Sir Keir Starmer has defended Labour’s controversial adverts attacking Rishi Sunak over the party’s stance on child sexual assaults.
The Labour leader said he will “make absolutely zero apologies for being blunt” following ads that claim the prime minister does not think child sex abusers should go to prison.
Mr Starmer said he would continue to criticise the Conservative’s record on crime “no matter how squeamish it might make some feel,” in an article published for the Daily Mail.
It comes as Labour MPs told The Independent they had personally complained to their leader about the Twitter ads – warning him that it will damage the party’s standing in “blue wall” seats in the south of England.
Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper distanced herself from the Twitter graphic on child sex abusers – with her team making clear she was not consulted about the ad devised by Labour strategists.
Starmer’s team remains unrepentant, however – and is preparing to go further by accusing Mr Sunak of effectively “decriminalising” rape in a new online ad in the coming days.
Voters want more compassionate politicians, survey finds as Labour attack ad draws criticism
The majority of voters believe political leaders do not display enough compassion, research has suggested as Labour comes under criticism for its attack advert on Rishi Sunak.
Some 57 per cent believe leading politicians should show more compassion, compared with 9 per cent who say they are already too compassionate, according to a survey.
Labour voters are far more likely to think political leaders in Britain do not show sufficient compassion, according to the research commissioned by the Global Compassion Coalition.
The YouGov survey had 83 per cent of them responding that there was too little compassion, compared with 37 per cent of Conservative voters at the last general election.
Labour shadow minister left floundered after tense exchange over attack ads
A Labour shadow minister was left floundering after being challenged over Sir Keir Starmer’s controversial attack on Rishi Sunak over child sex abusers.
In tense exchanges on BBC Radio 4 Today shadow attorney general Emily Thornberry was told Mr Starmer had been a member of the body that set the existing rules that say not all such offenders should be locked up.
Pressed three times to say if Mr Starmer had objected when the decision was made she said she didn’t know.
Interviewer Justin Webb pointed out that former director of Public Prosecutions, Mr Starmer, was a member of the “sentencing council” that set the guidelines in 2012 that he is now attacking Mr Sunak for.
After repeatedly trying to avoid answering Ms Thornberry said: “I wasn’t at the meeting and I don’t know what you are talking about.”
India ‘stops talks on UK trade deal’ after attacks on its embassy in London – report
India has reportedly halted trade negotiations with Britain in response to a perceived lack of action from Rishi Sunak’s government following protests at India’s embassy in London last month.
The Indian government was said to have “disengaged” from talks on a post-Brexit free trade agreement, which are at an advanced stage, until the British government issues a public condemnation of the Sikh separatist movement whose members vandalised the High Commission of India on Aldwych.
An unnamed UK government source was quoted by The Times as saying India “[have] said they don’t want to speak about trade, they don’t want to do trade negotiations because they think it’s part of a wider problem of us not taking the attack against the Indian high commission and the wider Sikh separatist movement seriously”.
Labour accuses Tories of handing 4,000 rapists ‘shockingly short’ prison sentences
Labour has accused the Tories of handing “ shockingly short” prison sentences to 4,000 rapists, as the party continued to attack Rishi Sunak’s handling of sentencing.
Sir Keir Starmers’ party has vowed to crack down on rapists by giving criminals convicted of the offence a minimum sentence of seven years behind bars.
Labour published analysis showing 3,876 adult rapists have received a prison sentence of less than seven years since 2010.
The figures come as Labour ramps up its attacks on the Conservative government’s record on crime ahead of the local elections in May and a national poll next year.
With his nasty attack on Sunak, Starmer has paved the way for dirty tactics to be used against him
A country that has the worst performing economy in the developed world, that is reeling from industrial unrest, and is suffering social strife and poor public services, needs far better than this, writes John Kampfner:
Keir Starmer doubles down with his ‘dirty tricks’ ads
Sir Keir Starmer has defied critics of Labour’s attack advert accusing Rishi Sunak of not wanting child sex abusers to go to jail by saying he stands by “every word”.
The Labour leader said he makes “absolutely zero apologies” for the campaign that has provoked anger within his own party regardless of how “squeamish” it makes people. The next adverts are set to blame Mr Sunak for crashing the economy, a report claims.
Amid frontbench unease, senior figures including former home secretary Lord David Blunkett called for the initial ad to be withdrawn, arguing that Labour is better than the “gutter” politics.
How Boris Johnson – and Brexit – almost unravelled the Good Friday Agreement
The former prime minister’s reckless suggestion that the Irish border would not be a problem as he sought to ‘get Brexit done’ came close to causing irreparable damage, writes Sean O’Grady.
Read it here:
Predicted 0.08% boost from UK-Asia trade deal could be overestimate
The government’s prediction that its Brexit trade deal with Asia-Pacific countries will grow the economy by 0.08 per cent may be an overestimate, it has emerged.
Officials working on the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) deal changed their usual approach to calculating the GDP figure and instead used a new model that “generates larger estimated GDP impacts”, according to the government’s own documentation.
Trade secretary Kemi Badenoch last week responded to mockery of the low figure, which amounts to a £1.8bn economic boost, by saying her department’s estimate was probably too low and ignored some benefits.
But her department’s own small print suggests the number might have been even smaller had its usual approach been taken.
Junior doctors strike ‘immediate risk to patient safety’, NHS chiefs warn
Matthew Taylor said the stoppage would also have a longer-term “catastrophic impact” on NHS waiting lists with the knock-on effect of “up to 350,000” cancelled operations and appointments.
Mr Taylor, whose organisation represents NHS managers, said the Acas conciliation service should be brought in to resolve the dispute between the government and junior doctors.
“It’s going to be an incredibly tough week. We’ve got four days of industrial action which of course come after the Easter Bank Holiday weekend, followed by another weekend, so you’re talking about 10 or 11 days when the NHS is not able to operate at full strength,” Mr Taylor told Sky News.
Our policy correspondent Jon Stone reports:
Yvette Cooper distances herself from Labour attack ads
Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper was not told about the release of controversial advert attack claiming Rishi Sunak does not think child sex abusers should go to prison.
The strategy has sparked a backlash from party figures in despair about the move into “gutter politics” after a series of Twitter ads which accuse the PM of being soft on crime.
The Independent understands that Ms Cooper was not told or consulted about the wording of the ad devised by the Labour’s strategy team, despite being related her home affairs brief.
However, Labour sources played down the idea of a row between Sir Keir’s camp and Ms Cooper, saying all shadow cabinet members were aware attacks were coming as part of law and order week.