Minggu, 07 Juli 2024

EU leaders will give Keir Starmer a 'fair hearing' on changes to post-Brexit deal, says Ireland's Simon Harris - Sky News

Ireland's prime minister Simon Harris has told Sky News that EU leaders will give Keir Starmer a "fair hearing" when it comes to potential changes to the post-Brexit deal with the UK.

Sir Keir has targeted a closer trading relationship with Brussels, including a veterinary agreement that would greatly reduce border checks on animal products.

The taoiseach said in an interview for Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips that in his view there is a space for such a veterinary agreement, something that will be seen as a boost for one of Sir Keir's campaign pledges.

"I do absolutely think there would be a fair hearing for any proposal that the British government or indeed the EU has about ironing out practical issues in terms of having a relationship that works," he said.

"Is there space to have a veterinary agreement, is there space in terms of student mobility, is there space to work closer together on issues? I think there absolutely is.

"And I do think there would be a willingness in Europe to have those conversations in due course, should that be the wish of the British government."

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Mr Harris speaking about potential 'reset' in Irish-British relations back in March

The taoiseach, who is calling for a "great reset" of Anglo-Irish relations that had been strained in the post-Brexit era, promised that Ireland "will always be an ally of Britain having a closer relationship with the European Union".

"It is obviously important that Britain and the European Union continue to be good neighbours and it is absolutely in Ireland's interest that we facilitate that in every way we can around any European table," he said.

If, he said, the British government sought closer relations with the EU, "of course Ireland will be an ally in that conversation".

'An opportunity we must seize'

Labour's landslide victory has sparked renewed optimism on both sides of the Irish border that poor relations with London can be repaired.

"Everybody knows the last number of years have been challenging," said Mr Harris, referring to the fallout from the 2016 Brexit referendum and the years of wrangling that followed.

But now the new occupant of 10 Downing Street is, according to the taoiseach, "a man of integrity".

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Starmer gets down to business

"He has won a comprehensive victory in the election. He's now the prime minister of our nearest neighbour. I'm very eager to work with him," Mr Harris said.

"Look, the British-Irish relationship is really strong. There's an opportunity now, a real opportunity, that we must seize. The next generation will never forgive us if we don't press reset, to say yes it's been a difficult few years, but you know what? We have so much more in common than divides us.

"We have so many issues of mutual concern. We are two islands side by side."

Read more:
Sir Keir Starmer seeks 'reset' with devolved nations
What are PM's biggest diplomatic challenges?
Don't be fooled by 'call me Keir' - this PM means business

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Mr Harris and Sir Keir have already shared a "warm" phone call, and the two men will meet for the first time at a working dinner in Downing Street on 17 July.

The taoiseach has welcomed the prime minister's plan to scrap the controversial Legacy Act, which offered a conditional amnesty from prosecution for troubles-era offences, and which is opposed by all parties on the island of Ireland.

The newly-appointed Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Hilary Benn has already met with Northern Ireland's political leaders this weekend.

Mr Benn met First Minister Michelle O'Neill of Sinn Fein and Deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly of the DUP at Hillsborough Castle, and stressed the need to build a new relationship between London and Stormont.

It's expected the prime minister will visit Northern Ireland in the coming days to meet with leaders.

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2024-07-07 04:45:56Z
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‘We’ll push the government to be bolder’: Carla Denyer on election success for the Greens - The Guardian

On Bristol’s harbourside on Friday morning, Carla Denyer was still on the go. The Green party co-leader, newly elected as MP for Bristol Central, had not slept since the count but was happy to pose for selfies with well-wishers and chat to her new constituents. “I’m elated,” she said, as people waved at her.

Denyer is still taking in the scale of the Green party’s achievements. Labour’s Thangam Debbonaire, the shadow culture minister who had been expected to take up a seat in the Labour cabinet, had a majority of more than 28,000 in Bristol West in 2019, but lost the new Bristol Central seat to Denyer by nearly 10,000 votes. Three more Green MPs were elected across the UK. “This is an historic breakthrough,” Denyer said. “We have quadrupled our representation in the House of Commons overnight. We have got a historic vote share across the country, a historic number of second places, and I expect a historic number of deposits saved as well.”

Brothers Max Shail, Kim Shail and Harry Shail felt the Greens understood issues that worry young people.

Denyer believes the four Green MPs can put pressure on Starmer. “We’ll be pushing the Labour government to be bolder on climate, on the housing crisis, or properly funding public services,” she said. “We’ll be using all of the levers that we have available as opposition MPs, whether that’s through ministerial questions, motions, amendments, the committees, and just moving the debate on.” One of her first priorities will be getting Labour to lift the two-child benefit cap: “That policy was brought in by the Conservatives, and yet, shockingly, the Labour party have ruled out [scrapping it], even though it holds 250,000 children in poverty.”

Some experts see further Green gains as a distinct possibility. The party gained nearly 2m votes overall and came second in 40 constituencies. Prof James Dennison, who has researched the ebbs and flows of Green support across Europe, believes the UK Green party could pick up many more voters under a Starmer government, which will be largely reliant on growth to fund struggling public services. “The Greens are the only party – apart from Reform – who are well placed to take those anti-incumbency votes,” he said.

Denyer agrees. “There is a potential to grow our parliamentary party in the next general election,” she said. “Especially if Labour continue to backslide on policies, as they have been before they even got into power.”

A Vote Green placard in Bristol

Among the scruffy student house-shares, cafes and shops of Clifton Down, a fine, warm drizzle could not dampen the mood of jubilation. “I’m really, really happy. It is my first time voting. It’s exciting to do something that actually changes things,” said Max Shail, 20, who voted for Denyer. “The vast majority of people I know have voted Green here.”

Shail said soaring rents and the death toll from the Israeli assault on Gaza were big issues for the area’s large student population. The Greens called immediately for a ceasefire, whereas Labour waited four months. The Greens also backed rent control, unlike Labour. “Lots of students want more than Labour is offering,” he said. “They are excited the Conservatives are gone, but I don’t know many excited to have Labour in.”

Shail is with his brothers, Kim and Harry. They are all studying at Bristol University. Their rents are between £500 and £660 each a month. “[The Greens] have been much more supportive of renters [than Labour],” said Kim, who voted for Denyer. “They are a great group for lobbying for the issues that are important to young people.”

Keir Starmer’s move to the centre ground has proved costly in this part of Bristol. Robin Galloway, 24, who works in sports and leisure, supported Labour in 2019 but now backs the Greens: “Labour has gone too far to the right,” she said. “I woke up feeling like the city did something good [electing Denyer]. It says we are forward-thinking, nice people.” Even Labour voters were supportive of the new MP. “I’m pleased the Greens have won,” said Sophie Evans, 32, a hospital doctor who backed Debbonaire. “It was meaningful that Carla Denyer was the only representative who came to the strike picket and is siding with the full pay restoration. I thought that was really important.”

Retired dentist and angler Barry Gilling outside a Bristol pharmacy

The Greens did not just appeal to left-leaning voters. Barry Gilling, 71, a retired dentist, opted for Denyer after five decades of voting Conservative. “I’m a salmon fisherman and the rivers are in such a mess,” he said. “I fish on the River Wye every other Tuesday. I’ve been wading in the water and human turds floated past me. It’s disgusting.”

Shail and his brothers are hoping that Denyer can hold Labour’s feet to the fire. “I think it will be better [under Labour]. There will be more integrity. But we need people to hold them to account over major issues like the environment and foreign policy issues like Gaza.”

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2024-07-07 08:00:00Z
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Starmer to make first visit to Scotland as prime minister - BBC.com

Keir Starmer at news conference in Downing Street
The new prime minister announced the visit at a news conference at Downing Street on Saturday

Sir Keir Starmer is due to visit Scotland later in his first visit to the country since becoming prime minister.

Scotland will be his first stop on a tour of the UK and he is expected to meet First Minister John Swinney.

Sir Keir said on Saturday he wanted to establish a "different and better" way of working across the United Kingdom.

The visit comes days after his party won a landslide victory in the general election which saw a dramatic upturn of Labour's fortunes in Scotland.

Labour now has 37 Scottish MPs - up from just one in 2019 - while the SNP's tally fell by 39, leaving them with just nine MPs at Westminster.

After holding his first cabinet meeting on Saturday, Sir Keir announced he would travel to all four nations in the UK before flying to Washington for a NATO meeting on Tuesday.

He said: "For the first time in 20 plus years, we have a majority in England, in Scotland and in Wales and that is a clear mandate to govern for all four corners of the United Kingdom.

“Therefore I will set off tomorrow to be in all four nations. I shall go first to Scotland, then to Northern Ireland, then to Wales and then back to England where I will meet the first ministers.

“Not just to discuss the issues and challenges of the day, of course we will do that, but also to establish a way of working across the United Kingdom that will be different and better to the way we’ve had in recent years and to recognise the contributions of all four nations."

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The prime minister added he knows that those with "skin in the game" know what is best for their communities.

Mr Swinney congratulated Sir Keir on his appointment during a phone call on Friday and said he was committed to working with the new government on "shared priorities for the people of Scotland".

"This includes eradicating child poverty, growing the economy, prioritising net zero, and ensuring effective public services," he said.

Mr Swinney added: “I welcome the prime minister’s commitment to forge a positive relationship between our governments and for our part, the Scottish government is committed to working constructively with the UK government to build a better Scotland.”

Sir Keir Starmer and his wife greet Labour supporters as they enter Downing Street for the first time
Labour supporters waved Welsh and Scottish flags as well as the Union flag as Keir Starmer arrived at Downing Street for the first time as prime minister

During the election campaign, Keir Starmer visited Scotland on a number of occasions in an attempt to win over Scottish voters.

One of the party's most notable policies is to set up a publicly-owned energy company, GB energy, headquartered in Scotland. No location has been announced but there has been speculation it might be in Aberdeen.

The Labour campaign was rewarded with the party gaining 36 seats across the country, including all of the six seats in Glasgow.

The central belt saw big gains for the party with most of its results following vote share swings of about 20% from the SNP.

Other big wins came in Edinburgh, Fife and Tayside.

The Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar, hailed the result as "historic".

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2024-07-07 07:35:46Z
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Sabtu, 06 Juli 2024

Starmer appoints two Blair and Brown figures as junior ministers - BBC.com

Starmer appoints two figures from Blair and Brown era as ministers

Composite image of Douglas Alexander and Jacqui Smith

Two former cabinet ministers who served under Tony Blair and Gordon Brown have been given junior ministerial roles by Sir Keir Starmer.

Former home secretary Jacqui Smith will join the House of Lords to become higher education minister, Downing Street said.

While Douglas Alexander, who held several cabinet roles in the last Labour government, is now a business minister after returning as an MP for the first time since losing his seat in 2015.

The new posts are part of a small number of new ministerial appointments made by the prime minister on his first full day in office.

Ellie Reeves, the sister of Chancellor Rachel Reeves, becomes minister without portfolio.

Sir Keir has also appointed Ms Reeves - who served as co-director of Labour's election campaign - as Labour Party chair.

In a social media post, Ms Reeves said she was "delighted" at her appointment.

Former Mayor of South Yorkshire and soldier Dan Jarvis joins the Home Office as a minister.

​Jim McMahon and Matthew Pennycook, who both have held roles in Sir Keir's shadow government, become ministers in the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities.

Mr Pennycook said his appointment was a "real honour".

"Tackling the housing crisis and boosting economic growth is integral to national renewal," he said.

A graphic which reads: More on general election 2024

Ms Smith - who is not an MP - will get a life peerage in order to re-enter government.

She returns as education minister, a brief she had previously held 25 years ago, under Tony Blair.

She went on to hold several ministerial roles, before rising to be the first female home secretary. She resigned in 2009 due to a series of expenses scandals.

The Standards Commissioner found she breached Commons rules by designating her sister's London house as her main residence and claiming expenses on her Redditch home.

Ms Smith also admitted to mistakenly claiming expenses for two pornographic films viewed by her husband while she was away.

Media reports revealed she had also claimed a flat-screen TV and scatter cushions on expenses.

She stepped down, blaming family pressures and claiming gender bias in the scrutiny of her expenses.

After losing her seat to Karen Lumley of the Conservative Party in the 2010 election Ms Smith competed on Strictly Come Dancing and co-hosted a political podcast with Conservative broadcaster Iain Dale.

She previously chaired the University Hospitals Birmingham trust and since 2021 has been chair of Barts health trust in London - two of the NHS’s biggest care providers.

After helping co-ordinate Labour's successful election campaign in 2001, Mr Alexander was made a junior minister in Mr Blair's government, serving in various roles before being made both transport secretary and Scottish secretary in 2006.

While an MP he repaid more than £12,000 he had claimed from Parliament during the expenses scandal.

While serving as shadow foreign secretary, Mr Alexander was defeated by the SNP's Mhairi Black at the 2015 general election, overturning his 16,000-vote majority.

After leaving parliament he joined Harvard and New York University as a professor and became an adviser to U2 front man Bono.

Mr Alexander chaired Unicef UK but resigned in 2020 following bullying allegations that he was later cleared of.

In 2023, it was announced he was Labour's candidate for East Lothian, one of the Labour Party's top target seats in Scotland.

They join several other ex-cabinet members from the last Labour government in Sir Keir's new top team, including Yvette Cooper, Hilary Benn and Ed Miliband.

A Labour source has also confirmed to the BBC that the new Health Secretary, Wes Streeting, has been having conversations with Alan Milburn about taking a role in the government.

Mr Milburn was Mr Blair’s health secretary during the latter part of his first term.

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2024-07-07 02:58:20Z
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David Cameron and senior Tories push back against swift leadership contest - The Guardian

Tory grandees including David Cameron are pushing back against the idea of a swift Conservative leadership contest, saying they want the candidates to be tested.

Robert Jenrick, Kemi Badenoch, James Cleverly, Suella Braverman, Tom Tugendhat, Priti Patel and Victoria Atkins, are among the long list of names believed to be preparing possible bids.

The contenders are readying themselves for a speedy contest to appoint a successor to Rishi Sunak by the early autumn in an effort to challenge the rise of Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party.

But senior figures are pushing for the contest to take place over a longer period to allow candidates to pitch themselves to the grassroots membership in a “beauty contest” at the Conservative conference in early October.

The former Conservative chancellor George Osborne said on Friday that Cameron was part of a “big effort … to get Rishi Sunak to just delay the moment when the new leader is chosen”.

He said: “The contest can start, but it doesn’t have to conclude. It’s very important, because these people, these candidates, they’re all government ministers who have now been kicked out of office. None of them have been in opposition.

“None of them have proved their mettle. I think over the next few months, it’s essential, and I know David thinks this and others do too, we just see how these candidates now perform on the opposition benches and use the party conference in the same way that Michael Howard did, to his eternal credit, in 2005.”

Osborne, speaking on his Political Currency podcast with his former Labour opponent Ed Balls, said: “Above all, an opposition politician, an opposition leader, needs to be a communicator, and we don’t want a dud who may have excited some faction of the right in government or said the right thing on this particular bit of Brexit policy two years ago in the cabinet.

“We want to know if these people can perform. Rishi Sunak … His last great service to the Conservative party would be to delay the Conservative contest’s outcome.”

BBC Newsnight also reported that the former Conservative leader Iain Duncan Smith was in this camp.

Others in the party are concerned that a drawn-out leadership contest would benefit Farage’s insurgent rightwing Reform UK and allow Labour to set the narrative about the Tory record in government, two well-placed Tory sources said.

“There’s a deep-rooted fear within the party institutionally that if we don’t have a full-time leader by September, that will allow Farage to position himself as the main opposition to Starmer,” a Tory close to the party HQ said.

“If you wait until party conference or even Christmas, the problem is you then come in as leader and instead of facing Starmer … you’re suddenly having to first argue with Farage.”

However, other people in the Conservative party are worried about having a vacuum in the leadership while Labour embeds itself in government and shapes the anti-Tory narrative.

Many contenders have also already started organising their campaigns, after the party crashed to its worst election result in history. But Jeremy Hunt, the former chancellor who previously ran as a leadership hopeful, ruled himself out of the race, telling GB News that the “time has passed”.

And asked whether she would be the next Tory leader, Braverman told broadcasters outside her home on Saturday: “No announcements. We’ve just got to take our time, we’ve got to figure out what the situation is. It’s been a really bad result. There’s no two ways about it. Hundreds of excellent Tory MPs have been kicked out of office.”

Two sources said Sunak had indicated he would stay in place as a caretaker party leader until early September or later into the autumn if needed.

Another party figure said senior Conservatives were mindful of what happened in 2010 when Cameron and Osborne, newly installed in Downing Street, demonised Labour’s record while the opposition party was going through a protracted leadership battle.

The source said Sunak would be prepared to face Keir Starmer at prime minister’s questions while a contest continued and felt he had areas on which to challenge Labour, including the cancellation of Rwanda deportation flights, decisions on public sector pay and on defence spending. They said Sunak was committed to staying the course and would serve in whatever way the party wished.

In the wake of their defeat, party figures have been arguing about the wisdom of trying to win back voters who switched to Reform either with rightwing policies or by presenting a broader vision to reclaim the centre ground.

Boris Johnson used his column in the Daily Mail not to contemplate merging with Reform: “I say to my fellow Conservatives, we are the oldest, most successful political party in British history. We are capable of endless regeneration. We don’t need to try to absorb other parties, to try to acquire their vitality like a transfusion of monkey glands.

“We need to occupy the space ourselves – and my humble suggestion to the 121 is that they need to rebuild that giant coalition of 2019, get back to some of the big themes that proved so successful that we won seats across the country.”

Damian Green, a former leader of the Tory One Nation caucus who lost his Ashford seat to Labour, also warned on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme against “the idea that you somehow bring Nigel Farage in – that would be disastrous because you would lose millions of votes on the other side”.

In his resignation speech in Downing Street, Sunak confirmed he was standing down as Conservative leader but would stay in place while his replacement was elected.

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2024-07-06 08:50:00Z
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Jay Slater's mother says Tenerife search is 'no holiday' in response to online trolls - Evening Standard

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2024-07-06 10:43:21Z
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Labour: Sir Keir Starmer chairs first cabinet meeting as prime minister - Sky News

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  1. Labour: Sir Keir Starmer chairs first cabinet meeting as prime minister  Sky News
  2. Election 2024 live: Keir Starmer to face questions in first news conference as prime minister  BBC.com
  3. Labour's house of cards  The New Statesman
  4. Watch live: Keir Starmer holds press conference at Downing Street  The Independent

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