Category: Politics

  • Trump tariffs could disrupt UK medicines supply, Wes Streeting warns

    The production and supply of medicines could be impacted by the tariffs placed on the UK, the health secretary has warned.

    Wes Streeting said Britain “already had issues with medicines production and supply internationally” but warned that this could be made worse by the 10 per cent tariffs imposed by the US.

    Speaking to Sky News on Tuesday morning, he said: “We are constantly watching and acting on this situation to try and get medicines into the country to make sure we’ve got availability, to show some flexibility in terms of how medicines are dispensed to deal with shortages.

    “But whether it’s medicines, whether it’s parts for manufacturing, whether it’s the ability of businesses in this country to turn a profit — this is an extremely turbulent situation. It’s unprecedented in terms of global trade and the steps that the United States has taken.”

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    Streeting said a “number of factors” are in play in ensuring people can access medicines.

    He added: “There have been challenges in terms of manufacturing, challenges in terms of distribution and if we start to see tariffs kicking in, that’s another layer of challenge. But we watch this situation extremely closely.

    “We work on a daily basis to make sure that we have the medicines supply this country needs.

    “Where we do see disruptions to supply, we also take steps at the dispensing end to show the flexibility needed to make sure people can access the prescriptions they need.

    “But, as I say, whether it’s medicines, whether it’s parts for manufacturing, whether it’s global trade, more generally, this is an extremely volatile and turbulent backdrop for the country, and that’s why the prime minister, the trade secretary, the entire cabinet are focused on this and making sure that we’re taking the steps needed here at home to protect British industries and Britain’s public services”.

    The prime minister has insisted that he will only sign a trade deal with the US that is in the UK’s “national interest”, as he seeks to combat Donald Trump’s tariff regime which has prompted economic turbulence across the world.

    Speaking during a visit to a Jaguar Land Rover factory in Solihull on Monday, Keir Starmer sought to reassure the public there would not be a trade deal at any price.

    “I will only strike a deal if it’s in the national interest”, he commented. “That’s my priority — strength abroad, security and renewal at home.”

    The PM said: “This is a moment for cool heads; nobody wins from a trade war, you know that.

    “But it’s also a moment for urgency, because we’ve got to rise together as a nation to the great challenge of our age – and it is the great challenge – which is to renew Britain so we’re secure in this era of global instability.”

    Trump has showed no sign of changing course, urging people to “be strong, courageous and patient”, promising that “greatness will be the result”.

    The president has imposed a 10 per cent tariff on US imports of British goods, along with the 25 per cent tariff on cars and separate import taxes for steel and aluminium.

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

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    Source: Politics

  • Ruth Jones: ‘We must not turn our backs on the plight of persecuted Christians’

    Where freedoms so fundamental as belief are under attack, we often find other basic human rights compromised.

    Across the world, many people are suffering obscene and difficult things simply because of their religion or faith.

    Freedom of belief is an issue that is close to my heart. In Parliament, I have the privilege of being an officer of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for International Freedom of Religion or Belief – but the privilege is often heavy and profound.

    In 2023, I represented our all-party group at the International Religious Freedom Summit in Taiwan. The IRF Summit is the biggest annual religious freedom gathering in the world, and we heard harrowing reports of persecution, torture and killings.

    I pay tribute, then and now, to the unwavering strength of those who have suffered loss, baseless eviction from their homes, rejection from employment opportunities and imprisonment solely for their faith.

    Amidst the wave of persecution, hate crimes and prejudice, a number of organisations are working tirelessly to expose and combat these injustices.

    The reports that reach MPs like me comprise hours upon hours of research on difficult topics like religious extremism, political oppression and government overreach.

    By gathering – and sharing – this information, these organisations expose violations of the International Declaration of Human Rights and amplify the voices of those who are otherwise silenced.

    Their work is instrumental. Without their vigilance, so many cases of abuse would remain unknown, and the people they support would continue to suffer.

    Despite the very real threat of persecution, hundreds of millions of Christians remain steadfast in their faith at great personal cost and peril, willingly risking their livelihoods, their lives, and the wellbeing of their loved ones.

    This strength should not go unnoticed, and they must not make these sacrifices in vain. We must advocate on their behalf, fighting so they can receive the fundamental freedoms so many of us in democratic societies have taken for granted.

    To ignore their plight is to turn our backs on the very principles of justice and dignity at the heart of what it means to be human.

    Christianity, the largest religion by population, is also the most persecuted minority faith in parts of the world. This comes from a number of angles, including Islamist extremism, Marxist regimes, and dictatorial governments. In some countries, public celebrations of Christmas are not just discouraged but life-threatening.

    Open Doors, an organisation monitoring this persecution, reported alarming figures last year. Last year, almost 5,000 believers worldwide were killed for their faith. Most were from Nigeria.

    Other countries in sub-Saharan Africa have seen rising numbers of Christian deaths, too. Last year, in Burkina Faso, 201 believers lost their lives – that is more than a fivefold increase from 2023.

    Last year, almost 210,000 Christians were forced to leave their homes, go into hiding, or exile, because of their faith. Almost half of these were from Nigeria.

    Since its inaugural publication in 1983, North Korea has topped the World Watch List a shocking 23 times. As in Burkina Faso, the persecution of North Korean Christians intensified in 2024, coinciding with a spate of stricter regulations announced by the authorities at the start of the year.

    Across the world, more and more Christians are needing to worship undercover. In Afghanistan, for example, it is effectively impossible for a Christian to publicly express their faith.

    In Algeria, all Protestant churches have been forced to close, and the number of Christians awaiting trial is at an all-time high.

    In China, an era of relative tolerance is over. Unregistered churches are illegal. Church teaching is informed by ideological pressure and official indoctrination. Religious education for children is banned.

    The small Christian community in Libya has had to be extremely careful to avoid a repeat of the 2023 crackdown that saw a wave of arrests. Believers are having to be increasingly creative and courageous in how they gather – if at all.

    Mexico – a country where around 90 per cent of its 130 million-strong population is Christian – is the only country in Latin America to climb the latest World Watch List rankings.

    In areas where organised crime is rampant, churches and Christians who seek to counter it make themselves targets, and there has been an increase in the number of believers abducted and killed.

    From violent attacks to house arrest and forced marriage, Christian women and girls are being shamed and persecuted twice: for their faith and their gender.

    All United Nations member states have signed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which covers freedom to adopt, change or retain one’s beliefs, and freedom from coercion.

    Despite this, there is a lack of accountability for those who fail to uphold these principles, leaving religious minorities around the world vulnerable to lifelong persecution.

    The UK has demonstrated great leadership in promoting freedom of religion and belief in recent years and, as long as there are people being denied these rights, must continue to do so.

    In the words of Martin Luther King Jr, injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. And what could be more fundamental than the freedom to believe?

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    Source: Politics

  • ‘Nobody wins from a trade war’, Keir Starmer declares in warning to Trump — full speech

    Keir Starmer has declared that “nobody wins from a trade war” in an apparent warning to US president Donald Trump. 

    The prime minister’s comments came after the government announced it will relax rules around electric vehicles, with carmakers affected by Trump’s tariffs.

    Starmer said there is “no doubt” the challenge that tariffs put forward by the United States bring, but he added: “This is a moment for cool heads.”

    The PM commented: “Nobody wins from a trade war — you know that, but it’s also a moment for urgency. 

    “Because we’ve got to rise together as a nation to the great challenge of our age — and it is the great challenge of our age — which is to renew Britain so we are stable in this era of global instability.”

    Read the prime minister’s full speech below.

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    Can I just say a big thank you to the entire workforce here. Some of you are here with us this afternoon. I just want to say thank you for showing us what you do. We have been able to see some of the skill and experience that you put into this incredible product, years and years in the making and the technology.

    But thank you also for making us proud to be British, because as each car rolls off here, that is rolling off your production line. That is your commitment, your toil, your work your professionalism. But it is then a product which you should be rightly proud of, and we are really proud of as a country.

    I know how much you put into that, and I want you to know just how much we appreciate what you do.

    Thank you for everyone for joining us this afternoon.

    Jaguar Land Rover, our leading exporter of goods, employing thousands of people across the West Midlands and beyond.

    That proud symbol of British engineering brilliance. And brilliance is the right word. It is our industrial heritage, but also in my strongly held view, it is our industrial future, not just our heritage.
    My message to you is simple: these are challenging times, but we have chosen to come here because we are going to back you to the hilt.
    I think it’s really significant that after the announcement on Wednesday, we had Adrian with us in Downing Street at 7 o’clock the next morning, and here we are on Monday, so read into that a statement of intent because it is a statement of intent about how important this is for you, for us and for the country.

    As Rachel has said, there is no doubt about the challenge, but this is a moment for cool heads.

    No one wins from a trade war.

    But it is also a moment for urgency.

    Because we have to rise, together as nation to the great challenge of our age, and it is the great challenge to renew Britain so that we are secure in this era of global instability.

    Nobody is pretending that tariffs are good news. You know that better than anyone.

    25% tariffs on automative exports. 10% on other goods.

    That is a huge challenge to our future. The global economic consequences could be profound. But this moment has also made something very clear.

    That this is not a passing phase. And just as we’ve seen with our national security and defence, particularly in relation to the war in Ukraine, now with our commerce and trade,

    This is a changing and completely new world.

    An era where old assumptions, long taken for granted simply no longer apply.

    Before the election – I called it an age of insecurity. And that is the right phrase. Insecurity. Because that’s how this is felt in the lives of working people. Insecurity and worry for builders, for carers, for nursers, for factory workers like people here in Coventry, working harder and harder for the pound in their pocket, yet watching this rising tide of insecurity threaten to sweep away the things we cherish in our communities.

    Trust me – I know people will be feeling that right now.

    But to those people, I say, we have your back.

    This government will not just sit back and hope.

    That is how politics has failed you in recent years.

    Attempting to manage crises without fundamental change just leads to managed decline.

    So no – we’re going to seize the possibilities.

    Fight for the future. On defence spending, on AI, on clean British energy and on manufacturing, including car building.

    Make those forces work for Britain. Rewire our economy and our state so that once again they serve the interests of working people.

    This is why we are rewiring the state completely.

    Ripping up the regulation that stops it being a force for good.

    Building new homes, new towns, new infrastructure.

    Accelerating the investment that will finally unlock the potential of every community.

    And let me be really clear as well. Our future is in our hands.

    And so of course – we will keep calm and fight for the best deal with the US and we have been discussing that intensely in the last few days.

    But we’re also going to work with our key partners to reduce barriers to trade across the globe.

    Accelerate trade deals with the rest of the world and champion the cause of free and open trade – right across the globe. And just like car building, that has always been our heritage – and we won’t turn our backs on it now.

    And look, when it comes to the US, I will only strike a deal if it is in the national interest. If it is the right thing to do for our security. If it protects the pound in the pocket that working people, across our country, work so hard to earn for their family.

    That is my priority. That is always my priority. Strength abroad – security and renewal at home.

    And on that journey of renewal we take another step today with our car industry.

    You know, there are people in this country who love to talk down our manufacturing. They say – we don’t make anything important anymore. ‘That’s not Britain’. Well – I would invite anyone who thinks like that to come here and see what you do in this factory.

    Anyone who is talking down manufacturing. Come here to Jaguar Land Rover and see what you are doing and they wouldn’t say that again.

    Because just as I’ve said, when we were going around earlier, what I saw made me proud.

    And I hope that if I feel proud of what you are doing, you are entitled to feel proud of what you are doing.

    This is British brilliance in the flesh.

    You’re making cars here – but you’re also representing our country with each car as it departs. That’s the pride that always goes with making things.

    And I’ve said it many times before, but I will say it again: my dad worked in a factory. He was an engineer. He made things with his hands. And he taught me as I was growing up, you should value the things that we make.

    And that’s what brilliant about manufacturing. And manufacturing shapes the identity of a place. This place, and of a community and a country. And that’s how it gets in your blood.

    Which is why electric vehicles are so important. Yes – of course it’s about the climate and you won’t hear me undermining the urgency of that cause.

    But it’s also about taking the pride, the heritage, the identity of places like this and securing it for the future.

    That’s what the previous government never understood. The link between manufacturing and who we are as a country.

    But those days are over. They are finished. This is a government of industrial renewal.

    Because my choice, in this volatile world is to back British brilliance.

    I believe that British car companies should be at the forefront of the electric revolution. This is a race we belong in.

    And so I think EV targets are a good thing.

    They are good for the climate. Good for business certainty and investment. Good for British manufacturing.

    But I accept – those targets have to work for British manufacturers.

    And I don’t want British firms, like this one put in a position where you have to pay a hefty fine or buy credits from foreign EV companies.

    So today – we’re going to introduce much more flexibility into EV mandates.

    We’re going to help car companies based in Britain reach the targets in a way that supports growth.

    We’re going to cut any fines – which I do not want or expect to see – by 20% and any money that is raised – would be invested directly back into support for the British car industry.

    We’re also going to take action on hybrids because these cars make a massive difference to reducing emissions.

    I mean, if you drive a Toyota Prius around town. Or, perhaps if you work here, a Range Rover you probably spend a lot of the time in electric mode. So I think for these vehicles a 2030 ban is too soon. So we’ll push that back to 2035 – for all hybrids. That’s a new step we are taking and a new announcement today.

    And because we’re not ideological about how we cut carbon emissions we’ll also make sure that cleaner, efficient, petrol cars sold before 2030 count towards your EV mandate. That will be good for British car manufacturers like this one.

    As Rachel has said, we are also putting £2.3 billion pounds into the British car industry giving people tax breaks worth hundreds of millions of pounds a year to help them switch to electric.

    Improving charging infrastructure. That is a massive factor when people are thinking about switching and our approach means we are seeing a new public charging point popping up – every half an hour.

    Because this is the moment when we back British business and charge up the electric revolution.

    British electric cars running off clean British power, made by British workers.

    British cars for British workers!

    And as you know by the way switching to electric can also save you up to £1100 a year so if we get this right it can help the cost of living as well.

    But look – it’s not just our car industry we need to back.

    In the coming days and weeks, we are going to use industrial policy to shelter British business from the storm.

    Take our life sciences sector, another shining example of British brilliance. An absolutely pivotal part of our export economy. We’re going to back them, as well.

    We’re going to rip up the red tape. Cut the stifling bureaucracy that slows down clinical trials. Now Britain used to be better at this but we’ve taken our foot off the pedal.

    The latest data says it takes over 250 days to set up a clinical trial. I’m going to slash that to 150.

    And on top of that, I can also announce – a new investment up to £600 million in a new Health Data Research Service. A welcome partnership with the Wellcome Trust strengthening the genome cluster in Cambridge.

    Making sure that patient data in our NHS is unlocked for the public good. An opportunity for growth – but more importantly to save lives with cutting edge medicine and Britain is so good at this.

    We saw that in the pandemic. And we now need to pick up the pace again. This country has never waited around for history to shape us. We have shaped history – and we will do so again now.

    Take our future into our hands. Do everything necessary to defend our national interest.

    Strengthen our alliances, increase our defence power, support our businesses, jobs and workers.

    Rebuild, in defiance of a volatile world our industrial strength.

    That is the purpose of this Government. Security and renewal. The world may be changing but we are driving forward securing our future with a clear Plan for Change.

    Thank you.

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    Source: Politics

  • Anatomy of a Kemi Badenoch row

    From the totemic to the trivial, no news cycle is immune to that most inevitable of developments: an intervention from Kemi Badenoch.

    Since securing the Conservative leadership in November, Badenoch has questioned the veracity of Reform UK’s membership ticker; suggested the Partygate scandal was “overblown”; scolded the humble sandwich as “not real food”; claimed (erroneously) that Netflix series Adolescence “fundamentally changed” the events it is based on; and ridden to the defence of US vice president JD Vance after he suggested (falsely) that the UK and France have not fought a war in 40 years.

    The consequence of each of these interventions has been a series of unwelcome headlines for the Conservative Party — as it seeks to carve some space in a crowded, hostile political landscape.

    Badenoch, for what it is worth, would protest she is merely doing her job: securing headlines for her party at an immensely perilous moment. With the Faragist tide rising and potential irrelevance looming, she is securing a future for the Conservatives one write-up at a time. Moreover, she is doing so while saying what she thinks and thus building a reputation for plain-speaking.

    Badenoch has no time for the question-dodging sophists in the Labour Party. Note her response to sandwichgate: “I got asked what I like to eat and I answered the question which is something Keir Starmer doesn’t do.”

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    Badenoch is also living up to the platform she set out during the Conservative leadership contest. “I am sad to be in opposition”, she told the Tory grassroots last October, “but there’s a part of me that’s excited.”

    “Opposition is an opportunity — an opportunity to make Angie uncomfortable, to make Rachel wriggle, and make Starmer sweat. We are going to have fun.”

    She added: “Some people say I like a fight — I can’t imagine where they got that idea. But it’s not true. I do not like to fight.

    “But I’m not afraid to fight. I don’t fight for the sake of fighting, but I do fight for you.”

    Perhaps it is in this vein that we should consider the Conservative leader’s latest controversy.

    Taking to the broadcast studios yesterday, Badenoch defended Israel’s decisionto deny two MPs entry into the country and deport them. She told the BBC that Israel had a right to “control its borders”, insisting it is “shocking” that there are Labour MPs — in this instance Abtisam Mohamed and Yuan Yang — whom other countries will not admit.

    In a joint statement released Sunday morning, some time before Badenoch’s comments, Yang and Mohamed said they were on a trip to visit the occupied West Bank to “witness, first-hand, the situation” and were “astounded” after being stopped at the airport.

    The Conservative leader was subsequently slammed for siding with the Israeli authorities over her parliamentary colleagues.

    David Lammy, the foreign secretary, wrote on X: “It’s disgraceful you are cheerleading another country for detaining and deporting two British MPs. Do you say the same about Tory MPs banned from China?

    “This government will continue to stand up for the rights of our MPs to speak their mind, whatever their party.”

    Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey accused Badenoch of “unbelievably poor judgment” and “another complete shocker”.

    Intriguingly, Richard Fuller, the shadow chief secretary to the Treasury, also took a very different stance from his leader. Speaking to Times Radio on Sunday, he commented: “Any member of parliament who goes on an official trip should be, I would think, welcomed in any country.

    “They’re going there to be better informed about the situation and then report back to their parliamentary colleagues about what they have found.”

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    But Badenoch doubled down in a social media post of her own. Responding to Lammy, she declared: “Unlike China, Israel is our ally and a democracy. A good foreign sec [sic] would be able to make that distinction.

    “Perhaps Labour MPs could put UK national interest first and do their jobs instead of campaigning for airports in Kashmir or promoting Hamas propaganda in parliament.”

    For those who have followed Badenoch’s career since her initial rise to prominence in 2022, this row follows a familiar pattern.

    There’s the immediate context: an unexpected development that requires some comment from a senior politician. Then arrives Badenoch’s reflexive, at times logic-defying, response. The ensuing commentary considers what audience the Conservative leader could possibly have in mind. The rebukes roll in — first from the opposition party best-placed to benefit, and then on a cross-party basis. Finally, Badenoch decides to double down with an excessively forceful response to her critics.

    This pattern presents some pretty obvious political problems for the Conservative Party.

    Firstly, Badenoch’s comments often reframe a news cycle in a fashion that reflects poorly on the Tories. Badenoch’s baseless criticism of Reform UK’s membership ticker, issued via a lengthy social media post in the quiet of Christmas recess, found a prominent place in the news bulletins. Farage was invited to respond, and so he did — again and again at the Conservative Party’s expense.

    Secondly, as Tory leader, Badenoch’s statements become — immediately and inevitably — the “line” for her party to take. Conservative MPs and frontbench spokespeople suddenly find themselves asked to repeat their leader’s latest intervention. Anything other than a fulsome endorsement of Badenoch’s position is considered a slight on her authority.

    Thirdly, Badenoch would be wrong to assume that provoking headlines is tantamount to relevance. The Conservative leader toured the broadcast studios yesterday, presumably, to get ahead of the government’s announcements this week on Trump’s trade war. But any such stance was lost in the furore she triggered.

    Opposition, especially when it comes to press strategy, is characterised by opportunity costs. The media spotlight is finite; and so Badenoch’s eye-grabbing “interventions” will always secure the story. More substantive contributions will be forgotten.

    And yet, the biggest problem with Badenoch’s instinctive interventions is that they frequently conjure attack-lines for her opponents from thin air.

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    Take the Conservative leader’s comments Sunday. The inability of Badenoch and frontbencher Richard Fuller to adopt the same position was weaponised by Labour’s press team. Foreign Office minister Hamish Falconer, set for a ministerial statement today on this matter, duly commented: “A good leader of the opposition can usually command the confidence of their front bench.

    “Mr Fuller’s position, like the foreign secretary’s, is the one that I hope the whole house can agree with; on both sides of the aisle.”

    Another pertinent example concerns Badenoch’s recent characterisation of the Liberal Democrats as a party that is “not on Twitter” but rather in “local communities”.

    The throwaway line, delivered on Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson’s podcast, framed Ed Davey’s keynote speech at his party’s spring conference last month. (Expect Badenoch’s remark to appear on many a Lib Dem leaflet ahead of the local elections on 1 May).

    And then there’s Badenoch’s comments relating to the triple lock, issued in January, which have inspired several planted questions at PMQs — not least of all Labour MP John Grady’s offering last week.

    Grady told the House: “This week, the full state pension will rise by £472 a year, putting money in the pockets of pensioners in Glasgow and across the United Kingdom.

    “Does the prime minister agree that this rise is possible only because of Labour’s plan for change and our commitment to the triple lock?”

    Starmer agreed (of course) before turning his fire on Badenoch: “The Leader of the Opposition wants to means-test the state pension so that she can cut it.”

    In the round, Badenoch’s recurrent rows form a pretty comprehensive picture of her political understanding — specifically, her perception of public opinion, her party’s vulnerabilities, and the media landscape.

    Badenoch’s sandwich commentary, and revealed preference for a lunchtime steak, has had an intriguingly long afterlife. (Rachel Reeves raised it at the spring statement). This can be explained by the following facts: (1), the British public, generally, likes sandwiches; (2), the Conservative Party, historically, is exposed to suggestions it is “out of touch”; and, (3), the media enjoys the ridiculousness of the remark.

    Consider also Badenoch’s comments on Partygate, JD Vance, maternity payand the minimum wage in these terms. After all, can the apparent “authenticity” of Badenoch’s positions really compete with the manifest political downsides?

    Above all else however, Badenoch’s rows point to a lack of understanding or research about a given topic. Her position on Adolescence, while unlikely to dictate the outcome of the next election, was baseless — and apparently borne of a social media conspiracy theory. Her (mis)understanding of public opinion could well be linked back to an evidenced over-reliance on social media.

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    My points here will not come as a surprise to many within the Conservative Party. Sir John Hayes, a onetime supporter of Robert Jenrick, suggested in October that Badenoch would make an “irascible” leader. Jenrick himself suggested she could turn the party into a “Twitter account”. And then there is the common refrain that Badenoch can start a fight in an empty room.

    The Conservative leader’s combative predisposition is a feature, not a bug, of her approach. That much is plain. Badenoch cannot be coached, by experience or external influence, away from this fundamental facet of her politics. It is simply something the Conservative Party will have to endure as long as Badenoch is leader.

    From 2020-2024, Keir Starmer tried his utmost to alienate as few voters as politically possible, while still going through the motions of opposition. That ensured he was well-positioned to benefit from the tide of anti-incumbency sentiment. This phenomenon, once so fruitful for the prime minister, is now working against him.

    Despite a dearth of policy, Badenoch is not copying Starmer’s “small target” strategy. And so I pose the following question: will Badenoch’s maladroit interventions alienate a critical mass of voters before the anti-incumbency tide sweeps her into Downing Street (or at least over the finish line with the help of Reform)?

    In other words, will Badenoch’s missteps prove so consequential that they overwhelm the prevailing geopolitical and economic conditions, which should benefit her as the default anti-incumbent option?

    Of course, if the historically regicidal Conservative Party dislikes the answer to these questions, they could always revert to type.

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    Lunchtime briefing

    Andrew Ranger: ‘Change takes time — but Labour will deliver’

    Lunchtime soundbite

    ‘I still think that this big tariff threat globally … It’ll look different in three months time.

    ‘He’ll use it as a big negotiating tool. I think we’re better positioned to come out of this with a deal than almost any other country.’

    —  Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, says that he thinks the Donald Trump tariffs are just “a big negotiating tool”.

    Now try this…

    ‘UK ministers consider abolishing hundreds of quangos, sources say’
    Via the Guardian.

    ‘My only priority is making British people better off’
    Keir Starmer writes for the Times. (Paywall).

    ‘5 pro tips for Donald Trump from Liz Truss* amid market bloodbath’
    Liz Truss (as imagined by Matt Honeycombe-Foster) writes for Politico.

    On this day in 2022:

    Minister denies chancellor’s wife is ‘sheltering’ from tax

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    Source: Politics

  • Andrew Ranger: ‘Change takes time — but Labour will deliver’

    The failure of privatisation is laid bare as we move into the new financial year with the reality of paying more, but for the same or — in some instances — worse service.

    Energy, rail, water — all of these have been privatised in the last 40 years and we the consumers are paying the price. Our bills are rising, profits are rising and yet the quality of what we receive is poor due to decades of underinvestment in infrastructure. The Thatcher sale of council homes has left us with a deficit of council properties and long waiting lists. Housing cannot meet the demand. In my constituency of Wrexham, one area has 371 people on the housing waiting list and in the last 6 months, 7 vacancies have become available.

    Many of us remember the beginnings of privatisation: British Gas in 1986 and electricity in 1990. The objectives of privatisation were to transfer the responsibility and ownership of many industries from the government to the private sector, to end the monopoly of utilities by increasing competition, and to increase the number of shareholders. But since 2021, we have been experiencing an energy crisis which was then worsened by Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

    And the solution? It’s not a simple or quick one. Change takes time.

    The Labour government has started to get to work, but it will take time. And the associated costs have to be balanced with the burden placed on the taxpayer.

    We have started on the legislation to begin to fix the huge legacy of issues we have inherited straight away after being elected, with our Passenger Railway Services (Public Ownership) Bill, Railways Bill, Great British Energy Bill and Water Special Measures Bill — all of these set the framework so that work can commence on fixing the mess left behind by the last Tory government. In terms of rail, four major operators — East Coast Mainline, TransPennine, Northern and South Eastern (LNER) — have been taken under public control and are being run by the government’s operator of last resort. Transport for Wales was brought under Welsh government control in 2021, and Scotrail was taken over by the Scottish Government the following year.

    But ownership of companies cannot reverse decades of underinvestment and ageing rolling stock. Polls have shown that having transport under public ownership is popular with the public. In January, Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham launched the Bee Buses to take on vehicles and depots. This franchising system means private operators run routes on Transport for Greater Manchester’s (TfGM) behalf and this is already paying dividends in terms of improved punctuality. Burnham has plans to bring trains under the same system later this year. Transport is opportunity and for too long rail has failed the people of the UK, again whilst private companies take huge public subsidies and extract more and more wealth from the British people.

    What about energy? There are examples out there. Here in Wales, the Anafon Hydro Project in Eryri started in 2010 and began generating in December 2015. It was funded by grants, community shares and a Charity Bank loan. The electricity grid was reorganised to ensure locally generated electricity is accessed by local domestic and business consumers, a truly community-based renewable energy project. The signs are there.

    In our manifesto, we said we would deliver permanently cheaper energy bills by the end of the parliament, saving people hundreds of pounds per year. We will tackle the blatant failure of the water companies to invest in our infrastructure (there have been no new reservoirs built since privatisation). And water shortages are now a real possibility due to that — as well as the completely irresponsible polluting of our rivers and coastal waters. All the time whilst shareholders extract more and more from these companies and have increased water bills higher than inflation every year.

    We have an ageing population in the UK, which means an exponentially increasing demand on health services in the longer term and more complex illnesses and diseases than in the past. Investment in public services is at its highest level in Wales thanks to the UK government settlement with Welsh government, following years of real term cuts that have left councils cutting social care and other services to the bone.

    The world is increasingly uncertain. America’s priorities are changing, and Russia continues to flex its influence. This is being felt by our European neighbours and of course Ukraine. Our armed forces were decimated to low levels by the Conservatives, meaning we are in need of an investment boost, and this cannot be kicked into the long grass.

    We need an economy that works for the benefit of all of us in the UK. Living standards have stagnated and were worse at the end of the Tory government than when they started in office. The Labour government is fixing the foundations with changes in employment rights, renters’ rights, more housing and improving public services. But it cannot be fixed overnight, it took the last government 14 years to break everything — we cannot expect, and nor should we, for it to be fixed overnight. We must be realistic and not simplistic.

    And as is often the case in life, some things may get worse before they get better.

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    Source: Politics

  • Anna Gelderd: ‘The Cornish language deserves recognition and respect — our identity is vital’

    With a government determined to deliver change for communities across the country, the things that make us unique across the nation must be front and centre of the conversation.

    That’s why I knew it was time to ensure that Cornwall’s unique cultural heritage was firmly on the map in Westminster. While the Cornish Language and Heritage (Education and Recognition) Bill is focused on uptake of the language, it also represents more than just linguistic ability. The bill is also about promoting Cornish pride, preserving our heritage, and making sure our distinct voice is heard in parliament, many miles from the Duchy.

    The Cornish Language and Heritage (Education and Recognition) Bill represents a historic step forward for Cornwall. Hansard, the official report of all parliamentary debates dating back over 200 years, contains only one other record of ‘Kernewek’ and that was 26 years ago. It’s time to bring Cornish back to the heart of UK government and ensure it remains in place for generations to come.

    For too long, Cornwall and the South West have been overlooked and underfunded with public services on their knees and Cornwall becoming one of the poorest areas in the UK. With a median wage 20% below the UK average, high housing costs, and reliance on seasonal work, families in Cornwall are struggling.

    But Cornwall’s strength has always been its people. From driving the first industrial revolution to ensuring food security through farming and fishing, Cornwall’s contribution to the UK is immense. Our heritage is woven into the landscape, ancient sites and rich traditions tell the story of a people who have endured. The Cornish language, with roots stretching back centuries, is a unique part of that story. It should be protected and passed on to future generations.

    For decades, local efforts to promote and protect the Cornish language have been carried out by cultural organisations, local authorities, and passionate individuals who have worked tirelessly. I want to ensure that I play my part championing Cornwall in that story. In 2014, the UK government formally recognised the Cornish people under the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities — designed to safeguard the rights of national minorities — this bill offers a practical step to honour that status. It seeks to make Cornish more visible on signs, in schools, in media, and in our local services, building a wider understanding of Cornwall’s unique heritage and safeguarding its future.

    Granting Cornish National Minority Status was a much needed first step, now it’s time for Cornish to be elevated to the same level of protection as other Celtic languages and given official status in Cornwall. The bill calls for educational institutions to have the opportunity to teach Cornish if they wish, with sufficient support. This isn’t about imposing Cornish on anyone, but about making it available, just as Welsh and Gaelic are.

    My mum was an early years teacher, she worked tirelessly for decades to give young children from disadvantaged backgrounds the best start in life. I understand how hard teachers work, and with an education system stretched to breaking point, I don’t want to create a new mandatory responsibility that becomes more of a chore than a celebration. So, I am working with this Labour government to ensure that reforms to our education system are fit for purpose and reflective of those it serves. In fact, I was proud to sit on the bill committee for the Institute for Apprenticeships and Technical Education Bill to make sure that new policies are fit for purpose, and benefit those that they are created to serve.

    Brilliant local initiatives to increase and celebrate the use of the Cornish language are already being carried out successfully with minimal additional workload. Using structured resources, sound files, and low-administration models we can ensure that even teachers who aren’t fluent can join the exciting opportunity to learn a new skill and broaden their understanding of Cornish culture.

    Increasing the ability to speak Cornish among residents also creates opportunity. Bilingualism has been shown to enhance cognitive skills, improve problem-solving abilities, and slow down cognitive decline. This change could deliver multiple benefits for all ages and for many years to come. Cornwall is a special place, distinct, and accepting, and I don’t believe this should be turned into a debate about nationalism. It’s not a question of Cornish versus English and it’s not about enforcement; it’s about the freedom to use both, enriching our communities and lives.

    This Bill looks to see Cornish culture represented, respected, and strengthened. As Gaelic contributes millions to Glasgow’s economy, the Cornish language could also support Cornwall’s economy through enhanced tourism, cultural events, and branding. But this must be done sustainably; Cornwall’s housing crisis cannot be worsened by unchecked tourism. This isn’t about selling our identity it’s about celebrating it.

    The reaction to the bill has been overwhelmingly supportive, with backing from campaigners, civil society, and MPs from all parties. I was delighted to hear that a new film exploring Cornwall’s past and present is in production, featuring the Cornish language, and the bill has even drawn interest from Welsh media.

    Cornwall deserves recognition and respect, our identity and culture are vital, and we cannot afford to let them fade away. The Cornish Language and Heritage (Education and Recognition) Bill is a step toward ensuring Cornwall’s unique identity is celebrated, protected, and shared.

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    Source: Politics

  • Conservative Party will fail trying to ‘out-Farage Farage’, shadow minister warns

    The Conservatives will not be able to build a broad coalition of voters if it focuses on “responding to and aping Nigel Farage”, a shadow cabinet minister has said.  

    Andrew Bowie, the shadow Scottish secretary, warned his party that “nobody can out-Farage Farage” in an interview with the Holyrood magazine.

    He said the Conservatives must attempt to be “authentic and true to ourselves”, arguing that chasing Reform presents a trap for the party. 

    The comments come after Jamie Greene quit the Conservative Party last Thursday, claiming it had become “Trump-esque in both style and substance”.

    In a statement, Greene claimed the Conservative were in a “grotesque dance with Nigel Farage” in an attempt to win over right-wing voters.

    Greene, who has since joined to the Liberal Democrats, accused the party of adopting a “Reform-lite agenda that appeals to the worst of our society, and not the best”.

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    In comments published after Greene’s defection, Bowie reflected on the challenged posed to his party by Reform UK, which is now consistently outperforming the Conservatives in the polls. 

    He said: “All the polls, even though we should just take them with a pinch of salt, demonstrate that right now there is disenchantment with politics as a whole, especially the established political parties in this country.

    “That is probably why we’re seeing so many people voicing support for Reform at the minute, because it’s ‘a pox on all your houses’, you know, ‘anybody but the above’ really is what people are saying. 

    “And that’s what Nigel Farage is offering. Whether that will hold for them up until the next election, that remains to be seen.”

    Further to this point, Bowie was asked how a centre-right party like the Conservatives should respond to a challenge from the right.

    The West Aberdeenshire MP commented: “By being authentic and true to ourselves, by not trying to out-Reform Reform, by not trying to appeal to the common denominator in terms of chasing the voter.

    “We need to stick true to who we are as Conservatives, offer a pragmatic, sensible, liberal, Conservative vision of what the future can be in Scotland, and indeed the UK.

    “You need a broad coalition of support from across the country, from across age groups, demographics, and that is what we have to be focused on doing. 

    “And we’re not going to achieve that, we’re not going to get that broad voter base, if we are purely focused on countering, responding to and aping Nigel Farage at every available opportunity, because nobody can out-Farage Farage, so why bother?”

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

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    Source: Politics

  • Opinion: Echoes of Oden Ewa

    Opinion: Echoes of Oden Ewa

    By Phylo Modlin Odu

    What began as whispers about the phenomenal personality of someone with the demeanor of a greenhorn but the performance, competence, and strategy of a seasoned veteran, has transformed into resounding accolades and admiration for the man called Oden Ewa.

    It is imperative to mention that Oden Ewa is at the forefront of the elegant renovation of the state library, which had been ruined and abandoned for years. As Commissioner for Special Duties in Governor Otu’s administration, he has proven his mettle in his contribution to the development of the State, and has become an integral factor in the successes of the administration by simply doing his job.

    Oden Ewa strikes the chord with people in his spontaneous, boundless acts of generosity and commitment to human capital development demonstrated in his constant outreach to those in need; giving financial support to small business owners, his award of scholarship worth ₦250,000 each to 100 postgraduate students early this year among others. In addition, he has facilitated the enrollment of 1,500 people from Central Senatorial District into the Cross River Health Insurance scheme, and a few days ago, a beneficiary was operated for large uterine fibroid.

    He hails from Ugep, Yakurr LGA. He is a shining example of an achiever, as his impressive achievements have demystified the usual underwhelming role of a commissioner in Cross River State. Oden Ewa is youthful, charismatic, smart, and accessible. He is an everybody’s guy.

    As the echoes of his accomplishments continue to grow louder, it has become apparent, that Oden Ewa is a source of hope, a rallying point for many, as he has taken over the task of offering succor, particularly, during this challenging period in the political trajectory of Central Senatorial district, where federal representation is lethargic.

    Phylo Modlin Odu,

    A foodstuff Vendor, Boki LGA.

  • Week-in-Review: Anneliese Dodds gives shape to ‘soft left’ unease in Labour

    Five years ago this week, Keir Starmer was elected leader of the Labour Party with a resounding if ill-defined mandate. 

    Of the 275,780 members Starmer prevailed upon, distinct sections identified with politically exclusive attributes. Some saw the shadow Brexit secretary as offering “Corbynism in a suit” — aesthetically palatable socialism adherent to the advice offered by David Cameron’s mother in 2016. 

    Others related to Starmer’s “unity” spiel and authentic disdain for the factional conflict that characterised the Corbyn years.

    A still smaller section, led by Starmer’s campaign manager, assessed the situation rather differently. In 2020, Morgan McSweeney set his master plan in motion: Starmer would court grassroots sentiment before pivoting definitely towards the centre ground. In consecutive steps separated by years, the now-PM would appeal to the progressive activist and the median voter: a winning combination. 

    First though, after assuming the Labour leadership with 56.2 per cent of the membership vote, Starmer constructed a shadow cabinet in the image of his muddled mandate. Rebecca Long-Bailey, the vanquished heir to the Corbynite throne, emerged as shadow education secretary. Posts like shadow minister for voter engagement and youth affairs were retained from the ancien régime. All things considered, Starmer could hardly have signalled a subtler rupture with the past. 

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

    There exist several methodologies for measuring the vast ideological distance Starmer has covered since 2020. For all the half-truths and reneged-upon commitments he levelled at the Labour membership, Starmer’s campaign slogan — “Another future is possible” — has proved prescient.

    Broadly, the prime minister’s political journey is best expressed by the inexorable deconstruction of his first shadow cabinet. Long-Bailey was swiftly defenestrated; the voter engagement and youth affairs brief was eventually expunged. But of all the Labour politicians Starmer has marginalised and rendered irrelevant since 2020, few career trajectories read so instructively as that of Anneliese Dodds, his first shadow chancellor. 

    Back in 2020, Dodds’ appointment was warmly welcomed by those politicians Starmer now routinely displeases. John McDonnell described his successor as shadow chancellor as “superb” and “conscientious in all she does” — citing her work in his shadow Treasury team.

    From 2020-2021, Dodds — leading a team featuring Pat McFadden and Wes Streeting — duelled with Rishi Sunak across the despatch boxes. In an empty chamber, the Covid chancellor’s prominence and popularity made him a difficult target. The prevailing narrative noted Sunak’s “dishy” profile and Dodds’ inability to “cut through”. The shadow chancellor’s most enthusiastic critics denounced her as “anonymous”. 

    Dodds was the most senior victim of Starmer’s first reshuffle — a development that triggered little surprise or consternation. From 2021-2024, she served loyally as Labour chair and shadow secretary of state for women and equalities. (In this latter capacity, Dodds shadowed her second future Tory leader: Kemi Badenoch).

    However, Dodds did not retain these briefs in government. A relatively intricate rearrangement of Starmer’s middle-ranking ministers saw Dodds shuffled, downwards again, into the Foreign Office. She attended cabinet as international development minister. But she did not become a secretary of state, serving simultaneously as a minister in the equalities department.

    Dodds lasted eight months in these posts, before resigning over No 10’s cuts to the foreign aid budget. Her resignation letter — deferred to avoid distracting from Starmer’s stateside visit — referenced to the abrupt nature of the announcement. Published to social media on 28 February, the missive reads: “I am only writing to you now that your meeting with president Trump is over, and four days after you informed me of your decision to cut Overseas Development Assistance to 0.3 per cent of GNI [emphasis mine].”

    Starmer unveiled the cut three days prior on 25 February. So Dodds was given no more than 24 hours advance notice of the decision. 

    And lo, Dodds’ journey from shadow chancellor to backbencher — after four years, two demotions and a resignation — was complete.

    Logistically, it was a loyal resignation. But her corresponding missive cast a wide net with its sharp objections to the government’s strategy. In a memorable aside, Dodds noted her unfulfilled expectation that ministers would “discuss our fiscal rules and approach to taxation” in the wake of geopolitical developments. She predicted that the defence spending uplift will need to go further. As such, “tactical cuts” — like those directed at the foreign aid budget — would not suffice. 

    But the Labour MP’s letter of resignation was overshadowed by its subject matter. Mere hours after Westminster registered the “soft left” warning shot, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy wandered innocently into the White House, springing Donald Trump’s trap.  

    Dodds’ resignation could not compete with this latest epoch-defining development. 

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    From shadow chancellor to party chair to where?

    On Thursday, less than 24 hours after Trump declared trade “liberation”, Dodds “broke her silence” in a House of Commons debate on the impact of digital platforms on UK democracy. 

    It marked the Labour MP’s first contribution as a backbencher since 2017, following an unbroken eight-year stint on the frontbench. (Dodds entered parliament on 8 June 2017 and was promoted a mere 25 days later; in that time, she managed just two commons contributions in the form of two questions).

    The view is “much better from here”, Dodds began, evoking Robin Cook — a potentially portentous reference for a former minister. In any case, Dodds picked up from where her resignation letter left off. 

    “The new government entered office at a time of unprecedented geopolitical and economic flux”, she told the House. “There is no muscle memory in government, or indeed in politics, for the instability we are currently seeing, and as democracy backslides globally, instability is the new normal.”

    She segued into the speech’s central theme: “It demands a strategic, not tactical, response.”

    Dodds’ resignation letter had deployed a similar turn of phrase. Writing in February, she denounced “tactical cuts to public spending” and the diminution of the foreign aid budget specifically. “These are unprecedented times”, she added, “when strategic decisions for the sake of our country’s security cannot be ducked.”

    Dodds’ insinuation is that recent interventions do not reflect an overarching programme for government, but reactive responses that are liable to be overtaken by the very events they profess to respond to.

    So what does Dodds mean by a “strategic” approach? “Economically”, the Labour backbencher told the commons on Thursday, “I believe… that we must be prepared to reassess shibboleths, whether on the fiscal rules, as Germany has done, or on taxation, especially when the very best-off are seeing so little impact on their wellbeing from the economic headwinds.”

    The use of “shibboleths” here is intriguing — given Starmer’s tenure as Labour leader has regularly brought him into conflict with ideological axioms. (His positions on welfare and foreign aid inspired a further deluge of such commentary). Across her commons speech and resignation letter, it is notable that Dodds’ arguments reflect the rhetoric adopted by No 10 almost exactly. The world is changing, she attests, as if she were still on the ministerial payroll. 

    But Dodds and Starmer draw divergent conclusions from the same diagnosis. At the spring statement, No 10 embraced the incumbent fiscal framework — turning on progressive shibboleths to appease its self-imposed ordinances. Dodds has called for a more radical reworking of the government’s financial position. 

    She continued on Thursday: “In addition, we must work with our allies — particularly in Europe but also beyond — to build our resilience on defence production and exports, with productivity growth hammered by post-Brexit impediments to trade and now, as we have heard this morning, with US-imposed tariffs. 

    “From Turkey to Somalia, people are desperate for democracy, stability and economic growth. In supporting them, we also support our country’s security.”

    The foreign aid cut is self-defeating and short-termist, Dodds maintained: an easy answer to the difficult questions our changing world begs. 

    In this vein, she turned to the subject of the debate: digital threats to democracy. “I believe that we need the same strategic approach — not tactical — when it comes to the protection of our democracy”, Dodds insisted. 

    She referenced the summer riots and the “appalling scenes when racist thugs set fire to hotels knowing that people remained inside”. She praised the swift policing and criminal justice response, but regretted the government’s apparent inertia. “There are many other canaries choking down the coalmine, not least due to the growth and impact of violent online misogyny”, she remarked.

    “Policy must deal not with how things were 10 years ago, but with the reality of an online world that is having huge offline consequences.”

    (Dodds went on to raise four policy suggestions, most of which relate to the regulatory framework established by the Online Safety Act).

    Soft left out

    In whatever capacity she has served in recent years, Dodds has always been associated with Labour’s “soft left” — the mushy mainstream of party opinion (and thus lobby fodder for frontbenches positioned to its ideological right or left).

    There exists a less objective, less favourable characterisation. The soft left (or “open left”) is ridiculed by its intra-party critics as politically invertebrate: a nominal faction that — rather like the one-nation pushovers in the Conservative fold — takes far from enthusiastically to factionalism. Soft by name and soft by nature.

    From 2015-c.2024, the informal collective struggled for purpose in the dichotomous cold war that raged between left and right. That said, proponents of Labour’s squeezed middle have served, and still serve, on Starmer’s frontbench. But they have also been slowly marginalised since 2020 — enfeebled if not entirely enervated.

    The Labour wets once claimed Starmer as their own. But the faction has fared poorly in recent months. Indeed, both of Starmer’s cabinet resignations — Dodds and Louise Haigh — are associated with the soft left tradition. In their wake, have risen ministers more obviously aligned with No 10’s political vision. 

    Starmer is a risk-taking leader — particularly in and around his own party. But contained within every “ruthless” gamble has rested the historically reasonable assumption that the soft left will either assent to his chosen course, or begrudgingly acquiesce.

    But even the stretchy and amenable soft left has an elastic limit.

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    A hard-edged soft left?

    The median Labour MP, all else being equal, would no doubt identify with the positions outlined in Dodds’ post-resignation interventions. The average parliamentarian, of whatever party, did not get into politics to serve as a faithful custodian of arbitrary fiscal rules. Dodds’ call for a “strategic left” and comments on the state of British democracy are similarly prescient. 

    And yet — all else is not equal. The incentive structure of Westminster rewards loyalty. For a new Labour MP, to speak up now would be to surrender any chance of career progression under Starmer.

    But this position cannot hold forever. And all indicators suggest the Starmer project is in peril.

    New polling for PLMR, conducted by Electoral Calculus, points to a three-way split between Reform UK, the Conservatives and Labour — the prevailing consensus established by successive surveys. Perhaps more pertinently, PLMR’s research suggests Starmer and Nigel Farage are tied (at 16 per cent) on the question of which party leader is most trusted to represent the UK on the international stage. That finding is cause for considerable concern in No 10. 

    Meanwhile, Survation’s monthly polling of the Labour membership continues to cast doubt over the longevity of the Starmer project. According to the LabourList’s league table, those ministers most favoured by No 10, (Liz Kendall, Rachel Reeves, Wes Streeting and Keir Starmer himself), have seen their approval ratings plummet in recent time. Even at this early stage, it seems unlikely that the Labour membership — if given the opportunity to vote in a future leadership contest — would back a continuity candidate.

    And what of the local elections? Labour’s first major interaction with the electorate since entering government could be punishing indeed. Perhaps then things might look a little more equal. (At some point, of course, the 2024 intake will realise there is not enough room for them all in cabinet — or time for them to get there).

    Rishi Sunak’s premiership, as ever, teaches an exigent lesson: backbench antagonism and electoral comeuppance are two sides of the same coin. Their interdependence manifests as vicious or virtuous cycles: electoral progress alleviates tension; while defeats exacerbate factional discontent. It’s an iron law that Starmer is very much subject to. 

    Now, this is not to say that the Parliamentary Labour Party is about to reorganise itself into “five families” and begin manoeuvring against Starmer. For what it is worth, the aforementioned political doom loop — which so dominated Sunak’s premiership — will prove less punishing at this stage in the electoral cycle. 

    But Anneliese Dodds’ interventions point to a fork in the road. At the very least, a coherent political position — shaped by the unique moment — has been established from which hitherto nervous critics can begin to make representations. The soft left, coarsened by Starmer’s missteps, might finally lay a finger on the itinerant Overton window. US tariffs and the further diminution of Reeves’ fiscal headroom will render Dodds’ assessment more salient over time.

    All of a sudden then, Starmer’s intra-party critics appear less amorphous: a fact his political operation has always taken for granted and ruthlessly exploited. 

    The prime minister, after all, could learn to fear a hard-edged soft left.

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

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    Source: Politics

  • ‘Like paying off a bully’: Starmer warned against scrapping digital services tax to ease US tariffs

    Keir Starmer has been warned that moving to cut a tax on US tech firms to secure a carve-out from reciprocal tariffs would be like “paying off a bully”.

    Lord Darroch, the former UK ambassador to the US, cautioned against getting rid of the digital services tax because of the message it would send to Donald Trump, who he said would come back for more. 

    The comment comes amid speculation the UK could offer to reduce or lift the tax on technology firms as part of negotiations with the US on an economic deal to mitigate the impact of Trump’s 10 per cent tariff on British goods.

    DST was introduced in 2020 as a temporary move prior to an international agreement on digital taxation. The policy imposes a 2 per cent tax on search engines, social media services and online marketplaces which make money from UK users, regardless of where the headquarters are based.

    The levy raises about £800 million a year for the UK.

    Questioned in recent weeks, government ministers and spokespeople have not ruled out changing the digital services tax in exchange for exemptions from US tariffs.

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    Lord Darroch, who served as the UK’s man in Washington DC during Trump’s first presidential term, said the UK should “keep calm and carry on” with negotiations on a bespoke US-UK economic deal, but warned of the potential implications of granting big concessions.

    He gave the example of the US administration seeking more access to the UK market for agricultural goods and said that would bring with it a risk of “massively” undercutting British producers.

    On the digital tax, Lord Darroch told LBC: “I also think it is difficult to agree to abolish the digital tax because you are essentially saying to someone who is bullying you, ‘I am going to pay you to stop’ and the risk there is they come back in six months time and say ‘we would like some more money now please’.

    “I think that is a very difficult decision for the government to take.”

    Lord Darroch’s position echoes that adopted by the Liberal Democrats in recent weeks, who have warned the prime minister against “appeasing” the US president. 

    Lib Dem leader Ed Davey told his party’s spring conference in Harrogate last month: “Now Labour’s even talking about scrapping Britain’s tax on social media giants. Changing the UK’s tax policy to appease Donald Trump and Elon Musk.”

    Speaking prior to the imposition of tariffs, Davey added: “Well, appeasement never works with bullies, and it doesn’t work with Trump.

    “And you can see that he’s already put his tariffs on British steel.”

    Left-wing Labour MP Rachael Maskell has also urged the government to avoid a “dash to let the US tech companies off the hook”.

    She told the Guardian newspaper last month: “With the chancellor saying that she is still looking at the digital services tax, just days before the spring statement, then I would be concerned if relief was granted in what would be seen as a dash to let the US tech companies off the hook, while at the same time as making disabled people pay for the revenue loss, with their lifelines being cut.”

    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