The Northern Ireland secretary insists Boris Johnson will survive the ongoing Partygate scandal to fight and win the next general election as Conservative leader.
Brandon Lewis’s comment came amid growing pressure on the PM – some from his own MPs – to quit if he is fined by police over alleged lockdown-busting parties in Downing Street, with ex-leader Iain Duncan Smith saying it would be “very tough” for him to stay on.
“He has my absolute 100 per cent-plus loyalty,” the cabinet minister said of his boss, adding he had got all “the big decisions right”.
Meanwhile, police have been asked to investigate death threats made against Sir Keir Starmer by right-wing extremists in the wake of the PM’s false claim that he “failed to prosecute” the paedophile Jimmy Savile. Messages from users of the Telegram app have been sent to police by the Centre for Countering Digital Hate. Among them were calls for the Labour leader and shadow foreign secretary David Lammy to be “executed”.
Watch: NHS chief ‘frustrated’ govt won’t sign up to recruitment plan
Labour: Reforms needed to deal with ‘perfect storm’ for policing
Following my earlier post (1.45pm), here’s what Yvette Cooper said about Britain’s policing in full, as reported by our political editor Andrew Woodcock.
The shadow home secretary warned an overhaul is needed to police training, misconduct proceedings, whistleblowing structures and social media use, writes
In the wake of the death of Sarah Everard and the exposure of misogynistic behaviour at Charing Cross police station in London, she called on home secretary Priti Patel to make tackling violence against women and girls a strategic policing requirement for all forces, as recommended in a report last year by HM Inspectorate of Constabulary.
Ministers voice security fears as PM seeks closer ties to China
A cabinet split over UK-China relations has deepened after it emerged Boris Johnson is seeking to boost trade with the Asian superpower.
Boris Johnson and chancellor Rishi Sunak are looking to form what sources close to them describe as a more pragmatic and balanced approach to ties with Beijing. The tone adopted by No 10 and 11 is at odds with what some cabinet figures view as a mounting threat to British security from the world’s second largest economy.
Foreign and business secretaries Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng are among those in cabinet who The Independent understands favour a more guarded approach which reduces the UK’s economic dependence on China, rather than reinforces it, writes our economics editor Anna Isaac.
Watch: Policing in UK facing ‘perfect storm,’ says shadow home sec
‘Stretching’ NHS targets not enough to stop waiting lists rising – health chief
An update on the post-Covid NHS crisis. Waiting lists are likely to continue growing for longer than government ministers have suggested, even if trusts meet their “very stretching” targets to tackle the backlog of treatment which has built up during the Covid pandemic, a health service boss has warned.
Launching a plan to speed up elective treatments last week, health secretary Sajid Javid acknowledged that queues will lengthen over the coming years as people who held back during the pandemic seek help, but said they were expected to be on a downward trend by March 2024.
But the chief executive of NHS Providers, Chris Hopson, today said that waiting lists could continue to swell beyond that point, even if trusts meet the target of stepping up to 130 per cent of normal levels by 2024/25.
Our political editor Andrew Woodcock has the full report:
Sunday services still affected by pay rows
Some transport news now. A rail operator was running a limited service on Sunday because of a strike by conductors in a dispute over pay.
The Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union said its members on TransPennine Express (TPE) were solidly supporting a 24-hour walkout. More strikes will be held on the next three Sundays.
RMT general secretary Mick Lynch said: “Reports from the ground show that RMT members are solidly supporting the action on TPE this morning in what is a fight for basic pay justice.
“Our members refuse to be treated unfairly and will be continuing with industrial action until the pay discrimination is dealt with. The company need to wake up to that fact and we hope today’s action will shake them out of their slumber.”
The company announced an amended timetable for Sunday, with a “significant” reduction in available services.
Home Office won’t apologise to 12 asylum seekers wrongly jailed
The Home Office and Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) have refused to apologise to at least 12 innocent asylum seekers who were jailed for crimes they did not commit.
The men, from countries including Iraq and Iran, were all prosecuted for “facilitating illegal immigration” by steering their dinghies across the English Channel. Their convictions were publicised by the Home Office in a series of press releases that falsely labelled them “people smugglers”, and it has not publicly acknowledged the quashing of their convictions.
The asylum seekers were jailed for between a year and three years and nine months in a string of cases that started in 2019, but were not reviewed by the Court of Appeal until last year, reports our home affairs editor Lizzie Dearden. Judges have so far overturned 12 cases, with the most recent tranche of seven convictions thrown out on Tuesday.
Watch: Tory minister shows support for PM in wake of Partygate
Police asked to probe death threats to Starmer following PM’s ‘Savile’ slur
Police have been asked to investigate a rash of online death threats made against Keir Starmer by right-wing extremists in the wake of Boris Johnson’s false claim that he “failed to prosecute” the paedophile Jimmy Savile.
A dossier of messages from apparently identifiable users of the Telegram app has been sent to police by the Centre for Countering Digital Hate, writes our political editor Andrew Woodcock.
Among them were calls for the Labour leader and shadow foreign secretary David Lammy – who were accosted by a mob shouting “paedophile protector” and “Savile” as they walked through Westminster last week – to be “executed”.
‘Odd’ for Sadiq Khan to pressure Cressida Dick to resign, says minister
There’s more from Brandon Lewis now, who used a Times Radio interview earlier to condemn the Mayor of London for withdrawing his support for Dame Cressida Dick, the former Met Police commissioner.
The Northern Ireland secretary described Sadiq Khan’s position as “rather odd”, asking listeners of the station to “bear in mind this is a man who just a couple of months ago extended Cressida Dick’s contract”.
Mr Lewis added he thought London’s mayor “should’ve been consulting with the home secretary” before he put pressure on Dame Cressida to go following a text messaging scandal in the Met which revealed serving officers making racist, sexist, and homophobic ‘jokes’ to one another.
“For me, yes, I think he should’ve been talking to and working with the home secretary particularly so close to a time he extended a contract himself – it does seem to be a rather odd position for him to have taken,” the cabinet minister said.
Asked if he thought the mayor was playing politics, he responded: “Possibly, to be frank.”
He argued Mr Khan was “very keen” to appoint Dame Cressida but now he “seems to have had a volte face in just the last week”.