Latest from Coffee House

Latest from Coffee House

All the latest analysis of the day's news and stories

Steerpike

Kemi becomes the Tory members’ favourite

When the king abdicates, who inherits the throne? Following Ben Wallace’s departure as Defence Secretary, it seems that Kemi Badenoch has now seized his crown as the toast of the Tory grassroots. For 18 months, Wallace topped the ConservativeHome league table of party members. But his exit from the political stage means there’s a vacancy

Steerpike

Parliament shells out another £190k for leaky roof report

It’s not just England’s schools that are crumbling. As the new term dawns, MPs have returned to Portcullis House to find work still ongoing to fix the building’s notoriously leaky roof. Water poured into the building’s atrium last month after a ‘huge bang’ which left the area fenced off with scaffolding underneath. A Freedom of

Are civil servants taking their revenge?

Jonathan Slater, a former top mandarin at the Department for Education (DfE), has laid the blame for the school building safety crisis fairly and squarely at the door of the Prime Minister. It is an extraordinary public intervention by a former senior civil servant in an ongoing political controversy: former mandarins of Slater’s rank are

Isabel Hardman

Does Gillian Keegan deserve some credit?

Gillian Keegan’s Commons statement on the school concrete crisis will not be the most memorable contribution the Education Secretary made today: that award goes to her hot mic moment a few hours before where she appeared to suggest that people should be grateful for what she was doing and that others hadn’t been doing anything

Steerpike

Watch: Keegan reacts to her hot mic moment

It’s been quite a day for the Education Secretary. Morning, noon and night, she has been on the airwaves today, having made what is surely the most famous on-air Keegan rant since Newcastle beat Leeds in April 1996. Appearing on Sophy Ridge’s new Sky show this evening, the garrulous minister had to sit and watch

Ian Acheson

Why Northern Ireland’s Chief Constable had to go

Simon Byrne, the Chief Constable of Northern Ireland’s beleaguered police force, has stepped down. It’s about time. The country’s police service, created to oversee a changing society in the aftermath of the Good Friday agreement, has been reeling from a succession of scandals. These stories – not least involving the leak of details about 10,000

Humza Yousaf’s Brexit hypocrisy

Nobody ever accused the SNP of being consistent but when it comes to the question of EU membership, the party’s position is positively incoherent. At a Saltire-strewn rally in Edinburgh on Saturday, party leader and Scottish First Minister Humza Yousaf told a crowd of around 5,000 (or 25,000 if you believe organisers’ spin) that Brexit was

Gareth Roberts

How did the ONS get its GDP figures so wrong?

The Office for National Statistics let a bombshell drop on Friday. Halfway down the first page of their grippingly-titled document ‘Impact of methodological and data improvements on current price and chain volume measure of quarterly gross domestic product (GDP), 1997 to 2021’, they slipped out this sentence: ‘Annual volume GDP growth in 2021 is revised

The SNP shakes up its Westminster frontbench

It’s not just Keir Starmer announcing a reshuffle today — the SNP’s Westminster leader Stephen Flynn has taken it upon himself to rearrange his frontbench. Flynn says that the promotion of women to top positions and improving the representation of other Scottish communities informed his decisions. It’s clear, however, that the Westminster leader’s main consideration

Steerpike

Watch: Gillian Keegan apologises for letting rip on camera

Education Secretary Gillian Keegan is in hot water. Keegan has been touring the broadcast studios to reassure worried parents in the wake of the schools concrete crisis, but it seems she has had enough. When the cameras stopped rolling at the end of her ITV interview, she let rip by saying: ‘Does anyone ever say,

Steerpike

Starmer’s new media spokesman: ‘Bring down the house of Murdoch’

It’s reshuffle day today, with Labour’s recently-promoted frontbenchers now beginning the work of familiarising themselves with their new briefs. One who certainly won’t need any introduction to her role is Thangam Debbonaire, a trained classical cellist who now has the job of shadowing the Department of Digital, Media, Culture and Sport. Among her responsibilities is

Katy Balls

The winners and losers from the Labour reshuffle

Who is the big winner so far from Keir Starmer’s reshuffle? The MP with the most to complain about is Lisa Nandy. She has been demoted from Levelling Up secretary to shadow cabinet minister for international development. Given she held the Foreign Office brief in Starmer’s first shadow cabinet, it’s quite a fall from grace.

Jonathan Miller

Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic problem

Ladies and gentlemen, please make sure your seat belt is securely fastened and your seat backs and tray tables are in their full upright position. Richard Branson will this week once again blast his Virgin rocket ship into space. Although not really, because at best his sub-orbital ship will only get to the edge of

James Heale

How did the Tories not see the school concrete crisis coming?

12 min listen

Parliament is back from recess and the row which will be dominating MPs inboxes is the school concrete crisis, which has disrupted the start of term for over 100 schools. Why didn’t the government act sooner?   James Heale speaks to Katy Balls and Isabel Hardman.   Produced by Oscar Edmondson.

Steerpike

Sunak faces another tricky Tory by-election

It never rains but it pours for Rishi Sunak. Just when a new term loomed, with the encouraging news that UK GDP had been revised upwards, along comes a deluge of bad news to dampen his freshly-raised spirits. First, there was the ongoing row about school roofs potentially collapsing on kids – a ‘sub-optimal’ spectacle,

Live blog: Keir Starmer promotes Angela Rayner in Labour reshuffle

Labour leader Keir Starmer’s reshuffle has now finished. Labour’s deputy leader Angela Rayner has been moved from her current berth, shadowing the Cabinet Office to Levelling Up – marking something of a promotion for Rayner. Lisa Nandy, however, has been given a large demotion from shadow Levelling Up minister to shadow cabinet minister for international

Sam Leith

Silicon Valley’s curious obsession with building old-fashioned communities 

It’s a peculiar thing about billionaires: they don’t half have a weak spot for building ideal communities from the ground up. You could call it pluto-utopianism. The latest manifestation of this is California Forever. A number of ultra-wealthy Silicon Valley tech entrepreneurs have been quietly buying up 55,000 acres of farmland in Solano county, California, and at the end of

Steerpike

Listen: Ex-mandarin slams Sunak on schools

Oh dear. With parliament returning from recess today, No. 10 was hoping that this week would be a chance to put the summer blues behind them. But a former mandarin with a grievance has returned to put a spanner in the works.  Amid a row over who is to blame in the ongoing schools farrago,

Isabel Hardman

How did the Tories not see the school concrete crisis coming?

How did they not see this coming? Normally that question is one of the laziest you can ask in Westminster: easy for pundits or opposition politicians to say with a confident flourish in hindsight when they hadn’t seen it coming beforehand, either. But in the case of reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC), everyone saw this

Steerpike

Fact check: would independence cut Scotland’s energy bills?

Good old Humza Yousaf: the one-man walking cure for imposter syndrome. Scotland’s First Minister was out making the case for independence this weekend, telling a Scexit rally that ‘the people of this country are not suffering from a cost-of-living crisis, they’re suffering from a cost of the Union crisis.’ When asked by reporters to justify

Steerpike

Kuenssberg loses a third of Marr’s viewers

More bad news for the Beeb. It seems that the Corporation’s flagship Sunday politics show has sprung a leak and is losing its audience at an alarming rate. Figures from Barb, obtained by the Sunday Times, show that the number of live viewers for Laura Kuenssberg’s show has declined by more than a third since

The terribleness of a progressive Bond

The latest Bond villain is Nigel Farage. Not literally, of course. But he was clearly a major inspiration for the chief antagonist in the most recent James Bond book, On His Majesty’s Secret Service. This master of international skulduggery is known as Athelstan; a former City trader with a Kentish accent, he espouses a boisterous,

Kate Andrews

What does Theresa May want?

26 min listen

Theresa May’s new book, Abuse of Power, will not be a gossip-fuelled account of her time in No. 10. Instead, it’ll be an account of how powerful people make mistakes, and how institutions corrupt. What’s the point of the book, and has the former Prime Minister landed on a real, punishing problem in British politics? Kate

Gavin Mortimer

Will Paris’s ban stop e-scooters killing people?

Rental e-scooters have been banned from Paris since Friday after residents of the French capital were asked to decide their fate in a referendum. The vote, held in April, attracted a low turnout, with only 103,000 of the city’s 1.38 million men and women bothering to cast their ballot. Of those that did, however, 90 per

Fraser Nelson

Revealed: Britain’s welfare hotspots

Every three months, the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) updates the full UK welfare picture. It’s a big task and there’s a six-month lag — but the resulting picture is the biggest scandal in politics. It shows that now, with a worker shortage crisis so acute that immigration has been running at a million