Britain under Tories is ‘longest episode of Eastenders ever,’ says Keir Starmer
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has claimed Rishi Sunak is being “bullied” by his own MPs and he used PMQs to mock the prime minister after a fresh Tory civil war erupted.
Sir Keir said that Mr Sunak was “endlessly” fighting with his own party and that the more “they slag him off behind his back, the louder they cheer in here”.
It comes after Liz Truss ally Sir Simon Clarke claimed that the Conservative Party could face “extinction” unless the prime minister resigns.
Sir Simon, who served in the Treasury under Mr Sunak, made the intervention in the Daily Telegraph to urge his colleagues to sack the PM ahead of the looming general election, arguing that he “has sadly gone from asset to anchor”.
Tory MPs have rounded on Sir Simon’s attempted coup, branding his move against Mr Sunak as “foolish” and “facile” – while another called him a “self-indulgent tosser”.
A senior Conservative MP told The Independent that Sir Simon was “flying a kite that’s already broken” and that they did not expect fellow right-wingers to join his rebellion.
Simon Clarke ‘wasting everyone’s time’, says Sunak ally
Senior Sunak allies said Sir Simon Clarke’s push against the PM had already fizzled out, with no-one new on the right calling for Sunak to be replaced, reports Political Correspondent Adam Forrest.
One senior figure told The Independent: “Clarke is wasting everyone’s time. It’s going nowhere.” Another called Sir Simon was an “outlier”, saying they were confident he was not be followed by other MPs on the right.
No 10: Simon Clarke is ‘one MP’
No 10 described Sir Simon as “one MP” who was “in a different place to some other MPs”, reports Politics and Whitehall Editor Kate Devlin.
However, Downing Street would not be drawn on whether or not they thought he was a ‘lone wolf’.
But they said his intervention would not “distract us” Mr Sunak from getting on with “what matters to people”.
Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer trade personal insults during bruising PMQs
Rishi Sunak is being “bullied” by Tory MPs as they take part in the “longest episode of EastEnders ever put to film”, according to Sir Keir Starmer.
The Prime Minister countered by branding Labour leader Sir Keir a “human weathervane” and attacked his work as a lawyer as the pair traded personal insults in the House of Commons.
Mr Sunak arrived in the chamber to loud cheers from his MPs, just hours after former Cabinet minister Sir Simon Clarke called for him to be replaced as leader to avoid a Conservative “massacre” at the general election.
Richard Wheeler reports:
Sir Simon is ‘in a different place to other MPs and won’t distract us’, says Downing St
Sir Simon Clarke is “in a different place to some other MPs” and his intervention “won’t distract us from getting on with what matters to people”, Downing Street said.
The Prime Minister’s press secretary said: “The PM is just focused on the job, getting on with the key priorities that he’s set out for the country and that’s where he’s spending his time at the moment.”
Asked whether Rishi Sunak would be talking with Sir Simon in the wake of his Telegraph op-ed, she said she would “never get into conversations between the Prime Minister and colleagues.”
Number 10 insisted the Conservatives are united on the “big issues” such as lowering tax where it is responsible to do so, describing Sir Simon as a “known critic.”
Asked whether Mr Sunak was worried about a wider revolt, she said: This is one MP. All I would say is Simon Clarke has set out his view in a paper today.
“We recognise that he’s in a different place to some other MPs that have come out today. He’s entitled to his view but that won’t distract us from getting on with what matters to people.”
No 10 refuses to deny Sunak has plans to bring back Anderson as Tory deputy chair
Downing Street has refused to deny Rishi Sunak has plans to bring Lee Anderson back as Tory deputy chairman, saying Number 10 has a “lot of time” for him despite his resignation over the Rwanda Bill.
Asked whether the prime minister would consider giving Mr Anderson his job back after he reportedly voiced regret over his abstention, Mr Sunak’s press secretary said it was “the PM’s prerogative to choose and when” who gets which jobs.
“I think we can say that we have a lot of time for Lee. He made it clear that he had concerns but actually he really supports getting this deterrent up and running so it’s good to see him talking about that today,” she said.
Mr Anderson and Brendan Clarke-Smith both quit as Conservative Party deputy chairs after siding with right-wing Tory MPs in backing the rebel amendments to Mr Sunak’s Rwanda bill.
Simon Clarke should shut up unless he wants ‘extinction’ of Tory party, says MP
Senior Tory MP Stephen Hammond has said Sir Simon Clarke was “wrong” to call for Rishi Sunak to be replaced – advising him to “keep quiet” unless he wanted to kill the party, reports Political Correspondent Adam Forrest.
The leading moderate told Times Radio: “My strong advice to Simon is, this isn’t going to work. This is wrong. And I think it’ll be helpful for the Conservative party cause, if he does want to stop the extinction of the party, don’t say any more.”
Mr Hammond added: “The very worst thing we could do now is have another change of leader. That would make us look … well I think self-indulgence is probably the right term.”
Lee Anderson regrets Rwanda rebellion – and says he would take job back
Senior Tory Lee Anderson has now said he should have backed Rishi Sunak and voted for the Rwanda bill, reports Political Correspondent Adam Forrest.
The right-wing rebel – who quit as deputy chair over the bill and later abstained – even said he would take his old job back if Mr Sunak asked him.
Speaking to The Telegraph, Mr Anderson should have been “brave” and sided with the PM. “I felt like I was letting my party down,” he said.
Asked if he would return to his old role if approached by Mr Sunak, Mr Anderson said: “Yeah, of course I would.”
He added: “I did wrong. Well, I say I did wrong, I acted on a point of principle. I had to resign. I had no choice. I bear no malice or anything, it’s just I know the rules.”
Sunak to give councils £500m in emergency bailout amid cash crisis
Communities secretary Michael Gove is also expected to announce lower tier districts will receive a funding boost of approximately £30 to £40m.
Political Correspondent Adam Forrest reports:
Watch: Rishi Sunak sends ‘best wishes’ to King Charles and Princess of Wales over health concerns
Rishi Sunak sent his “best wishes” to King Charles III and the Princess of Wales regarding their health.
His Majesty is preparing to undergo treatment for an enlarged prostate this week, and Kate has spent a week in hospital being cared for as she recovers from abdominal surgery.
The 42-year-old princess is expected to remain hospitalised for between 10 and 14 days in total.
Charles, 75, has returned to Sandringham ready to undergo treatment after flying back from Scotland with the Queen on Friday (19 January).
He received his diagnosis on Wednesday having had a check-up after experiencing symptoms.
Sunak sends ‘best wishes’ to King Charles and Princess of Wales over health concerns
Rishi Sunak sent his “best wishes” to King Charles III and the Princess of Wales regarding their health. His Majesty is preparing to undergo treatment for an enlarged prostate this week, and Kate has spent a week in hospital being cared for as she recovers from abdominal surgery. The 42-year-old princess is expected to remain hospitalised for between 10 and 14 days in total. Charles, 75, has returned to Sandringham ready to undergo treatment after flying back from Scotland with the Queen on Friday (19 January). He received his diagnosis on Wednesday having had a check-up after experiencing symptoms.
PMQs is over for another week
And that is it for now. Mr Sunak will head back to No 10 with an ever growing to-do list and rebellious MPs.
Meanwhile Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer will count his lucky stars that the Tory party continues to self-implode on an almost daily basis.