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UK politics live: Badenoch warns of Tory leadership ‘stitch-up’ as Johnson reveals ‘nuts’ vaccine raid plan

Boris Johnson promises ‘the unfiltered truth about Brexit, Covid and the Conservative Party’ in his new book, Unleashed

Barney Davis,Holly Evans
Saturday 28 September 2024 12:13
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Keir Starmer refuses to apologise to pensioners over winter fuel payment cuts

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Kemi Badenoch has warned that Tory members will be “very angry” if MPs take part in a “stitch-up” to lend votes to other candidates to keep her out of the top two in the leadership contest.

Allies of Badenoch have claimed she is the victim of a “dirty tricks” campaign, with Robert Jenrick in effect lending votes to James Cleverly, which the former has strongly denied.

Asked if she believed Jenrick was taking this approach, she told The Times: “I think that may be happening. But what else is happening is that there is tactical voting. We’re also operating in an environment where people have friends — people who they’ve worked with, people they owe favours to. So that will be happening.”

Meanwhile, Boris Johnson has claimed he considered launching an “aquatic raid” on a warehouse in the Netherlands to retrieve Covid vaccine doses amid a row with Europe.

The former prime minister wrote in his new book Unleashed that he considered sending the British Army on a daring raid to snatch the vaccines from an EU warehouse, although he rejected the idea, saying: “The whole thing was nuts.”

Mr Johnson’s book, Unleashed, is being serialised in the Daily Mail and has seen him defend his actions during “Partygate”, which eventually led to his resignation after he was found to have lied over flouting lockdown rules.

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Tories spent too long ‘appeasing Reform voters’, warns Theresa May

The Conservative Party has “failed to see the threat from the Liberal Democrats” while focusing too much on Reform, Theresa May has warned.

Writing in The Times ahead of the party’s annual conference in Birmingham, Baroness May said the remaining candidates for the Tory leadership could “play into Reform’s hands” by failing to understand why they lost the general election.

The former prime minister said the Conservatives lost power in July not due to policy, but because the party had “trashed our brand”, losing its reputation for “integrity and competence”.

Theresa May has warned the Conservative candidates could ‘play into Reform’s hands’
Theresa May has warned the Conservative candidates could ‘play into Reform’s hands’ (Hannah McKay/PA Wire)

Blaming the Partygate scandal and Liz Truss’s mini-budget, Lady May added the Tories had spent “too long tacking to the right in order to appease potential Reform voters” and “forgot that we are not a right-wing party but a centre-right party”.

Lady May compared the Conservatives’ strategy to last month’s 1,500m Olympic final in Paris, in which Norway’s Jakob Ingebrigtsen was too focused on defeating Britain’s Josh Kerr that he allowed American Cole Hocker to come through on the inside and take gold.

She said: “Just as Ingebrigtsen was focused on Kerr and failed to see that his action against him would open up other threats, so the Conservative Party has been focused on Reform and failed to see the threat from the Liberal Democrats – losing 60 seats to them at the election.”

Holly Evans28 September 2024 12:13
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Badenoch condemns ‘unforgivable’ attempts to undermine Sunak

Kemi Badenoch has hit out at Rishi Sunak’s critics who attepted to undermine him during the final months of his premiership, describing it as “appalling”

“Starting the New Year with people talking about a ‘grid of shit’ to undermine Rishi, ‘We’re going to cause all these problems so he has to resign’, in the year we were most likely to have an election … that is unforgivable,” she told The Times.

She revealed that she had been approached by those plotting to remove him but rebuffed them, before taking aim at Robert Jenrick, who was one of Sunak’s most ardent critics.

“The difference between Robert and me is that my resignation was my lowest moment and his resignation was his highest moment,” she says. “In the hustings he tells people that it was his resignation that showed why he should be leader, whereas my resignation was, for me, a sign that our party was fragmenting.

Both Badenoch and Jenrick are due to lay out their vision for the future of the Conservatives over the following days at the party’s annual conference.

After returning to parliament, MPs will whittle down the four candidates to a final two, with members voting for their new leader soon afterwards.

Holly Evans28 September 2024 11:45
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Kemi Badenoch warns Tory members will be ‘very angry’ if stitch-up occurs

Tory leadership hopeful Kemi Badenoch has warned that members will be “very angry” if MPs orchestrate a “stitch-up” to keep her out of the final two.

Allies of the North West Essex MP have claimed her campaign is the victim of “dirty tricks”, which has seen her competitor Robert Jenrick accused of lending votes to James Cleverly.

Speaking to The Times about the support she has received from voters, Badenoch said: “But really what I think that they’re saying is less that they want a chance to vote for me, but that there is no stitch-up. They want a real competition. And if the MPs try and stitch it up, I think the members will be very angry.”

She recalled: “It happened in 2019, where the Boris [Johnson] camp played around with votes to make sure that they got the person they wanted to be up against. And it can happen. I don’t know whether there’s enough of us for it to happen.”

Asked if she believed Jenrick was attempting that approach, she said “that may be happening”, but added that a number of MPs were tactically voting for friends or to repay favours.

Kemi Badenoch’s allies have claimed she is the victim of a ‘dirty tricks’ campaign by other Tory leadership hopefuls
Kemi Badenoch’s allies have claimed she is the victim of a ‘dirty tricks’ campaign by other Tory leadership hopefuls (PA Wire)
Holly Evans28 September 2024 11:28
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Russell Findlay picks Rachael Hamilton as Scottish Tories deputy leader

Scottish Conservative leader Russell Findlay has said his new deputy leader will “play a key role” in changing the party.

Mr Findlay, who comfortably won the contest to succeed Douglas Ross as the leader of the Scottish Conservatives, appointed MSP Rachael Hamilton to the post.

She takes over from Meghan Gallacher, who had stood against Mr Findlay for the party leadership and resigned as deputy partway through the campaign.

Ms Hamilton, the MSP for Ettrick, Roxburgh and Berwickshire, said she was “privileged” to become deputy and “excited” to be part of the party’s new leadership team.

It is Mr Findlay’s first appointment since becoming party leader on Friday, and he said he was “delighted” Ms Hamilton would be deputy leader.

Findlay was announced as the new leader of the Scottish Conservatives on Friday morning
Findlay was announced as the new leader of the Scottish Conservatives on Friday morning (Andrew Milligan/PA Wire)
Holly Evans28 September 2024 11:00
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Boris Johnson says he ‘struggled’ to keep straight face during trans debate

In his new memoir, Boris Johnson has recalled his amusement during Penny Mordaunt’s speech that gender recognition for trans people was the “most important issue of our times”.

In an excerpt published in the Daily Mail, he said: “I didn’t catch all the details, but it seemed fairly harrowing stuff, and at one point I heard Penny claim: ‘This is the most ­important issue of our times.’

“I didn’t always agree with Phil Hammond, but I happened at that moment to catch his eye and to see that he – like me – was ­struggling to contain his amusement.

“I mean: I could see that this was an issue of huge importance to some people (though surely not that many?) and I could see that it needed to be handled with tact and sensitivity.

“But ‘the most important issue of our times’? Really?”

In his book Unleashed, he wrote that Theresa May had announced “in breathy vicar’s-daughter tones” that Ms Mordaunt had “something very important to talk about”, which led him to question whether Lady May was really Right-wing.

Holly Evans28 September 2024 10:29
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Starmer’s pragmatic approach to government is proving to be what’s best for the country

Almost three months into his administration, Sir Keir Starmer’s self-styled “British pragmatism” has made a refreshing – indeed invigorating – change from the ideological obsession and grinding search for new culture wars that disfigured politics under the Conservatives.

Such controversies as there have been – notably about the cuts to the winter fuel allowance and policy in the Middle East – have been fact-based and verging on the empirical. The same is true about his efforts to build a personal rapport with Donald Trump, and the apparent willingness to rethink taxing the super-rich non-doms, given reports that the Treasury fears little if any new revenue may be raised by attacking these extremely mobile people.

There is nothing to be gained from taxation that yields no return, and there is even less to be said for failing to get on terms with a man who has a roughly even chance of being the president of the United States of America in about six weeks. The prime minister, in both cases, is placing country firmly before party, even if it means dining on some of his own words as well as Mr Trump’s no doubt excellent banquet.

Read the full article here:

Starmer’s pragmatism is proving to be the best way to govern

Editorial: The prime minister’s willingness to put country ahead of ideology is serving the UK far better than his culture war-obsessed predecessors

Holly Evans28 September 2024 09:56
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Starmer responds after Musk tells people to avoid UK following summit snub

Sir Keir Starmer has responded to Elon Musk after the tech tycoon said people should not go to the UK.

The Tesla and SpaceX boss lashed out at the UK after it was reported he had not been invited to a major investment summit because of his social media posts during the summer riots.

Mr Musk said: “I don’t think anyone should go to the UK when they’re releasing convicted paedophiles in order to imprison people for social media posts.”

Sir Keir, who held a gathering for US business chiefs set to attend the summit while he was in New York, told reporters that Mr Musk’s views were in “stark contrast” to those of the executives he had met.

Elon Musk lashed out after it was reported he had not been invited to a major investment summit
Elon Musk lashed out after it was reported he had not been invited to a major investment summit (REUTERS)

“There’s a really strong window of opportunity now with the UK, given the changes we’ve brought about, our number one mission on economic growth, and to talk them through the wealth fund, the industrial strategy, what we’re doing in terms of planning, grids, etc,” Sir Keir said.

“So I’m listening good and hard to what they have to say, because they will be attending the summit, and many of them are already investing in the UK.

“On Tesla. Obviously, I encourage investment from anywhere, and so I don’t want to be misunderstood on this. So good investment into the UK is what I’m very, very keen to promote.”

It is understood SpaceX has been invited to send a representative to the summit in October.

Holly Evans28 September 2024 09:26
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The Tories are adrift in the political wilderness – can they ever recover?

When the Conservatives begin their annual conference tomorrow (Sunday), it might be tempting for them to savour the woes engulfing Keir Starmer’s government so early in its life. Labour’s freebies will certainly provide plenty of ammunition – and jokes at Starmer’s expense.

True, it’s good news for the Tories if voters think the parties are “all the same” – one likely result of the recent controversy. It will be harder for Labour to play the sleaze card against the Tories at the next election.

All politicians struggle to resist schadenfreude. Yet the biggest mistake the Tories could make would be to assume Labour is doomed to be a one-term government. I recall such Tory complacency in 1997 after Labour’s previous landslide; the Tories lost the following two elections.

Read the full analysis here:

The Tories are adrift in the political wilderness – can they ever recover?

Ahead of this week’s party conference, the race to become the next leader of the Conservatives is heating up, writes Andrew Grice – but given the state of the party’s popularity, how much does it actually matter?

Holly Evans28 September 2024 09:01
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Boris Johnson considered ‘nuts’ plan to raid Dutch warehouse over vaccines row

Former prime minister Boris Johnson considered launching an “aquatic raid” on a warehouse in the Netherlands to retrieve Covid vaccine doses amid a row with Europe, according to an extract from his memoir.

Mr Johnson convened a meeting of senior military officials in March 2021 to discuss the plans, which he admitted were “nuts”, according to an extract from his Unleashed book published in the Daily Mail.

At the time, the AstraZeneca vaccine was at the heart of a cross-Channel row over exports, with the EU lagging behind the pace of the rollout in the UK.

The extract says the deputy chief of the defence staff (military strategy and operations), Lieutenant General Doug Chalmers, told the prime minister the plan was “certainly feasible”, using rigid inflatable boats to navigate Dutch canals.

But the senior officer said it would not be possible to do this undetected, with lockdowns meaning the authorities might observe the raid, meaning the UK would “have to explain why we are effectively invading a long-standing Nato ally”.

The former PM admitted: “Of course, I knew he was right, and I secretly agreed with what they all thought but did not want to say aloud: that the whole thing was nuts.”

Holly Evans28 September 2024 08:42
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SNP calls for investigation into donations from Labour peer

The SNP has asked for an investigation into donations to Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and Labour MPs by Lord Waheed Alli.

In a letter to the standards commissioners in the House of Commons and House of Lords, SNP MP Brendan O’Hara said the revelations have “become Sir Keir Starmer’s version of the expenses scandal”, and he also wants Lord Alli’s Downing Street pass – that he held for a time after the election – looked into.

Donations from Lord Alli, such as money that was spent on clothing, have been under scrutiny.

Mr O’Hara said that unless the matter is “comprehensively investigated” then it is “inevitable that the damaging drip, drip of revelations will continue to erode public trust”.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said all rules had been complied with (Leon Neal/PA)
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said all rules had been complied with (Leon Neal/PA) (PA Wire)

He later added: “I believe there now exists a clear and immediate public interest in launching a full and independent investigation into all of Lord Alli’s donations and gifts to the Prime Minister, Cabinet ministers and Labour Party MPs.

“There must also be an investigation into the decision to give Lord Alli a security pass to Downing Street, and into how – and why – it was used.”

On Friday evening The Guardian reported there were further clothing donations worth a total of £16,000 to Sir Keir by Lord Alli in October 2023 and February 2024. According to the paper, the donations were described as “for the private office of the leader of the opposition”.

Holly Evans28 September 2024 08:29

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