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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Andrew Sparrow

Axing most winter fuel payments would break Tory manifesto promise, says Labour – as it happened

Reports Sunak
Reports Sunak is considering the move come ahead of the Tory party conference. Photograph: Aaron Chown/PA

HS2 will be 'total white elephant' if Sunak cancels phase 2 to Manchester and final leg to Euston, says Boris Johnson

Boris Johnson, the former PM, has said that HS2 would be a “total white elephant” if Rishi Sunak cancels the Birmingham to Manchester and the Old Oak Common to Euston legs, as he is reportedly considering. In his Daily Mail column Johnson says:

Cancel HS2? Cut off the northern legs? We must be out of our minds. Let us get one thing clear: it is now physically impossible just to cancel the entire project, and hope that we could all quietly forget about it. HS2 is already a huge streak of construction running from London to Birmingham, with thousands of people in hard hats, and endless beeping diggers and excavators. They have dug colossal tunnels, and built bridges, and rerouted roads. You can see HS2 from space. You can’t stop now — and you can’t stop at Birmingham. If the rumours are right — and I pray they are not — the government is again debating the notion of delaying the legs to Manchester and the East Midlands, so that we are left with a massive new railway, with trains capable of running at 225 mph, from Birmingham to . . . wait for it, Old Oak Common.

Have you been to Old Oak Common? I have, and it is nowhere near the city centre. You would have to get off and schlep into town, adding about half an hour to your journey. If this really is the plan, then we are going to throw away the chance to regenerate the Euston site — an economic boost worth £50 billion for a cost of £8 billion. If this is really the plan, then we are going to end up with the crowning absurdity of spending £100 billion, or more, on a line from Birmingham to the outskirts of London that will actually be slower than the existing service. It would be a total white elephant, the vanity project to end all vanity projects; but that is not the worst thing about this proposal.

According to a report by Matt Dathan for the Times, “ministers are among more than a dozen gay Conservative MPs who have complained to the chief whip about Suella Braverman’s ‘poisonous’ anti-immigration speech, which they say has taken the party backwards.”

In further comments on Twitter, Dathan reports:

There is growing discontent over the Tory leadership’s attitude to LGBT issues more broadly.

One MP points out that there hasn’t been an openly-gay cabinet minister in each of Boris Johnson, Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak’s cabinets, a period stretching more than four years.

Concerns have been raised about the failure to implement a promised ban on conversion therapy + increasingly hardline rhetoric from some cabinet ministers against trans people

MP says many are starting to question the “instincts of some of the people at the top of the party”

The Liberal Democrats are also saying Rishi Sunak would be wrong to stop most pensioners getting the winter fuel payment. In response to the Sky News report (see 4.48pm), Wendy Chamberlain, the Lib Dem spokesperson for work and pensions, said:

Scrapping the winter fuel allowance would be a slap in the face for pensioners facing soaring energy bills this winter.

Rishi Sunak must be living on another planet if he thinks this is the answer to the country’s problems. Pensioners have worked hard and paid their taxes all their lives, they shouldn’t be made to pay the price for the Conservative party crashing the economy.

Liberal Democrats would double the winter fuel allowance to offer extra help to pensioners, paid for by a proper windfall tax on the oil and gas giants.

Updated

Axing most winter fuel payments would break Tory manifesto promise, says Labour, after reports PM considering option

Labour has said Rishi Sunak will be breaking a manifesto promise if reports that he is planning to remove the winter fuel allowance from all but the poorest pensioners are accurate.

Rachel Reeves, the shadow chancellor, said that a better policy would to increase the scope of the windfall tax on energy companies which have seen profits soar since the invasion of Ukraine.

According to Sky News, Sunak is considering removing the winter fuel allowance – worth between £250 and £600 this winter – from most pensioners. Under this proposal only the poorest, on pension credit, would still receive it, Sky reports.

According to PA Media, No 10 sources are distancing themselves from suggestions that such a proposal is being considered.

But Sky’s Beth Rigby says Sunak has accepted that he has to commit to keeping the pension triple lock in the next Conservative manifesto, despite claims that ultimately the cost of the policy will become unsustainable, because doing otherwise would be politically impossible.

Sunak is said to think that getting rid of the winter fuel allowance instead would compensate for the cost, and enable the government to spend a bit more on younger people. Rigby reports:

“Rishi understands the politics of the triple lock, although he thinks it’s far from fair from an intergenerational point of view, so he’s trying to redress that a little bit,” said one government insider.

Another person familiar with discussions told Sky News that if the government decides to “keep the triple lock but take away the winter fuel allowance from rich pensioners. I think people will understand that and think it’s fair”.

Winter fuel payments are expect to cost the Treasury £2bn a year.

The Sky report does not say when winter fuel payments might be cut back, but the government is focusing on policies that might be implemented after a general election.

Asked for her reaction to the story, Reeves said the Conservatives promised in their last manifesto to keep the triple lock and the winter fuel payment. She said:

These were commitments that the Conservatives gave to older people at the last election in their manifesto, and they should not be breaking those commitments.

One thing that I would be doing if I was chancellor today would be to have a proper windfall tax on the huge profits that the big energy giants are making and use that money to help people with their bills, older people and families too.

That is a choice that the Conservatives could make. That is a choice that they’ve failed to make.

Updated

Labour aims to win back voters across Scotland with byelection success

As scores of Labour activists queued up for Keir Starmer’s final rallying speech before next week’s Rutherglen and Hamilton West byelection, another queue was forming at the church next door.

Inside the church hall in Burnbank, two volunteers, Alex Gilmour and Anne Paul, were preparing trays of cheese and ham-filled rolls and cups of tea for about 80 local people who rely on its daily free breakfasts, its food bank and its council-funded money advice service.

This byelection, to replace the disgraced former Scottish National party MP Margaret Ferrier, has been a head-to-head contest between Labour and the SNP, with the cost of living crisis, in-work poverty and Scotland’s overstretched health service the key issues on the doorstep.

For Gilmour, a former mental health worker, the parish church’s services are where those crises bite hardest. Some of the cafe’s customers are “self-medicating” with alcohol, others are mentally unwell and some are homeless and living in “scatter flats” – short-term accommodation aimed at preventing rough sleeping.

“There’s a lot of people struggling with the cost of living now,” Gilmour said, as volunteers piled up heavily stuffed carrier bags of food on the church hall stage on Friday morning. “They want a politician that’s going to be honest, that’s going to be somebody standing up for them, somebody with integrity, and no just in it for themselves.”

That antipathy to politics has been echoed on the doorsteps, say Labour activists. The Conservatives’ repeated crises, such as Partygate and Liz Truss’s disastrous mini-budget last year, mirrored in Scotland by the SNP’s internal feuding and the police inquiry into party finances, has left many voters in Rutherglen and Hamilton West deeply disillusioned.

Updated

Britons are more likely to support than oppose lowering the speed limit in urban areas from 30mph to 20mph, according to YouGov polling from last year. Rishi Sunak is planning to make it harder for councils in England to do this.

Keir Starmer has refused to rule out holding independence talks with the SNP if the party wins the most seats in Scotland at the next general election – as he accused Humza Yousaf of trying to hide his government’s “failure in record” by focusing on the constitution, PA Media reports. PA says:

Campaigning in Scotland today, the Labour leader was pressed on what he would do if the Scottish first minister attempts to open independence talks after the election expected next year.

A new policy from Yousaf and SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn makes clear that they would view winning the most Scottish seats in the next general election as giving the Scottish government a mandate to open such discussions.

The policy, to be discussed at the SNP conference in October, has been put forward in the wake of successive prime ministers refusing to grant a mandate for a second independence referendum.

With polls suggesting Starmer could be in 10 Downing Street after the next Westminster election, he was asked if he would take part in talks with Yousaf.

Starmer responded by accusing the SNP of using “divisive politics” as a “mask for the failure in record”.

He said: “The fact is they haven’t got a record, which is why they are simply going on the attack. When a party goes on the attack like that, there is only one reason and that is because they know they haven’t got a record to stand on.

“Yet again we descend into this SNP-led discussion which is not about the cost-of-living crisis, it is not about the health service, it is not about the way they have lost control of education and the economy here in Scotland, but is about a divisive issue about the constitution. I think their priorities are completely wrong.”

Updated

The SNP has responded to Keir Starmer’s criticism of the party while campaigning in Rutherglen and Hamilton West today. (See 1.50pm.) The SNP MSP Clare Haughey said:

Keir Starmer finally came to the byelection but seemed to have very little to say.

The compelling message in this byelection is that voting SNP is the way to protect Scottish interests and drive change, forcing Westminster to act on the cost of living crisis.

The SNP’s record in government is helping people right now, including gamechanging policies such as Scottish child payment, which doesn’t exist anywhere else in the UK.

The SNP will stand up for Scotland and support households through the cost of living crisis and work to achieve a fairer, greener, independent Scotland.

Updated

Conservative peer says party does not deserve to win next election

Lord Harris of Peckham, a former Conservative donor, has said the party does not deserve to win the next election, weeks after he donated £5,000 to Labour. Aletha Adu has the story.

Why is the Tory conference happening before Labour's this year?

A reader asks:

It would be nice to learn that some arcane constitutional principle was in play, and that Simon Case, the cabinet secretary, had intervened to declare that the Conservatives were no longer entitled to the final slot (often the best one, in most presentational contexts) on grounds of fairness (or perhaps as a sanction for uselessness). Sadly, the answer is a lot more boring.

The main UK parties have staged their conferences with the Liberals first, Labour next and the Conservatives last since the 1950s. It has run like this regardless of who was in government.

But several years ago Labour wanted to make a block booking for the ACC conference centre in Liverpool over multiple years. That was fine, but the week they wanted for 2023 was already booked, and so Labour asked the other parties if they would be happy to switch. And they agreed.

Sorry. It’s not much of a tale. But it does show the parties can agree on some things.

Updated

Keir Starmer has compared the SNP government in Scotland to the Conservative one at Westminster, saying they have both failed.

Speaking while campaigning in Rutherglen and Hamilton West this morning, Starmer said:

If either of those parties, either here in Scotland or in the United Kingdom, had a record they could stand on they would stand on it. They would be coming here saying ‘this is what we have delivered, this is why you should vote for us, these are the things we have done’.

But they can’t because they have delivered nothing, and the more we look at the record of the SNP here in Scotland the more we see a record of failure.

That is why people desperately want that change here in Scotland, and it is the same story with the Conservatives.

Keir Starmer (centre) alongside Michael Shanks (2nd from right), the Labour candidate for Rutherglen and Hamilton West, at a byelection rally this morning.
Keir Starmer (centre) alongside Michael Shanks (2nd from right), the Labour candidate for Rutherglen and Hamilton West, at a byelection rally this morning.
Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian

Why is GB News allowed to let Suella Braverman be interviewed by Lee Anderson?

Tonight GB News will be broadcasting an interview with Suella Braverman, the home secretary, conducted by Lee Anderson, the Conservative party deputy chair and a GB News presenter. That prompted a reader to send me this question.

How can it be right for a Tory MP to interview a Tory MP on mainstream television?

Melanie Dawes,the Ofcom chief executive, has provided an answer. Essentially, she says if it is current affairs, not news, that’s OK. Jim Waterson has more here.

Updated

Sammy Wilson says new NI border checks from Sunday will mean DUP cannot resume power sharing

Sammy Wilson, the DUP chief whip at Westminster, has said that the introduction of new customs arrangements in Northern Ireland this weekend will mean his party cannot resume power sharing.

Speaking to the BBC’s Good Morning Ulster, he said that under the new arrangements “it will be confirmed that Northern Ireland has got a border in the Irish Sea”. That was unacceptable to the DUP, he said.

As part of Brexit the UK and the EU agreed a Northern Ireland protocol, under which Northern Ireland remains in the EU single market and there are some checks on goods arriving in Northern Ireland from Great Britain. This means there is no need for checks at the Ireland/Northern Ireland border, which all sides agreed would have been disastrous.

Earlier this year Rishi Sunak negotiated a revision to the protocol, the Windsor framework, to reduce the inconvenience for traders in Northern Ireland. One of the main elements of the framework, a green lane/red lane system for the movement of goods – will become operational at Northern Ireland ports on Sunday.

Sunak hoped that the framework would persuade the DUP to lift its boycott of power sharing at Stormont, which started as a protest against the protocol. But today Wilson said implementing the framework would make it impossible for his party to sit at Stormont. He explained:

From Sunday there will be impediments to trade coming into Northern Ireland. There will be different laws applying in Northern Ireland without any democratic control, because EU law will apply to Northern Ireland, so when [Sunak] says that the union is safe, that he has safeguarded the union, he has taken away any sense of a border in the Irish Sea, that is not true.

If we were inside Stormont, the law now requires us, and judgments have been made in the courts, that we implement it.

There should have been a £40m six-acre border checkpoint built in the Port of Larne by now. The DUP minister was able to stop that because he refused to give permission for it. If he were back in Stormont tomorrow he would by law be required to facilitate that, to introduce all the measures to do it, the procurement, appointing the builders.

That is the reason why we will not and cannot as unionists be in Stormont where we are required to implement an agreement we believe is detrimental to the union and to the people of Northern Ireland.

With the DUP boycotting power sharing, the Northern Ireland executive has not been able to function and executive decisions about Northern Ireland are either being postponed, or taken by civil servants, or the UK government. Other parties, and the Irish government, are becoming increasingly frustrated, with Sinn Féin saying yesterday patience with the DUP had “run out”.

Sammy Wilson.
Sammy Wilson. Photograph: Liam McBurney/PA

Updated

UK sanctions have been imposed on Russian officials involved in “sham” elections in annexed Ukrainian territory, the Foreign Office has announced.

Labour is currently on course to win a majority of 90 in a general election, according to polling published by the Times.

Using MRP (multilevel regression with post-stratification – a technique that involves using conventional, nationwide polling data and then working out the likely result in every constituency, based on their demographic makeup), the research from Stonehaven also suggests the Conservative party might gain fewer than 200 seats.

In his write-up for the Times Patrick Maguire reports:

Rishi Sunak’s projected 196-seat tally would be the worst recorded by any Conservative leader since William Hague’s 166 in 2001. Labour’s 372 seats would give Sir Keir Starmer a comfortable working majority of 90, the party’s biggest since 2001.

Highlighting the Tories’ vulnerabilities in their traditional southern heartlands, the Liberal Democrats would be returned with 36 seats and 10.8 per cent of the vote, a marked improvement on the 15 seats they hold at present.

Maguire says a result like this would see six cabinet ministers or attendees (Jeremy Hunt, Alex Chalk, Greg Hands, David TC Davies, Simon Hart and Andrew Mitchell) lose their seats, as well as Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg.

After a YouGov MRP poll successfully predicted a hung parliament in 2017, when most conventional polls had the Conservatives on course for an outright victory, MRP polling has had an enhanced reputation. But, like all polling, it only provides a snapshot of opinion at a particular moment, and it can be wrong.

Projection based on Stonehaven MRP polling
Projection based on Stonehaven MRP polling Photograph: The Times

Updated

Starmer says next week's Rutherglen and Hamilton West byelection 'of monumental significance'

Keir Starmer has been speaking at a rally in Rutherglen this morning, ahead of next week’s Rutherglen and Hamilton West byelection. The seat is fairly typical of the several dozen once-solid Labour constituencies that swung to the SNP after the 2014 independence referendum, and the byelection will show whether Labour now has the appeal to win them back.

In comments released by Labour in advance of the rally, Starmer said:

This byelection is of monumental significance. For far too long the people of Rutherglen and Hamilton West have been let down by two incompetent governments that don’t speak for you, and a rule-breaking MP who refused to do the right thing.

Next Thursday voters in Rutherglen and Hamilton West can say enough is enough. You can vote for change and you can elect a local champion in Michael Shanks who will put our two failing governments on notice.

Labour is once again the party of working people and ready to serve the people of the UK.

We can tackle the cost of living crisis, put money in working people’s pockets and make work pay.

Keir Starmer and Anas Sarwar, the Scottish Labour leader, with activists campaigning in the Rutherglen and Hamilton West byelection this morning.
Keir Starmer and Anas Sarwar, the Scottish Labour leader, with activists campaigning in the Rutherglen and Hamilton West byelection this morning.
Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian

Starmer also attacked the SNP for hiring workers on zero-hours contracts to distribute leaflets in the campaign. He said:

I know the importance of respect for a day’s graft. The dignity in a day’s work. The necessity for work to pay. This is why it is so insulting for the SNP candidate here to hire workers on zero-hour contracts.

It runs totally counter to the asks of people across Rutherglen and Hamilton West - for security in work, secure family finances, and fairness in exchange for hard work.

Keir Starmer speaking at a Labour rally in Rutherglen this morning.
Keir Starmer speaking at a Labour rally in Rutherglen this morning.
Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian

Updated

Sunak says revised growth figures show he can be trusted to halve inflation and grow economy

The UK economy made a faster recovery from the Covid pandemic than previously estimated, according to revisions to official figures revealing a stronger performance than Germany and France, Richard Partington reports. In a boost for Rishi Sunak before the Conservative party conference in Manchester beginning this weekend, revised figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed gross domestic product was 1.8% above pre-pandemic levels at the end of the second quarter this year.

Sunak has posted a message on X (formerly Twitter) this morning saying these figures show he can be trusted “to halve inflation and grow the economy” (two of his five priorities).

People doubted the strength of the UK economy - today’s data proves them wrong.

We’re sticking to the plan to halve inflation and grow the economy.

You can trust me to get it done.

Curbing power of councils to introduce 20mph zones would put drivers and walkers at risk, says safety charity RoSPA

RoSPA, the safety charity, says it is alarmed about reports that Rishi Sunak wants to restrict the rights of councils in England to introduce 20mph zones. Steve Cole, its executive head of policy, campaigns and public affairs, issued this statement in response to the Guardian’s story.

RoSPA is deeply concerned by reports of Sunak’s plans to block councils imposing 20mph speed limits, particularly as only yesterday figures showed that motorist and pedestrian death rates in this country are still too high.

Local practitioners and their communities know their roads far better than Westminster and should therefore have the powers to make decisions about local speed limits.

The evidence shows that local decision making about road safety including 20mph zones is both essential and effective in reducing deaths, and we do not believe that local communities should be subject to blanket decision making from Westminster about their needs.

It’s important that communities feel safe, and it is estimated that 20mph speed limits can result in 40% fewer collisions and a seven-fold reduction in deaths.

By removing powers from local communities, the government are putting drivers and pedestrians at risk and should instead be focusing efforts on assessing the evidence and delivering its long-awaited road safety strategy.

Updated

Sunak's plan for motorists will 'make roads worse', say leading cycling and walking organisations

Six leading organisations representing cyclists and walkers have issued a joint statement saying that if, as the Guardian reports, Rishi Sunak goes ahead with a “plan for motorists” that would make it harder for councils in England to limit driving, he will “make the roads worse”.

The statement comes from the the chief executives of Bikeability Trust, British Cycling, Cycling UK, Living Streets, Ramblers and Sustrans. They say:

When ministers could be promoting public transport, cycling and walking as cheap sustainable options in a cost-of-living and climate crisis, they’re entrenching congestion and reliance on driving for short local journeys.

When the government could respect people’s freedom to choose how they travel, it’s removing the alternatives.

This is a plan that looks no further than one way of travelling and will make the roads worse for those occasions when people do need to drive.

Updated

The Conservative MP Anthony Browne told the Today programme this morning that he would support Rishi Sunak in seeking to limit attempts to restrict options for drivers. He said:

There is obviously a case for low traffic speeds outside schools, for example, when children are playing, or in market squares.

But if you go where Wales has gone where it’s become the default position, 20mph, then that is basically a punitive thing against motorists.

It is absolutely true that there is a mood, certainly I think particularly on the left, to try and stop people driving as much as possible, to get them out of their cars. They see driving as a bad thing.

Browne is the MP for South Cambridgeshire. In Cambridge the Conservatives won a surprise victory in a council byelection earlier this year because of opposition to a congestion charge proposal.

Updated

Dowden says UN-led multilateral system not right body to oversee international regulation of AI

Oliver Dowden, the deputy prime minister, has said the United Nations is not the right body to oversee regulation of artificial intelligence.

Writing in the Times, Dowden said a “new approach” to global cooperation will be taken at a forthcoming global summit on AI safety and that the new system will bring governments and companies together. He said:

The multilateral system, overseen by the United Nations, will be insufficient to respond to AI. Companies and governments need to be at the table: a new form of multilateralism.

Dowden indicated that the government’s Frontier AI Taskforce, which is scrutinising the threat posed by the most advanced forms of AI, could become an international AI safety body.

It’s the first body of its kind, and I hope it can evolve to become a permanent institutional structure, with an international offer on AI safety.

Dowden added that the UK and other countries had to work with China, which has been invited to the summit as a powerful player in AI despite tensions between Beijing and the west over a range of issues including the future of Taiwan.

As a liberal democracy we welcome the open exchange of ideas and culture of rules and transparency that are essential to making AI safe. However, this will require us to work with countries that do not always share our values, including China.

Updated

Current parliament likely to mark 'decisive and permanent shift to higher-tax economy', says IFS

Andrew Griffith, a Treasury minister, has defended the government’s tax plans after the Institute for Fiscal Studies said British households were facing the biggest rise on record, Kiran Stacey and Richard Partington report.

Here is the IFS report. And this is from Ben Zaranko, a senior research economist at the IFS and one of the report’s authors.

It is inconceivable that this parliament will turn out to be anything other than a tax-raising one – and it looks nailed on to be the biggest tax-raising parliament since at least the second world war. This is not, for the most part, a direct consequence of the pandemic. Rather, it reflects decisions to increase government spending, in part driven by demographic change, pressures on the health service, and some unwinding of austerity. It is likely that this parliament will mark a decisive and permanent shift to a higher-tax economy.

This chart, from the IFS report, shows how government receipts (mostly, but not entirely, taxes) have changed as a proportion of national income during every parliament since 1900, when Lord Salisbury was PM.

How government receipts have changed as % of national income during every parliament since 1900
How government receipts have changed as % of national income during every parliament since 1900 Photograph: IFS

Updated

Rishi Sunak says 20mph limits and Ulez 'aren't the values of British people'

Good morning. The Conservative party conference starts on Sunday, and this is always a big moment when a governing party can reset, redefine itself and chart a new agenda for the next 12 months. But this time the pressure for a successful reboot is much more intense than usual, for three reasons.

First, it’s Rishi Sunak’s first party conference as leader. Second, the political model he has adopted over the first 12 months (steady “competence”, focusing on the five priorities) has totally failed (if success is judged by electoral performance, which unfortunately is the metric that matters most to MPs). And, third, with the election due in about a year, this is probably a last-chance conference. It’s all or nothing.

That means it will be fascinating to see how Sunak repositions himself, and, in a tremendous scoop last night, Peter Walker provided part of the answer. He is going to put the Conservative party on the side of drivers, with particular measures to curb the extension of 20mph speed limit zones.

The story has, rightly, been widely followed.

In the light of what we know now, it is worth looking again at what Sunak said yesterday during his marathon pre-conference regional TV and radio interview round. The Welsh government has recently introduced a de facto 20mph speed limit for residential areas which Penny Mordaunt, the leader of the Commons, criticised as “absolutely insane”. Asked if he agreed, Sunak told ITV Cymru Wales:

I think imposing a blanket 20 mile-an-hour speed limit on areas is absolutely not right. It doesn’t reflect people’s priorities.

People are dependent on their cars for their day-to-day journeys and these kind of blanket bans aren’t the right proportionate approach.

But also it comes on top of this other policy not to build any new roads as well.

You take these things together, it seems like an attack on motorists and that’s rightly received the opposition that it deserves.

When it was put to Sunak that the 20mph speed limit in Wales was not a blanket ban, because there are exemptions, the PM went further, saying policies like this were not in line with the values of the British people.

He replied:

You’ve seen the opposition from people in Wales to this policy. Look, it’s not alone – a Labour mayor in London imposing the Ulez charge, £12.50 on ordinary families when they’re just trying to get their kids to school, take them to football practice, go weekly shopping or, you know, get to work.

Those aren’t the right values of the British people who do rely on their cars to get around and we should be supportive of them.

I will post more on this as the day goes on.

Otherwise, the only thing in the diary is Keir Starmer speaking at a Labour rally in Rutherglen and Hamilton West, where the byelection takes place next week, at 10.30am. But there might be more reaction to the IFS saying that “it is likely that this parliament will mark a decisive and permanent shift to a higher-tax economy”. And, at some point before it airs at 7pm, GB News may release extracts from its interview with Suella Braverman, the home secretary. With Andrew Neil no longer working for the channel, Braverman will be subject to intense, hard-hitting and forensic questioning from – er, Lee Anderson, the Tory party deputy chair.

To be fair, Anderson is probably the only person in her party likely to criticise Braverman’s immigration speech this week, on the grounds it was a bit soft.

If you want to contact me, do try the “send us a message” feature. You’ll see it just below the byline – on the left of the screen, if you are reading on a laptop or a desktop. This is for people who want to message me directly. I find it very useful when people message to point out errors (even typos – no mistake is too small to correct). Often I find your questions very interesting, too. I can’t promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either in the comments below the line; privately (if you leave an email address and that seems more appropriate); or in the main blog, if I think it is a topic of wide interest.

Updated

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