Minggu, 09 Juni 2024

Labour pledges to create more than 100,000 new nursery places - The Guardian

Labour has pledged to create more than 100,000 new nursery places for children from nine months old, helping to both drive up standards and meet demand, as a key manifesto offer for working parents.

The party plans to set up more than 3,300 new nurseries in existing primary schools in England to support a major expansion of childcare.

The existing childcare system is widely regarded as expensive and underfunded, and many parents are forced to drop out of the workforce to look after their children.

The plan for near-universal provision, available from the end of parental leave to the end of primary school, is one of a series of eye-catching policies expected to be unveiled this Thursday, as Keir Starmer publishes Labour’s manifesto.

Labour has already pledged to stick to government plans for a staged expansion of childcare, with working parents of all two-year olds able to claim 15 hours a week of free childcare during term time since April. This will apply to parents with children over the age of nine months from September 2024, and increase to 30 hours a week from September 2025.

But experts have warned that it is a sticking-plaster solution, pumping money into a system already struggling to cope with demand. Nurseries said they did not have the capacity to deliver the extra spaces needed.

Under Labour’s plan, 3,334 classrooms in existing primary schools will be converted to accommodate 100,000 extra childcare places. Spare capacity is growing in primaries due to falling birth rates. The Department for Education estimates that about 85,000 places are needed for current plans.

Labour said that refurbishing classrooms, which they hope will start within weeks of entering government and be complete well before the end of a first term, would cost an average £40,000 each. The total, £140m, would be funded by the party’s plans to levy VAT on private school fees.

Keir Starmer, the Labour leader, told the Guardian: “It’s very good for children to be at nursery, particularly our plan to have them in a school environment. Many schools will say when they get to reception many children don’t have the skills that they need to start learning straight away.”

Local growth plans would consider whether low recruitment of nursery staff was inhibiting parents and carers from returning to work, while councils would be given more of a role in shaping nursery provision in their areas.

Around 85% of mothers struggle to find childcare that fits around their work, while one in 10 have quit jobs due to childcare pressures, according to the Fawcett Society. In England, there are currently two children for every available place.

“It’s hugely important for parents and carers, predominantly women, to get back into the working environment … It’s not just about being back in the labour force, but progressing,” Starmer said.

“There are many bits of our plan to grow the economy, but one of them is making sure we can get as many people into the labour market as possible. So this is a big lever to pull.”

Labour will target its new nursery places – to be run by schools themselves or local private or voluntary providers – in “childcare deserts”, areas with severe shortages, enabling more parents to work. As well as high-quality education, nurseries in schools see lower staff turnover.

Starmer indicated that the plans would go a significant way towards providing universal childcare, which his shadow education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, who has visited Estonia, Australia and other countries for inspiration, said last year would compare with the creation of the NHS.

“Yes, once you’ve gone to 30 hours from nine months to four years, with a plan to deliver it, which is the difference between us and the government … it’s pretty bold stuff,” said Starmer, adding that Labour, which has already pledged breakfast clubs for every primary school, would encourage more schools to open during the holidays.

The party has already commissioned Sir David Bell, a former chief inspector of schools and permanent secretary at the DfE, to draw up detailed plans to deliver the expansion as part of a wider review of early years provision.

Jemima Olchawski, the chief executive of the Fawcett Society, said it was about time childcare became an election priority. “There are many things wrong with our childcare system, and so Labour’s announcement that they will undertake a wide review of the sector involving all stakeholders is important,” she said.

“We welcome Labour’s focus on increasing places, especially in childcare deserts – this is particularly important in terms of getting women back into work, as well as supporting early education for the most disadvantaged.

“We are also pleased that they have heeded our calls for more of a market-shaping role for local government, and more financial transparency for the big providers.

“We need to see childcare given the prominence it deserves in every party’s manifesto and we need to see genuine, long-term commitments that last beyond this election. If we don’t, women will lose out and parties will lose votes.”

Victoria Benson, chief executive of Gingerbread, a charity for single-parent families, said they welcomed the creation of more childcare places, particularly in childcare deserts, but that the problems ran deeper.

“Currently, single parents who are training, retraining or studying aren’t entitled to the same childcare support as those in work. This must change to allow single parents to reach their full potential,” she said.

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2024-06-10 01:30:00Z
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Live: Crime scene in place after incident in Bristol - Bristol Live

A crime scene is in place in Bristol this morning (Sunday, June 9) following a knife attack. Avon and Somerset Police said nine people have been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder following the assault during the early hours of this morning.

The reported attack took place near Rawnsley Park, in Easton, at around 4.40am. Two men in their 20s have been taken to hospital with knife wounds, one of whom is in serious condition.

Easton Way is closed between the junction with Stapleton Road and Pennywell Road. There is also no access to Easton Way from Old Market.

This is a live blog. Scroll down for updates.

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2024-06-09 10:35:00Z
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Sunak will ‘absolutely’ remain Tory leader despite D-day blunder, ally says - The Guardian

An ally of Rishi Sunak has said the prime minister will “absolutely” continue to lead the Conservative election campaign after his D-day ceremony blunder, which triggered fury within the party.

The prime minister was campaigning in Yorkshire on Sunday without media appearances, after cutting short his attendance at the 80th anniversary of D-day in France with other world leaders.

Mel Stride, the work and pensions secretary, said Sunak would not resign over the move in the middle of an election campaign.

Asked whether Sunak might hand over the Conservative leadership before the 4 July election, Stride dismissed the idea.

“There should be no question of anything other than [Sunak continuing to lead the party],” he told Sky News.

Stride said Sunak “deeply regrets” his decision to leave the D-day events early, calling the prime minister “deeply patriotic” and committed to supporting veterans.

“He has recognised that he made a mistake. He deeply regrets that. He has apologised unequivocally for that,” Stride said.

“And I think he will be feeling this personally, very deeply because he’s a deeply patriotic person. He will be deeply uncomfortable with what has happened.”

Sunak has been criticised by politicians across the spectrum for his decision, and caused outrage in his party. The choice to return to the UK early to resume campaigning left Keir Starmer, the Labour leader, and Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, to occupy his space on the world stage in France.

However, Farage has also been criticised for claiming Sunak’s early exit demonstrated the prime minister did not understand “our culture”.

Asked if he was trying to highlight Sunak’s British-Asian background, Farage pointed to the contribution made by Commonwealth troops and suggested he was talking about the prime minister’s “class” and “privilege”.

The Reform UK leader told BBC One’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme: “I know what your question is leading at – 40% of our contribution in world war one and world war two came from the Commonwealth.

“He is utterly disconnected by class, by privilege, from how the ordinary folk in this country feel. He revealed that, I think spectacularly, when he left Normandy early.”

However, Stride said Farage’s remarks were “uncomfortable”, while Shabana Mahmood, the shadow justice secretary, said the suggestion that the prime minister was not part of “our” culture was “dog-whistle” code.

“I think this is a classic Nigel Farage trick: lean just enough to signal a bit of a dog-whistle and then lean straight back and sound perfectly reasonable and say something good about the contribution that Commonwealth soldiers, ethnic minorities made towards the war effort,” she said.

“We can all see exactly what Nigel Farage is doing. He’s got form; it is completely unacceptable. This is a man that has a track record of seeking to divide communities, who just wants to do it with a veneer of respectability whilst he’s at it.”

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2024-06-09 11:13:00Z
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Gove's replacement caught out on constituency house claim as home found on AirBnb - The Independent

The Tory candidate to replace Michael Gove has boasted about moving into a home in the constituency, only for it emerge the property was seemingly an AirBnb.

Councillor Ed McGuinness, who is running to be the Conservative MP for Surrey Heath, said he is “now a resident of St Paul’s ward”.

Alongside pictures of himself entering a house, Mr McGuinness said Surrey Heath residents “rightly expect their MP to be a part of their community”.

Follow our politics live blog for all the latest general election updates

Blaming Mr Gove’s last minute decision to step down when the snap summer general election was called, Mr McGuinness said it has been “hard to get a place so quickly”.

But users on social media platform X quickly posted pictures of an AirBnB listing that appeared to show the same house.

The property is described on the rental site as “a light and airy self contained annex”.

One said it was “a bit weird to do a ‘getting the keys’ shot for an AirBnb’”.

A community note on X said: “The property featured here appears on AirBnb and is therefore not indicative of the user being a ‘resident’ of the local community.

“Moreover the availability of the property does not indicate a long-term booking has been made.”

At the time of Mr McGuinness’s post about the home, it still appeared to be available to book on several days in July.

Ed McGuinness hopes to succeed Michael Gove, who is not standing in Surrey Heath at the General Election (PA Wire)

A spokesman for the Liberal Democrats, who are eyeing up the seat, said: “From Gove giving up to a candidate seemingly camping in an AirBnb, it’s clear the Conservatives are running scared of the Liberal Democrats right across Surrey. To be honest, it would be the best for Mr McGuinness as he could be gone from the constituency in just a few weeks.”

Mr McGuinness is a former British Army officer and veteran of Afghanistan. His website describes him as a political commentator, an active Conservative campaigner, a former Association Chairman and now a Prospective Parliamentary Candidate.

Mr Gove, one of the longest-serving Conservative ministers and the last remaining high-profile MP from the David Cameron government elected in 2010, announced he would step down at the 4 July election after it was called.

The shock announcement was a blow to the Tory Party which is facing an exodus of high-profile MPs at the election.

The secretary of state for Levelling Up, posted on X: “After nearly 20 years serving the wonderful people of Surrey Heath and over a decade in Cabinet across five government departments, I have today taken the decision to step down as a Member of Parliament.”

Mr Gove said it was time for a “new generation” to lead and highlighted his time in various government roles, including as education secretary, Cabinet office minister and housing secretary.

The Lib Dems believe that Mr Gove’s Surrey Heath seat is also up for grabs. It too was altered in the boundary review but the Lib Dems hope to overturn what was an 18,349 majority in 2019 under the old boundaries.

Mr McGuinness was asked to comment.

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2024-06-09 09:56:47Z
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Four people rushed to hospital after fairground ride 'collapses' in Lambeth - Evening Standard

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2024-06-09 02:31:24Z
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UK general election 2024 live: ‘No tax surprises’ in manifesto, Keir Starmer says - The Guardian

Labour Leader Sir Keir Starmer has reiterated his party’s pledge not to raise taxes, despite reports from The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) that tax rises would be necessary to maintain current levels of departmental funding.

Sir Keir told reporters in Essex:

We will not be raising taxes on working people. That means we won’t be raising income tax, national insurance or VAT.

We will launch our manifesto very soon and that will have no tax surprises in it because all of our plans are fully funded and fully costed and none of them require tax rises over and above the ones that we’ve already announced.

What we do need to do, just to take up the challenge that’s been put to us is, we do need to grow the economy. We do need to make sure that the economy and living standards across the whole country are growing and that’s why step one, in government if we get to serve our country, will be to stabilise and grow our economy.

We are not returning to austerity.

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At the campaign event in Essex, Sir Keir Starmer said he was “critical” of the early release scheme for prisoners but added that “tough decisions” would have to be taken by a Labour government.

He said:

I am critical of the Tories’ early release scheme because what’s happened is that they’re releasing early, prisoners who should still be in prison and that’s a shocking state of affairs.

Like the many problems that they have left for the country, if we do come into power we’re going to have to fix it.

Now that will involve building prisons, that will involve taking tough decisions because the money has been allocated for prison building but there are tough decisions about planning and getting those prisons up.

Labour Leader Sir Keir Starmer has reiterated his party’s pledge not to raise taxes, despite reports from The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) that tax rises would be necessary to maintain current levels of departmental funding.

Sir Keir told reporters in Essex:

We will not be raising taxes on working people. That means we won’t be raising income tax, national insurance or VAT.

We will launch our manifesto very soon and that will have no tax surprises in it because all of our plans are fully funded and fully costed and none of them require tax rises over and above the ones that we’ve already announced.

What we do need to do, just to take up the challenge that’s been put to us is, we do need to grow the economy. We do need to make sure that the economy and living standards across the whole country are growing and that’s why step one, in government if we get to serve our country, will be to stabilise and grow our economy.

We are not returning to austerity.

A £2 hourly pay rise could help tackle the care worker shortage, Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey has said.

He told the Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips programme: “If you paid this extra money to care workers, I think people would make a choice of not working in supermarkets or Amazon warehouses and things like that because they would feel that the tough job of being a carer would be properly rewarded.”

Sir Ed, who has previously spoken of his own caring responsibilities for his disabled son, added:

There are millions of people who have similar experiences to me and my family where they are doing a lot of the caring.

If we support carers who are caring for their loved ones at home, then actually a lot of the caring will be done by families.

If you are more generous with respite care, with carers’ allowance and helping people into work so they can balance caring and working – we have got a full package so yes, it is about paying care workers better and valuing them more.

It is also [about] looking after the millions of family carers.

He said one of the reasons why the Conservatives have got things “so badly wrong” is that they have been relying on people coming in from other countries.

Sir Ed added:

They have issued hundreds of thousands of healthcare visas and those people are doing a fantastic job and I think we should recognise that but imagine if we were paying healthcare workers more – I don’t think we would need to issue all those visas.

I think that a lot of people in this country would be more willing to work in the care sector.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper have arrived in Essex where they will set out how Labour plans to crackdown on antisocial behaviour if they win the general election.

They will also meet activists and victims of antisocial behaviour.

Labour is promising new powers for police to quickly scrap noisy dirt and quad bikes causing havoc in neighbourhoods as part of a crackdown on antisocial behaviour.

Keir Starmer’s party also wants to raise on-the-spot fines for using off-road bikes or ignoring officers’ instructions to stop, which are as low as £100.

The shadow home secretary, Yvette Cooper, said if Labour wins the general election police will get the powers to take the bikes that are a “nightmare for communities” off the streets for good.

Under the plans, set out in the Mail on Sunday and Sunday Express, police will be able to dispose of off-road bikes being used antisocially within 48 hours.

Currently, bikes seized by officers have to be impounded for two weeks before disposal, with the steep costs incentivising forces to auction them off and risk handing them back to offenders.

Labour would also extend closure notices for drug dens from 48 hours to 72 hours, giving police more time to get them shut down at court.

Data-driven hotspot policing would target the most prolific antisocial offenders, under the party’s proposals.

Cooper said: “Noisy off-road bikes speeding round local streets and neighbourhoods, deliberately disturbing and intimidating local residents, are a nightmare for communities. Yet too often the culprits get away with it again and again, and even when the police take action, the bikes still end up back on the streets.

You can read the full news story here.

Two people wearing helmets on a quad bike on the road

The Labour shadow justice secretary, Shabana Mahmood, has defended her party from being “changed into the Conservatives”.

Responding to a comment made by Green Party co-leader Carla Denyer during Friday’s seven-way BBC debate that Labour had “changed into the Conservatives”, Mahmood said: “That’s exactly the kind of stuff you’d expect from some of the smaller parties.”

She told Sky News: “There are billions of pounds worth of difference between us and the Tory party, because we will make different decisions.

“For example, levying VAT on private school fees, we will get non-doms to pay their fair share. We’ll make sure oil and gas giants pay their fair share with the proper windfall tax. That is a big difference between us and the Tory party.”

Mahmood said Labour would make prisons “of national importance”.

She said: “From day one, a Labour Government will deem prisons to be of national importance. It means that the planning decision is ultimately made by ministers, rather than going through the usual local authority planning process.

“So we can move much faster than this Government, who have let themselves get bogged down by backbencher complaints and the planning process, so we can deliver the full 20,000 [prison places].”

Nigel Farage has defended his claim that Rishi Sunak’s early exit from D-day commemoration events in France demonstrated that he did not understand “our culture”.

Asked if he was trying to highlight Sunak’s British-Asian background, Farage pointed to the contribution made by Commonwealth troops and suggested he was talking about the prime minister’s “class” and “privilege”.

The Reform UK leader told BBC1’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme: “I know what your question is leading at – 40% of our contribution in the first world war and the second world war came from the Commonwealth.

“He is utterly disconnected by class, by privilege from how the ordinary folk in this country feel. He revealed that, I think spectacularly, when he left Normandy early.

“And out there now there are millions and millions of people who were Conservative voters, traditional Conservative voters, not the red-wallers, who are now thinking ‘Do we go on supporting the Conservatives or do we support Reform?’

“And this is going to be, I think, the acid test of this election.”

Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said Labour and the Conservatives “don’t really want to talk about the scale of the challenge facing them”, should they win the election.

He told Sky News:

Both parties have tied themselves to the, in my view, rather bizarre fiscal rule which is they want debt down.

They don’t want to talk about tax increases because that frightens the voters.

Maybe they’re just hoping they get lucky.

Labour told Unite they will create enough jobs to cover potential losses in the oil and gas sector, after the union did not endorse the party’s manifesto, Labour shadow justice secretary Shabana Mahmood has said.

She told Sky News:

Unite have some areas of policy where they would probably want us to go further but they did not push any of those issues to a vote.

[Unite] recognise that actually change is coming, the issue is speed and transition on which we were able to provide assurances on plans that have been backed by independent experts.

We will create over 100,000 jobs as part of our plans. These are good quality jobs in the same sector.

Asked if the Unite leadership had confidence in those assurances, Mahmood said:

That’s a matter for Unite and their own internal management of their union.

Work and Pensions secretary Mel Stride has told Sky News that Rishi Sunak “deeply regrets” his decision to leave D-day 80th anniversary events early.

Speaking to Trevor Phillips this morning, Stride said that the prime minister was “deeply patriotic” and committed to supporting veterans, after he was roundly criticised for leaving France ahead of other world leaders to film a television interview.

Stride said:

He has recognised that he made a mistake. He deeply regrets that he has apologised unequivocally for that.

The prime minister has accepted that he made a mistake. He has apologised unequivocally for that.

And I think he will be feeling this personally, very deeply because he’s a deeply patriotic person. He will be deeply uncomfortable with what has happened.

Stride also said that Sunak would “absolutely” lead the party into the election on 4 July, dismissing suggestions that the Conservative leader may be replaced before polling day.

“There should be no question of anything other than that,” he said.

On this third Sunday of the general election campaign, today will not be a day of rest for the political parties vying for votes.

Sir Keir Starmer and shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper are out in the east of England, where they will set out Labour’s plans to crack down on antisocial behaviour. While in Scotland, first minister John Swinney and will be on the campaign trail with SNP candidates in Paisley, and Scottish Tory deputy leader Meghan Gallacher will be out with Perth and Kinross-shire candidate Luke Graham.

And in the studio, Laura Kuenssberg is joined by Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride, shadow justice secretary Shabana Mahmood, Reform UK leader Nigel Farage and SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn, with Former home secretary Amber Rudd, Fire Brigades Union general secretary Matt Wrack and businessman John Caudwell on the panel.

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2024-06-09 10:22:54Z
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Sabtu, 08 Juni 2024

General election latest: Farage wins BBC election debate, snap poll finds - The Telegraph

Sir Keir Starmer has insisted there “won’t be any surprises on tax” under a Labour government.

His comments come after the Tories have repeatedly said Labour has a £38.5 billion black hole in their spending promises which would necessitate a £2,000 tax raid on each UK household. 

However, during a campaign visit in Camden, north London, today, Sir Keir promised he would not raise taxes, aside from those already proposed.

He said: “There won’t be any surprises on tax. All of our plans are fully costed, fully funded, none of them involving tax rises over and above those that we have already set out.”

The Prime Minister previously highlighted a Treasury analysis that suggested there was a major black hole in Labour’s spending approach, arguing it would inevitably lead to higher taxes.

Sir Keir denied the claims and accused Mr Sunak of breaking the ministerial code and lying.

Mr Sunak denied that he misled the public over the warning.

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2024-06-08 12:07:46Z
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