that market moving as well."

Sunak to raise migrant crossings with Macron - Politics latest

He added that the general public will "have to wait until the 17th" to know exactly which measures the government is going to pursue to tackle what the Resolution Foundation thinktank has said is a £40bn financial black hole.

Last week, an initial report in The Times suggested that Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Chancellor Jeremy Hunt were planning to extend windfall taxes on oil and gas companies to raise an estimated £40bn over five years.

Mr Sunak and Mr Hunt want to maximise revenues from the windfall tax by increasing the rate from 25% to 30%, extending the policy until 2028, and expanding it to cover electricity generators - according to the paper.

More on Budget

With BP unveiling profits that doubled to more than £7.1bn in the three months to September, pressure is continuing to mount for an enhanced windfall tax on oil and gas giants to help fill the Treasury coffers.

COP26 president Alok Sharma, who was demoted from the cabinet by Mr Sunak, has backed this move, saying: "We need to raise more money from a windfall tax on oil and gas companies and actively encourage them to invest in renewables."

The Resolution Foundation said in a report last week that tax raises are "likely" to come soon as the government faces an "unpalatable menu" to find ways to re-balance the nation's finances after former chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng's ill-fated economic plans.

A combination of tax rises and spending cuts is likely to find the £40bn needed, it said.

Mr Sunak and Mr Hunt are currently figuring out how to tackle the abysmal economic forecast ahead of the autumn statement on 17 November, which was pushed back soon after Mr Sunak reappointed Mr Hunt.

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Why do Shell's profits matter?

The Resolution Foundation's report added that a recession next year could be predicted by the government's independent forecaster, the Office for Budget Responsibility.

Last week, the Bank of England raised its official interest rates by 0.75 percentage points to 3% and said the UK was already in recession.

It was the single biggest increase in more than three decades.

While GDP forecasts could be cut by up to 4% by the end of 2024.

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BoE interest rate hike explained

The autumn statement this month will likely encompass "rough" tax rises, Sky News has been told by a source in the Treasury.

The tax rises are likely to be across the board, although Mr Sunak and Mr Hunt are said to agreed those with the "broadest shoulders" should bear the greatest burden, it is understood.

Read more: Demand for mortgages falls as customers grapple with high interest rates

Few concrete details have emerged but, according to The Times, public sector workers could face deep real-terms cuts to wages, with The Treasury reportedly looking at an increase of 2% across the board for 2023-24, at a time when inflation is expected to be well above that threshold.

The Resolution Foundation has said £9bn could be saved by the government choosing not to raise benefits and pensions in line with rising prices next year, but any such move would have a "huge" impact on those already struggling to make ends meet.

Another option would be to re-instate the health and social care levy to raise £15bn by 2026-2027, while around £2bn could be raised by extending the "stealth" freezes in income tax threshold by a further year to 2026-2027.

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2022-11-07 07:52:30Z
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