Selasa, 19 Maret 2024

Mood among Tory MPs darkens as Rishi Sunak faces leadership questions - BBC.com

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  1. Mood among Tory MPs darkens as Rishi Sunak faces leadership questions  BBC.com
  2. Politics latest news: We can't change leader as often as our socks, Rees-Mogg warns Tory rebels  The Telegraph
  3. Loyalty was once the glue that held the Tories together. But now they’ve come unstuck  The Guardian
  4. Penny Mordaunt isn't the answer  The Spectator
  5. Anger, denials and apathy over Tory 'plots' to oust Rishi Sunak  The Times

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2024-03-18 21:22:48Z
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MPs vote to throw out amendments to Rwanda deportation bill - The Guardian

Rishi Sunak’s plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda took a step forward on Monday night after MPs voted overwhelmingly to throw out a series of amendments made to the Rwanda bill by the House of Lords.

MPs voted down all 10 amendments made by peers over the past few weeks to return the bill to the form in which it was initially passed by the Commons in January, giving a much-needed boost to the beleaguered prime minister.

The safety of Rwanda (asylum and immigration) bill, which is designed to overcome the supreme court’s objections to the plan, will return to the Lords later this week. Peers will then have to decide whether to reinsert their amendments and slow down the bill’s passage once more.

Speaking before the votes on Monday, Sunak said: “I am still committed to the timeline that I set out previously, which is we aim to get a flight off in the spring.”

The rejection of the amendments provides some welcome relief for the prime minister after a difficult few weeks that culminated over the weekend in speculation that Penny Mordaunt, the Commons leader, could be lining up a bid to replace him before the election.

Sunak has urged his party to keep faith with his leadership, promising on Monday that 2024 “will be the year Britain bounces back”.

He is hoping that a combination of falling inflation, accelerating growth and the long-awaited start to his Rwanda plan will help boost the Tories’ flagging poll ratings later in the year.

However, the asylum plan relies on MPs and peers agreeing a version of the bill in the coming weeks so that ministers will have the power to ignore any emergency injunctions issued by Strasbourg aimed at stopping flights taking off.

Among the 10 amendments peers have made to the bill in recent weeks was one that would have forced ministers to abide by domestic and international law. Others included preventing the government from declaring Rwanda a safe country until Kigali implements a series of safeguards it has promised, and exempting those who have worked with the British armed forces abroad from being deported to the African country.

Labour, the Scottish National party and the Liberal Democrats voted to keep all 10 amendments. But they were defeated by a relatively united Tory party, with the majority voting against all 10.

After the debate, Labour MP Clive Lewis apologised for swearing in the Commons chamber and said his “outburst” was not directed at anyone in particular.

The Norwich South MP told the Commons: “I’d like to put on record, if I could, my apologies to the chamber, to members [of parliament] and members of staff, for an earlier outburst I had.

“If I could very quickly explain, I received a message which caused me some consternation and surprise, to which I made an outburst in general at no one specifically.

“If I could do it again I’d probably have said something like ‘my giddy aunt’, rather what did come out of my mouth, and for that I apologise. But just to clear the air and put on record the fact that it was directed at no one in particular.”

The deputy speaker, Sir Roger Gale, who earlier said it had been alleged an MP had sworn at a doorkeeper, said: “I appreciate the honourable gentleman’s candour in identifying himself and the fullness of the nature of his apology, which is accepted.”

Opening the debate on Monday afternoon, Michael Tomlinson, the minister for illegal migration, told the Commons: “This bill is an essential element of our wider strategy to protect our borders and to stop the boats, to prevent the tragic loss of lives at sea caused by dangerous, illegal and unnecessary crossings across the Channel.”

He added: “I don’t accept that the provisions of the bill undermine the rule of law, and the government takes its responsibilities and its international obligations incredibly seriously. There’s nothing in the bill that requires any act or omission which conflicts with our international obligations.”

Officials say that if the Lords chooses to add in more amendments, it is unlikely to pass until Easter. Even then, however, they believe they will still hit the spring deadline.

A Downing Street official said: “The timeline remains unchanged, whether the bill is passed before or after Easter.”

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2024-03-19 02:30:00Z
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Senin, 18 Maret 2024

Tributes to 'loving husband and father' murdered in Edinburgh - BBC

Nashir AhmedPolice Scotland

The family of a man murdered at an Edinburgh bus stop have paid tribute to a "loving husband and father".

Nashir Ahmed, 65, was assaulted earlier in March while waiting for a bus on the city's Ferry Road.

He died from his injuries in hospital five days after the attack.

Police stated that they are currently following several lines of inquiry regarding the murder.

Mr Ahmed's family said that they would remember him for his "warmth and kindness."

They stated: "Nashir was a loving husband and father.

"He was a big part of our family and we are devastated at losing him. He was heavily involved in Edinburgh’s Bangladeshi community and will be greatly missed.

"He loved life and cared for all his family and friends. We will always remember his warmth and his kindness."

Mr Ahmed was waiting for a bus alongside a 48-year-old man around 20:30 on Sunday 10 March when they were attacked by a man.

Emergency services attended and both men were taken to the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, where Mr Ahmed died on 15 March.

'Left feeling bereft'

The attacker is described as black, around 30-years of age, with short, dark hair. He was wearing a red tartan scarf and a long, black jacket with a hood.

Det Ch Insp George Calder said the circumstances of the death were "heartbreaking".

He stated: “A family has been left feeling bereft as they come to terms with losing someone so integral to their lives. The circumstances are heartbreaking, and I can’t possibly imagine the pain they are feeling during these difficult times."

Det Ch Insp Calder added that anyone with any information about the case, no matter how small, should contact the police.

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2024-03-18 16:53:20Z
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Penny Mordaunt’s Tory leadership rivals blamed for coup plot rumours - The Guardian

Penny Mordaunt’s rivals in a future Conservative leadership contest have been blamed for briefing coup rumours meant to ruin her chances of eventually taking over from Rishi Sunak, the Guardian has been told.

The Commons leader, who came a close third in the leadership contest won by Liz Truss in 2022, has in recent days been at the centre of speculation over an alleged plot to try to oust the prime minister to avert a general election disaster for the Conservatives.

But her allies insisted on Monday that it was “nonsense” that she had been talking to Tory rightwingers as part of any plot. Everyone knows that Penny’s rivals are just trying to stir up trouble,” one supporter said.

“She’s loyal to Rishi and doesn’t want to add legitimacy to all this fluff by publicly denying the claims.”

On a visit to the Midlands on Monday, Sunak said he was “not interested in Westminster politics” and insisted that his party was “united” as he tried to quell speculation that he could become the latest Tory leader to lose his grip on power.

Those loyal to Sunak say they do not believe Mordaunt herself is the source of rumours that she might stand against him.

“I don’t know who is putting it about but I don’t think it is her,” said one supportive cabinet minister. “My best guess is those who are likely to stand against her at a leadership election in the future are trying to spoil her candidacy now by making her look disloyal.”

Senior figures from across the party came to Mordaunt’s defence, with one former cabinet minister from the Boris Johnson era suggesting that the speculation was a result of a “three-bottle lunch” between supporters of her rivals and members of the press.

The reports about a potential Mordaunt coronation emerged on Friday evening in the Daily Mail and Daily Telegraph, which said a meeting had taken place between leading figures on the Tory right and prominent supporters of Mordaunt’s last leadership bid.

The former cabinet minister said: “There’s a lot of unhappiness in the party towards Rishi and the No 10 operation. But we don’t know whether there briefing is coming from a 12-year-old junior spad in a Whitehall department or a cabinet minister.”

One minister from the centre of the party said the claims were “pretty unfair” to Mordaunt, who they said had been doing the constituency party dinner circuit for years.

A senior party figure on the One Nation wing said Mordaunt was being “used” by supporters of her rightwing rivals for the Tory crown – including Kemi Badenoch, Suella Braverman and Simon Clarke – to launch a leadership contest.

“They’re using her to try to take over from Rishi. None of the rightwingers can get the centre of the party onboard. Even if there’s a coronation, Penny still loses the election and it takes her out of play for the longer term,” the MP said.

A leading rightwing MP said it was unlikely their colleagues would back Mordaunt, even as a compromise candidate, because of her liberal position on social issues such as trans rights. “I don’t sense any appetite for trouble-making though,” they said. “I believe this is just Penny’s rivals trying to do her down.”

While Sunak’s supporters have dismissed the idea that electing a fourth party leader within a single parliament could revive the party’s fortunes, many remain unhappy about the way in which his Downing Street operation has worked in recent weeks.

Even the prime minister’s allies say he was slow to remove the whip from the former deputy chair Lee Anderson for his comments about the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, and then indecisive once more over what to do about the Tory donor Frank Hester.

Many say they are frustrated by Downing Street’s inability to stick to a single message.

“The national insurance cuts in the budget had the potential to cut through,” said the cabinet minister. “But it won’t do that if we don’t keep talking about it. Just because we haven’t seen an eight-point narrowing in the polls in the week after the budget doesn’t mean we should stop talking about it.”

Allies say Sunak has been frustrated by the latest bout of infighting and he has no intention of calling an early election to fend it off, as has been suggested by some in the party. “The plan is still to do it in the last quarter of the year,” said one.

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2024-03-18 18:26:00Z
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Anger as V&A museum lists Margaret Thatcher as Punch and Judy villain - Daily Mail

  • A puppet of Baroness Thatcher from Spitting Image is also in the exhibition 

The Victoria and Albert Museum was facing calls last night for it to be stripped of its public funding after naming Margaret Thatcher in a list of 'unpopular public figures' alongside Hitler and Osama bin Laden.

Britain's first female prime minister is described as a 'contemporary villain' in a current display on British humour through the ages.

This appears under a set of Victorian Punch and Judy puppets with a caption headed: 'That's the way to do it?'

The words state: 'Over the years, the evil character in this seaside puppet show has shifted from the Devil to unpopular public figures including Adolf Hitler, Margaret Thatcher and Osama bin Laden, to offer contemporary villains.'

A puppet of Baroness Thatcher from the satirical television show Spitting Image is also included in the comedy exhibition at the London museum whose director is former Labour MP Tristram Hunt.

Britain's first female prime minister, Margaret Thatcher (pictured), is described as a 'contemporary villain' in a current display on British humour through the ages
This appears under a set of Victorian Punch and Judy puppets with a caption headed: 'That's the way to do it?' Pictured: Judy and Baby puppets
A puppet of Baroness Thatcher from the satirical television show Spitting Image (pictured)  is also included in the comedy exhibition at the London museum whose director is former Labour MP Tristram Hunt

According to 2022-2023 figures, the museum received most of its income, more than £67million, from the taxpayer via the Department of Culture. 

What the sign says 

'Punch and Judy is seen as traditionally British, but it evolved from the 16th-century Italian street performance commedia dell'arte. 

Although aimed at a family audience, the original narrative in its Victorian heyday featured domestic violence, hangings and racist caricatures - a jarring and unacceptable combination for modern audiences. 

Over the years, the evil character in this seaside puppet show has shifted from the Devil to unpopular public figures including Adolf Hitler, Margaret Thatcher and Osama bin Laden to offer contemporary villains.'

Last night the V&A was branded 'disgraceful' and 'moronic' amid calls for ministers to axe its financial backing.

Sir Connor Burns, a former trade minister and Conservative MP for Bournemouth, said: 'Whoever wrote that caption should be called out publicly for being a moron, or perhaps more usefully sent to read a Ladybird book of modern world history.

'It is sadly symptomatic of the woke, luvvie-dom nonsense that persists in our public institutions.

'They should be given a serious rap across the knuckles and a clarion instruction to grow up.'

Former Conservative leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith agreed.

'Given the fact that MPs are now regularly receiving death threats, myself included, from extremists and others, this V&A exhibition is ill-thought and mendacious,' he said.

'They must live in a bubble, away from the real world, to think that it is rational to propose that a politician of the stature of Margaret Thatcher would equate to any of those mass murderers and vile human beings.

'This sort of idiocy begs the question about funding. It would be a good idea if those who thought of this did a hard day's work in among the rest of us, rather than sitting on their lofty perch producing stupid ideas.'

Nile Gardiner, a former aide to Baroness Thatcher and director of The Heritage Foundation's Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom, also commented. 

According to 2022-2023 figures, the museum received most of its income, more than £67million, from the taxpayer via the Department of Culture. Pictured: Adolf Hitler
Last night the V&A was branded 'disgraceful' and 'moronic' amid calls for ministers to axe its financial backing. Pictured: Osama Bin Laden

'Disgraceful from the Victoria and Albert Museum. It should be stripped of public funding,' he wrote on X.

Political commentator and businessman Russell Quirk told GB News: 'Thatcher was the mother of entrepreneurship. How anyone can say she was a villain – she was one of political history's heroes.

'She stood up against the militant unions to make sure they didn't destroy the economy and social fabric of Britain. She should be applauded rather than labelled a villain. She gave ordinary people access to wealth, aspiration and success, and for that she should be heralded a hero.'

It is not the first time the museum's treatment of Baroness Thatcher, who died in 2013, has provoked controversy.

In 2015 the V&A was widely criticised for refusing to accept a selection of her suits and handbags. 

Her family offered hundreds of items, from her wedding dress to her red prime ministerial dispatch box, because they wanted them kept together on public display rather than auctioned off and scattered across the world.

But, according to reports, the museum 'politely declined', saying it collected only items of 'outstanding aesthetic or technical quality' rather than those with 'intrinsic social historical value'.

It is not the first time the museum's treatment of Baroness Thatcher, who died in 2013, has provoked controversy. Pictured: Director of the Victoria and Albert Museum Tristram Hunt
In 2015 the V&A was widely criticised for refusing to accept a selection of her suits and handbags. Pictured: The Victoria and Albert Museum

Bosses later claimed no formal offer had been made. A year on, the V&A did put on an exhibition of some of the former Conservative prime minister's clothes, including the distinctive royal blue suit she wore as she voted in the 1987 general election.

At the time Claire Wilcox, senior curator of fashion, said this constituted 'a record of the working wardrobe of one of the most influential and powerful women of the 20th century'.

The V&A is the world's largest museum of decorative art and design with more than two million objects. 

It was contacted yesterday but no-one was available for comment.

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2024-03-18 07:10:41Z
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Sadiq Khan promises 40,000 new London council homes if he wins third term - The Guardian

Sadiq Khan will launch his campaign for a record third term as mayor of London by promising the “greatest council homebuilding drive in a generation”.

Appearing at an event in London on Monday, alongside the Labour leader, Keir Starmer, with whom the mayor has had public policy clashes in recent months, Khan will promise to build 40,000 new homes by 2030.

The target is double that Khan set himself between 2018 and 2024 and which was achieved last year, when it was confirmed that work had started on 23,000 homes.

The focus of Khan’s campaign is an acknowledgment that London has a housing crisis, with more than 300,000 households on the waiting list for social housing. Rough sleeping has increased by 50% in the last decade.

Should Khan be re-elected on 2 May, he would be the first person to achieve three terms as mayor since the directly elected position was created in 2000.

He is expected to claim that the contest will be the “closest ever”, although his Conservative rival Susan Hall, a London assembly member, has struggled to build a profile.

The threat of the former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn standing as an independent candidate and eating into Khan’s share of the vote also appears to have diminished.

According to the Sunday Times, friends of Corbyn, who lost the Labour whip three years ago over his response to an Equality and Human Rights Commission report, recently asked a printing company about the cost of producing election leaflets for him in the constituency of North Islington.

When Khan appears with Starmer, the Labour leader is expected to emphasise a choice between “chaos and division with the Tories, or unity and hope with Labour”.

Starmer clashed with Khan last October when the London mayor called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza as the Labour leader was demanding a “humanitarian pause” to allow in aid.

The Labour leader had also criticised Khan over his ultra-low emission zone for London, suggesting it would have a disproportionate impact on people “in the middle of the cost of living crisis”.

Despite the past disputes, Starmer will claim that “from more police on the streets, being on the side of Londoners in the cost of living crisis and delivering the most council houses since the 1970s, Sadiq’s achievements as mayor of London over the last eight years have transformed our communities.”

“This is the difference Labour makes when in power,” he is expected to say.

Khan, in turn, will suggest that it will be in London’s interest for City Hall and Downing Street to be run by Labour, presenting a “once in a generation opportunity to make real inroads into solving London’s housing crisis”.

He is expected to say: “As mayor, I’m under no illusion about the scale of the challenge. The housing crisis has been decades in the making. But, with political will, it can be overcome. And today – in my first major pledge of this election campaign – I can commit to delivering at least 40,000 new council homes in our city by the end of the decade.”

He will add: “Working together with a new Labour government, I know we can go even further. Quickening the pace, building on the progress we’ve made and unleashing the greatest council housebuilding drive in a generation.

“After years of a Tory government trying to drag London backwards, a Labour government would be transformative, propelling us forwards and helping to accelerate delivery of the homes Londoners desperately need and deserve.”

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2024-03-18 07:31:00Z
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'Economy turning a corner': Rishi Sunak seeks to turn around fortunes amid plot rumours - Sky News

Rishi Sunak has insisted "the economy is turning a corner" and urged Tory MPs to "stick to the plan" amid reports of a plot to oust him before the election.

The prime minister is seeking to shift the political debate to the gradually improving economic outlook as he tries to shore up his leadership.

With many Tories increasingly fearful about losing their seats, there have been claims some MPs are considering replacing him with Commons leader Penny Mordaunt.

Launching a fightback, Mr Sunak vowed that 2024 "will be the year Britain bounces back" in remarks issued by Downing Street on Sunday night.

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Sunak 'will lead Tories' in election

He faces another tough week with his Rwanda Bill returning to the Commons and an appearance before the backbench 1922 committee.

Mr Sunak said he hopes to see "more progress" on inflation when the Office for National Statistics releases the latest inflation data on Wednesday.

"There is now a real sense that the economy is turning a corner with all the economic indicators pointing in the right direction.

More on Penny Mordaunt

"This year, 2024, will be the year Britain bounces back.

Read More:
Lee Anderson's defection and the Diane Abbott race row show politics is toxic
Ed Davey calls for 'cast iron commitment' to cross-party talks on social care crisis

"Inflation has more than halved, with the OBR (Office for Budget Responsibility) forecasting it will hit its 2% target in just a few months' time, a full year ahead of what they were forecasting just a few months ago."

On Monday, Mr Sunak will set out reforms to boost apprenticeships and cut red tape for small businesses at a conference in Warwickshire.

👉 Listen above and tap here to follow wherever you get your podcasts 👈

MPs will later consider changes made to his Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill by the House of Lords.

The government will seek to overturn peers' amendments after it suffered 10 defeats in the upper chamber.

But a poll by Focaldata commissioned by the British Future think tank found majority public support for almost all of the changes proposed by the Lords to introduce extra safeguards.

The deportation policy also faces fresh criticism after a cabinet minister failed to guarantee migrant flights will take off before the general election and reports that Kigali has insisted on a staggered approach to the implementation of the policy.

Transport Secretary Mark Harper on Sunday said it was the government's "intention" for flights to begin before voters go to the polls, but refused to guarantee it.

The Times reported that the first flights are unlikely to take off before mid-May, and that Kigali wants to test the policy with a pause of two months after it accepts the first migrants.

Labour's shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper tweeted: "Unbelievable. Govt finally admitting here that Tories' flagship £500m Rwanda scheme will only cover around 150 people.

"Probable cost of this failing gimmick to British taxpayer is near £2m per person."

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2024-03-18 05:12:53Z
CBMieGh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2Vjb25vbXktdHVybmluZy1hLWNvcm5lci1yaXNoaS1zdW5hay1zZWVrcy10by10dXJuLWFyb3VuZC1mb3J0dW5lcy1hbWlkLXBsb3QtcnVtb3Vycy0xMzA5NzAyNdIBfGh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2FtcC9lY29ub215LXR1cm5pbmctYS1jb3JuZXItcmlzaGktc3VuYWstc2Vla3MtdG8tdHVybi1hcm91bmQtZm9ydHVuZXMtYW1pZC1wbG90LXJ1bW91cnMtMTMwOTcwMjU