Politics

Read about the latest UK political news, views and analysis.

Fraser Nelson

Boris Johnson was right to say the NHS was not overwhelmed

The triviality-obsessed Covid Inquiry has today been having fun with Dominic Cummings’s emails and finding rude words he used about colleagues. Trying to draw anything substantial from this is hard but one line did jump out at me: Boris Johnson saying ‘I no longer buy all this NHS overwhelmed stuff’. The inquiry should be asking: was he right?  It was October 2020. The Prime Minister messaged Lee Cain, his press chief, to talk about Covid deaths: I must say I have been slightly rocked by some of the data on Covid fatalities. The median age is 82-81 for men and 85 for women. That is above life expectancy. So get COVID

Steerpike

Four flashpoints from Cummings’ Covid Inquiry appearance

Today it was the turn of the Vote Leave gang to appear before the Covid Inquiry. And while Lee Cain, Boris Johnson’s onetime director of comms, gave a fairly sober appearance this morning, the arrival of Dominic Cummings produced the expectant headlines. Much of Cummings’ evidence today had first been revealed two-and-a-half years ago during his mammoth nine hour session before a special parliamentary select committee. But there were fresh messages and tense exchanges for the attendant hacks to chew over and fill tomorrow’s newspapers. Below are four flashpoints from today’s Covid Inquiry evidence session. X-rated language One of the first questions was for Cummings to explain his texts, published

Lisa Haseldine

Why Putin thinks war with Ukraine is like the Israel-Palestine conflict

Who is to blame for the shocking pogrom in the Dagestani city of Makhachkala, where a mob of hundreds stormed the local airport in search of Jews on a flight from Tel Aviv? Vladimir Putin has offered a predictable answer: the West. In a meeting with Russia’s security council and law enforcement agencies, president Putin said the actions of the anti-Semitic mob in Dagestan were ‘inspired through social media, including originating from Ukraine, created at the hands of agents of Western intelligence services’.  Putin is trying to present his invasion as an existential fight against encroaching Western influence Putin then went further, suggesting that the US could also be blamed for war in

When will XL Bully defenders admit that genes matter?

It’s not a good time to be an American XL Bully. The breed, an extra-large pitbull variant, has been blamed for a threefold rise in fatal dog attacks in the UK; after a series of high-profile maulings, bullies have today been added to the list of breeds restricted under the Dangerous Dogs Act. Incidents involving the dogs have been met with a bizarre insistence from some quarters that no, there is nothing especially dangerous about the XL bully. The RSPCA has long opposed ‘breed-specific legislation’, and denies that any breed of dog – including those bred for fighting, or, in the case of one prohibited breed, hunting down escaped slaves – poses more of a risk than another. The Dogs Trust put

Steerpike

SNP in civil war over Ash Regan’s Alba defection

All is not well in nationalist circles. Veteran SNP MSP Fergus Ewing has now lashed out at the ‘petulant’ response of Humza Yousaf and the SNP leadership to Ash Regan’s defection to Alba. Steerpike can’t blame him — with hapless Humza’s muddled indy strategy confusing, er, just about everyone, they’re all back to fighting like Nats in a sack… The SNP is ‘having a sort of late adolescence, as I would see it,’ Ewing told Mr S. ‘A sort of troubled, angry patch of door slamming and getting in with the wrong crowd… But the thing about adolescents is they grow up,’ he added, hopefully. For his sake, Mr S

Stephen Daisley

Suella Braverman is all talk

Three cheers for Suella Braverman, hammer of the left. The Home Secretary has provoked yet more howls of indignation from progressives after describing anti-Israel demonstrations as ‘hate marches’. Speaking after Monday’s Cobra meeting, Braverman said: ‘We’ve seen now tens of thousands of people take to the streets after the massacre of Jewish people, the single largest loss of Jewish life since the Holocaust, chanting for the erasure of Israel from the map. To my mind there is only one way to describe those marches: they are hate marches.’ Suella Braverman’s right-wing philippics are her version of ‘build the wall’ Finally, someone willing to tell it like it is. That is,

Kate Andrews

What can Rishi learn from the EU’s plummeting inflation rate?

Good headlines are coming out of the Eurozone this morning, as the inflation rate slowed to 2.9 per cent in October. This is a spectacular fall from its double-digit peak last October, when the rate sat at over 10 per cent. Today’s news brings inflation to a stone’s throw away from the European Central Bank’s target of 2 per cent. But it’s not without trade-offs. Alongside today’s inflation news, we have also learned that growth across the Eurozone took a hit, averaging a 0.1 per cent contraction between July and September this year. This dip was worse than the consensus, which expected to see a small uptick in GDP. Some

Is Sunak winning over Scottish voters with his petrol ban delay?

Fewer than one in five Scots can reliably be expected to vote for the Conservative party, but a poll this weekend showed that well over half are in favour of his delay on the banning of the sale of new petrol and diesel cars. In rural areas, much of which is still considered SNP territory, this is nearer 70 per cent. The Tories aren’t popular north of the border — but Rishi Sunak’s green pushback rhetoric is making an impact on Scotland. Our electric vehicle charging infrastructure in Scotland is very poor. The government built a network which is now both dismally slow and almost unfeasibly unreliable. Now, the Prime

James Heale

Vote Leave duo turn on Johnson at Covid Inquiry

Boris Johnson wasn’t in attendance at the Covid Inquiry this morning, but he was certainly there in spirit. The ex-Prime Minister suffered a bevvy of blows in absentia, in the form of WhatsApps published from his former No. 10 team. Among the more explosive were his blunt views on a second national lockdown in October 2020: ‘We should let the old people get it [coronavirus] and protect others’ he wrote in one. ‘The median age is 82-81 for men & 85 for women. That is above life expectancy. So get Covid and live longer.’ A diary entry from Sir Patrick Vallance complained that  Johnson is ‘obsessed with older people accepting their

Katy Balls

Starmer takes on his party over Gaza ceasefire demand

Keir Starmer has tried to get back on the front foot today over his party’s position on Israel and Palestine. Following growing discontent in Labour over Starmer’s refusal to call for a ceasefire, the party’s leader used an impromptu speech at Chatham House to insist that he would not bow to demands to change his mind. Despite more than a fifth of his MPs calling for one, Starmer argued that ‘a ceasefire now is not the right way forward’ as it would stop Israel from dismantling Hamas and could embolden the terrorist group. Starmer said a ceasefire would ‘freeze’ the situation as it is – which would be a bad

Jake Wallis Simons

Is Suella Braverman wrong about pro-Palestine ‘hate marches’?

Supporting the Palestinians is a reasonable thing to do. Flying their flag is not an act of hatred. Expressing sympathy for their hardships is not bigotry. There is nothing invalid about arguing for their national self-determination.  The problem has always been the proximity of the Palestinian cause to the Jews. Is accusing the ‘Zionist lobby’ of pulling the strings of politics a reasonable expression of support for the Palestinians? Is accusing Jews of ‘white supremacy’, even though a majority of Israelis are non-white? Is trying to lynch them at an airport? If, as I argue, Israelophobia is the newest version of the oldest hatred, then it is as adept as

Will Elon Musk end up humiliating Rishi Sunak?

Bill Gates was probably otherwise engaged. Mark Zuckerberg was busy in the metaverse. And Jeff Bezos was tied up on his next rocket trip. When the Prime Minister Rishi Sunak was looking for a major technology tycoon to host a conversation with at his Artificial Intelligence summit later this week those were probably the names at the top of the wish list. When all of them declined, however, the Prime Minister settled for the Tesla founder Elon Musk instead. But hold on. While Musk is without question a major tycoon, he is also a huge wild card. And Sunak may well end up regretting his choice.  Whether he lights up

Steerpike

Len McCluskey’s mad Mossad theory

Since slinking off into ignominious retirement two years ago, Westminster has been blessedly free of the pronouncements of Len McCluskey. Amid ongoing questions about a controversial hotel project, the former Unite boss has seemed largely content to reinvent himself as a scribe of sorts, teaming up with longtime comrade Jeremy Corbyn to release, er, a collection of ‘accessible’ poems – though now without the musings of Russell Brand. But last night the duo returned to the spotlight, reuniting in LBC’s Millbank studio to opine on the ongoing conflict in Gaza and Andy McDonald’s suspension from Labour. And ‘Red Len’ certainly brought his trademark tact, wisdom and diplomatic touch to the

Gareth Roberts

Israel, Palestine and the troubling silence of Britain’s anti-racists

There’s no room for racism in Britain, we’re told. EDI (equality, diversion and inclusion) initiatives and anti-racism strategies are everywhere. We’re all familiar with the ‘horror’ of micro-aggressions and unconscious bias. We are forever on alert for dangerous racial ‘dog whistles’. And yet the last few weeks has exposed a troubling blind spot when it comes to tackling racism: it’s clear that Jews don’t really count. Hamas’s attack – and the response from Israel – has unleashed a tide of hate on the streets of Britain. Posters of kidnapped Israeli children have been torn off walls. ‘From London to Gaza, we’ll have an intifada,’ demonstrators chanted during the Palestinian solidarity

Isabel Hardman

Starmer suspends Labour MP over ‘river and the sea’ comments

In the past few minutes, Labour has suspended Andy McDonald from the party whip after comments he made that were ‘deeply offensive, particularly at a time of rising anti-Semitism which has left Jewish people fearful for their safety’. Those comments, which the Labour backbencher made at the weekend, included the phrase ‘between the river and the sea’. He will now be investigated by the party’s disciplinary process. The suspension highlights the difference between the two main parties on disciplinary matters arising from the Israel-Hamas conflict. The Tories have sacked one frontbencher, Paul Bristow, for calling for a ceasefire against the party line. Labour now has more than a dozen frontbenchers

Katy Balls

What’s the point of the Covid inquiry?

14 min listen

The Covid inquiry enters its most dramatic week, questioning Martin Reynolds (a.k.a. ‘Party Marty’), as well as former No. 10 advisors Lee Cain and Dominic Cummings. But it seems that the inquiry has gone down more the route of interpersonal drama rather than lessons learnt for government decisionmaking. So what’s the point of it? Katy Balls talks to Isabel Hardman and James Heale. Produced by Cindy Yu.

James Heale

Government aide sacked after calling for Gaza ceasefire

Rishi Sunak has tonight moved quickly to sack a Tory MP who called for a ceasefire in Gaza. Paul Bristow, the MP for Peterborough, was removed as a Parliamentary Private Secretary (PPS) less than two hours after the Telegraph reported that he had become the first Conservative MP to publicly support such a plan. According to a No. 10 spokesman: ‘Paul Bristow has been asked to leave his post in government following comments that were not consistent with the principles of collective responsibility.’ Bristow wrote to Sunak on Thursday, setting out the case for a ceasefire in a two-page letter. He wrote that ‘Thousands have been killed and more than

Isabel Hardman

What’s the point of the Covid inquiry?

Was anything in Martin Reynolds’s evidence to the Covid inquiry surprising today? We already knew that Boris Johnson had a sketchy hold of the details when Covid emerged in early 2020, something that the PM’s former private secretary gave us more on when he admitted that there was a period of ten days where the Prime Minister wasn’t briefed on Covid at all. We already know that Simon Case liked to mouth off on WhatsApp about how unimpressed he was by, well, everyone, and how it was all a bit unfair. We got more of those missives from the Cabinet Secretary, along with a contrasting exchange between Reynolds and the