Kamis, 20 Juli 2023

Voters head to polls in three byelections seen as test of Rishi Sunak’s premiership – UK politics live - The Guardian

Polls have opened in three parliamentary seats where byelections are being held, with Rishi Sunak braced for an electoral test of his premiership.

The Conservative-held constituencies are being targeted by Labour and the Liberal Democrats, who hope to overturn large majorities and send Tory MPs off into the summer recess nervous about their own political futures come the general election.

Voters have been able to cast their ballots from 7am in the south-western Tory stronghold of Somerton and Frome, Boris Johnson’s old seat in the west London suburbs Uxbridge and South Ruislip, as well as Selby and Ainsty in North Yorkshire.

Sunak was privately downcast on Wednesday afternoon about the his party’s electoral prospects, in part given the nature of why the contests were triggered.

Johnson stood down to avoid being suspended from parliament over a report that found he misled MPs over Partygate. Nigel Adams quit after being passed over for a peerage. And David Warbuton, an MP in Somerset since 2015, quit after being investigated over claims of harassment and drug use.

On top of the circumstances of the byelections being called, Sunak’s party is also polling poorly, nationally. At a behind-closed-doors meeting of Tory backbenchers on the eve of the byelections, MPs said Sunak appeared to acknowledge the results would be “tough”.

If the Conservatives are trounced, Sunak could become the first prime minister since Harold Wilson in 1968 to lose three byelections in a single day.

A member of polling station staff walks into a building past a signs stating: ‘polling station’

I will be looking after the politics blog today. If you have any tips or suggestions, please get in touch: nicola.slawson@theguardian.com.

Reminder: Please don’t tell us how you voted in the comments section – Election law (specifically section 66A of the Representation of the People Act 1983) makes it an offence to publish before the polls close at 10pm. Many thanks.

You can read more from my colleague Aubrey Allegretti here:

Staff working for MPs need better HR access and a more supportive culture in parliament, but the system through which they are directly employed by members does not need to change, a report by a committee of MPs has concluded.

The Speaker’s conference on the employment conditions of members’ staff, chaired by Lindsay Hoyle, the Commons Speaker, was set up last year following a wave of stories about sexual harassment and bullying in parliament.

There was particular concern that staff working directly for MPs, as opposed to those centrally employed by parliament, were vulnerable given the HR practices and working culture were directly set by the MP, who was also their employer.

Ahead of the inquiry, Hoyle called for a change to this system, suggesting the idea of an outside employer, meaning staff would have independent input into their careers and concerns.

But the report, produced by a cross-party group of 16 MPs, led by Hoyle, said the problems faced by staff were “not inherently related to the identity of the employer”, and that changing the employer would be expensive, time consuming, and “ultimately a blunt instrument”.

They said:

We conclude that the nature of the work of an MP, and the close working arrangements and personal loyalty between members and their staff mean that members should continue to be the employers of their staff.

The report, which will be debated in the Commons before it is implemented, sets out other proposals, including universal access to professional HR, and reforms to the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority, which has a significant role in the contracts and salaries of MPs’ staff.

More widely, the MPs said, there was a need for “a culture which recognises and values the work that [MPs’ staff] do and makes these staff feel part of the wider parliamentary community”.

Rishi Sunak braced MPs at a meeting of the 1922 Committee of Tory backbenchers on the eve of the polls on Wednesday night that they face a “tough battle” in what were seen as safe seats for his party.

The prime minister told them that governing parties rarely win by-elections but urged the MPs to unite in the face of any defeat as he pledged to “throw everything” at winning the next general election, PA News reports.

Labour hopes to snatch Uxbridge and South Ruislip, which was Boris Johnson’s seat until he quit, and Selby and Ainsty - vacated by his ally Nigel Adams’ resignation.

The Liberal Democrats are eying victory in the contest in Somerton and Frome that was triggered by David Warburton quitting after admitting cocaine use amid allegations of sexual harassment.

Losses for the Tories in all of them would be the first time in 55 years that a government has been defeated in three by-elections on the same day.

On Wednesday evening, Sunak was understood to have told his MPs:

In the coming months, I am going to set out more of what I would do if I had a full term.

I was recently described as a full spectrum modern Conservative and you are going to see that in the programme I lay out.

Sunak pledged to show the public “who is really on their side”, adding: “And that is what will propel us to victory.”

He was conscious of the battle he will face if voters roundly reject the Tory candidates, but urged MPs to unite ahead of a general election expected next year.

Sunak told the meeting.

When we come back in September we have a choice to make, all of us. Do we come together and throw everything at winning the next election or not? I’ve made my choice, I’m all in with you to win.

I promise you we can do this but we can only do it together as one team.

Tory backbencher Jonathan Gullis told reporters outside the meeting that the problem is “apathetic Conservative voters” rather than the public’s support for Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer.

He said Sunak told them “what we already know, which is it’s going to be a tough battle” in the by-elections.

Tory MPs at the meeting said he did not address suggestions that he could spring a Cabinet reshuffle on Friday in an attempt to reset his premiership.

During a visit to Warwickshire, Sunak told reporters asking whether he would shake up his top team that “you would never expect me to comment on things like that” – in what was clearly not a denial.

He welcomed a fall in the rate of inflation as proof his government’s plans were working.

The prime minister’s press secretary acknowledged it would be tough for the Tories to hold the three seats on Thursday.

She said:

By-elections, for incumbent governments, are very difficult, that is the nature of them.

The election that the Conservative Party is most focused on is the general election.

Polls have opened in three parliamentary seats where byelections are being held, with Rishi Sunak braced for an electoral test of his premiership.

The Conservative-held constituencies are being targeted by Labour and the Liberal Democrats, who hope to overturn large majorities and send Tory MPs off into the summer recess nervous about their own political futures come the general election.

Voters have been able to cast their ballots from 7am in the south-western Tory stronghold of Somerton and Frome, Boris Johnson’s old seat in the west London suburbs Uxbridge and South Ruislip, as well as Selby and Ainsty in North Yorkshire.

Sunak was privately downcast on Wednesday afternoon about the his party’s electoral prospects, in part given the nature of why the contests were triggered.

Johnson stood down to avoid being suspended from parliament over a report that found he misled MPs over Partygate. Nigel Adams quit after being passed over for a peerage. And David Warbuton, an MP in Somerset since 2015, quit after being investigated over claims of harassment and drug use.

On top of the circumstances of the byelections being called, Sunak’s party is also polling poorly, nationally. At a behind-closed-doors meeting of Tory backbenchers on the eve of the byelections, MPs said Sunak appeared to acknowledge the results would be “tough”.

If the Conservatives are trounced, Sunak could become the first prime minister since Harold Wilson in 1968 to lose three byelections in a single day.

A member of polling station staff walks into a building past a signs stating: ‘polling station’

I will be looking after the politics blog today. If you have any tips or suggestions, please get in touch: nicola.slawson@theguardian.com.

Reminder: Please don’t tell us how you voted in the comments section – Election law (specifically section 66A of the Representation of the People Act 1983) makes it an offence to publish before the polls close at 10pm. Many thanks.

You can read more from my colleague Aubrey Allegretti here:

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2023-07-20 08:12:00Z
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Nigel Farage says Coutts behaved like Corbynista students - latest updates - The Telegraph

Nigel Farage has accused Coutts of behaving like Corbynista students after documents showed he was targeted because of his political views.

The former Ukip and Brexit Party leader had his bank account closed by Coutts, a subsidiary of NatWest, after it said he did not align with its “values”.

Speaking to Newsnight about the dossier compiled on him, Mr Farage said: “The vitriol, the bias, the prejudice... It reads like a report read by a postgraduate Corbynista that literally hates everybody with a Conservative view. I was shocked, I was literally shocked.

“This was a personal hit job. It was like a brief to a barrister before a criminal trial. This bank are behaving now like a political campaigning organisation.”

It came as The Telegraph disclosed that Dame Alison Rose, the NatWest chief executive, sat next to Simon Jack, the BBC’s business editor, at a charity dinner the night before Mr Jack wrote a story claiming Mr Farage had been de-banked for “commercial” reasons – a story now described as “concerning” by the banking watchdog.

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2023-07-20 08:35:48Z
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Nigel Farage says Coutts behaved like Corbynista students - latest updates - The Telegraph

Nigel Farage has accused Coutts of behaving like Corbynista students after documents showed he was targeted because of his political views.

The former Ukip and Brexit Party leader had his bank account closed by Coutts, a subsidiary of NatWest, after it said he did not align with its “values”.

Speaking to Newsnight about the dossier compiled on him, Mr Farage said: “The vitriol, the bias, the prejudice... It reads like a report read by a postgraduate Corbynista that literally hates everybody with a Conservative view. I was shocked, I was literally shocked.

“This was a personal hit job. It was like a brief to a barrister before a criminal trial. This bank are behaving now like a political campaigning organisation.”

It came as The Telegraph disclosed that Dame Alison Rose, the NatWest chief executive, sat next to Simon Jack, the BBC’s business editor, at a charity dinner the night before Mr Jack wrote a story claiming Mr Farage had been de-banked for “commercial” reasons – a story now described as “concerning” by the banking watchdog.

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2023-07-20 06:55:29Z
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Byelection polls open with Rishi Sunak forecasting 'tough' fight to save seats - The Guardian

Polls have opened in three parliamentary seats where byelections are being held, with Rishi Sunak braced for an electoral test of his premiership.

The Conservative-held constituencies are being targeted by Labour and the Liberal Democrats, who hope to overturn large majorities and send Tory MPs off into the summer recess nervous about their own political futures come the general election.

Voters can cast their ballots from 7am on Thursday, across the south-western Tory stronghold of Somerton and Frome, Boris Johnson’s old seat in the west London suburbs Uxbridge and South Ruislip, as well as Selby and Ainsty in North Yorkshire.

Sunak was privately downcast on Wednesday afternoon about the his party’s electoral prospects, in part given the nature of why the contests were triggered.

Johnson stood down to avoid being suspended from parliament over a report that found he misled MPs over Partygate. Adams quit after being passed over for a peerage. And David Warbuton, an MP in Somerset since 2015, quit after being investigated over claims of harassment and drug use.

On top of the circumstances of the byelections being called, Sunak’s party is also polling poorly, nationally. At a behind-closed-doors meeting of Tory backbenchers on the eve of the byelections, MPs said he appeared to acknowledge the results would be “tough”.

If the Conservatives are trounced, Sunak could become the first prime minister since Harold Wilson in 1968 to lose three byelections in a single day.

The safest Tory seat is Selby and Ainsty – which delivered a 20,000 majority at the 2019 general election. Both Labour and the Conservatives say they expect the result to be tight – within about 1,000 votes. Keir Starmer’s party want to pull off a win there to show they can win in rural areas as well as metropolitan cities and their traditional former industrial heartlands. But the swing required is much greater than current polls suggest they would achieve at a general election.

Somerton and Frome should also be a Tory safe seat – with the party holding a 19,000 majority at the last election. But after the loss of Tiverton and Honiton last year, which saw an area in neighbouring Devon clinched by the Liberal Democrats, it is considered the most likely to flip.

In Uxbridge and South Ruislip, hopes of a Tory resurgence have grown in recent days given some anger at the extension of the London ultra-low emissions zone by the capital’s Labour mayor, Sadiq Khan.

The byelections will have a unique tinge to them. They will be the first parliamentary elections where voter ID is required, after the scheme was rolled out to council elections earlier this spring.

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2023-07-20 06:11:00Z
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Selasa, 18 Juli 2023

Keir Starmer defends decision not to scrap two-child benefit cap - The Guardian

Keir Starmer has doubled down on his decision not to scrap the two-child benefit cap, warning his party that there will have to be more tough choices if Labour is to win the next election.

The Labour leader, who faces pressure from senior party figures to row back from his position on the policy, instead told them they had to be even more focused and disciplined in the months ahead.

At the Future of Britain conference, Starmer said Labour had had to make “really ruthless” decisions, including ruling out other unfunded spending commitments, since he took the reins to ensure it was in a good place to contest the next election.

He acknowledged that would involve not being able to do everything that shadow cabinet ministers may want to, but added: “We keep saying collectively as a party that we have to make tough decisions. And in the abstract, everyone says: ‘That’s right Keir.’

“But then we get into the tough decision – we’ve been in one of those for the last few days – and they say: ‘We don’t like that, can we just not make that one, I’m sure there is another tough decision somewhere else we can make.’ But we have to take the tough decisions.”

In conversation with Tony Blair, and in remarks that appeared to be directed at his own MPs before the party meets this weekend to thrash out policy before drawing up its manifesto, he added: “The next stage is where we’ve got to be even tougher, even more focused, even more disciplined.”

At a tense meeting of his shadow cabinet on Tuesday, Starmer defended his position over the two-child cap – stressing that without fiscal responsibility Labour would never make it to power. Aides maintained that tackling child poverty remained a central ambition.

He told his top team: “Tough choices is not a soundbite. We’re going to have to take them. Without them, we don’t get to the next stage.”

However, he faced further pressure from senior Labour figures to mitigate the decision. Andy Burnham, the Greater Manchester mayor, said he should promise that “when there is the headroom to do something, this clearly should be at the front of the queue”.

The senior Labour MP Stella Creasy argued that scrapping the cap could in fact save money as it was “potentially costing more than it is saving” as greater hardship prevented people from finding work.

Jeremy Corbyn, the former Labour leader who now sits as an independent MP, said he had spoken to backbenchers and they were “seething with anger” over the policy.

However, the shadow cabinet minister Lucy Powell suggested that any significant changes would have to wait until a second term.

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“We can’t do everything that we would want to do in the first term of a Labour government, because quite honestly, there’s no money left, to coin a phrase, and we have to take that responsible position,” she told Times Radio.

The policy, introduced by George Osborne during his austerity drive when he was Tory chancellor, prevents parents claiming universal credit for any third or subsequent child.

Scrapping the cap would lift about 270,000 households with children out of poverty at an estimated cost of £1.4bn in the first year.

Blair told his successor the economic picture Labour could inherit next year, with the party riding high in the polls, was far more stark than in 1997 when New Labour won a landslide. “What you are going to inherit next year, it is grim,” he said.

Starmer agreed the current mood of the country was “pretty bleak” as he set out the need to reassure voters about the situation while also setting out a vision for the future. Repurposing a slogan used by New Labour, he said: “We need three things: growth, growth, growth.”

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2023-07-18 19:44:00Z
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Senin, 17 Juli 2023

Met use counter-terrorism tactics to catch men attacking women - BBC

File photo showing the backs of two anonymous uniformed police officers talking to colleagues.PA Media

Police tactics used against terrorists are being used to catch the 100 worst predators targeting women in London.

The Met said a system assessing 35,000 offenders reported each year for crimes against females was being used.

It follows a series of scandals and a review that found the force was racist, misogynist and homophobic.

Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley said: "It's taking the organised crime or terrorism approach to male predatory violence."

"If we go after them proactively, build a case against them, get them off the streets, that protects women and children in London, so that's an indicator of something more innovative, more front-footed, and how we reform how we police London", Sir Mark added.

The Cambridge Crime Harm Index (CCHI) is the first system that measures the seriousness of crime harm to victims, and not just the number of officially recorded crimes.

It gathers data on tens of thousands of men recently convicted of domestic assault, rape, sex offences, stalking, and harassment to rank the 100 who pose the highest risk to the public.

'Rebuild public trust'

Baroness Casey was appointed to review the force's culture and standards after the abduction, rape and murder of Sarah Everard by serving police officer Wayne Couzens, in 2021.

During the course of her review, another Met officer, David Carrick, was convicted of a series of rapes, sexual offences and torture of women.

Sir Mark Rowley
PA Media

Plans to overhaul the force, a £366 million two-year scheme dubbed A New Met for London, are being launched with visits to every borough in the English capital.

Bosses say there will be an increased emphasis on neighbourhood policing in a bid to rebuild public trust.

Some 240 officers out of the Met's total workforce of around 34,000 will be moved from central to local teams.

There are also plans to recruit 500 more community support officers (PCSOs) and an extra 565 people to work with teams investigating domestic abuse, sexual offences and child sexual abuse and exploitation.

Each borough will have at least one front counter open 24 hours a day under the proposals.

During austerity from 2010 onwards, local borough teams were cut so that between two and four boroughs were covered by one basic command unit.

Sir Mark, who previously said there were hundreds of officers in the Met who should have been kicked off the force, said bosses are "sacking and suspending more officers than ever before".

He added: "I've got a minority of my people I need to sort out, and we're doing that as rapidly and as quickly as we can do."

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said: "Londoners will rightly judge this plan on actions not words, and I will be unflinching in holding the Met and the Commissioner to account and supporting him to deliver."

London's Victims' Commissioner Claire Waxman OBE said: "A New Met for London clearly sets out how the Met plans to turn around the force and deliver for Londoners, but there is no time to lose, as they need to quickly and effectively improve their support to the thousands of victims they interact with on a daily basis."

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2023-07-18 00:37:08Z
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Minggu, 16 Juli 2023

Government to miss 40 new hospitals target - watchdog - BBC

NHS construction siteGetty Images

The government is likely to miss its target to build 40 new hospitals by 2030, the spending watchdog has said.

The National Audit Office (NAO) said in a report that the project had been beset by delays. It also warned that cost-cutting and inaccurate modelling of future demand could mean new hospitals are too small.

The health department remained "firmly committed" to delivering the England building pledge, a spokesperson said.

But Labour called the report "damning".

The hospitals plan was a Conservative manifesto commitment during the December 2019 election campaign, and it was made policy the following year.

When the health department officially set out the plan in October 2020, eight hospital construction projects already under way were not included in the target. But recent government statements about building 40 new hospitals include these eight projects, referred to as "legacy hospitals".

And in May, the government changed the scope of the scheme to include hospitals in urgent need of repairs, including five judged to be at risk of collapse because of crumbling concrete infrastructure.

Now the National Audit Office has analysed the plans and found that, by the definition set out in 2020, the target will be missed, and only 32 will be built in time. The NAO said the government has used a "broad" definition of "new", which includes refurbishment of existing buildings as well as completely new hospitals.

The 32 that will be built in time include 24 from the original new hospitals programme, five that were added in May, and three new mental health hospitals.

It said a further eight do not count towards the original definition of "new" because they were already under way when the commitment was made.

Questions have been asked for some time about whether the programme is on track and it is significant that the watchdog has now ruled that, judged by the original template, it is not.

The NAO said staff shortages mean a planned design for a standardised hospital has been delayed until May 2024.

It also warned that a push to meet the target at the lowest possible cost - combined with optimistic forecasts about how much care will be outside hospitals in the future - could result in new hospitals that are too small.

The government had failed to achieve good value for money, the NAO said, as it called for a review of the underlying assumptions behind the plans to make sure the new hospitals are fit for purpose.

Health Secretary Steve Barclay had already told MPs in May that some of the original group included in the new hospitals programme might not be completed by 2030.

He made the admission as he updated the department's building plans to deal with hospitals built with a lightweight concrete that was used in the 1980s and is now judged to be unsafe.

But he restated the commitment to deliver 40 new hospitals by the end of the decade.

A nurse walking down a hospital corridor
PA Media

Gareth Davies, head of the NAO, said the programme included "innovative plans" to improve efficiency and quality. But there are important lessons to ensure future major projects were affordable, transparent and delivered on time, he said.

Sir Julian Hartley, chief executive of NHS Providers, urged the government to "shift gears" to get the hospitals built and warned that costs had "spiralled due to high inflation".

He said many NHS trusts were "deeply disappointed" by delays and said the government "could have better managed expectations about the funding available, given the uncertainty involved and the impact of inflation".

Liberal Democrat deputy leader Daisy Cooper said the "utterly damning report demolishes the government's claims to be building 40 'new hospitals'".

She called on the health secretary to make an urgent statement in Parliament addressing its findings, saying "the public deserves answers".

Labour's shadow health secretary Wes Streeting said: "The Conservatives have overpromised, under-delivered, and they've been found out.

"Meanwhile patients are being treated in outdated, crumbling hospitals."

A health department spokesperson said: "The NAO's report acknowledges that despite changes to the original programme, 40 new hospitals are still expected to be delivered by 2030 and praises the programme's innovative plans to standardise hospital construction, deliver efficiencies and improve quality.

"We remain firmly committed to delivering these hospitals, which are now expected to be backed by over £20 billion of investment, helping to cut waiting lists so people can get the treatment they need quicker.

"Three new hospitals have already opened and more will open this year so patients and staff can benefit from major new hospital buildings, equipped with the latest technology."

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2023-07-16 23:29:11Z
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