Rabu, 17 April 2024

Rishi Sunak rules out Rwanda bill concessions as Starmer hits back at Rayner 'smears' - The Independent

Related video: MP who made Rayner complaint unable to explain what offence he thinks she committed

Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer are clashing at the first session of PMQs since MPs returned to parliament following the Easter break.

The prime minister and Labour leader face off after the government’s smoking ban for those born after 2009 cleared its first Commons hurdle and as the Rwanda bill returns for further votes.

Earlier it was reported that the police probe into Labour deputy leader Angela Rayner was looking at multiple allegations and not limited to potential electoral law offences.

Greater Manchester Police previously announced it was investigating Ms Rayner over the sale of the property and whether she broke electoral law by giving false information of her address.

The probe will also look into tax matters relating to the sale.

“It’s very well resourced, it’s not a single issue,” a source told The Times. “There is a volume of material and a clear public interest to fully investigate.”

The source also emphasised it was possible no offences would be identified.

Ms Rayner has insisted she has done nothing wrong and vowed toresign if found to have committed any offences.

She said the story was a smear being pushed by the Conservative Party to hurt her and Labour ahead of the local elections on 2 May.

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Rishi Sunak refuses to rule out NHS and state pension cuts to fund tax bung

Rishi Sunak has refused to rule out cuts to the NHS and state pensions to fund a £46bn national insurance giveaway, Archie Mitchell reports.

The prime minister has promised to abolish national insurance contributions in the long run, describing it as a “double tax” on work.

But Labour has repeatedly warned the cut would need to be funded by cuts to state pensions or the NHS, which the levy funds.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer twice asked Mr Sunak to rule out cuts to the NHS or state pensions to pay for what he called the “unfunded tax cut”.

“This is genuinely extraordinary, two chances to rule out cuts to state pensions and cuts to the NHS to fund his promise,” Sir Keir said.

He added: “This matters to millions of people who want to know what is going to happen to the NHS and their pensions.”

Matt Mathers17 April 2024 12:17
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Sunak hits back saying that the Labour leader should spend less time reading Truss’s book and more time reading his deputy’s tax advice.

Labour leader responds by saying that we have “a billionaire prime minister” and his wife whose families have used scheme to avoid paying millions in tax, “smearing a working class woman”.

He adds that the former PM made millions of peoples lives a “misery” with her disasterous mini-Budget”.

Matt Mathers17 April 2024 12:11
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Starmer pokes fun at Liz Truss book

Starmer uses his first question to poke fun at former PM Liz Truss, who has been promoting her book this week.

He points out that Truss described her premiership as the happiest period in her life.

He asks Sunak if he has met anyone who agrees with that.

Matt Mathers17 April 2024 12:05
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Starmer and Sunak will clash at PMQs in a few minutes.

We’ll have all the action as it happens.

Stay tuned for all the latest updates. Watch it live here.

Matt Mathers17 April 2024 11:57
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Right-wing National Conservatism Conference to resume after being shut down by Brussels police

The right-wing National Conservatism Conference will be free to meet today for its second day of programming without further interference from the police, the Belgium high court has ruled.

The Conseil d’État, the highest court in Belgium relating to issues of public administration, said the conference should be allowed to resume today after it was closed down by the police on Tuesday following an order by the local mayor.

Full report:

Matt Mathers17 April 2024 11:55
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How did your MP vote on government’s smoking ban?

Here’s how all MPs voted:

Matt Mathers17 April 2024 11:45
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Fears interest rate cuts will be delayed after inflation falls less than expected

UK inflation slowed less than expected in March, leading economists and traders to be cautious about possible interest rate cuts in the summer.

The figures released by the ONS on Wednesday morning showed that inflation was 3.2 per cent in March, slightly higher than the 3.1 per cent predicted by economists.

Full report:

Matt Mathers17 April 2024 11:34
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Sunak and Starmer to face off at PMQs

Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer are set to clash at the first session of PMQs since MPs returned to parliament following the Easter break.

The prime minister and Labour leader face off after the government’s smoking ban for those born after 2009 cleared its first hurdle and as the Rwanda bill returns to the Commons.

We’ll bring you live updates from the session - you’ll also be able to watch it live on our YouTube channel (link to follow).

Matt Mathers17 April 2024 11:24
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The hounding of Angela Rayner is an outrageous declaration of class war

Labour’s deputy leader is northern, working class and a strong woman – so obviously Tories and the Conservative press are out to bring her down ahead of a general election where she will be a major asset on the doorstep, says John Rentoul.

Read John’s piece in full here.

Matt Mathers17 April 2024 11:17
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ICYMI: Rishi Sunak forces through vote for total ban on smoking for those born after 2009

Full report:

Matt Mathers17 April 2024 11:07

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2024-04-17 14:50:55Z
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Mohammed Abbkr: Man who set fire to two elderly people leaving mosques in London and Birmingham sentenced to indefinite hospital order - Sky News

A man found guilty of attempting to murder two elderly men by setting them on fire as they left separate mosques has been sentenced to an indefinite hospital order.

Mohammed Abbkr attacked Hashi Odowa, 82, and Mohammed Rayaz, 70, outside mosques in London and Birmingham in February and March last year.

The 29-year-old claimed he believed they were among several people "controlling him through magic".

Hashi Odowa (left) and Mohammed Rayaz (right)
Image: Hashi Odowa (left) and Mohammed Rayaz (right)

When Abbkr was convicted by majority 11-1 verdicts in November, West Midlands Police said his victims were left with "long-lasting physical injuries and significant mental trauma".

Sentencing Abbkr, who has paranoid schizophrenia, Judge Melbourne Inman KC said: "The nature of each attack was identical. You threw petrol over your victims and then set them alight - the attacks were horrific.

"The two victims in this case were, on any rational view, chosen at random. You, however, genuinely believed each of them was one of those trying to take control of you," the judge added.

"I am wholly satisfied that you committed both of these offences at a time when you were suffering a severe mental illness."

More on Birmingham

Abbkr, who is being treated at Ashworth high security hospital in Merseyside, watched the proceedings by videolink.

The court had heard how Abbkr, from Edgbaston, Birmingham, prayed with the congregation before waiting for his victims outside.

Abbkr used a water bottle filled with fuel and a lighter
Image: Abbkr used a water bottle filled with fuel and a lighter
Mohammed Rayaz's burnt jacket
Image: Mohammed Rayaz's burnt jacket

He then followed both men, sprayed them with petrol from a water bottle, and used a lighter to set them on fire.

The court heard Abbkr set fire to Mr Odowa on 27 February as he made his way to a neighbour's car outside West Ealing Islamic Centre in west London.

He attacked Mr Rayaz on 20 March after he left the Dudley Road Mosque in Birmingham.

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Abbkr - who came to the UK from Sudan in 2017 seeking asylum and was granted leave to remain two years later - had denied two counts of attempted murder and two alternative counts of maliciously administering a destructive thing to endanger life.

Jurors were told he admitted to setting the victims on fire, but they had to determine whether he had intended to kill his victims - and if he had known what he was doing and that it was wrong.

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2024-04-17 14:06:02Z
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Prime Minister's Questions: Rishi Sunak and Keir Starmer clash on economy - BBC

Catherine McKinnell, Labour MP for Newcastle upon Tyne North, speaks about how crime rates in nearby Tory-run Teesside are among the highest in the country.

She says the PM has not only lost control of his party of "but crime in this country".

"What a joke," Sunak responds.

He says crime has been cut by 50% under this government.

Sunak adds people with a Labour police and crime commissioner are more likely to be victims of burglary and other crimes.

"Vote Conservative for safer streets," he says.

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2024-04-17 10:01:08Z
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Yvonne Fletcher murder: Libyan suspect faces private prosecution - BBC

WPC Yvonne FletcherMetropolitan Police

A police officer who held the hand of his dying colleague after she was shot 40 years ago is launching a private prosecution of one of the suspects.

PC Yvonne Fletcher was killed when gunmen inside London's then Libyan embassy fired into a demonstration outside.

Her colleague, John Murray, is going to court to demand the remaining key suspect is tried for murder.

The case is being launched on the 40th anniversary of PC Fletcher's death.

The first court hearing is expected in the coming weeks.

PC Fletcher, 25, was gunned down while she and other officers controlled crowds protesting against the Libyan dictator Colonel Muammar Gaddafi.

All the shots were fired from inside the embassy, also known as the Libyan People's Bureau. After a 10-day siege, Margaret Thatcher's government allowed all the Libyans to leave because they were protected by diplomatic immunity - and to this day nobody has been charged in relation to PC Fletcher's death.

In 2017 the Crown Prosecution Service dropped a possible case against one of the suspects because some of the evidence against him could not be used in court because it related to secret national security matters.

But Mr Murray, who was with PC Fletcher, says he now has a legal team to launch a rare private prosecution for murder against Saleh Ibrahim Mabrouk.

In 2019 the retired officer sued Mr Mabrouk for damages in the High Court. Mr Mabrouk denied any wrongdoing in a response he sent to the court from Libya.

Saleh Ibrahim Mabrouk
Shutterstock

A judge later found Mr Mabrouk "jointly liable" for the shootings, although he had not been one of the gunmen himself, and awarded Mr Murray symbolic damages of £1.

The ruling examining the allegations of who had been responsible for what happened has paved the way for the more serious allegation of murder to be made in a private criminal prosecution.

"To this very day the quest for justice for Yvonne continues," said Mr Murray.

"If the CPS cannot or will not proceed with criminal charges, the only option available is to embark on our own legal action in the criminal courts."

Mr Murray's private prosecution means he will use the same legal power available to anyone else to ask a court to begin a case against Mr Mabrouk.

Retired police officer John Murray (centre) outside the Royal Courts of Justice in London, after he won his High Court bid
PA Media

However, it is not clear whether he and his lawyers will be able to get the case over a series of legal hurdles.

The case can be taken over or stopped at any time by the Director of Public Prosecutions.

If the DPP does not step in, Mr Murray will ask a court to order that the suspect is brought to the UK - but it is unclear what the government and law enforcement agencies would then do.

Wednesday morning will see retired officers gather at the memorial to PC Fletcher close to where she was shot. Members of the officer's family are remembering her privately and not taking part in the event.

A senior figure from the Metropolitan Police will attend a separate private event - although it has denied that serving officers have been banned from attending the larger memorial.

The Met's Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley said: "WPC Yvonne Fletcher was just 25 when she was callously murdered. She was simply doing her job, policing protest, not unlike what many officers do so often today."

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2024-04-17 07:00:32Z
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UK inflation falls less than expected to 3.2% in March - Financial Times

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2024-04-17 06:04:45Z
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Political longevity of Sunak smoking ban likely to outlast PM - BBC.com

Rishi Sunak speaking inside Downing Street in London on 14 April

Unless the opinion polls shift and shift quite a bit, Rishi Sunak knows his time left as prime minister might be running out.

But he is the instigator of a smoking plan with substantial, cross-party political support, which looks set to herald a sizeable social change.

And that cross-party support suggests it's an idea with greater political longevity than he might have, because Labour wouldn't scrap it if they win the election.

In other words, whatever happens, it is what some in politics call a legacy.

As I wrote here when Mr Sunak first set out his plans last autumn - in what he described at the time as "the biggest public health intervention in a generation" - this is a government seeking to nudge, or elbow, a societal shift along: the near end of smoking.

On Tuesday, Health Secretary Victoria Atkins said she hopes creating a smoke free generation will "spare thousands of young people from addiction and early death as well as saving billions of pounds for our NHS".

What was once mainstream is already marginal. Now the attempt to near-eradicate it, over time.

This isn't the end of this discussion: what we have seen so far are the early parliamentary stages. There is more to come before it becomes law.

So that is the big picture, potential social change stuff. What about the politics?

Nearly 60 Conservative MPs voted against Mr Sunak's idea.

Yes, they had a free vote - they weren't told how to vote - but they defied him nonetheless. The cabinet minister Kemi Badenoch among them.

Another 100-ish abstained. The cabinet minister Penny Mordaunt among them.

A source close to Ms Mordaunt told me that she abstained because "she was not a supporter of the bill. She has many objections to it. The practicality of it. The implementation and enforcement of it. But being a serving cabinet minister she thought voting against it would look more confrontational and posturing than abstaining would have been."

Who could that possibly be a dig at? Ah, Kemi Badenoch.

And what do Ms Mordaunt and Ms Badenoch have in common? A splash of ambition.

They are both talked up by some as future Conservative leaders.

line

Read more about the smoking ban

line

When you look at the numbers, nearly half of Conservative MPs couldn't bring themselves to endorse one of their leader's flagship ideas of the last six months.

Which tells you something about the fractious nature of the Conservative parliamentary party, although not a lot that wasn't pretty clear to the regular observer already.

Labour are already gleefully talking up that it is a good job they backed the idea or Mr Sunak would have lost.

And they are also publicly pondering what those opponents might do once the chance arises to change the ideas, to bolt on amendments.

But then again they would be defeated if those in favour keep backing the plan as it is.

When governments manage to latch on to a plan which goes with the grain of where a society is already heading, the might of the law can shove it along profoundly and, probably, permanently.

This idea - for now at least - looks like it might be one of those.

And, for all his political troubles, it is Mr Sunak who is its author.

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2024-04-17 07:04:29Z
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Selasa, 16 April 2024

Six things that stand out for me in Liz Truss book - Chris Mason - BBC.com

Liz Truss speaks outside 10 Downing Street while prime minister

I have spent the last couple of weeks reading the former Prime Minister Liz Truss's new book, Ten Years to Save the West.

I was sent a copy to prepare for my interview with her, which you can watch on BBC iPlayer and listen to on BBC Sounds.

It is the best part of 100,000 words long.

You may have seen already some of what is making news from what she has said.

Here is what else stood out for me.

'Faltering' Conservatism

Ms Truss writes that "the Conservative movement across the West has been faltering for almost a generation".

She says the West has become "decadent and complacent," adding that "we have Conservative politicians accepting extremist environmentalist dogma and wokeism".

She argues there are "leftists in the Conservative Party" and the Tories have been insufficiently hungry to overturn some of the decisions taken by the previous Labour government, such as the Human Rights Act.

The former PM says some of her Tory colleagues are what she calls CINOs - Conservatives in Name Only.

She argues the environmental debate is "the single greatest example of Conservatives over the last few decades losing arguments to the Left" and claims plenty of environmentalists are "watermelons" - green on the outside, red (i.e. socialists) on the inside.

She argues the greatest threat to the environment is "the rise of authoritarian regimes".

line

Read more about Liz Truss

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'The tyranny of the technocracy'

This is a big theme of the book. She thinks there are too many officials with too much power and not enough accountability.

She blames the Bank of England Governor, Andrew Bailey, in part at least, for her downfall as prime minister and would like rid of him. Mr Bailey, for his part, has decided not to respond to her criticism.

She would scrap the independent economic forecaster the Office for Budget Responsibility.

And she would pull the UK out of the European Convention on Human Rights.

Ms Truss reckons too many civil servants are actually political activists

"If you're an environmentalist, you go and work at the Environment Department and if you're an equality campaigner, you go and work at the Government Equalities Office," she said.

"Thus, we end up with activists as civil servants, which I don't think happened in the past and which can present real problems."

Truss thinks furlough was too generous

"This has the effect of preserving the economy in aspic," she writes, "with little incentive for people to respond to the changed world by establishing new and innovative businesses."

'Snobbery' in the judiciary

Liz Truss says her time as justice secretary "radicalised" her.

The judiciary is a "self perpetuating oligarchy," she writes. "[The] sheer level of snobbery… shocked me."

She would scrap the Supreme Court. And she would dismantle the Judicial Appointments Commission.

In short, she thinks power of judicial appointments should lie with elected politicians.

Candid about her own limitations

She says she went about her time as justice secretary "in a clumsy fashion".

"I am gregarious and I like people, but even my best friends wouldn't describe me as a great people manager," she writes, adding that her usual style is "full frontal".

In summary…

Whatever you may think of Liz Truss, if you like political ideas and argument, this is a provocative and enjoyable read.

She gives direct answers to direct questions.

Some, of course, will never forgive her for her time as prime minister.

And some of those are very senior Conservatives.

Labour are delighted she is out and about again - they think her very appearance in a whole load of interviews is hugely helpful to their cause.

And if you are of a sceptical inclination, wondering why or whether she deserves attention, I would say all former prime ministers deserve scrutiny.

And hers is a voice still listened to and influential among her party members, as many Tories privately anticipate losing the election, and consider their future after it.

The former prime minister writes towards the end of the book that "the road to hell is paved with compromise and triangulation."

No one could accuse her of that.

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2024-04-16 10:31:21Z
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