Senin, 12 Juni 2023

Ex-PM asked Sunak to 'do something I wasn't prepared to do' - live - The Independent

Rishi Sunak: Boris Johnson ‘asked me to do something I wasn’t prepared to do’

Rishi Sunak has hit back at Boris Johnson in a row over his resignation honours list, revealing the former PM asked him to “do something I was not prepared to” by overruling the approval committee for peerages.

Taking questions at the London Tech week conference, Mr Sunak said: “Boris Johnson asked me to do something that I wasn’t prepared to do, because I didn’t think it was right.” He was asked whether anyone in No 10 had intervened in the former prime minister’s resignation honours list.

“That was to either overrule the Holac (House of Lords Appointments Commission) committee or to make promises to people”, Mr Sunak added.

“Now, I wasn’t prepared to do that. I didn’t think it was right and if people don’t like that, then tough.”

Mr Johnson dramatically resigned as MP on Friday over the outcome of the Partygate inquiry, with two of his allies – Nadine Dorries and Nigel Adams – also quitting with immediate effect.

The Privileges Committee will meet today to conclude their inquiry into whether the former prime minister misled Parliament over No 10 lockdown parties.

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Rishi Sunak: ‘Boris Johnson asked me to do something that I wasn’t prepared to do’

Rishi Sunak said Boris Johnson asked him to “do something I wasn’t prepared to do”, when asked about whether anyone in No 10 had intervened in the former prime minister’s resignation honours list.

Taking questions at the London Tech week conference, Mr Sunak said: “Boris Johnson asked me to do something that I wasn’t prepared to do, because I didn’t think it was right.”

“That was to either overrule the Holac (House of Lords Appointments Commission) committee or to make promises to people.

“Now, I wasn’t prepared to do that. I didn’t think it was right and if people don’t like that, then tough.”

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 09:48
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Downing Street expresses confidence in the work of the Privileges Committee

Downing Street expressed confidence in the work of the Privileges Committee, which has been the subject of attacks by Boris Johnson and his allies.

Prime minister Rishi Sunak’s official spokesman said: “This is a properly set-up committee that the House has voted to carry out their work.

“The government will in no way traduce or criticise the work of the committee who are doing exactly what Parliament has asked them to do.”

Asked about reported concerns over the security of committee members, the spokesman said: “I’ve only seen the reporting around that. I don’t know the facts. Clearly, any threats against any MPs are completely unacceptable.”

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 12:26
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‘It is entirely untrue to say that anyone from No 10 attempted to remove or change or alter Holac’s list’ - Downing Street

It is “entirely untrue” that Rishi Sunak or members of his No 10 team removed names from Boris Johnson‘s peerages submission, Downing Street has said.

Asked if anyone in No 10 spoke to the House of Lords Appointments Commission (Holac) before it made its redactions to Mr Johnson‘s list, the prime minister’s official spokesman told reporters: “It is entirely untrue to say that anyone from No 10 attempted to remove or change or alter Holac’s list.”

The official noted that “this is a process for Holac to make a decision” and said that “when it comes to peerages, the final list comes to the Prime Minister”.

Asked whether Mr Sunak broke a deal with his predecessor under which he would have waved through the honours list - as has been suggested by Mr Johnson‘s camp - the spokesman pointed to the Prime Minister’s comments on Monday morning, when he said Mr Johnson asked him to “do something I wasn’t prepared to do” by overruling Holac.

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 12:09
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‘Life moves on’ after Boris Johnson, Michael Gove has said

Michael Gove has said “life moves on” after Boris Johnson’s resignation as an MP - in the latest attempt by the government to draw a line under the rows engulfing the former prime minister.

The levelling up secretary highlighted what he called Mr Johnson’s “significant contributions” to public life, but emphasised his decision to stand down. “The work of government goes on,” Mr Gove said.

And in a separate interview with the BBC, Mr Gove added: “Boris’s decision to step down means that he’s no longer a member of parliament, and life moves on.

“As for Boris’s future, that will be a matter for him.”

As he quit unexpectedly on Friday, Mr Johnson used his 1,000-word exit statement to leave the door open for a return to Westminster. In a furious outburst, in which he attacked Rishi Sunak, Mr Johnson said he was leaving parliament “for now”.

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 11:46
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More than 600 migrants cross Channel in 2023 record - days after Sunak claimed plan was ‘working’

Figures released by the Home Office show that 616 people arrived in 12 boats on Sunday, bringing the total so far this year to around 8,400.

At the same point last year, the total had just passed 10,000, and last Monday the prime minister hailed the reduction as proof that “our approach is working”.

But Border Force sources told The Independent crossings had been suppressed by weeks of rough seas in the Channel, and experts said much of the reduction had resulted from a drop in Albanian migrants rather than an overall change.

Our Home Affairs Editor Lizzie Dearden reports:

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 11:26
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Johnson ally accuses Sunak of having ‘secretly blocked’ peerages of Nadine Dorries and others

An ally of Boris Johnson has accused Rishi Sunak of having “secretly blocked” the peerages of former culture secretary Nadine Dorries and others.

Responding to the Prime Minister accusing his predecessor of asking him to do something he “didn’t think was right” over the resignation honours list, the ally said: “Rishi secretly blocked the peerages for Nadine and others.

“He refused to ask for them to undergo basic checks that could have taken only a few weeks or even days.

“That is how he kept them off the list - without telling Boris Johnson.”

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 10:53
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Watch: Boris Johnson ‘asked me to do something I wasn’t prepared to do’, says Rishi Sunak

“Boris Johnson asked me to do something that I wasn’t prepared to do, because I didn’t think it was right”, Rishi Sunak said when asked about whether anyone in No 10 had intervened in the former prime minister’s resignation honours list.

The prime minister made the comments as he addressed the opening day of the London Tech Week conference.

“That was to either overrule the Holac (House of Lords Appointments Commission) committee or to make promises to people”, Mr Sunak added.

“Now, I wasn’t prepared to do that. I didn’t think it was right and if people don’t like that, then tough.”

Watch here:

Rishi Sunak: Boris Johnson 'asked me to do something I wasn't prepared to do'
Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 10:50
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Defiant Sunak hits back at Boris Johnson over honours row

In his first public remarks since his predecessor quit as an MP over the Commons partygate inquiry, the prime minister claimed Mr Johnson asked him to either overrule the committee which vets peerages - known as Holac - or “make promises to people”.

“I was not prepared to do that,” Mr Sunak said defiantly. “If people don’t like that, then tough.”

His comments come amid a row with Mr Johnson and his allies, who blame Downing Street for Conservative MPs failing to appear on his resignation honours list despite them being nominated for the House of Lords.

Holac has confirmed it did not support eight peerage nominees put forward by Mr Johnson. It is understood Mr Sunak would not promise peerages to MPs in the future in order to avoid potentially damaging by-elections for the government.

My colleague Archie Mitchell reports:

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 10:25
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‘When I got this job I said I was going to do things differently’ - Sunak

“When I got this job I said I was going to do things differently because I wanted to change politics and that’s what I’m doing”, Rishi Sunak added when asked about whether anyone in No 10 had intervened in the former prime minister’s resignation honours list.

“And I’m also keen to make sure that we change how our country works and that’s what I’m here talking about today: making sure that we can grow our economy, that we can maintain our leadership in the innovative industries of the future.”

Former culture secretary Nadine Dorries, ex-minister Nigel Adams and Cop26 president Sir Alok Sharma were reportedly put forward by Mr Johnson for peerages.

Ms Dorries and Mr Adams have resigned as MPs since being omitted, giving Mr Sunak the headache of three separate by-elections, with Mr Johnson also quitting over complaints about a Commons partygate inquiry.

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 10:14
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Voices: Boris’s resignation honours are the latest in more than 100 years of corruption and cronyism

Somewhat charmingly, the Cabinet Office has a website in which it invites people to “nominate someone amazing for a national honour”. The honours system, the site tells us, “Celebrates the people who go above and beyond to change the world around them for the better”. These are people, the Cabinet Office claims, who have “gained the respect of their peers” and “displayed moral and physical courage”.

You do not have to be immensely cynical to find it hard to reconcile the stated purpose of the honours system with how it works in reality. Take, for example, the honours list of Boris Johnson, who resigned on Friday in a manner that can described as considerably less than “honourable”, let alone “amazing”. Like the former PM himself, whose departure along with two of his allies has already triggered three by-elections and created an enormous headache for his party, it is difficult when looking at his list to find the “respect”, “morality”, and certainly “courage”.

The honours system is as broken as just about every other system in this country, and has been for more than a century, writes Guy Walters:

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 10:05

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2023-06-12 11:09:54Z
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Chloe Mitchell: Brandon John Rainey appears in court charged with murder - Belfast Telegraph

Breaking | 

Brandon John Rainey (right) is charged with the murder of 21-year-old Chloe Mitchell

Chloe Mitchell

thumbnail: Brandon John Rainey (right) is charged with the murder of 21-year-old Chloe Mitchell
thumbnail: Chloe Mitchell

Liam Tunney

The man accused of murdering Ballymena woman Chloe Mitchell (21) had absconded to the Ballymena area three times from a secure mental health facility, a court has heard.

Brandon John Rainey (27), of James St, Ballymena, appeared via video link at Ballymena Magistrates Court on Monday morning charged with murdering Ms Mitchell between June 2 and June 5 this year.

Rainey replied “Yeah” when asked if he understood the charges, before a police officer told the court she could connect the accused.

Chloe Mitchell

Defence for Rainey made an application that the defendant be remanded at the Shannon Clinic - a secure psychiatric unit in Belfast - rather than at HMP Maghaberry.

The court heard Rainey had previously been a resident at the clinic, but had been released last Autumn following assessment.

Police objected to the application and said Rainey should be remanded at Maghaberry as he had previously absconded three times from the facility.

On each occasion, he was located in the Ballymena area.

District Judge King refused the defence application, remanding Rainey at HMP Maghaberry to appear before the court again on July 6.

Also appearing via video link was co-accused Ryan Johnston Gordon (34) of Nursery Close, Ballymena.

Johnston replied “yes” to indicate he understood the charge against him of assisting an offender.

Defence counsel indicated that Gordon also suffered from mental health issues, and an application to adjourn a bail application for the defendant to June 20 was granted by Judge King.

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2023-06-12 11:09:37Z
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Three British passengers confirmed dead after fire on Egypt diving boat - Sky News

Three missing British passengers who were on a diving boat that caught fire in Egypt have died, a tour operator has confirmed.

A spokesman for Scuba Travel said: "It is with great regret that we, as tour operator, with heavy hearts, must accept that three of our much-valued dive guests, perished in the tragic incident.

"Our sincere and heartfelt condolences go out to their families and friends at this very sad time."

In a statement, the company said the three passengers were among 15 qualified diving enthusiasts who were on a week's stay on board the "Hurricane" dive boat when the fire broke out at around 8:30am local time (6:30am UK time) on Sunday.

A search had been under way for the three divers following the fire which broke out while the boat was off the Elphinstone Reef in the Red Sea.

"At the time the fire broke out, 12 divers were participating in a briefing on board, while those missing had apparently decided not to dive that morning."

According to Scuba Travel, the severity of the fire meant that 12 of the divers were immediately evacuated to another craft nearby and the 14 crew members also had to abandon ship after trying to reach the missing guests.

All the 12 guests who were taken off the dive ship went ashore to Marsa Shagra where they were provided with any medical attention required and gave statements to the local police.

Read more from Sky News:
Russian man mauled to death by tiger shark off Egypt's Red Sea coast in rare attack
Girl, 11, from British family shot dead in France

A full investigation into the cause of the fire will be carried out by police and local authorities.

Authorities said initial reports suggested the fire was due to an electrical fault.

The "Hurricane" is being towed to a yet to be decided port as it is still smouldering and will need to cool down before entry.

It is understood that the Foreign and Commonwealth Department has contacted the families of the divers who died.

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2023-06-12 07:52:30Z
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Nicola Sturgeon should give up SNP membership, says ex-leadership rival - The Guardian

Nicola Sturgeon should consider voluntarily suspending her Scottish National party membership until the police investigation into its finances is over, a former leadership candidate has said.

Ash Regan, a former minister who came third in the race to succeed Sturgeon as SNP leader, said there was a clear precedent for parliamentarians to stand down as party members if they were under police investigation.

“Nicola should perhaps consider voluntarily resigning her SNP membership until this is cleared up,” Regan, the MSP for Edinburgh Eastern who quit as a minister in protest at Sturgeon’s gender recognition reforms, told BBC Radio Scotland on Monday morning.

If Sturgeon did not voluntarily step down, Humza Yousaf, her successor as party leader, should consider suspending her, Regan added. “The leadership needs to think about taking decisive action.”

Sturgeon was arrested and questioned “as a suspect” on Sunday by Police Scotland detectives as part of their investigation into the SNP’s finances after a series of complaints were made about the party’s handling of more than £600,000 in donations for an independence campaign.

On Sunday night, shortly after being released without charge, Sturgeon said “in the strongest possible terms” that she was entirely innocent of any wrongdoing.

“Innocence is not just a presumption I am entitled to in law,” she said in a short statement on Twitter. “I know beyond doubt that I am in fact innocent of any wrongdoing.”

Yousaf, who was Sturgeon’s favoured successor as party leader and first minister, has refused to suspend Peter Murrell, Sturgeon’s husband, and the party’s then-treasurer Colin Beattie MSP, after they were arrested and questioned as part of the same inquiry.

Like Sturgeon, they were released without charge and Yousaf said therefore there should be a presumption of innocence.

However, the leadership’s critics argue there have been numerous examples of MPs and MSPs under investigation or accused of significant wrongdoing being suspended by the party or their voluntary resignations being welcomed by party leaders.

Angus MacNeil, the MP for Na h-Eileanan an Iar and an ally of Sturgeon’s predecessor, Alex Salmond, tweeted: “This soap opera has gone far enough, Nicola Sturgeon suspended others from the SNP for an awful lot less! Time for political distance until the investigation ends either way.”

His intervention infuriated other SNP parliamentarians. James Dornan, the SNP MSP for Glasgow Cathcart, suggested MacNeil should be kicked out of the party for his remarks. He tweeted that what would “help the cause of independence is get rid of the ‘too big to discipline’ MPs” such as MacNeil.

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Regan, whose leadership campaign was run by one of Salmond’s former advisers, said there had to be some accountability. “Accountability in these types of situations is really important. Nicola is not doubt considering this at the moment,” Regan said.

“There is precedent in the party for people who have been involved in issues of this type to resign from the party, voluntarily suspending their membership until this can be cleared up. I think if she did that, that would reaffirm her commitment to the principles of the party.”

Jackie Baillie, Scottish Labour’s deputy leader, said this challenge was a test of Yousaf’s strength as party leader. It was clear Sturgeon should be suspended, Baillie told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

“I think we all anticipated that at some point Nicola Sturgeon would be arrested for questioning about the SNP finances because she is, of course, the third signatory on the accounts,” she said.

“The question in my mind, given all this chaos, given the kind of secrecy and cover-up that has been the hallmark of how the SNP operate, is whether Humza Yousaf, the current first minister, is indeed strong enough to suspend her and protect the party.”

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2023-06-12 10:15:00Z
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Ex-PM asked Sunak to 'do something I wasn't prepared to do' - live - The Independent

Rishi Sunak: Boris Johnson ‘asked me to do something I wasn’t prepared to do’

Rishi Sunak has hit back at Boris Johnson in a row over his resignation honours list, revealing the former PM asked him to “do something I was not prepared to” by overruling the approval committee for peerages.

Taking questions at the London Tech week conference, Mr Sunak said: “Boris Johnson asked me to do something that I wasn’t prepared to do, because I didn’t think it was right.” He was asked whether anyone in No 10 had intervened in the former prime minister’s resignation honours list.

“That was to either overrule the Holac (House of Lords Appointments Commission) committee or to make promises to people”, Mr Sunak added.

“Now, I wasn’t prepared to do that. I didn’t think it was right and if people don’t like that, then tough.”

Mr Johnson dramatically resigned as MP on Friday over the outcome of the Partygate inquiry, with two of his allies – Nadine Dorries and Nigel Adams – also quitting with immediate effect.

The Privileges Committee will meet today to conclude their inquiry into whether the former prime minister misled Parliament over No 10 lockdown parties.

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Rishi Sunak: ‘Boris Johnson asked me to do something that I wasn’t prepared to do’

Rishi Sunak said Boris Johnson asked him to “do something I wasn’t prepared to do”, when asked about whether anyone in No 10 had intervened in the former prime minister’s resignation honours list.

Taking questions at the London Tech week conference, Mr Sunak said: “Boris Johnson asked me to do something that I wasn’t prepared to do, because I didn’t think it was right.”

“That was to either overrule the Holac (House of Lords Appointments Commission) committee or to make promises to people.

“Now, I wasn’t prepared to do that. I didn’t think it was right and if people don’t like that, then tough.”

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 09:48
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‘Life moves on’ after Boris Johnson, Michael Gove has said

Michael Gove has said “life moves on” after Boris Johnson’s resignation as an MP - in the latest attempt by the government to draw a line under the rows engulfing the former prime minister.

The levelling up secretary highlighted what he called Mr Johnson’s “significant contributions” to public life, but emphasised his decision to stand down. “The work of government goes on,” Mr Gove said.

And in a separate interview with the BBC, Mr Gove added: “Boris’s decision to step down means that he’s no longer a member of parliament, and life moves on.

“As for Boris’s future, that will be a matter for him.”

As he quit unexpectedly on Friday, Mr Johnson used his 1,000-word exit statement to leave the door open for a return to Westminster. In a furious outburst, in which he attacked Rishi Sunak, Mr Johnson said he was leaving parliament “for now”.

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 11:46
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More than 600 migrants cross Channel in 2023 record - days after Sunak claimed plan was ‘working’

Figures released by the Home Office show that 616 people arrived in 12 boats on Sunday, bringing the total so far this year to around 8,400.

At the same point last year, the total had just passed 10,000, and last Monday the prime minister hailed the reduction as proof that “our approach is working”.

But Border Force sources told The Independent crossings had been suppressed by weeks of rough seas in the Channel, and experts said much of the reduction had resulted from a drop in Albanian migrants rather than an overall change.

Our Home Affairs Editor Lizzie Dearden reports:

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 11:26
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Johnson ally accuses Sunak of having ‘secretly blocked’ peerages of Nadine Dorries and others

An ally of Boris Johnson has accused Rishi Sunak of having “secretly blocked” the peerages of former culture secretary Nadine Dorries and others.

Responding to the Prime Minister accusing his predecessor of asking him to do something he “didn’t think was right” over the resignation honours list, the ally said: “Rishi secretly blocked the peerages for Nadine and others.

“He refused to ask for them to undergo basic checks that could have taken only a few weeks or even days.

“That is how he kept them off the list - without telling Boris Johnson.”

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 10:53
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Watch: Boris Johnson ‘asked me to do something I wasn’t prepared to do’, says Rishi Sunak

“Boris Johnson asked me to do something that I wasn’t prepared to do, because I didn’t think it was right”, Rishi Sunak said when asked about whether anyone in No 10 had intervened in the former prime minister’s resignation honours list.

The prime minister made the comments as he addressed the opening day of the London Tech Week conference.

“That was to either overrule the Holac (House of Lords Appointments Commission) committee or to make promises to people”, Mr Sunak added.

“Now, I wasn’t prepared to do that. I didn’t think it was right and if people don’t like that, then tough.”

Watch here:

Rishi Sunak: Boris Johnson 'asked me to do something I wasn't prepared to do'
Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 10:50
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Defiant Sunak hits back at Boris Johnson over honours row

In his first public remarks since his predecessor quit as an MP over the Commons partygate inquiry, the prime minister claimed Mr Johnson asked him to either overrule the committee which vets peerages - known as Holac - or “make promises to people”.

“I was not prepared to do that,” Mr Sunak said defiantly. “If people don’t like that, then tough.”

His comments come amid a row with Mr Johnson and his allies, who blame Downing Street for Conservative MPs failing to appear on his resignation honours list despite them being nominated for the House of Lords.

Holac has confirmed it did not support eight peerage nominees put forward by Mr Johnson. It is understood Mr Sunak would not promise peerages to MPs in the future in order to avoid potentially damaging by-elections for the government.

My colleague Archie Mitchell reports:

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 10:25
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‘When I got this job I said I was going to do things differently’ - Sunak

“When I got this job I said I was going to do things differently because I wanted to change politics and that’s what I’m doing”, Rishi Sunak added when asked about whether anyone in No 10 had intervened in the former prime minister’s resignation honours list.

“And I’m also keen to make sure that we change how our country works and that’s what I’m here talking about today: making sure that we can grow our economy, that we can maintain our leadership in the innovative industries of the future.”

Former culture secretary Nadine Dorries, ex-minister Nigel Adams and Cop26 president Sir Alok Sharma were reportedly put forward by Mr Johnson for peerages.

Ms Dorries and Mr Adams have resigned as MPs since being omitted, giving Mr Sunak the headache of three separate by-elections, with Mr Johnson also quitting over complaints about a Commons partygate inquiry.

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 10:14
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Voices: Boris’s resignation honours are the latest in more than 100 years of corruption and cronyism

Somewhat charmingly, the Cabinet Office has a website in which it invites people to “nominate someone amazing for a national honour”. The honours system, the site tells us, “Celebrates the people who go above and beyond to change the world around them for the better”. These are people, the Cabinet Office claims, who have “gained the respect of their peers” and “displayed moral and physical courage”.

You do not have to be immensely cynical to find it hard to reconcile the stated purpose of the honours system with how it works in reality. Take, for example, the honours list of Boris Johnson, who resigned on Friday in a manner that can described as considerably less than “honourable”, let alone “amazing”. Like the former PM himself, whose departure along with two of his allies has already triggered three by-elections and created an enormous headache for his party, it is difficult when looking at his list to find the “respect”, “morality”, and certainly “courage”.

The honours system is as broken as just about every other system in this country, and has been for more than a century, writes Guy Walters:

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 10:05
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Keir Starmer tells Rishi Sunak to ‘find a backbone’ and call snap election

Keir Starmer has told Rishi Sunak to “find a backbone” and call a snap general election – after three quick-fire MP resignations left the prime minister facing by-election battles on multiple fronts.

Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey also echoed Labour’s call – with both opposition parties hoping to capitalise on Tory woes and capture seats at the by-elections.

Mr Adams and Ms Dorries had been tipped for peerages in Mr Johnson’s resignation honours but neither featured in the published list.

Meanwhile Mr Johnson announced his exit on Friday by launching a scathing attack on a Commons Privileges Committee investigation into his conduct during the pandemic.

Jon Stone has the full story:

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 09:45
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Watch: UK should be ‘grateful’ for what Boris Johnson did as prime minister, says Michael Gove

Speaking to BBC Breakfast, the cabinet minister suggested the UK should be “grateful” to Mr Johnson.

“All of us will want to be grateful for what he did during the Covid pandemic, when he initiated the vaccine task force... and was responsible for the fastest vaccine rollout in Europe,” Mr Gove said.

“We should be grateful for that, grateful also for the staunch support that he gave to Ukraine.”

Watch here:

UK should be ‘grateful’ for what Boris Johnson did as PM, says Michael Gove

Michael Gove paid tribute to Boris Johnson as he steps down as an MP, praising the former prime minister for his record on Covid and Ukraine. Speaking to BBC Breakfast, the cabinet minister suggested the UK should be “grateful” to Mr Johnson. “All of us will want to be grateful for what he did during the Covid pandemic, when he initiated the vaccine task force... and was responsible for the fastest vaccine rollout in Europe,” Mr Gove said. “We should be grateful for that, grateful also for the staunch support that he gave to Ukraine.”

Eleanor Noyce12 June 2023 09:25

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2023-06-12 10:46:51Z
2113395606

Minggu, 11 Juni 2023

Sunak allies at war with ex-PM as Shapps says 'world has moved on' from Boris – live - The Independent

Related video

Rishi Sunak allies are fighting back against Boris Johnson amid a growing Tory row over the former prime minister’s decision to quit the Commons.

Mr Johnson dramatically resigned as MP on Friday over the outcome of the Partygate inquiry, with two of his allies – Nadine Dorries and Nigel Adams – also quitting with immediate effect, triggering three by-elections.

Senior Tories accused the former PM and his allies of a “coordinated attempt to damage the Sunak government”. Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg also claimed Johnson could “easily get back into Parliament” and warned the Conservative Party not to “block” his return.

But Sunak loyalists have attempted to play down the row, insisting the PM will be relieved at having a chance to draw a line under the “Boris madness”.

Senior Cabinet minister Grant Shapps said “the world has moved on” and that Tories did not miss the drama of a Johnson administration. One senior MP, who is close to Mr Sunak, told The Independent: “Good riddance.”

It came as Sir Keir Starmer said the PM “must find a backbone” and call a snap election.

1686483937

Johnson ‘taken charge’ by resigning, says ex-PM’s former communications director

Boris Johnson’s resignation shows he has “taken charge,” the former prime minister’s ex-director of communications has said. Holly Patrick reports:

Speaking on Sky News, Guto Harri said Mr Johnson had stepped down as an MP on his own terms rather than “being dragged kicking and screaming.”

Mr Johnson resigned on Friday, 9 June, after launching a scathing attack on the Commons Privileges Committee investigation into whether he misled MPs with his assurances over the Partygate scandal.

Longtime allies of the former PM, Nadine Dorries and Nigel Adams, announced their resignations shortly afterwards.

Matt Mathers11 June 2023 12:45
1686483054

CCHQ declines to say if it will block Johnson in Mid Bed by-election

Conservative Party HQ has declined to say if it would block Boris Johnson from standing as a candidate in the Mid Befordshire, according to a report.

“Up to three candidates will be put to the association members”, a spokesperson told the Mirror.

A source close to Mr Johnson said “there’s a lot of ideas under discussion,” the paper added.

Matt Mathers11 June 2023 12:30
1686481854

Farage claims 10 Tories willing to join new party

Nigel Farage said he believes "it’s the end of Boris Johnson in the Conservative Party" as he suggested more than 10 Tory MPs could be willing to join a new party.

The prominent Leave campaigner, appearing on the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg show, added that the "gap for another insurgency is actually bigger than it was 10 years ago".

Mr Farage said: "I think it’s the end of Boris Johnson in the Conservative Party. I think all this talk of ‘oh, he’ll go for this seat or that seat’, well, hang on, he’s virtually just gifted Uxbridge to the Labour Party, there’s no way he’s going to be given a seat, if he really wants to be in politics he is going to have to be part of some sort of centre-right realignment.

"It’s been talked about years ago, the referendum stopped it, now the Ukip insurgency was getting to such a level that there was real talk about this happening, and is Johnson somebody who would want to be part of a new attempt to break the mould of British politics, or would he rather be on the after-dinner speaking circuit?

"I look at reform and, you know, I’m not actively involved in it at the moment, but I think the gap for another insurgency is actually bigger than it was 10 years ago."

<p>Nigel Farage said Boris Johnson is finished in the Conservative Party (Kirsty O’Connor/PA)</p>

Nigel Farage said Boris Johnson is finished in the Conservative Party (Kirsty O’Connor/PA)

Matt Mathers11 June 2023 12:10
1686480943

Rees-Mogg and Patel shouldn’t have been given honours - Lammy

Former Cabinet ministers Jacob Rees-Mogg and Priti Patel should not be rewarded with honours, a senior Labour politician has said.

Shadow foreign secretary David Lammy said comments made by Mr Rees-Mogg in the wake of the Grenfell Tower fire make him unfit for a knighthood.

Mr Rees-Mogg is tipped for the title in Boris Johnson’s resignation honours list alongside Ms Patel, who will receive a damehood.

Asked about Mr Johnson’s list, Mr Lammy told the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg: "After Grenfell Tower, where I lost a friend, Jacob Rees-Mogg said that the residents of that tower lacked common sense.

"I don’t believe he is someone who should have been rewarded.

"Priti Patel was found to be bullying in her department. I don’t believe she should be rewarded.

"I don’t believe that if a Government sets rules for everybody else during a pandemic, it is right that those who encouraged parties in No 10 should be rewarded."

<p>Former Cabinet ministers Jacob Rees-Mogg and Priti Patel should not be rewarded with honours, a senior Labour politician has said (BBC/PA)</p>

Former Cabinet ministers Jacob Rees-Mogg and Priti Patel should not be rewarded with honours, a senior Labour politician has said (BBC/PA)

Matt Mathers11 June 2023 11:55
1686479154

Johnson acting like a ‘baby-man'

Labour has accused Boris Johnson of acting like a "baby-man" and blaming his mistakes on everyone else, Jon Stone reports.

Pat McFadden, Labour’s shadow chief secretary to the Treasury, told Sky News’ Sophy Ridge On Sunday programme that the ex PM hadn’t been forced out of parliament by the committee.

"It just triggers a recall petition where he could face the voters," he said.

"But the truth is he didn’t want to face any of the verdicts because he can never accept responsibility for his own actions.

"That’s true of all these right-wing populist leaders. They are like baby-men. Whenever anything goes wrong, it is everybody else’s fault."

Matt Mathers11 June 2023 11:25
1686478254

Labour repeats call for general election

Pat McFadden, Labour’s shadow chief secretary to the Treasury, said a general election was the only way to prevent Conservative "chaos".

Speaking to Sky News’ Sophy Ridge On Sunday programme about Sir Keir Starmer’s call for a snap election, the Opposition politician said: "I don’t think there’s any cure for this chaos under the current government."

Mr McFadden added: "They are the party of government, and if this goes on, the chaos will continue.

"You’ve got Jacob Rees-Mogg, one of Boris Johnson’s principal allies, writing in one of the Sunday newspapers today that not only should Boris come back, but that he would be a good candidate in a future leadership election.

"So, it is quite clear. This is going to continue in the Conservative Party and they cannot fix it themselves. The only way to fix this is to have a general election and a change of government.

"Otherwise, the country is going to be bedevilled by this chaos and instability, and it is having a real effect on the governance and the economy of the country."

Matt Mathers11 June 2023 11:10
1686477354

Recycling deposit scheme row shows devolution not working - Yousaf

Humza Yousaf has said the deposit return scheme - the recycling initiative which has now been delayed to at least 2025 - was an example of how "devolution is becoming unworkable".

He told the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg show that the UK Government had sought to "sabotage" the scheme at the 11th hour.

He was asked if the Scottish Government would pay compensation to businesses which had paid millions to prepare for a scheme which is now not going to happen.

Mr Yousaf said: "We don’t believe there’s a case for the Scottish Government to need to compensate because the action we’ve had to take is because of that 11th hour, last-minute intervention from the UK Government, which has meant that a Scottish scheme, unfortunately, isn’t viable."

Matt Mathers11 June 2023 10:55
1686476680

Scottish independence will be ‘front and centre’ of SNP election campaign - Yousaf

Humza Yousaf has said Scottish independence will be "front and centre" of the SNP’s general elections campaign.

He told the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg show that at the next general election "very simply a vote for the SNP is going to be a vote for independence".

Discussing polling on independence, he said different polls showed support above or below 50 per cent.

The first minister said: "I don’t want to be there or thereabouts, I want independence to be the consistent, settled will.

"At the moment, for example, it’s pretty obvious that independence is not the consistent, settled will of the Scottish people."

Asked if it is realistic that Scotland would not be independent within five years, he said: "Not if I’ve got anything to do with it."

<p>Humza Yousaf is being urged to ‘hold his nerve’ and press ahead with Scotland’s deposit return scheme (Jane Barlow/PA)</p>

Humza Yousaf is being urged to ‘hold his nerve’ and press ahead with Scotland’s deposit return scheme (Jane Barlow/PA)

Matt Mathers11 June 2023 10:44
1686474740

Uxbridge by-election ‘acid test’ for Labour majority

The by-election in Boris Johnson’s old seat will be an “acid test” as to whether Labour can win a general election, the chief executive of Ipsos Mori has claimed.

Speaking on Sky News, Ben Page said: “If Starmer is going to win a general election convincingly, this ought to be in many ways a breeze for Labour.

“That really is going to be an acid test.

“If they breeze through that, then all the polls showing an average 16-point lead for Labour, people will bake it in.

“If they don’t, or it’s only very narrow, then I think there will be a lot more uncertainty.”

Former prime minister Mr Johnson resigned as MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip on Friday.

Matt Mathers11 June 2023 10:12
1686473004

‘Not true’ that a member of Sunak’s team altered Johnson’s honours list

Grant Shapps has flat-out denied claims that Rishi Sunak or any member of his team got names removed from Boris Johnson’s resignation honours list, Jon Stone reports.

The issue has come to light as Tory Nadine Dorries and Nigel Adams both believed they would be in line for peerages – but quit as MPs after they did not receive them.

Asked whether Mr Sunak removed any names, Cabinet minister Mr Shapps told the BBC:

"No. The list that came to him was the list that went to the House of Lords commission that looks at these things, called Holac.

"And just to be clear the committee would have to say if the Prime Minister removed anyone.

"The Prime Minister has exactly followed the very, very long standing conventions of prime ministers who simply take the list, pass it on, and receive it back."

He added: "You’re asking me upfront if he removed anyone: my understanding is no."

Asked specifically whether – as reported – a member of the prime minister’s team had removed anyone from the list months ago before it went to the Commission, Mr Shapps replied:

"As far as I’m aware, that’s not true. The list went across, the commission are the people who made those decisions."

Matt Mathers11 June 2023 09:43

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2023-06-11 11:45:37Z
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Three British passengers missing after boat bursts into flames off Egypt's coast - Sky News

A search is under way for three missing British passengers after a diving boat caught fire in the Red Sea off Egypt's coast, officials have said.

Twelve tourists were rescued from the vessel in Marsa Alam, which local officials said was carrying 15 British passengers, 10 crew members and two guides.

Authorities said initial reports suggested the fire was due to an electrical fault.

The boat had left Port Ghalib on Tuesday (6 June) and was due to return on Sunday.

The Red Sea Governorate said: "The initial examination resulted in an electrical short circuit in the engine room, and the investigation authorities went to conduct an inspection and investigation."

Footage on social media appeared to show the boat almost entirely engulfed in flames and smoke.

A Foreign Office spokesperson said: "We are in contact with local authorities following an incident aboard a dive boat near Marsa Alam, and are supporting British nationals involved."

The fire was spotted at 9:15am on Sunday and according to a statement from Red Sea Governorate, the Secretary General confirmed that the accident was the result of a fire on the boat, which was named the ‘Hurricane’.

It added: "He pointed out that the crew and passengers were rescued by the boat named 'Blue' and returned to central Marsa Alam, and a search is still underway for 3 British passengers by the concerned authorities and other boats, stressing that the Ambulance Authority and the Directorate of Health Affairs have been notified to raise the level of readiness and follow-up is underway."

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2023-06-11 11:00:50Z
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