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    Tom Tugendhat backtracks after casting doubt on net zero pledge

    Conservative leadership hopeful Tom Tugendhat has backtracked on remarks which appeared to cast doubt on his commitment to the party’s net zero target.The row comes as fears grow that Boris Johnson’s successor as prime minister will ditch the pledge to reach net zero emissions by 2050.Chris Skidmore – the former energy minister who leads the Net Zero Support Group of environmentalist backbenchers – tweeted that Mr Tugendhat had told a hustings event the target should be moved back.But Mr Tugendhat, the perceived moderate left in the race, claimed he was merely questioning how best to achieve the 2050 net zero emissions.Asked about his views by reporters on Thursday, he said: “Of course I agree with the target, but nobody yet has set out a path to achieving it.”RecommendedRishi Sunak, Penny Mordaunt and Liz Truss all offered clear backing for the 2050 net zero target at Wednesday night’s hustings, according to Mr Skidmore.But Kemi Badenoch said she wanted to change the “concept” of the target, while Suella Braverman said the 2050 date should be moved back.A Tory source told The Independent that Mr Tugendhat told MPs that the landmark date should be looked at again.But the moderate appeared to offer his support for the push to cleaner energy supply when speaking to reporters on Thursday, saying it was vital to invest in new technologies.“We keep talking about net zero as a cost – it is also a benefit,” he told reporters. “We could be imitating the Norwegians and actually making money from carbon capture.”Senior Tory MP Steve Baker – founder of the Net Zero Scrutiny Group – has suggested that he would push for the next PM to dismantle the government’s climate agenda.Ms Braverman, Mr Baker’s favoured candidate, has said the party should “suspend the all-consuming desire to achieve net zero by 2050”.Ms Badenoch has also publicly branded the net zero target “unilateral economic disarmament” and has vowed to ditch policies which “consume taxpayers hard-earned money”.Ms Truss, Ms Badenoch and Ms Mordaunt all said they would suspend green taxes on energy bills. The levies help pay for investment in renewable energy needed to move Britain away from fossil fuel dependence.“I’d have a temporary moratorium on the green energy levy … while looking at the best way of delivering net zero,” Ms Truss told The Spectator.Conservative peer Zac Goldsmith told The Independent earlier this week that it would be better to have a Labour government than a Tory leader who “deprioritises” action on net zero.And Alok Sharma, the former business minister and president of the Cop26 climate conference, has also warned Tory leadership that backtracking on net zero is “a road to nowhere”.RecommendedMeanwhile, Mr Tugendhat – who won 37 votes in the first round – has denied he would be dropping out of the Tory race. “I’m still in this fight,” he said.Telling reporters that he had been wooed by other candidates to back them, he said: “I feel like a prom queen”. More

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    Tory leadership – live: Penny Mordaunt under fire as knives come out in race for No 10

    ‘I have grave reservations’: Lord Frost questions Penny Mordaunt’s leadership abilitySuella Braverman has been knocked out of the Tory leadership race in the second round of voting, as Rishi Sunak topped the ballot with more than 100 backers.Penny Mordaunt increased her lead over Liz Truss, with 83 votes to the foreign secretary’s 64 – while Tom Tugendhat vowed to fight on despite receiving the backing of just 32 Conservative MPs.Lord Frost earlier launched a brutal attack on Ms Mordaunt after polling placed her as the favourite among the Tory faithful to succeed Boris Johnson, with the former Brexit minister claiming he had asked for her to be removed as his deputy during talks with the EU.Alleging that the former defence secretary “did not master the detail that was necessary” during negotiations and “wouldn’t always deliver tough messages to the EU” when the situation merited it, the Conservative peer said he was now “gravely concerned”.Ms Truss will now be hoping to hoover up Ms Braverman’s support – with the results likely to amplify calls from her allies who earlier urged those supporting Kemi Badenoch to “join Liz” instead.RecommendedShow latest update

    1657810161Truss ‘faces narrow path’ to final two, as Tory MPs ‘want a fresh face’Here is some reaction from journalists to the results, and what they could mean for the next stages of the race.Liz Truss faces a narrow path to make it into the last two, The Times’ political editor believes.Tom Newton-Dunn of TalkTV suggests that the dispersion of the results in today’s vote indicates that “the majority of MPs still want a fresh face”.And Stephen Bush of the Financial Times argues that “the only candidates you can say had an unalloyed good result” are Kemi Badenoch and Penny Mordaunt.Andy Gregory14 July 2022 15:491657809343Penny Mordaunt slightly increases lead over Liz Truss and picks up most new votesThe margin between Penny Mordaunt and Liz Truss has seen a slight increase – with the foreign secretary coming 19 votes behind her rival in the second round.Ms Truss will be hoping to hoover up votes belonging to newly-eliminated Suella Braverman as she seeks to close the gap – which has grown from 67-50 in the first round, to 83-64 in the second.Picking up 16 new votes, Ms Mordaunt increased her vote share in the second round by more than any other candidate:Andy Gregory14 July 2022 15:351657808593Watch: Suella Braverman eliminated from raceHere is the moment that Suella Braverman was knocked out of the race:Tory leadership: Suella Braverman eliminated from race as Sunak leads in second ballotAndy Gregory14 July 2022 15:231657808525Tugendhat vows to fight on after receiving just 32 votesTom Tugendhat has insisted that his “campaign for a clean start” continues – despite him receiving just 32 votes in the second round of the leadership race.“We need trust back in our politics. I will be putting my vision for Britain forward to the public at the TV debates next week,” the foreign affairs committee chair said.Andy Gregory14 July 2022 15:221657807993Liz Truss campaign claims she is attracting support from across Tory PartyLiz Truss’s leadership election team claimed she is attracting a wide range of support from across the Tory party, as they indicted Suella Braverman’s supporters should now back the foreign secretary.“Suella Braverman ran a campaign that she can rightly be proud of,” a spokeswoman for Ms Truss said.“As Liz set out in her speech now is the time for MPs to unite behind the candidate who will cut taxes, deliver the real economic change we need, continue to deliver the benefits of Brexit and ensure Putin loses in Ukraine.“Liz Truss has the experience to deliver from day one, grow our economy and support working families and then beat Labour.”Andy Gregory14 July 2022 15:131657807529Sunak receives more than 100 votes in second round of votingOur deputy political correspondent Rob Merrick has this breaking report on the results of the second Tory leadership vote: More

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    What time is the latest Tory leadership vote today?

    The next round of voting in the Conservative Party leadership contest takes place on Thursday, with the race to succeed Boris Johnson as prime minister heating up nicely.Former chancellor Rishi Sunak appears to be the clear front-runner, securing 88 votes in the first round and picking up the support of Jeremy Hunt after he dropped out of the running on Wednesday, joining the likes of Sir Gavin Williamson, Oliver Dowden, Dominic Raab, Grant Shapps and Steve Barclay in endorsing the candidate.However, Mr Sunak endured a torrid time on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Thursday morning as anchor Justin Webb pressed him on his wealth and whether it disqualified him from being able to empathise with the very real concerns of low-income families facing hard choices because of the cost of living crisis.He was also reluctant to be drawn on precisely when he lost faith in Mr Johnson’s premiership, having served him for two and a half years before his dramatic resignation on 5 July amid accusations that he first set up a draft campaign website at the height of the Partygate scandal back in January, presumably in anticipation of the PM’s demise.Junior trade minister Penny Mordaunt appears to be the second favourite, having secured 67 votes on Wednesday, ahead of foreign secretary Liz Truss, Kemi Badenoch, Tom Tugendhat and attorney general Suella Braverman.RecommendedBut Ms Mordaunt has also found herself under siege this morning, with former Brexit minister Lord Frost telling TalkTV he has “grave reservations” about her candidacy after working with her.“I am quite surprised at where she is in this leadership race. She was my deputy – notionally, more than really – in the Brexit talks last year.“I felt she did not master the detail that was necessary in the negotiations last year. She wouldn’t always deliver tough messages to the European Union when that was necessary.“She wasn’t fully accountable, she wasn’t always visible. Sometimes I didn’t even know where she was. This became such a problem that, after six months, I had to ask the prime minister to move her on and find somebody else to support me.”With the contest increasingly resembling Netflix’s brutal death sport thriller Squid Game, its second round of voting opens at 11.30am on Thursday morning and closes at 1.30pm.We can then expect to see the results published at around 3pm. More

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    Tory leadership candidates ‘ignoring winter fuel crisis’ urged to do more for struggling families

    Tory leadership candidates are “ignoring” the winter fuel crisis and should set out how they would help families and businesses, leading charities have said.Martin Lewis, founder of MoneysavingExpert.com, warned the energy crisis was “potentially more dangerous to lives than the pandemic” and the country could face “cataclysmic” problems this winter as he received his CBE at Windsor Castle on Wednesday.The consumer expert condemned the MPs running in the Tory leadership contest for their “deafening silence” on how they would tackle the energy crisis on becoming prime minister in the autumn.Many of the candidates in the race to replace Boris Johnson in Number 10 have promised to cut fuel duty if elected, however, they are yet to set out a detailed plan of how they would tackle the cost of living crisis.Now, more than 40 charities and campaign groups including Oxfam, Save the Children and Fuel Poverty Action have written to each candidate calling on them to detail how they would “keep people safe and warm this winter”.RecommendedThey are concerned key decisions on the cost of living crisis will be delayed until the new leader is elected in the autumn after the prime minister said any new policies must wait until his successor is in place.The groups are calling for the leadership hopefuls to draw up detailed policies as soon as possible so they can be implemented once they are elected.In their letter, they warned the country is “headed into a potentially catastrophic winter”.They wrote: “In eleven weeks’ time, more than a third of households – many millions of British families –  may not be able to afford to heat their homes. “Meanwhile, earlier this year, 2.3 million families on low income were going without enough food and were unable to keep their homes warm.“In the words of Martin Lewis last week: ’millions of households will be forced into poverty unless we act. This is a genuine, urgent emergency’.”Simon Francis, co-ordinator of the End Fuel Poverty Coalition, told The Times: “The candidates to be our next prime minister are ignoring the single most pressing issue facing families across the country.“Unless they take bold and decisive action now, the next prime minister’s first act as leader will be to preside over the worst winter for millions of people in living memory.”It recently emerged councils are planning to offer “warm spaces” for residents to go to during winter if they cannot afford heating with soaring energy bills.Mr Lewis asked on social media whether “warm banks” – similar to food banks but for people in need of heating – would be needed this year. Some responded saying the wheels were already in motion to set up free public warm spaces as rocketing energy prices cripple budgets further in the cost of living crisis.RecommendedBristol mayor Marvin Rees replied saying it was “completely true” that a heating equivalent of food banks would be needed this year.Another reply shared a letter from Gateshead Council that called on local partners to help set up a Warm Spaces scheme. More

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    Nadine Dorries claims ‘coup’ brought down Boris Johnson

    Nadine Dorries has accused fellow Tory MPs of staging a “coup” against Boris Johnson.The culture secretary has been one of the outgoing prime minister’s most ardent supporters, sticking by him even as support for his leadership collapsed at Westminster.Ms Dorries told BBC Panorama: “I was quite stunned that there were people who thought that removing the prime minister who won the biggest majority that we’ve had since Margaret Thatcher in less than three years.“Just the the anti-democratic nature of what they’re doing alone was enough to alarm me.“And for me it was a coup”.RecommendedMs Dorries made the same claim on Monday, when she also criticised those who moved against Mr Johnson.“14 million people voted for the prime minister and a group of MPs, ministers, the chancellor, his sitting chancellor, via what is effectively a coup, removed him,” she told GB News.Ms Dorries has thrown her weight behind foreign secretary Liz Truss in the Tory leadership contest that will select Mr Johnson’s successor at No 10.She has led an attack on Ms Truss’ rival, Rishi Sunak, whose resignation as chancellor last week is seen by Johnson allies as key in ending the prime minister’s grip on No 10.Ms Dorries accused Mr Sunak’s campaign team of using the “dark arts” following claims they tried to “syphon off” votes to ensure Jeremy Hunt cleared the threshold to enter the contest because they believed Mr Sunak would beat him in a run-off vote of party members. More

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    Nadine Dorries in spat with Kemi Badenoch as government shelves Online Safety Bill

    Culture secretary Nadine Dorries has clashed with colleague Kemi Badenoch over the government’s Online Safety Bill, after the Tory leadership candidate attacked the proposed legislation.After it emerged that the bill’s final stages have been delayed until the autumn, Ms Badenoch said the postponement was the “right move”, adding: “We should not be legislating for hurt feelings.”The “anti-woke” right-winger contender tweeted: “The bill is in no fit state to become law. If I’m elected prime minister I will ensure the bill doesn’t overreach.”But Ms Dorries, who has been spearheading the bill aimed at cracking down on harmful content, fired back: “Which part of the bill legislates for hurt feelings, Kemi?”Labour’s shadow culture secretary Lucy Powell also lashed out at Ms Badenoch, saying her comments showed why she “shouldn’t be let loose on protecting our children”.RecommendedThe Labour MP tweeted: “You obviously have no idea how the bill will work nor why it’s needed. You’ve clearly fully sniffed up some dodgy briefing from an ill-informed colleague. Educate yourself before you preach if you want to be PM.”The legislation was provisionally due to go before parliament next week, but The Independent understands that it has been delayed to allow for a confidence vote in the government and the next stage of the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill to take place.However, the bill is expected to be tabled in the autumn once the new prime minister has taken office.Campaigners have warned that any delay could be detrimental in the fight to keep children safe online.Andy Burrows, head of child safety online policy at the NSPCC, said the bill was “a crucial piece of legislation that is fundamentally about protecting children from harm and abuse that is taking place on an industrial scale on social media”.He added: “Any delay will mean families continue to pay the price for the failure and inaction of tech firms who have allowed harm to fester rather than get their house in order.”Ms Dorries has vowed that the legislation would hold tech giants to account when “harm, abuse and criminal behaviour have run riot on their platforms”.The bill will give the regulator Ofcom the power to fine companies that fail to comply with the laws up to 10 per cent of their annual global turnover.But some view the bill as an attack on freedom of speech, given its attempt to crack down on legal but “harmful” expression.Tim Cairns, senior policy officer at charity Care, said his organisation “understands the free speech concerns associated with certain provisions … However, other aspects of this legislation are unquestionably laudable”.He argued that safeguarding online has not kept pace with safeguarding in the real world. Care is particularly concerned about the array of disturbing and harmful content children encounter online.“Age verification is one measure that would reduce child exposure to pornography – something the vast majority of Brits support,” said Mr Cairns. “Age checks were already legislated for in 2017 but never actually brought into force. The Online Safety Bill was supposed to correct this mistake.”Mr Cairns added: “Failing to deliver this change would amount to a second betrayal of children, who deserve help and protection from those in power.”RecommendedMeanwhile, work and pensions secretary Therese Coffey – who called her candidate Liz Truss a “fantastic lady” – said it was time for supporters of Ms Badenoch and Suella Braverman to fall in behind the foreign secretary.Ms Badenoch, who has strong support from anti-woke MPs, picked up a more impressive 40 votes and is not expected to back out at the second round of voting today. More

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    Online Safety Bill delay sparks row over child safety and free speech

    Culture secretary Nadine Dorries has clashed with colleague Kemi Badenoch over the government’s Online Safety Bill, after the Tory leadership candidate attacked the proposed legislation.After it emerged that the bill’s final stages have been delayed until the autumn, Ms Badenoch said the postponement was the “right move”, adding: “We should not be legislating for hurt feelings.”The “anti-woke” right-winger contender tweeted: “The bill is in no fit state to become law. If I’m elected prime minister I will ensure the bill doesn’t overreach.”But Ms Dorries, who has been spearheading the bill aimed at cracking down on harmful content, fired back: “Which part of the bill legislates for hurt feelings, Kemi?”Labour’s shadow culture secretary Lucy Powell also lashed out at Ms Badenoch, saying her comments showed why she “shouldn’t be let loose on protecting our children”.RecommendedThe Labour MP tweeted: “You obviously have no idea how the bill will work nor why it’s needed. You’ve clearly fully sniffed up some dodgy briefing from an ill-informed colleague. Educate yourself before you preach if you want to be PM.”The legislation was provisionally due to go before parliament next week, but The Independent understands that it has been delayed to allow for a confidence vote in the government and the next stage of the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill to take place.However, the bill is expected to be tabled in the autumn once the new prime minister has taken office.Campaigners have warned that any delay could be detrimental in the fight to keep children safe online.Andy Burrows, head of child safety online policy at the NSPCC, said the bill was “a crucial piece of legislation that is fundamentally about protecting children from harm and abuse that is taking place on an industrial scale on social media”.He added: “Any delay will mean families continue to pay the price for the failure and inaction of tech firms who have allowed harm to fester rather than get their house in order.”Ms Dorries has vowed that the legislation would hold tech giants to account when “harm, abuse and criminal behaviour have run riot on their platforms”.The bill will give the regulator Ofcom the power to fine companies that fail to comply with the laws up to 10 per cent of their annual global turnover.But some view the bill as an attack on freedom of speech, given its attempt to crack down on legal but “harmful” expression.Tim Cairns, senior policy officer at charity Care, said his organisation “understands the free speech concerns associated with certain provisions … However, other aspects of this legislation are unquestionably laudable”.He argued that safeguarding online has not kept pace with safeguarding in the real world. Care is particularly concerned about the array of disturbing and harmful content children encounter online.“Age verification is one measure that would reduce child exposure to pornography – something the vast majority of Brits support,” said Mr Cairns. “Age checks were already legislated for in 2017 but never actually brought into force. The Online Safety Bill was supposed to correct this mistake.”Mr Cairns added: “Failing to deliver this change would amount to a second betrayal of children, who deserve help and protection from those in power.”RecommendedMeanwhile, work and pensions secretary Therese Coffey – who called her candidate Liz Truss a “fantastic lady” – said it was time for supporters of Ms Badenoch and Suella Braverman to fall in behind the foreign secretary.Ms Badenoch, who has strong support from anti-woke MPs, picked up a more impressive 40 votes and is not expected to back out at the second round of voting today. More

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    Another contender set for eviction from UK Conservative race

    Former British Treasury chief Rishi Sunak worked to stave off momentum from challenger Penny Mordaunt in the race to replace Prime Minister Boris Johnson, with Conservative Party lawmakers set to knock one of the six remaining contenders out of the contest on Thursday.Sunak, who quit as Britain’s Treasury chief last week, got the most votes in a first-round ballot on Wednesday, with junior trade minister Mordaunt a strong second. Bookmaker Ladbrokes said Mordaunt was now the favorite to win the leadership election, followed by Sunak and Foreign Secretary Liz Truss.Whoever wins, the contest will replace the flamboyant, flawed Johnson with a new and much lesser-known prime minister. Only Conservative lawmakers and party members are participating in the vote and choosing Johnson’s successor. Truss placed third on Wednesday and is trying consolidate support from lawmakers on the party’s right, who mistrust Sunak’s high spending on support to people and businesses during the coronavirus pandemic, and the tax increases he brought in as COVID-19 hammered Britain’s economy.Sunak argues that the immediate tax cuts promised by his rivals are reckless amid economic shockwaves from the pandemic and the war in Ukraine.RecommendedHe also has faced allegations he is out of touch with ordinary people’s struggles because of his wealth. He is a former investment banker, and his wife is the daughter of the billionaire founder of Indian tech company Infosys.“I don’t judge people by their bank accounts, I judge them by their characters,” Sunak told the BBC. “And I think people can judge me by my actions over the past couple of years.”Three other candidates remain in the race. Lawmakers will vote again Thursday, and the lowest-placed contender will drop out.Further rounds of voting are due to take place next week until just two candidates remain.The final two contenders will face a runoff vote by about 180,000 Conservative Party members across the country. The winner is scheduled to be announced Sept. 5 and will automatically become prime minister, without the need for a national election.The contest was triggered when Johnson resigned as Tory leader last week when his party revolted after months of ethics scandals and government ministers began resigning en masse. He will remain in office as a caretaker prime minister until his replacement as party chief is chosen.Truss had been seen as a front-runner, but gained fewer votes Wednesday than Mordaunt, who scores highly in polls of party members.Unlike Sunak and Truss, Mordaunt didn’t hold a senior post in Johnson’s government, though she was a junior minister. An affable politician from a military family, she is widely seen as a breath of fresh air and has been scoring highly in polls of party members.Recommended___Follow all of AP’s coverage of Prime Minister Boris Johnson and British politics at https://apnews.com/hub/boris-johnson More