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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Daniel Lavelle

UK politics: ‘Nothing off the table’ over potential UK troop deployment for Ukraine, says No 10 – as it happened

British soldiers training in Romania earlier this year
British soldiers training in Romania earlier this year Photograph: Andrei Pungovschi/Getty Images

Closing summary

Good afternoon,

This blog will be closing soon.

Thank you for all your lively contributions in the comments section today.

You can still follow the Guardian’s political reporting here and in tomorrow’s newspaper.

Have a lovely weekend.

Here’s a summary of today’s top stories, which included Downing Street saying they were not ruling out deploying British troops to the ground, air and sea in Ukraine; a tense meeting with MPs over a new era of austerity, leaked messages from Nigel Farage and attacks on endangered bats…

  • “Nothing is off the table” in terms of potential troop deployment on air, land or sea for Ukraine, Downing Street said amid questions about whether the prospect of ground forces had become less likely.Asked whether the focus had shifted away from the prospect of ground troops for Ukraine, a Number 10 spokesman said: “No, nothing is off the table on any of these fronts, so I wouldn’t start ruling anything out, but clearly thousands of troops will be required to support any deployment, whether that is at sea, on land or in the air.”

  • Labour MPs having ‘tense meetings’ over return to austerityLiz Kendall has been having “tense’ meetings with Labour MPs to reassure them about cuts to disability benefits,” Shebab Khan, ITV’s Political Correspondent, reports.n a post on X, Shebab wrote that “One MP told me they left the meeting ‘feeling worse than when they walked in’ while another said they weren’t sure ‘how much longer we can claim this isn’t austerity’.”

  • Reform UK leader Nigel Farage described the behaviour of suspended Reform MP Rupert Lowe as “disgusting” and “contemptible” in private WhatsApp messages leaked to the BBC. In one message, Farage says Lowe is “contemptible”. When asked by the BBC’s anonymous source, who used to be a party member and is also being investigated for bullying, a claim they deny, why Reform did not allow an investigation to be completed by a lawyer before suspending Lowe, Farage said: “Because he is damaging the party just before elections. Disgusting.”

  • A YouGov poll found that 61% of people either strongly supported or somewhat supported the government’s commitment to cut carbon emissions to net zero by 2050, while 24% said they somewhat opposed or strongly opposed it and 15% said the didn’t know.Even among those who voted Conservative at the last general election, 52% supported the net zero commitment, 38% opposed it and 11% didn’t know.

  • The Health Secretary, Wes Streeting, accused the NHS of acting in an “immoral” way by depriving needy countries of homegrown health professionals. Brexit has left the NHS increasingly dependent on doctors and nurses from poor “red list” countries, from which the World Health Organization says it is wrong to recruit.

  • High-profile celebrities including Sir Stephen Fry, Brian Cox and Stanley Tucci have criticised the government’s £5bn cuts to disability benefits, calling the plans “shameful” and “a stain on this country”. Fry said the cuts burden should fall on the best-off in society, rather than hitting vulnerable disabled people: “The social security system should be rooted in justice and compassion, fairness and need. It’s not too late to rethink this.”

  • More than 9,000 unpaid carers looking after ill and disabled loved ones have become the latest to be hit with carer’s allowance overpayment debts in the past year, prompting calls for ministers to suspend the controversial practice. In total, 144,000 carers now have outstanding repayments after falling foul of drastic “cliff-edge” rules limiting the amount they can earn from part-time jobs while still claiming carer’s allowance benefit.

Tommy Robinson loses court case

The High Court has dismissed an attempt by the far-right agitant Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, better known as Tommy Robinson, to challenge his jail conditions.

Yaxley-Lennon argued that his segregation at HMP Woodhill in Milton Keynes, was destroying his mental health and breaching his human rights.

Dismissing the case, Mr Justice Chamberlain said Yaxley-Lennon’s own barrister had accepted there was no evidence his client had been segregated “for the purpose of breaking his resistance or humiliating or debasing him”.

On the contrary, all the evidence shows [the decision] was taken for his own protection and in the interests of preserving the safety of other prisoners and staff.”

He himself had said, when first detained at HMP Belmarsh, that he had a conflict with the followers of Islam.

It was thus understandable the governor should be concerned that Mr Yaxley-Lennon’s presence might foment unrest or violence between Muslim and non-Muslim prisoners.

The former leader of the English Defence League, known for organising racist and violent protests, was handed an 18-month sentence in October after admitting he breached a court order which had told him not to repeat lies about a Syrian refugee.

Yaxley-Lennon has a long history of criminality and has been found guilty of offences including multiple assaults, mortgage fraud, faking a passport, stalking, contempt of court and various public order offences.

Updated

The leader of Plaid Cymru, Rhun ap Iorwerth, has warned people to “beware” Donald Trump, Elon Musk and Nigel Farage at his party’s spring conference speech.


Speaking on Friday, Iorwerth said:

Courage calls to courage everywhere, and its voice cannot be denied That suffragist mantra rings just as true now as it did when it was first uttered more than a century ago.

Because be in no doubt, those wishing to silence that voice are more energised, more organised, more enfranchised than they have been in a very long time.

So, as Trump and Musk and Farage and their followers seek to profit from the currency of fear and hate, we too must show courage.

We must be united and determined in exposing these morally bankrupt millionaires and billionaires who know the price of everything and the value of nothing.

Trump believes in Trump. Musk believes in Musk. Farage believes in Farage.

Beware these men whose only real ideology is their ego.

First minister John Swinney says he is “sorry” that veteran MSP Fergus Ewing will not stand for the SNP in next May’s Holyrood elections, the PA news agency reports.

Earlier on Friday, Ewing, who previously served as the Scottish government’s rural economy secretary, said he could run as an independent candidate in the elections.

Ewing said: “Amongst several reasons, the principal one is that I am afraid that I simply cannot defend the record of the SNP Government to fail to deliver on its longstanding pledges to dual the A9 and A96 – both so vital for my constituency.

I have stood in every election on these pledges, and so, as a matter of honour, I simply cannot defend the lack of delivery.”

Swinney said he was “sorry Fergus Ewing has decided not to stand for the SNP at the next election”.

The SNP leader praised the veteran politician for being a “faithful servant of his constituents” and added he has “contributed much” to both the parliament and the Scottish government. “I said I would be the first minister for all of Scotland, and that is what I will do.”

Updated

Labour MPs having 'tense meetings' over return to austerity

Liz Kendall has been having “tense’ meetings with Labour MPs to reassure them about cuts to disability benefits,” Shebab Khan, ITV’s Political Correspondent, reports.

In a post on X, Shebab wrote that “One MP told me they left the meeting ‘feeling worse than when they walked in’ while another said they weren’t sure ‘how much longer we can claim this isn’t austerity’.”

It is true that Reeves’ cuts to public spending are some of the biggest since austerity was first inflicted on the UK in 2010 by the coalition government.

The last bout of deep spending cuts launched by the coalition and subsequently sustained by the Tories was an unmitigated disaster for the most vulnerable people in the UK.

Over 300,000 excess deaths have been attributed to austerity, which also saw significant rises in child poverty, homelessness, crime rates, health inequality, and a decline in life expectancy.

Updated

The UK’s largest fact-checking charity, Full Fact, has compiled a few issues with statements the prime minister has made this week about welfare spending, the PA news agency reports.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and another minister suggested that such spending is set to reach £70 billion by the end of the decade.

Sir Keir said at an event last week: “The welfare system as it’s set up, it can’t be defended on economic terms or moral terms. Economically, the cost is going through the roof. So if we don’t do anything, the cost of welfare is going to go to £70 billion per year.”

And in a broadcast interview on Monday, Economic Secretary to the Treasury Emma Reynolds MP said that without changes “we’ll be spending £70 billion on social security by the end of the decade”.

However, according to Full Fact, these figures appear to refer specifically to the forecast cost of working-age health and disability benefit spending by 2029/30 - not the overall cost of welfare spending, which is much higher.

Figures published by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) prior to this week’s announcement forecast that spending on health and disability benefits for working-age adults would increase from £56.4 billion in 2024/25 to £75.7 billion in 2029/30.

Full Fact said:

It’s been four months since we at Full Fact launched our Government Tracker - a major ongoing project tracking the Government’s progress in delivering some key pledges, made both in the Labour manifesto and in the eight months since Labour took office.

We’re now monitoring progress on 51 pledges. And while the Government’s made clear progress on a range of commitments, we believe it still needs to do much more to explain what some of its pledges mean and how progress on them should be measured.

While many of the Government’s promises are clear, or have been clarified since Labour formed a Government, we’ve found it difficult or impossible to meaningfully rate 12 pledges, due either to unclear wording or insufficient information about the details of the pledge.

That represents nearly a quarter of the pledges we’re tracking so far, selected from an initial list of almost 300 trackable commitments in Labour’s election manifesto and some of the commitments the Government has made subsequently.

We’ve been unable to give any meaningful verdict on three pledges - including the commitment to “not increase taxes on working people” and to deliver “thousands more GPs” - because of a lack of clarity and essential information about what Labour originally pledged.

We think a further nine pledges - such as the promises to recruit “6,500 new expert teachers in key subjects” or halve serious violent crime - lack important information to determine how success should be measured.

We’ve so far rated eight of the 51 pledges we’ve examined as ‘achieved’, and a further 16 as ‘appears on track’. Three pledges are currently rated as ‘appears off track’ however, including the commitment to “secure the highest sustained growth in the G7” and the promise to end the use of “asylum hotels”.

The Government recently declared it had achieved one manifesto pledge - to deliver an extra two million NHS appointments - even though that pledge appears to have originally been set in the manifesto as an annual target, which means we won’t be able to say for sure if it has been achieved until the first year of the parliament is complete. For now, we’ve rated that pledge as ‘appears on track’.

Health secretary will consider national inquiry into baby deaths at NHS trust

Health secretary Wes Streeting says he will consider making a public inquiry into a maternity scandal after pressure from affected families.

On Thursday, Streeting met with families who had lost babies and women under the care of Nottingham University Hospitals (NUH) NHS Trust.

The trust is now the subject of the largest review in the history of the NHS, with senior midwife Donna Ockenden scrutinising 2,500 individual cases.

Streeting claimed he would “reflect carefully” on calls for a public inquiry and consider the ”next steps”.

Streeting said in a statement that he heard “personal and painful accounts” including stories of “dead babies, life-changing injuries” and ongoing trauma. He added that the two-hour meeting “will stay with me for the rest of my life”.

“While my words can’t do justice to what they – and other families across the country – have suffered, actions from government and the NHS can at least try to put right past wrongs. I will do everything in my power to ensure all women and babies receive the safe, personalised and compassionate care they deserve.”

Updated

The prime minister is expected to take a call on Friday to discuss progress towards safeguarding any Ukraine peace deal.

The PM will get his own briefing from European Council President António Costa, and possibly Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, in a call to brief their non-EU allies this afternoon.

Keir Starmer is expected to also update them on the “coalition of the willing” of countries prepared to support Ukraine. Turkey, Norway and Iceland are expected to also dial in.

Leaked messages reveal Farage's antipathy to Lowe amid Reform rows

Nigel Farage accused the suspended Reform UK MP Rupert Lowe of “damaging the party”, calling his behaviour “disgusting” in leaked messages which reveal the antipathy between the two right-wing politicians.

Farage had sent the private Whatsapp messages to someone who had worked for Lowe in recent years. His criticism came after Lowe called Reform a “protest party” and Farage “messianic” in an interview with the Daily Mail in March.

In the interview, Lowe – who had been touted as a replacement leader by Elon Musk earlier this year – was asked if Farage would make a good prime minister. He told the Mail: “It’s too early to know whether Nigel will deliver the goods. He can only deliver if he surrounds himself with the right people.

“Nigel is a fiercely independent individual and is extremely good at what we have done so far. He has got messianic qualities. Will those messianic qualities distill into sage leadership? I don’t know.”

Read the full story here

The energy secretary, Ed Miliband, has faced questions about how one fire could shut down an entire airport.

He said electricity distribution network National Grid had told him they had not seen “anything like the scale” of what happened.

“But it makes Heathrow look quite vulnerable and therefore we’ve got to learn lessons, as I say, about not just Heathrow but how we protect our major infrastructure,” he told ITV news.

The chair of the parliamentary transport committee, Ruth Cadbury, said it was “speculative” to suggest at the moment that arson might have caused the fire.

But she told Times Radio: “There are obviously questions about it.”

Asked about the Heathrow fire, the No 10 spokesman said it “wouldn’t be unreasonable to expect checks on resilience” to be carried out at other major airports.

Counter terror police are leading the investigation into the “unprecedented” electrical substation fire that has closed down the airport, stopping more than 1,300 flights on Friday. You can follow our blog on developments here

'Nothing off the table' over potential UK troop deployment for Ukraine, says No 10

“Nothing is off the table” in terms of potential troop deployment on air, land or sea for Ukraine, Downing Street said amid questions about whether the prospect of ground forces had become less likely.

Asked whether the focus had shifted away from the prospect of ground troops for Ukraine, a Number 10 spokesman said: “No, nothing is off the table on any of these fronts, so I wouldn’t start ruling anything out, but clearly thousands of troops will be required to support any deployment, whether that is at sea, on land or in the air.”

Any deployment will require significant support and the firming up of “basic logistics of ... moving people and ensuring deployment rotations, so as the PM said we need to be prepared for all eventualities,” the official said.

Updated

More London meetings next week to 'accelerate' Ukraine planning

More military meetings will take place in London next week among allied countries to “accelerate” planning to enforce any future peace deal in Ukraine, Downing Street has said.

As PA Media reports, a Number 10 spokesman said: “We’ve moved into an operational phase now and what that means is ... bringing together military planners to look at the potential design of force structures, interoperability and what capability is needed to ensure a sovereign Ukraine is able to defend itself for generations to come.

“That includes looking at everything from aircraft, tanks, troops and intelligence capabilities, and how we can best put them to use to support Ukraine.

“This delivers on the prime minister’s plan to support Ukraine by ramping up delivery of weapons and equipment, boosting Ukraine’s defensive capabilities in the long-term, working with allies to develop robust security assurances and keeping up the pressure on President Putin.

“Next week, we’ll continue to accelerate the pace and scale of operational planning with further meetings at our Northwood headquarters as we look forward more closely at the details and structure of any future force.”

More than 5,000 people have arrived in the UK in small boats after crossing the Channel so far this year, latest figures show.

PA reports that 341 people made the journey in six boats on Thursday, bringing the provisional total for the year so far to 5,025. This is the earliest point in the year that crossings have reached the 5,000 mark since data on Channel crossings was first reported in 2018. Last year, 5,000 arrivals was passed on 31 March.

The cumulative number of arrivals so far in 2025 – 5,025 – is 24% higher than at this stage in 2024, when the figure stood at 4,043, and 36% higher than at this point in 2023 (3,683).

The highest number arriving in one day this year so far stands at 592 people, crossing the Channel in 11 boats on 2 March.

The latest figures come after the French coastguard confirmed two people died in two days trying to cross the Channel on Wednesday and Thursday. One person died after being pulled from the water while the other person died after trying to cross in an overloaded boat, despite rescue efforts to save them.

The UK signed a “road-map” agreement with France earlier this month aimed at bolstering cooperation to tackle people-smuggling across the Channel. The government’s new border security, asylum and immigration bill also continues through parliament with plans to introduce new criminal offences and hand counter terror-style powers to police and enforcement agencies to crack down on people-smuggling gangs.

A Home Office spokesperson said: “We all want to end dangerous small boat crossings, which threaten lives and undermine our border security. The people-smuggling gangs do not care if the vulnerable people they exploit live or die, as long as they pay. We will stop at nothing to dismantle their business models and bring them to justice.”

Wrong, badly wrong, and it won’t easily, if ever, be forgotten or forgiven. To take £5bn from those with the least, disability claimants already well below the median income who are clustered in the poorest towns, will leave a lasting scar on Labour’s reputation.

Sending Labour ministers out on the airwaves to defend the indefensible has been like sending lambs to the slaughter. The welfare secretary, Liz Kendall, and the employment minister, Alison McGovern, used to speak with passion about their optimistic plans for the future of work – but they never meant £5bn cuts. Torsten Bell, the treasury minister, is fresh from heading the Resolution Foundation with its myriad reports on reducing poverty and inequality, but he had to back £5bn cuts on Newsnight. Stephen Timms, social security and disability minister at the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), is one of the most thoughtful and knowledgable ministers about social security. He surely never intended this, yet he too was sent out on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme…

Bats are being "scapegoated" by Reeves - Chris Packham

Nature broadcaster Chris Packham has told my colleague Helena Horton that Bats are being “scapegoated” by Rachel Reeves after the chancellor suggested they were getting in the way of economic growth.

“It’s absolutely absurd,” says the broadcaster and nature campaigner:

I am always someone who likes to deal with the facts so I would really like to know over the course of a year how many planning applications are completely refused because of bats, as a percentage of all those across the country. I am going to hazard a guess that it would be a fraction of 1%.

They picked bats because most people never get to see them and engage with them because they are nocturnal. They wouldn’t pick on hedgehogs or red squirrels for example.”

The life of Bats in the UK is precarious, with some species being endangered and others being considered near threatened. According to the Bat Conservation Trust, even though populations of the 11 species of bat surveyed in a study “appear to be stable or increasing, we know there is still a long way to go before these species recover from huge historical declines.”

For more on the story:

Farage says suspended Reform UK MP's behaviour was "contemptible" in leaked messages

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage described the behaviour of suspended Reform MP Rupert Lowe as “disgusting” and “contemptible” in private WhatsApp messages leaked to the BBC.

In one message, Farage says Lowe is “contemptible”. When asked by the BBC’s anonymous source, who used to be a party member and is also being investigated for bullying, a claim they deny, why Reform did not allow an investigation to be completed by a lawyer before suspending Lowe, Farage said: “Because he is damaging the party just before elections. Disgusting.”

When it was suggested the investigation into Lowe was a response to his criticism of the leadership, Farage replied on WhatsApp: “We are definitely damaged and within two weeks of nominations. Awful.”

Members of Rupert Lowe’s team. Among them, people who have worked with Farage for years told the BBC that “Nigel is thin-skinned and egotistical. I have spent years defending him but the aura has gone for me now. Reporting Rupert to the police? Come on. They’re trying to put him in prison!”

The staff member claimed the row was over Elon Musk’s praise for Lowe on X, saying: “Nigel is very sensitive about his American contacts.”

Another staffer added: “It is absolutely terrible the party going to the police. You’d never find someone more kind and considerate than Rupert. If you don’t have policies as a party, you’re a joke, and that is what Rupert was pointing out.”

Ed Miliband announces first major project for the publicly-owned Great British Energy.

Responding to a question about the 650,000 new jobs pledged in Labour’s manifesto, the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Friday:

We’re confident we’re going to provide hundreds of thousands of jobs as a result of our drive to net zero.

This is the growth opportunity of the 21st century. Turn your back on net zero and you turn your back on business investment, good jobs, innovation for the future, and Britain leading in the key industrial areas of the future.

I’m very confident that we will create hundreds of thousands of jobs in the green economy.” He also said he is “confident” the Government will meet its pledges.

The investment will also include additional money for councils and community groups to create clean power projects, such as community-owned onshore wind, rooftop solar and hydropower in rivers.


Miliband told ITV’s Good Morning Britain there are “many schools and hospitals facing sky-high energy bills as a result of our dependence on fossil fuels. This will cut bills for schools, 200 schools, 200 hospitals, a 300% increase in the coverage of solar panels in terms of the NHS in terms of hospitals.”

He added that the average reduction in a bill would be “£25,000 for a school” and “£45,000 for a hospital”.

Elections will take place in 23 councils across England on 1 May 2025.

  • Six mayors will also be elected on 1 May in the West of England, Cambridgeshire and Peterborough, North Tyneside, Doncaster and – for the first time – in Greater Lincolnshire and Hull and East Yorkshire.

  • Contests for seats in 14 county councils will take place in Cambridgeshire, Derbyshire, Devon, Gloucestershire, Hertfordshire, Kent, Lancashire, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire, Nottinghamshire, Oxfordshire, Staffordshire, Warwickshire and Worcestershire. Council elections are also taking place in the Isles of Scilly.

  • There will be eight contests for seats in unitary authorities, including Buckinghamshire, Cornwall, County Durham, North Northamptonshire, Northumberland, Shropshire, West Northamptonshire and Wiltshire, as well as one metropolitan district in Doncaster.

Government to scrutinise smartphone bans in schools

The education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, will begin monitoring the efficacy of smartphone bans in schools amid growing pressure to act on some of the negative influences social media has on children.

The guidance states that “all schools should prohibit the use of mobile phones throughout the school day – not only during lessons but break and lunchtimes as well”, but does not say how schools should enforce the bans

The education secretary is to start monitoring a group of schools to understand the effectiveness of the guidance.

A government source told the Guardian: “It beggars belief that the Tories repeatedly told voters they were banning phones but did nothing to ensure the guidance was being followed.

“While the vast majority of schools are complying with the guidance we need to make sure it’s being followed to the letter. Rather than indulge in gimmicks and headline-grabbing after years of telling us the guidance was sufficient like the Tories, we’re going to keep schools honest and ensure classrooms and corridors are phone-free.”

For the full story, please read this report by my colleagues, Jessica Elgot, Rachel Keenan and Rachel Hall

Part of the issue is that Reeves has clung tightly to her “non-negotiable” fiscal rules, and promised not to repeat anything on the scale of last October’s tax-raising budget, leaving spending cuts as the path of least political resistance. The chancellor has set significant credence in keeping the OBR on side in particular.

But the mood is turning in Labour circles, much of it stemming from the tight involvement of the OBR in policymaking. “People are feeling pretty gloomy right now. And there is no sign of anything getting better either,” said one source close to the party. “We have a loop where you get two forecasts [a year] and one budget. It’s a nightmare for political management.”

There is precedent for the fiscal rules to be breached. George Osborne, the OBR’s architect in 2010, broke his rules in 2012 and 2016. The targets have been changed repeatedly: at least eight times since 2010, giving them the shortest lifespan of any major government’s fiscal rules…

Talks aimed at ending a strike by waste collectors in Birmingham have ended without a breakthrough.

Members of the Unite union in the city launched an all-out strike on 11 March in a long-running dispute over pay, leading to rubbish piling up and bins remaining unemptied for weeks. Residents have complained that rats are rummaging through the waste, leading to fears over public health.

Last Tuesday, nearly 400 council bin workers in the city began indefinite strike action. United said the Labour-run city council could end the dispute “by agreeing to pay a decent rate of pay”. Union officials met council officers on Thursday, but the strike continues…

February’s public finances data, published on Friday, is only likely to make Rachel Reeves more convinced that she needs to take action at next Wednesday’s spring statement.

Despite scepticism from economists and some colleagues, including in the cabinet, Reeves is determined to make spending cuts, including the £5bn reduction in welfare spending already announced, to restore the headroom against her self-imposed fiscal rules.

February’s data underscored why she believes something has to be done.The government borrowed £10.7bn in February, against the £6.5bn that the Office for Budget Responsibility had estimated, in the light of Reeves’s budget.

It is not surprising there are pressures: growth has been weaker than expected, and borrowing costs higher, as global markets have driven up interest rates. And tax receipts always bounce around at the start of the year because of the timing of self-assessment returns.

People are “over-interpreting” what prime minister Keir Starmer said in regard to the future of Ukraine, says energy secretary Ed Miliband.

On Thursday, Starmer said the so-called “coalition of the willing” was dividing its planning efforts between air, sea, land, borders, and regenerating Ukraine. However, Starmer did not mention putting troops on the ground, leading some to speculate that the government is withdrawing from that commitment.

However, Miliband insists that’s not the case: “I think people are over-interpreting what the prime minister said yesterday,” he told Sky News.

Miliband added:

Look, I think work is obviously ongoing on the terms of a ceasefire and the protection that will be put in place to protect that ceasefire and to protect the people of Ukraine. That operational planning, that military planning, is ongoing.

You wouldn’t expect me to get into the detail of that but I don’t think people should jump to conclusions.

That planning is an ongoing process and obviously is one going on in concert with our allies, and indeed in concert with Ukraine and the government of Ukraine.”

Updated

Outspoken SNP backbencher Fergus Ewing has said he will not run for the party in the 2026 election and may run as an independent instead, reports the PA news agency.

Ewing, who has been a vocal critic of the Scottish Government, says he will not quit the party before the election.

He said failures to dual the “vital” A9 and A96 roads were the chief reason he was not putting himself forward for nomination again.

Writing for the Press & Journal newspaper, Mr Ewing said:

It is with great sadness that, after 26 years and six successful election campaigns, I shall not be submitting my name for nomination for the SNP for the Holyrood election next year for the Inverness and Nairn constituency.

Among several reasons, the principal one is that I am afraid that I simply cannot defend the record of the SNP government to fail to deliver on its long-standing pledges to dual the A9 and A96 - both so vital for my constituency.”

Unless progress is made on dualling the roads, he said he “may consider standing next year as an independent candidate”.

But sadly, the SNP just is no longer the party for all of Scotland, as it has been for most of my 50 years as a member - the national party.

UK government borrowing rose by more than expected in February to £10.7bn, underscoring the challenge for Rachel Reeves before next week’s spring statement.

Figures from the Office for National Statistics showed borrowing – the difference between total public sector spending and income – was little changed from the same month a year earlier. However, over the financial year to date borrowing was up nearly £15bn on the same period last year.

In a setback for the chancellor, the monthly total was higher than expected in a Reuters poll that predicted a deficit of £6.6bn.

Reeves will make her spring statement to the Commons on Wednesday against a backdrop of sluggish economic growth, stubbornly high inflation and rising government borrowing costs…

My colleague Gaby Hinsliff argues in her column that after Keir Starmer watched the Netflix show Adolescence, a drama that highlights youth violence and growing misogyny among young boys, he now needs to act.

Hinsliff argues that young people’s siloed information bubbles driven by manipulative algorithms need to be better regulated, and there needs to be better support for families.

Here’s an extract:

Though talk of misogynistic “manosphere” influencers such as Andrew Tate hovers over the storyline, this isn’t really a story of radicalisation. What it skewers is the feeling of growing up very publicly in a world where sending nudes risks them instantly being shared round the class and everyone automatically films playground fights on their phones, and how that intensifies dangerous feelings of shame and rejection in immature minds. Over half of young women now say they’re frightened of their male peers, according to a sad little survey for the Lost Boys project at the Centre for Social Justice thinktank. What’s not always obvious is that beneath their anger, boys are often equally frightened of them…

Ed Miliband says he is confident government will meet its target of net zero by 2050

Good morning,

After a disastrous week for the Labour government, with many saying the party have abandoned their core values by cutting disability benefits, Ed Miliband is trying to shift focus on to the government’s carbon emissions targets.

The government is “absolutely up for the fight” over net zero, Miliband said, as he accused the Conservatives and Reform of “a total desertion and betrayal” of future generations by failing to tackle the climate crisis.

Miliband told BBC’s Today programme that he is confident the government will meet its target of net zero by 2050.

In other news …

  • A YouGov poll found that 61% of people either strongly supported or somewhat supported the government’s commitment to cut carbon emissions to net zero by 2050, while 24% said they somewhat opposed or strongly opposed it and 15% said the didn’t know.

  • Even among those who voted Conservative at the last general election, 52% supported the net zero commitment, 38% opposed it and 11% didn’t know.

  • The Health Secretary, Wes Streeting, accused the NHS of acting in an “immoral” way by depriving needy countries of homegrown health professionals. Brexit has left the NHS increasingly dependent on doctors and nurses from poor “red list” countries, from which the World Health Organization says it is wrong to recruit.

  • High-profile celebrities including Sir Stephen Fry, Brian Cox and Stanley Tucci have criticised the government’s £5bn cuts to disability benefits, calling the plans “shameful” and “a stain on this country”. Fry said the cuts burden should fall on the best-off in society, rather than hitting vulnerable disabled people: “The social security system should be rooted in justice and compassion, fairness and need. It’s not too late to rethink this.”

  • More than 9,000 unpaid carers looking after ill and disabled loved ones have become the latest to be hit with carer’s allowance overpayment debts in the past year, prompting calls for ministers to suspend the controversial practice. In total, 144,000 carers now have outstanding repayments after falling foul of drastic “cliff-edge” rules limiting the amount they can earn from part-time jobs while still claiming carer’s allowance benefit.

Updated

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