Category: Politics

  • MPs would get vote on deployment of British troops in Ukraine, minister suggests

    MPs would get a vote before British troops were sent to Ukraine “if circumstances allow”, a cabinet minister has indicated. 

    The prime minister has declared he is prepared to put “our own troops on the ground if necessary” in Ukraine if there is a deal to end the war with Russia. Ahead of an “emergency meeting” of European leaders on Monday, the prime minister said he was “ready and willing” to send British troops as part of a peacekeeping force in Ukraine.

    Writing in the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Keir Starmer insisted the UK was “ready to play a leading role” in Ukraine’s defence and security.

    Heidi Alexander, the transport secretary, was asked on Tuesday whether MPs would be given the chance to vote on the deployment of British troops in Ukraine. 

    She told Times Radio: “It is my understanding that before any troop deployment, it would be normal, if circumstances allow, for parliament to be consulted.

    “But, as I say, I do think that we are some way away from this at the moment.”

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    Alexander was also asked if the armed forces could be deployed for peace-keeping in Ukraine without the backing of other European countries.

    The transport secretary responded that any such talks were in the very early stages.

    She added: “The prime minister has been clear to date that he sees that partnership with the US as being absolutely essential, that any security guarantee must be worked through both with our European allies and with America.”

    The Liberal Democrats have called for a vote in parliament “in principle”, with party leader Ed Davey pledging his support to the government. 

    The Lib Dem leader posted to X: “In principle there should be a vote in parliament when troops are deployed. I’m confident all sides of the House are likely to agree with the prime minister apart from those [Donald] Trump bootlickers in Reform.”

    Rupert Lowe, the Reform MP for Great Yarmouth, responded by calling on Davey to “grow up”. 

    Former prime minister Rishi Sunak is another senior parliamentarian who has committed to voting in favour of troop deployment in Ukraine. Speaking in the House of Commons last week, Sunak said Britain and Europe should consider providing Ukraine with a “military presence across land, air and sea”.

    He added: “Can I assure the government that it will have my support if that’s what it decides to do?”

    Josh Self is Editor of Politics.co.uk, follow him on Bluesky here.

    Politics.co.uk is the UK’s leading digital-only political website. Subscribe to our daily newsletter for all the latest news and analysis.

    Rishi Sunak: UK and Europe must consider ‘military presence’ in Ukraine

    Source: Politics

  • Sadiq Khan: ‘Brexit was a mistake’

    Sadiq Khan is set to tell European Union (EU) diplomats that “Brexit was a mistake” as he renews calls for closer alignment and a youth mobility scheme.

    At a summit hosted by the London mayor and attended by the EU’s Heads of Mission in the UK, Khan will tell delegates that Britain’s withdrawal from the trading bloc “continues to have a negative impact”.

    Khan, who campaigned prominently to remain in the EU during the 2016 referendum, will promise to make the case for “being bold” in efforts to seek closer alignment.

    Prime minister Keir Starmer has made resetting relations with the EU a priority for his government, but has repeatedly ruled out returning to the single market, customs union or freedom of movement.

    In a major speech earlier this month, Nick Thomas-Symonds, the minister for the constitution and European Union, called for an end to “ideologically driven division” between the EU and the UK and for a new “ruthless pragmatism”.

    Speaking in Brussels at the UK-EU forum’s annual conference, Thomas-Symonds said: “It is through a new partnership between the UK and the EU that we will deliver for the people of the United Kingdom and for people across the continent.

    “The future of the EU and the UK lies beyond the status quo, reaching forward to deliver benefits for all our people to share.”

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    However, ministers have so far resisted proposals from Brussels for a new scheme allowing under-30s from the bloc to live, work and study in the UK and vice versa. 

    Khan is now set to repeat his call for a youth mobility scheme. “As mayor, I’m strongly in favour of a new youth mobility scheme”, he is expected to say on Tuesday.

    “This would help to aid economic growth across Europe, but also give young Londoners and EU citizens important life experiences — like the opportunity to work abroad and learn more about our respective languages and cultures.

    “As part of this, I’m keen for us to look at how we can make it easier for school children from the EU to visit the UK and learn more about our shared ties and history.”

    The London mayor will also insist European allies must come together to tackle a series of “shared challenges” including “the rise of an intolerant and anti-democratic populism” and “tariffs posing a real threat to international affairs.”

    Khan will say: “I’m a proud European and of the view that Brexit was a mistake that continues to have a negative impact — not just on my city and country, but on the European community as a whole.”

    “I remain passionate about growing and improving our relationship across every area possible, and I believe this is essential if we’re to effectively tackle a host of shared challenges — relating to trade, our economies, security, the environment and the rise of an intolerant and anti-democratic populism.”

    He is expected to add: “Indeed, at a moment when we see trade wars and tariffs posing a real threat to international affairs, I’m convinced that we should be looking at what more we can do to strengthen our relationship as a counterweight to these trends.”

    Josh Self is Editor of Politics.co.uk, follow him on Bluesky here.

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    Lib Dem MP urges government to back EU youth mobility scheme as part of Brexit reset

    Source: Politics

  • Gov Otu speaks on alleged rift with some NASS members

    Gov Otu speaks on alleged rift with some NASS members

     

    By Kelvin Obambon

    Cross River Governor, Prince Bassey Otu has eased political tension that emanates from an alleged face-off with some members of the National Assembly in the state.

    Responding to question bothering on the issue during a media chat in Calabar on Monday, the governor stated that he has no problem with any member of the National Assembly. He cautioned people against dwelling on social media narratives to form opinions about governance in the state.

    He said as governor, his primary concern is the development of the state, and that everyone must work to deliver on their mandate. He added that 2027 politics cannot take the place of governance, as it was too early to start talking about election that is two years ahead.

    Read Also: N/Assembly Clerk Seeks Review of Staff Service Act

    “I am not against anybody and all those are social media skirmishes, I believe everyone must deliver on their mandate,” the governor stated.

    The political space in Cross River has been tensed in recent time following rumours, especially on social media, that the governor was bent on replacing some members of the National Assembly in 2027.

  • Kemi Badenoch: Conservatives couldn’t fund defence boost because of welfare spend

    Kemi Badenoch has revealed that the last Conservative government considered increasing funding for defence but decided it was impossible because the state was spending “so much on welfare.”

    The Tory leader, who served as a cabinet minister in the last government, has now urged Labour to “rewire” the economy in order to now find the funds required for a defence spending uplift. 

    Speaking to Sky News, Badenoch said the Conservatives had looked into increasing the current expenditure from around 2.3 per cent of national income to 3 per cent, having held discussion on the topic around the cabinet table. 

    The former business and trade secretary said: “I remember being in cabinet, seeing if we could get to 3 per cent by 2030, and we could not make it work because we were paying so much in debt and so much on welfare.

    “We’ve got to rewire our economy so we can look after our country.”

    Badenoch noted that the UK is spending significantly less on defence now than it was during the Cold War, when it spent 4 per cent of GDP. 

    But she added: “At the moment, we can’t afford to do much more. We have got to change our economy around.”

    Donald Trump has demanded Nato members spend 5 per cent of GDP on defence.

    In the Conservative Party’s 2024 general election manifesto, then-PM Rishi Sunak pledged to spend 2.5 per cent of GDP on defence. The document insisted a Conservative government, if re-elected, would have met the new target “by” or “in” 2030.

    Prime minister Keir Starmer has committed to spending 2.5 per cent of GDP on defence, but he has not yet set out a timeline for doing so.

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    Speaking on Monday, Starmer told broadcasters that Europe must be committed to “playing our full part when it comes to the defence of the sovereignty of Ukraine if there’s a peace agreement, and, of course, when it comes to funding and training”.

    The prime minister said: “We are going through a strategic review of defence at the moment, which is looking at the challenges and the capability, and then we’ll set out that path.

    “Part of my message to our European allies is that we’ve all got to step up on both capability and on spending and funding. Now, that includes the UK, which is why I’ve made that commitment to spend more.”

    Kemi Badenoch’s comments, delivered in an interview with Sky News, came after she warned of civilisational collapse during a speech on Monday morning. 

    Addressing attendees of the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship (ARC) in London, the Conservative leader declared that the ideas and culture of Western civilisation that have “dominated the world for well over two centuries” are in retreat. 

    Badenoch said: “This is not a crisis of values. It’s a crisis of confidence that has set in at exactly the same time that we face existential threats on the left.

    “This self doubt manifests as an embarrassment of the West’s legacy and in extremis, a hatred of Western history and even its culture.

    “But what about the right? We know that the West has given the world amazing ideas and values, from democracy and free markets to our banking systems, yet around us, we see so much cultural and economic decline.

    “We doubt ourselves. We doubt our ability to build like our predecessors Did. We doubt liberal values of tolerance or free trade, demanding a post-liberal world.”

    Josh Self is Editor of Politics.co.uk, follow him on Bluesky here.

    Politics.co.uk is the UK’s leading digital-only political website. Subscribe to our daily newsletter for all the latest news and analysis.

    Kemi Badenoch praises Trump and ‘populism’ in speech warning of civilisational threats

    Source: Politics

  • Keir Starmer to meet Trump in Washington DC next week

    Keir Starmer will meet US president Donald Trump next week, No 10 has confirmed.

    The confirmation came as the prime minister called on European allies to “step up” when it comes to both defensive capabilities and increasing defence spending

    Asked on Monday morning about comments made by US vice-president JD Vance on free speech in the UK, the prime minister’s spokesperson said: “There’s going to be a wide range of issues that we’ll be working with the new US administration on.

    “The prime minister looks forward to meeting president Trump shortly to discuss how we can deepen the special relationship across trade, investment and security.”

    They added: “The prime minister will travel to Washington DC next week.”

    Also speaking on Monday, Starmer told broadcasters that Europe must be committed to “playing our full part when it comes to the defence of the sovereignty of Ukraine if there’s a peace agreement, and, of course, when it comes to funding and training”.

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    The UK government has committed to spending 2.5 per cent of GDP on defence, but it has not yet set out a timeline for doing so.

    The prime minister said: “We are going through a strategic review of defence at the moment, which is looking at the challenges and the capability, and then we’ll set out that path.

    “Part of my message to our European allies is that we’ve all got to step up on both capability and on spending and funding. Now, that includes the UK, which is why I’ve made that commitment to spend more.”

    Starmer has also declared he is prepared to put “our own troops on the ground if necessary” in Ukraine if there is a deal to end the war with Russia.

    Ahead of an “emergency meeting” of European leaders, the prime minister said he was “ready and willing” to send British troops as part of a peacekeeping force in Ukraine.

    Writing in the Daily Telegraph newspaper, the prime minister said the UK was “ready to play a leading role” in Ukraine’s defence and security, by committing £3 billion a year until 2030.

    The article was published as Emmanuel Macron prepares to rally European leaders at a hastily arranged summit in Paris to discuss the next steps for Ukraine.

    The summit will take place as the US sends senior officials to Saudi Arabia for peace talks with Russia — which representatives from Europe have not been invited to.

    Josh Self is Editor of Politics.co.uk, follow him on Bluesky here.

    Politics.co.uk is the UK’s leading digital-only political website. Subscribe to our daily newsletter for all the latest news and analysis.

    Source: Politics

  • Kemi Badenoch praises Trump and ‘populism’ in speech warning of civilisational threats

    Kemi Badenoch warned that Western civilisation is facing a “crisis” point as she praised US president Donald Trump and defended populism in a major speech. 

    The Conservative Party leader addressed delegates at a major rightwing conference in London, held by the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship or ARC, on Monday morning. 

    ARC is an international centre-right organisation, co-founded in 2023 by the Canadian psychologist and political commentator Jordan Peterson alongside the Tory peer Philippa Stroud.

    ARC claims that its conference, being held from 17 to 19 February, will help “re-lay the foundations of our civilisation”.

    In her speech, which preceded that of the speaker of the US House of Representatives Mike Johnson, Badenoch warned of a series of civilisational threats. The Conservative leader declared that the ideas and culture of Western civilisation that have “dominated the world for well over two centuries” are in retreat. 

    ***Politics.co.uk is the UK’s leading digital-only political website. Subscribe to our daily newsletter for all the latest news and analysis.***

    Addressing attendees, Badenoch began: “This is not a crisis of values. It’s a crisis of confidence that has set in at exactly the same time that we face existential threats on the left.

    “This self doubt manifests as an embarrassment of the West’s legacy and in extremis, a hatred of Western history and even its culture.

    “But what about the right? We know that the West has given the world amazing ideas and values, from democracy and free markets to our banking systems, yet around us, we see so much cultural and economic decline.

    “We doubt ourselves. We doubt our ability to build like our predecessors Did. We doubt liberal values of tolerance or free trade, demanding a post-liberal world.”

    She went on to critique “leftwing progressivism” and its manifestations in Diversity Equity and Inclusion (DEI) practises, “climate activism”, the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), as well as UK prime minister Keir Starmer for “taking the knee” during Black Lives Matter protests of 2020. 

    Kemi Badenoch’s embrace of ‘new media’ is a trap

    She contrasted the “courage” of Katharine Birbalsingh, founder and head teacher of Michaela Community School, with that of Starmer. The prime minister, she said, “was cowed by the mob.”

    “The problem isn’t liberalism. The problem is weakness,” she added.

    Badenoch also issued a warning about mass migration, suggesting some of those who come to Britain bring “behaviours, cultures and practices” that undermine Western civilisation.  

    She said: “Millions of people all around the world want to live in the West because they want the benefits.

    “However, some of them bring behaviours, cultures and practices that will undermine the West and the values that helped make us great. They find common cause with our useful idiots who don’t appreciate their own inheritance.”

    The Conservative leader also went on to praise Donald Trump, who she claimed is “fixing” problems as US president. 

    Badenoch said: “A conservative party in Britain has just lost an election. We have a crisis just like the West. People ask me what difference new leadership will make? Well, take a look at president Trump. 

    “He’s showing that sometimes you need that first stint in government to spot the problems, but it’s the second time around when you really know how to fix them.

    “And it starts by telling the truth. A country cannot be successful if its people and its intellectual elite don’t believe in it. This means dealing with the poison of minds that is happening in higher education. 

    “We have been naive on economic growth. We have been naive on issues from net zero to immigration, weakening ourselves and strengthening our competitors. Immigration is far too high. We cannot support all those who wish to come to our country. We have no obligation to do so. The British people must come first.”

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    PMQs verdict: Kemi Badenoch puts in her worst performance yet

    Badenoch went on: “Some cultures are better than others, and it’s only contentious to say this, because honesty has become impossible. People should not be afraid to speak out. We will be proud of our country. 

    “Most of all, we need to get up off our knees and start fighting, not just for the UK, but for the West and our values. Again, we will have to decide between the true but hard way that needs tough decisions and bravery, or whether we have more slogans and announcements but no plan.”

    Badenoch instructed attendees to ignore the “media class complaints about populism”, which she appeared to describe as the “very essence of democracy”.

    However, in an apparent swipe at Nigel Farage and Reform UK, she added: “Populism becomes corrosive if it is just words without thought, rage without reason, anger without the ability to action.”

    Badenoch continued: “For those of us who seek leadership, we must do better, and that is why, in the United Kingdom, my party is starting the largest renewal of policy and ideas in a generation. 

    “This conference is part of finding those answers, and it fills me with hope. If we get this right, we stand at the dawn of a new conservative century with so much opportunity and possibility.”

    “If we throw this opportunity away because of anger or self doubt or weakness, our country and all of Western civilization will be lost, and that is why we, the next generation of conservatives, must lead the world back from the precipice. It is time to speak the truth.”

    Badenoch’s comments come as a new poll indicates the Conservative Party is behind Reform UK, led by Farage, on a range of key indicators.

    A new YouGov/Sky News survey asked respondents about a number of positive and negative measurements.

    Only 10 per cent saw the Tories as strong, with 61 per cent seeing them as weak. Meanwhile, 31 per cent of voters said they thought Reform was strong, and 27 per cent that they were weak.

    18 per cent of voters said they think the Conservatives have a clear sense of direction. 59 per cent said they thought it unclear.

    Reform UK also fared better on this point, with 49 per cent saying the party had a clear sense of purpose, and 24 per cent saying it is unclear.

    Reform also performed better than the Tories when it came to trust. Just 11 per cent of respondents said that the Conservatives are trustworthy, whereas 65 per cent found them untrustworthy. For Reform, the figures were 19 per cent and 52 per cent.

    Farage will be interviewed on the ARC stage on Tuesday by Jordan Peterson. Reform’s chair, Zia Yusuf, is also expected to take part in an ARC panel for a session called “The choices we face: unilateral economic disarmament or a pro-human way?”

    Josh Self is Editor of Politics.co.uk, follow him on Bluesky here.

    Politics.co.uk is the UK’s leading digital-only political website. Subscribe to our daily newsletter for all the latest news and analysis.

    Source: Politics

  • Week-in-Review: Lord Hermer, Blue Labour and the defining choice Keir Starmer faces

    Across successive PMQs scuffles, Kemi Badenoch has characterised her opponent, the prime minister, as in hock to some clandestine sect of North London solicitors. Keir Starmer is a “lawyer”, the Conservative chief chides, not a “leader”. He is concerned with dinner party invitations and the righteous commendation of former colleagues, not with the national interest. Cue the Tory roar. 

    So frequently does Badenoch pursue this (at times conspiratorial) line of inquiry that Starmer’s team has prepared a specific comeback. “We know she is not a lawyer, she is clearly not a leader”, Starmer declared in a recent session. “And if she keeps on like this, she is going to be the next lettuce.”

    The riposte ensured Starmer won the exchange and the surrounding session. Labour MPs lapped up the PM’s allusion to Liz Truss’ defeat at the hands of a bewigged leaf vegetable. (The lettuce did have hands). How the Tory benches hushed. 

    But Badenoch’s question — an old Boris Johnson quip from his buccaneering heyday — remains outstanding. The development of this government in recent weeks points to a prevalent tension between the PM’s two distinct personalities. Keir Starmer the methodical lawyer and Keir Starmer the ruthless politician still vie for supremacy.

    At the peak of Partygate, Starmer’s dual nature worked in tandem to defenestrate his bête noire. The now-prime minister, treating the commons as his courtroom, ruthlessly cross-examined Johnson into submission. In the House, Starmer’s self-contained professionalism contrasted reassuringly with the accused’s blithe bluster. Politically, the lawyer versus the liar imagery portrayed a potent dichotomy. Harriet Harman and the privileges committee did the rest. 

    But since entering No 10 Downing Street, Starmer’s split personality — and the tension between legal and political imperatives — has infused his government. If there is a disjointed, unbalanced feel to the government’s priorities, it flows from the individual in whose contested image Whitehall is now constituted. 

    Consider the case of Lord Hermer, the prime minister’s pick to serve as attorney general, whose striking prominence personifies the first half of this law-politics paradox. 

    ***This content first appeared in Politics.co.uk’s Week-in-Review newsletter, sign up for free and never miss this article.***

    The law

    Lord (Richard) Hermer was plucked from relative obscurity in July 2024 to perform the role that, it’s often suggested, once marked the apex of Starmer’s ambition. 

    The attorney general is a low-profile position, by design and necessity. Sure, sometimes they appear before MPs to declare a parliament “dead” — sometimes they are Suella Braverman. But attorneys general, generally, accomplish their work behind the scenes. They counsel ministers on how mooted measures will interact with the judicial system; they are tasked with reviewing Crown Court sentences that are considered “unduly lean”. Crucially, their advice to officials is delivered in the strictest confidence. Requests to see such guidance are usually vehemently denied. The attorney general’s activity should be imperceptible.

    Brace for faint praise: Starmer, who became an MP in 2015 after a long career in law and officialdom, would have suited the role. Indeed, had Ed Miliband won the general election of that year, the prime minister’s law officer destiny would surely have come to pass. As Labour leader, Miliband persuaded the now-PM to join his party and stand for parliament as the MP for Holborn and St Pancras. (Contemporary reports suggested the constituency’s candidate selection process was stitched up in Starmer’s favour). Miliband must have imagined Starmer, an institutionalist with progressive prowess, as perfect for the role of attorney general in a Labour government.

    Lord Hermer is cut from the same silk as the Starmer of 2015. The human rights law specialists are close personal friends, having practised as colleagues at Doughty Street Chambers in the noughties. And like Starmer, Hermer’s lawyer past is considered prime hunting ground for Tory attack dogs. The attorney general once represented Sri Lankan refugees to the Chagos Islands and ex-Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams (in separate cases). He acted, too, for the human rights group Liberty in the case of Isis bride Shamima Begum. His record of clients reads as a Tory rogues’ gallery.

    Hermer’s public commentary, delivered before his time in office, is a similarly rich resource for Conservative propagandists. He once said that pledges to “control our borders” were dehumanising; acknowledged a “moral argument” for Britain to pay reparations for slavery; decried Donald Trump as an “orange tyrant”; and, as late as May 2023, celebrated Just Stop Oil group’s disruptive protests as “inspiring”. 

    Nonetheless, it is Hermer’s role in government, as a distinctly perceptible attorney general, that continues to attract the greatest share of SW1 chagrin. And nor is such criticism limited to the 121 MPs who named Badenoch as Tory leader last year. According to recent reports, a string of cabinet ministers consider Hermer as a spanner in the machinery of government: a quibbling block on the worthy churn of politics and policy. Ministers have described Hermer to The Times as a “freeze on government”, who opposes measures on the off chance of conflict in the courts. 

    In other words: this government, unburdened by doctrine, has become burdened by legal strictures. 

    Delivering his first set-piece speech as attorney general last year, Hermer declared that the UK government would — after years of legal brinkmanship from Tory premiers — once more place the rule of law at the centre of its domestic and diplomatic agendas. To ensure as much, Hermer unveiled his plan to amend the guidance for “assessing legal risk” in government; that would ensure “the standards for calibrating legality” were raised, he said. “I want [lawyers] to feel empowered to give their full and frank advice to me and others in government and to stand up for the rule of law.”

    Hermer has since defended these changes under question from sceptical MPs. Asked about the “practical impact” of his amendments at a justice select committee hearing, Hermer argued the legal risk guidance he inherited had “risked diluting legal standards”. Old guidance meant ministers were “being advised that there was a respectable legal argument” for a particular policy, but weren’t being properly informed it “was highly likely to be unlawful”, Hermer contended. 

    Labour MP Andy Slaughter, the committee chair, did not sound wholly convinced. In what seems like a far-sighted observation, he suggested that overly stringent advice could “impair” the ministers’ ability to construct a “radical and reforming government”. Slaughter cited the government’s “very ambitious targets on housebuilding and planning”. Labour MP Sarah Russell also expressed “some concerns”. 

    Hermer did not budge. “The guidance will not inhibit decision-makers”, he insisted. “The guidance will ensure that decision-makers are possessed with proper, full, comprehensive legal analysis on which to make their decision.”

    ***This content first appeared in Politics.co.uk’s Week-in-Review newsletter, sign up for free and never miss this article.***

    The politics

    This was the context into which Lord Glasman’s pointed intervention was received this week.

    In an interview with the New Statesman, the leading Labour peer said he considered Hermer an “arrogant, progressive fool”. “He’s got to go”, Glasman said of his noble colleague. “He is the absolute archetype of an arrogant, progressive fool who thinks that law is a replacement for politics… They talk about the rule of law but what they want is a rule of lawyers.”

    Lord (Maurice) Glasman is the intellectual force behind Blue Labour, the party faction that advocates a counter-intuitive blend of economically left/statist policies and social conservatism. The Blue Labour weltanschauung has commanded significant attention in recent weeks; Glasman’s prominence has risen in direct proportion to the burgeoning threat of Nigel Farage and Reform UK. 

    The Labour peer’s appearance at Donald Trump’s inauguration, as the only party figure to receive an invitation (courtesy of vice president JD Vance), sparked particular intrigue — especially as it coincided with the formation of a new Blue Labour caucus at Westminster. Dan Carden, once a devout Corbynist, leads the grouping of MPs. 

    Lord Glasman also heads a Policy Exchange research programme called the “Future of the Left” — alongside fellow Blue Labourites Jon Cruddas and Jonathan Rutherford. No 10 is said to be paying close attention to the project’s work, and Rutherford is reported to have recently met several of Keir Starmer’s aides at No 10, including his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney. 

    McSweeney is a natural Blue Labour ally. Glasman and the man who masterminded Labour’s 2024 election victory first met during the latter’s time fighting the British National Party (BNP) in Barking and Dagenham. 

    McSweeney, fortunately, has never been less of a mystery. Thanks to Get In — Patrick Maguire and Gabriel Pogrund’s extraordinarily detailed new account of his rise to power (with Starmer in tow), we have never known more about McSweeney’s politics and motivations. Maguire and Pogrund, journalists with the Times and Sunday Times newspapers, purvey his loathing of elite progressive opinion and its pernicious capture of the Labour Party. 

    In one instructive passage, McSweeney is reported as asking Labour colleagues a series of pressing questions: “Are we always going to be for the judges? Are we always going to be for the BBC? Why should Gary Lineker be paid £2 million a year?”. The No 10 chief of staff, it is written, felt “Labour’s instincts had become conservative, elitist, too willing to defend failure provided those failing were its friends: lawyers, activists, columnists.”

    For all its sentimental claims of iconoclasm and people power, [Labour] was really a ‘party of the status quo’, an echo chamber for the received wisdom of metropolitan England that its traditional voters despised.

    McSweeney has long argued Labour must adopt clear and robust positions on law and order, on immigration and on questions of culture — issues the party in previous iterations squeamishly avoided. Today, he spearheads a political operation that is, more and more, cast in the image of Blue Labour.

    ***This content first appeared in Politics.co.uk’s Politics@Lunch newsletter, sign-up for free and never miss our daily briefing.***

    Disruption

    For the faithful Blue Labourite, Lord Hermer represents all that is wrong with elite progressive opinion and its grip on the party at large. His entrance into Labour politics last July was, in truth, a natural evolution; Hermer followed in the footsteps of many a human rights specialist. Blue Labour loathes the supple partition between the legal profession and party politics.

    After all, the attorney general possesses the exact managerial, arch-institutionalist impulses Glasman insists Labour must eschew to resist the insurgent right. Hermer’s legalism is antithetical to the Blue Labour cause in a most literal sense. He embodies a contradictory theory of government. He values establishment thinking over political insurgency.

    From Keir Starmer’s vantage point in No 10 Downing Street, this dichotomy is no mere abstraction. It is presented to him as a practical political choice — one that could define the shape of his premiership. 

    Last month, responding to critical briefings at Hermer’s expense, a No 10 spokesperson voiced the prime minister’s full confidence in the attorney general. But the government’s politics has developed rapidly in recent weeks — and Hermer is looking more and more like an anachronism from a bygone reset. 

    Starmer’s increasingly strident stances, borne unmistakably of McSweeney’s influence, speak volumes. There is a new, all-encompassing emphasis on growth; a harder line on border security; a resurgent frustration with Whitehall inertia. As the prime minister embraces his role as a pugnacious insurgent, the tension at the heart of his government throbs. 

    Addressing ministers at a cabinet away-day last month, Starmer berated “progressive liberals” who have become “too relaxed about not listening to people about the impact of [immigration]”. This sentiment was echoed by the official readout. The PM urged his team “to increase the pace of change to meet the demands of a new era”. He added: “My reflection is that while we are working away the world is speeding up.”

    Starmer’s language reflects his gradual-turned-sudden conversion to the cause of political disruption. The focus on immigration and globalisation, the smashing of progressive taboos, the addressing of societal anxieties — it’s all ripped straight from the Blue Labour playbook. In truth, Starmer’s suspicion of his surrounding structures has been escalating ever since his statement on the Southport murders took aim at egregious state failure.  

    Disruption is coming, Starmer and McSweeney have concluded. They will be its author — not its victim. 

    But just how categorical is this tangible tone shift in practice? The PM’s commitment to the inherent good of institutions and to international law runs deep — arguably deeper than his recent reformation. Hermer’s place in government is a testament to this — and therefore an intellectual continuity in the prime minister’s otherwise fluid politics. 

    Hermer, in some compelling senses, reflects the Starmer of 2015: before No 10, before the Labour leadership, before Westminster — before McSweeney. The government’s strategic tension — between insurgency and institutionalism — is so politically profound because it is personal to Starmer. The tension reflects his striking evolution since 2015, since 2020, since 2024 — and simultaneously highlights aspects of his politics McSweeney is yet to dispel.

    The prime minister’s past is in conflict with his future — a future that the momentum of events and McSweeney demand.

    And this tension must be resolved. Starmer’s apparent embrace of Blue Labour doctrine has birthed an untenable hybrid: the PM is both a brazen populist and final bastion of the establishment — gatekeeper and barbarian. 

    ***This content first appeared in Politics.co.uk’s Politics@Lunch newsletter, sign-up for free and never miss our daily briefing.***

    The Politics vs The law

    The contested concept of “sovereignty” encapsulates how legal and political principle can interact in acute disharmony. So too does the concept of “Keir Starmer”. Can the prime minister resolve his ideological contradictions and discover his true political calling? Does he want to? Will he dare?

    History serves as a guide in two senses. First, in a reductive rock-paper-scissors sense, politics beats law. The legal reality that sovereignty is vested in the United Kingdom parliament does not correspond with — or delegitimise — the political aspirations and assumptions of Scottish nationalists, for instance. The “pooling” of sovereignty to supranational bodies, such as the European Union, creates a new political reality — even though the default legal position does not change. Referenda express a new, arguably more potent, form of sovereignty than simple statute law confers.

    Oh, and there is also Donald Trump — convicted felon and 47th president — to consider. 

    Abstraction aside, perhaps a more pertinent precedent is this: the McSweeney-Starmer dynamic ratchets only in one direction. Sometimes it can take time for the cogs to shift and convulsion to resolve — but as Get In elucidates, when the prime minister settles on a course of action, he pursues it with genuine remorselessness. Baroness Gray and Jeremy Corbyn can attest. McSweeney and Starmer’s resonance, after an unforeseen ruction, is restored. But the consensus is forged on the former’s terms. Morgan always wins.

    Time for some steps back. Get In does not reveal what McSweeney thinks about Hermer specifically. There is no suggestion Lord Glasman was speaking for McSweeney in his NS interview. McSweeney’s natural affinity with Blue Labour is not reflected in any official collaboration. 

    Nor is Hermer, despite the headline suggestions of critical columnists and Conservative frontbenchers, solely responsible for the government’s principal legal-political debacle: the Chagos Islands handover. 

    All that said, the Chagos fiasco does flow from a familiar hierarchy of imperatives: strict legal probity has been privileged above and beyond considerations of political sense. The government took the view, reportedly on Hermer’s advice, that Britain has an “obligation” to hand the Chagos Islands to Mauritius — even though the International Court of Justice’s opinion on the matter is not legally binding. 

    The details of the deal reflect dismal politics. Assuming the new US administration consents, the UK government will cede sovereignty of the Chagos Islands on the agreement it can lease back the Diego Garcia military base for 99 years at the cost of £9 billion. 

    But even if Donald Trump objects, the political damage is surely done. The saga has made Labour look profligate with the public purse and unpatriotic. In electoral terms, that is the losing Labour formula. 

    McSweeney won this argument in opposition. How quickly Whitehall inertia smuggled complacency back into Labour politics. 

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    His friends for his life

    Starmer stands tallest at the crossroads. Moments of apparent flux prompt a decisive response. The prime minister finds solace in ending the career of a former friend or ex-comrade.

    Get In author Patrick Maguire, Westminster’s most accomplished Starmerologist, reckons that the prime minister is “capable of going anywhere he believes political advantage might lie”. His tome’s opening epigraph repurposes an old Jeremy Thorpe quote, issued in response to Harold MacMillan’s Night of the Long Knives cabinet reshuffle: “Greater love hath no man than this, that he lay down his friends for his life.”

    Hermer, the personification of all Blue Labour exists to eradicate, has good reason to fear Starmer’s self-interested scythe. His exit from government, if it does eventually come to pass, would be a sure signal of prime ministerial intent.

    Practically of course, shuffling Hermer out of the Attorney General’s Office (AGO) would be a simple administrative task. He is a Labour peer with no political-factional grounding in the party. Hermer owes his ermine robes and ministerial red box to Starmer. There are plenty of Labour KCs who could assume his post. There would be none of the political tremors caused by Jeremy Corbyn’s exile in 2020; or logistical quandaries posed by Sue Gray’s deposition. Hermer, materially, is Starmer’s most vulnerable minister. 

    Psychologically though, the act of removing Hermer would be harrowing. It would mark Starmer’s most ruthless act by some distance. The PM’s relationship with his attorney general renders the above Thorpe quote doubly applicable; Starmer would also be signalling a definitive break with the philosophy he once cherished, before McSweeney burdened him with power and contradictions. 

    And yet this is the choice the prime minister faces. The level of noise that surrounds Hermer means that any decision to retain his skills would be an active one. For what it is worth, Starmer’s defence of Hermer at prime minister’s questions on Wednesday was described as “impassioned” by the Guardian. We have seen Starmer defend safe colleagues (Rachel Reeves recently for instance). He could have been far stronger. 

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    Morgan always wins

    Hermer is doing the job Starmer hired him to do — and doing it well. That’s the problem. 

    As Miliband once wanted Starmer, Starmer knew Hermer would be a statement appointment. His zealous emphasis on proper procedure symbolised the government’s stability is change maxim. 

    But this sentiment has been slowly eroded by the harsh realities of government. Voters care about ends not means. Since July 2024, Labour has won no plaudits for its due respect for norms and veneration of convention. We can say Hermer’s appointment, in these terms at least, reflected the wrong priorities. 

    In practical terms, to appropriate the PM’s own vernacular, the attorney general is a blocker in a government to builders. Further tension between Starmer’s political initiative, as reimagined in recent weeks, and the legal advice Hermer consummately enforces is inevitable — on asylum law, on housebuilding, on growth projects. Meanwhile, the attorney general’s belief in the sanctity and inviolability of international law — restated in a speech to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe last month — could become a significant sticking point if Labour turns on the ECHR. That is far from out of the question. 

    The bottom line is this: an insurgency with glaring internal impediments is no insurgency at all — not politically, not practically. McSweeney must recognise this. 

    Now, if the politics proceeds as precedent suggests, the prime minister will come around to the McSweeney view. Starmer’s final sacrifice will be his former self. Mr Rules will be replaced by someone willing to shatter norms to deliver for voters. 

    And McSweeney will have utterly reconfigured the man he happened upon in 2019. Total victory.

    Josh Self is Editor of Politics.co.uk, follow him on Bluesky here.

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    Source: Politics

  • Senior Conservative says ‘70 per cent chance’ of Reform-Tory merger before next election

    There is a “70 per cent chance” that the Conservative Party and Reform UK will merge or agree to an electoral pact before the next general election, a senior Tory has claimed.

    Sir Edward Leigh, who as “father of the House” is parliament’s longest serving MP, also argued that if his party is unable come up with a strong immigration policy ahead of the local elections in May, it will be “slaughtered”.

    Leigh, an MP since 1983, added that he did not know if Kemi Badenoch will be leading the party at the next election.

    Speaking to GB News, Leigh said that the Conservatives must agree to “a full scale merger” or not compete in 100 seats where Nigel Farage‘s party is strongest, in order to thwart a second Labour term.

    Asked about the odds of a merger between the Conservatives and Reform, he said: “Very high — 70 per cent. If not merger, a deal.”

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    The Gainsborough MP added: “We can’t just stand against each other in the first past the post system. So I would have at the very least an electoral alliance where we would stand down in 100 seats and let Reform take on Labour, or a full scale merger. And why not?”

    Leigh said around a third of the party’s 121 MPs now want a merger or a deal with Reform UK.

    “At a bare minimum” the MPs who backed Robert Jenrick in the 2024 Conservative leadership campaign are in favour of doing a deal with Farage’s party, he clarified.

    He said: “I would have that at the bare minimum there would be 44, and if we are still in this bad place in a year or two’s time it will be many more than that, maybe half.”

    But Leigh insisted that the political logic of some electoral arrangement was “absolutely inevitable”.

    He added: “Reform policies don’t go any further than I want to do. I want to have an absolute right to get out of the ECHR [European Convention on Human Rights], arrest boat people when they land on our shores and deport them.

    “And I want a zero cap on net legal migration, and there are loads of Tory MPs who agree with me.

    “Our policies are absolutely identical and there is no point spending the next three or four years scrapping and then standing against each other in every single constituency and then Keir Starmer gets back into power with 30 per cent of the vote.”

    Asked if Badenoch will be leader at the next general election, Leigh said: “I have no idea — I wish her well. I have to say that going back through history we did burn through leaders after we lost badly in 1997 before we got to one who won.”

    Commenting on Leigh’s interview with GB News, a Labour spokesperson said: “The Tories continue to say the quiet part out loud: they’re plotting a dodgy backroom deal with Reform to deceive the public.

    “The Conservatives wrecked public services and Nigel Farage plans to wreck the NHS — charging patients thousands for routine treatments. Their now open secret risks bringing chaos back to Britain.

    “Only Labour will stand up for Britain. Our Plan for Change is delivering investment and reform to deliver growth, put more money in people’s pockets, and secure Britain’s borders.”

    Josh Self is Editor of Politics.co.uk, follow him on Bluesky here.

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    Source: Politics

  • Ukraine is on ‘irreversible path to Nato’, Keir Starmer tells Zelenskyy

    Ukraine is still on an “irreversible path to Nato”, Keir Starmer has told Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

    In an apparent rebuke of the position taken by the US administration, the prime minister reiterated the UK’s commitment to Ukraine joining Nato, “as agreed by allies at the Washington Summit last year”, a Downing Street statement said.

    “He was unequivocal that there could be no talks about Ukraine, without Ukraine”, it added.

    Starmer made the remarks in a phone call with Zelenskyy as global leaders gathered in Munich for a major security conference.

    The prime minister’s stance contradicts the message that came out of Washington earlier this week, following comments by the US defence secretary.

    Pete Hegseth told Ukraine’s allies on Wednesday that the US does not see Nato membership for Kyiv as part of a solution to the ongoing war. In comments delivered on Wednesday, Hegseth also said it is “unrealistic” for Ukraine’s borders to return to what it was like before Russia invaded Crimea in 2014. 

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    Trump, who endorsed Hegseth’s comments, held a a 90-minute phone call with Vladimir Putin this week, in which it was purportedly agreed that talks to end the war in Ukraine should start “immediately”.

    “We each talked about the strengths of our respective nations, and the great benefit that we will someday have in working together”, Trump said in a social media post. “But first, as we both agreed, we want to stop the millions of deaths taking place in the War with Russia/Ukraine.”

    Zelenskyy has also had an hour-long phone call with Trump this week. Commenting after, the Ukraine president said they “agreed to maintain further contact and plan upcoming meetings”.

    The full No 10 statement on the UK PM’s call with Zelenskyy reads: “The prime minister spoke to the president of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, this morning.

    “The prime minister began by reiterating the UK’s concrete support for Ukraine, for as long as it’s needed.

    “He was unequivocal that there could be no talks about Ukraine, without Ukraine.

    “Ukraine needed strong security guarantees, further lethal aid and a sovereign future, and it could count on the UK to step up, he added.

    “The prime minister reiterated the UK’s commitment to Ukraine being on an irreversible path to NATO, as agreed by Allies at the Washington Summit last year.

    “Discussing the upcoming third anniversary of Ukraine’s courageous defence of its sovereignty in the face of Russia’s barbaric full-scale invasion, the leaders agreed that it would be an important moment to demonstrate international unity and support for Ukraine.

    “The leaders also reflected on the prime minister’s visit to Kyiv last month, and the president updated on his plans at Munich Security Conference.

    “They agreed to stay in close contact.”

    A statement on Zelenskyy’s social media said: “I informed prime minister Starmer about my discussion with president Trump and contacts with the American side. The Ukrainian and American teams must work together with Europeans and all our global partners to achieve concrete results.

    “The security of each nation depends on strengthening our collective security. It is crucial that every new week brings tangible results that will ensure a lasting and reliable peace.

    “We also discussed an action plan for the near future to shape a common strategy on security, economic cooperation, and political partnership.”

    Josh Self is Editor of Politics.co.uk, follow him on Bluesky here.

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    Source: Politics

  • UK defence secretary’s message to Trump: ‘No negotiation about Ukraine without Ukraine’

    There can be no negotiation on ending the war in Ukraine “without Ukraine”, the UK defence secretary has declared. 

    The comments come after US president Donald Trump said he and Russian premier Vladimir Putin had agreed to start negotiations on ending the war “immediately”.

    Responding to Trump’s comments on Wednesday, John Healey described Nato’s job as to “put Ukraine in strongest possible position for any talks.”

    Speaking to reporters, Healey said: “We’ve seen the calls from president Trump overnight and we all want to see a durable peace and no return to conflict and aggression.

    “And let’s not forget, Russia remains a threat well beyond Ukraine.”

    Donald Trump had a 90-minute phone call with Vladimir Putin on Wednesday, leading to a series of major announcements. After the discussion, the US president said he and Putin agreed that talks to end the war in Ukraine should start “immediately”.

    “We each talked about the strengths of our respective nations, and the great benefit that we will someday have in working together”, Trump said in a social media post. “But first, as we both agreed, we want to stop the millions of deaths taking place in the War with Russia/Ukraine.”

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    Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky also had an hour-long phone call with Trump. Zelensky said they “agreed to maintain further contact and plan upcoming meetings”.

    In comments delivered earlier on Wednesday, the new US defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, said it is “unrealistic” for Ukraine’s borders to return to what it was like before Russia invaded Crimea in 2014. Trump later endorsed Hegseth’s comments. 

    Hegseth also said the US would no longer “tolerate an imbalanced relationship” with its allies and called on Nato members to spend much more on defence.

    “Safeguarding European security must be an imperative for European members of Nato,” the US defence secretary said. “Europe must provide the overwhelming share of future lethal and non-lethal aid to Ukraine.”

    Healey insisted the UK had “heard a clear message from the US about stepping up and we are”, pointing to a new £150 million package of military aid including drones, tanks and air defence systems for Ukraine.

    The comments come as Nato defence ministers gather in Brussels for the first day of a summit.

    Healey told reporters ahead of the meeting that “my message… will be that there can be no negotiation about Ukraine without Ukraine and Ukraine’s voice must be at the heart of any talks.”

    “The Ukrainians are fighting bravely”, he said. “It’s our jobs as defence ministers here at Nato to put them in the best position to secure a lasting peace through strength.”

    Josh Self is Editor of Politics.co.uk, follow him on Bluesky here.

    Politics.co.uk is the UK’s leading digital-only political website. Subscribe to our daily newsletter for all the latest news and analysis.

    Source: Politics