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As it happenedended1573845681

Boris Johnson news – live: Expert warns Tory rail fund ‘would only buy 25 miles of track’, as PM makes string of false claims in BBC interview

Follow all the latest developments

Adam Forrest
Friday 15 November 2019 20:21 GMT
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General Election 2019: What you need to know

Boris Johnson has made a series of claims about immigration and knife crime picked apart by fact checkers, and said there was “no evidence” of Russian interference in the UK. He also shut down questions about his family in testy BBC interviews.

He has also earmarked £50m for the rejuvenation of railways closed under the Beeching cuts of the 1960s - however figures in the rail sector are unconvinced by the amount pledged

It comes as Labour promises to nationalise part of BT and deliver free broadband for all the country if elected, with Jeremy Corbyn set to reveal more as he campaigns in the north-west today.

Nigel Farage, meanwhile, has claimed that the Tories offered jobs and peerages to his Brexit Party candidates in a bid to get them to drop out of marginal seats. Mr Farage said he expected “police investigations into what has gone on here”.

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Johnson grilled on Russian report and oligarch donations

Georgie has the prime minister why he isn’t publishing the Russia report – the intelligence and security committee report on alleged interference that’s now with No 10 awaiting release.

“Georgie, I see absolutely no reason to change the normal procedures … just because there’s an election coming.”

Challenged on what the procedures are and whether there’s any reason to delay if it’s been clearing by the intelligence services, Johnson says: “Because they’re not normally published at that pace.”

Asked if there’s anything to hide, he says: “Absolutely not.”

Asked how many Russian oligarchs donate to the Conservatives, Johnson says: “Frankly I have …,” he says before pausing. “All donations to the Conservative party are properly vetted and properly publicised ... I leave it to your teams of researchers to … bring that fact before us.”

When told it was a serious question about Russian interference in our politics, Johnson says “there is no evidence for that”.

He adds: “I think that you’ve got to be very careful before you simply cast aspersions on everybody who comes from a certain country, just because of their nationality.”

The prime minister’s claim was in direct contradiction of the assessment of his predecessor Theresa May, who used a speech in 2017 – while Johnson was foreign secretary – to accuse Russia of attempting to influence British politics.

Adam Forrest15 November 2019 10:05
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Tories dismiss Labour’s free broadband offer as ‘crackpot scheme’

Boris Johnson dismissed Labour’s pledge to deliver free broadband for all by nationalising part of BT as a “crackpot scheme that would involve many, many tens of billions of taxpayers’ nationalising a British business”.

And the Conservatives have shared this dial up-era ad on Twitter, claiming Corbyn and Labour are “making promises they just can’t keep”.

Adam Forrest15 November 2019 10:14
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John Curtice would be ‘surprised’ if Tories didn’t lose seats in Scotland

Polling expert Professor Sir John Curtice has said he “would be surprised” if the Conservatives do not lose some of their 13 seats in Scotland.

Sir John told BBC Radio Scotland’s Good Morning Scotland programme on Friday that polls currently put the SNP on around 40 per cent of the vote, while Labour has dropped to 20 per cent north of the border.

“A slight question mark over the Conservatives, recent polls still had them down about seven points in Scotland, but given they have been making some ground across the UK as a whole and there’s something of a Brexit Party vote to squeeze in Scotland, it would be surprising if the Conservatives were not at risk of losing some of their seats.”

The professor also claimed it is a “widespread misapprehension” that Labour voters are not in favour of Scottish independence.

He said: “If you look at the polling evidence in Scotland, sure, a majority of Labour voters in Scotland are in favour of staying inside the union.

“But the polls consistently find in the high 30 per cent of those who say they are going to vote Labour, are in favour of independence.

“As compared with the Conservative Party, Labour’s vote in Scotland is very different. The party is much more able to pick up votes from independence supporters than the Conservatives.”

Adam Forrest15 November 2019 10:29
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Boris Johnson shuts down questions about his children

Before the end of his questions-from-listeners session on Radio 5 Live, host Rachel Burden raised the topic of Boris Johnson’s children while discussing education, asking: “None of your children have been to state school, as I understand it?”

Johnson replied: “Sorry, I don’t comment about my children. I’m not going to comment on my children, if that's alright."

Burden said the topic of Johnson’s children is a “question that frequently comes up”.

She told him: “Lots of people have been in touch this morning saying, ‘ask the prime minister how many children he has’. That is a question that frequently comes up, just so you’re aware.

“I think people find it odd that someone who is a public figure can’t answer that question.”

Johnson said: “Your assertion that none of my children have been to state school is wrong. That’s all I’ll say.”

Adam Forrest15 November 2019 10:33
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PM’s claims on knife crime, immigration and indyref2 rejected as false

Some of the claims made by Boris Johnson in his BBC interviews have already been picked apart.

The PM said the proportion of EU and non-EU net immigration is 50-50. But actually, ONS figures show that EU citizens have only made up around 20 per cent of the total proportion.

He claimed that as London mayor he took 11,000 knives “off the street” through the stop and search policy. But as Labour party have pointed out, only 4,500 knives were recovered through stop and search.

He also said the murder rate fell below 100 for “several years” while he was at City Hall – a claim he’s made before that’s already proved to be incorrect.

The PM says Jeremy Corbyn would have a Scottish referendum “next year”, but Corbyn says he would “not countenance an independence referendum in the early years of a Labour government”.

He also tried to avoid responsibility for the failed “Garden Bridge” project – launched under his watch at City Hall.

Adam Forrest15 November 2019 10:51
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The Russia report could be damning for the Tories

Our columnist Mary Dejevsky suspects the prime minister may be right to think that keeping the Russia report under wraps will be less costly than releasing it now.

Read more here:

Adam Forrest15 November 2019 11:17
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Labour’s free broadband ‘incompatible’ with EU rules, claims Lib Dems

The Lib Dems’ business spokesman Sam Gyimah said Labour’s broadband plans would be incompatible with EU rules, claiming the plan was an “admission they want Brexit”.

“Assuming they can nationalise BT Openreach under EU state aid rules, there’s no way they could give it away free under EU competition law. Labour is not a Remain party,” he said.

The party’s economic spokesman Sir Ed Davey have accused both the big parties of looking backwards: “Fantasies born of nostalgia for a British Imperial past, competing with fantasies from a failed 1970s ideology.”

The Liberal Democrats are today expected to announce that they would spend £100bn with a five-year investment that would “jump-start” efforts to combat the “climate emergency”.

Adam Forrest15 November 2019 11:23
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Corbyn says broadband ‘too important’ to be left to corporations

The Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has been speaking in Lancaster about his party’s plan to nationalise part of BT and establish “British Broadband”.

He said: “This is core infrastructure for the 21st century. I think it’s too important to be left to the corporations.

“The most efficient and rapid way to deliver a broadband network fit for our times, and make it a genuine public service for all, is for the public to take control.”

“So under our plans, we will create a new public enterprise – and we’ll call it British Broadband.”

Corbyn claims a publicly-owned full-fibre network will deliver free broadband to every home within ten years. “To do that we will bring the relevant parts of BT, including Openreach, into public ownership.”

How are they going to pay for it all?

Corbyn says the initial infrastructure upgrade will be funded through its “Green Transformation Fund”, and big companies will be taxed to pay for running costs.

“A Labour government will close down tax tricks used by giants like Google and Facebook, who make millions in Britain while paying next to nothing to the public purse.”

Jeremy Corbyn speaking in Lancaster (PA) 

Adam Forrest15 November 2019 11:41
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McDonnell says British Broadband will be ‘public ownership for the future’

Shadow chancellor John McDonnell has been giving more detail on Labour’s plan to nationalise parts of BT and roll-out free, full-fibre broadband.

“British Broadband will be a new public service for the twenty-first century,” he said.

“That entity will bring the broadband-relevant parts of BT into public ownership. That will include Openreach, which has installed the majority of existing full-fibre coverage, parts of BT Technology, BT Enterprise, and BT Consumer.”

He added: “EE, Plusnet, BT Global Services, and BT TV will not be brought into public ownership and we will work the workforce and unions to finalise the details of these plans.”

Claiming that “nostalgia for some bygone era is no substitute for vision,” McDonnell explained: “British Broadband will not represent a return to the 1970s in how it operates. They didn’t have broadband in the 1970s, this is public ownership for the future.”

John McDonnell speaking in Lancaster (AFP) 

Adam Forrest15 November 2019 11:54
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Widdecombe claims she was offered role by No 10 if she stood down

Ann Widdecombe, the Brexit Party MEP standing for the party in Plymouth Sutton and Devonport, said she was offered a government role in the Brexit negotiations if she was prepared to stand aside.

“I was rung up twice by somebody at No 10. The first time it was really about how I had a moral obligation to stand down. It was all that kind of stuff,” she told the BBC’s Victoria Derbyshire programme.

“The second time it was to say that if I did stand down, I would be offered ‘a role in the negotiations’.

“I have no idea what that means, because I immediately said that I had played no role in the Tory party for a large number of years. I couldn’t now be flattered and buttered up and promised things.”

Widdecombe declined to say who she had spoken to, although she said it was not Johnson or his senior advisers Dominic Cummings and Sir Edward Lister.

Adam Forrest15 November 2019 11:57

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