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    Alba Party: ‘All over’ for Alex Salmond, polling suggests

    Alex Salmond’s pro-independent Alba Party has been hit by shock new polling, which puts his party on course to take zero seats in next month’s Holyrood election.The Survation survey, the first to gauge support for the new party, finds only 3 per cent of Scottish voters will back Alba at the ballot box.Leading polling experts believe Mr Salmond’s party needs at least 5 per cent of the votes to be in range of winning seats under Scotland’s regional list system.“The headline is that it looks as though it’s all over for Salmond,” said polling guru Professor John Curtice – who has warned the former SNP leader could finish up “empty handed” on 6 May.Prof Curtice said it was still possible that Mr Salmond “might just get a seat” in the north-east, where he heads up his party’s regional list. “But this [poll] is not what he needs if he is going to get his campaign to take off.”Read more: Mr Salmond’s team remained defiant, despite the poor poll numbers. “These early indications put Alba within touching distance of representation across Scotland,” said a party spokesperson.The spokesperson added: “With five weeks still to go Alba’s support can only grow as we approach polling day. It is worth noting that Alba has already achieved, in three days, approaching half the level of support of the Liberal Democrats, a party which has existed for over a century.”Inside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayInside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayMr Salmond is writing to regulator Ofcom and TV broadcasters, claiming there is an “unanswerable” case to include his party in election debates alongside the five established parties with seats at Holyrood.Nicola Sturgeon, meanwhile, has said she has “no intentions” of working with Mr Salmond, even if his party does get seats in the Holyrood parliament, after the Alba Party leader suggested she would have to work with others in the cause of Scottish independence.The SNP leader told Channel 4 News that she does not believe the Alba Party would “help the independence cause”, adding: “I’m not even sure from his perspective it’s intended to do that.” More

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    Government’s race report ignores ‘brutal evidence’ of economic inequality, says charity

    A controversial report that concluded institutional racism does not occur in the UK failed to consider the “brutal evidence” of inequality highlighted by Covid-19, an anti-poverty charity has said.Turn2Us said its research painted a different picture to the one described in the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities’ report.The government-commissioned independent review into racism asserted that UK is no longer a country where systems are “deliberately rigged against ethnic minorities” and that very few inequalities are due to race.Data compiled by Turn2Us indicates that ethnic minorities have suffered significantly greater economic hardship during the pandemic.One in six people from Black Caribbean descent have had to borrow from friends or family since March 2020, compared to one in 11 (9.3 per cent) of white British people.Read more:People from minority groups were also more likely to have sold their belongings to get by.One in eight people of Indian descent have done so since the pandemic began, compared to one in 13 white British people.About 10 per cent of white British people reported going into their overdraft since March 2020 compared to 17.9 per cent of people of Black African descent.Inside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayInside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayOne in six of people of Pakistani descent have had to miss bills since March 2020, compared to one in 14 white British people (7.3 per cent).Thomas Lawson, chief executive at Turn2us, said the data demonstrated deep-rooted inequalities in society. “You are more likely to experience financial hardship if you are black. You are more likely to have lost your job in the coronavirus pandemic if you are Bangladeshi. “You are more likely to experience deep poverty if you are Pakistani. This is not a coincidence, this is clearly a long-term endemic structural and institutional problem.”He added: “We urge the government to not dismiss the reality of institutional racism and instead look at the evidence and produce a strategy to create meaningful change.” More

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    Like Brexit, Covid has turned both the EU and the UK into losers

    The new post-Covid geopolitical normal will feature a much weaker European Union than could ever have been foreseen before the crisis. Brexit, damaging to all concerned as it has undoubtedly proved, looks a mere distraction set against the impact of the coronavirus. The public health test-and-trace response, and death rates, in some EU member states, notably Germany, have been enviable, and many others have scored successes of their own, not least Belgium and the Netherlands, such important centres for vaccine production. Yet throughout the year of turmoil, the European Union’s efforts to coordinate national responses have been either ineffective or downright disastrous. From the get go, when individual countries rushed to close borders and ban exports of protective equipment, ventilators and treatments, the authorities in Brussels have been bystanders. When hard-pressed nations such as Italy sought financial assistance, they were scorned by Commission president Ursula von der Leyen. She was chosen to run the EU, it is rumoured, because Paris and Berlin favoured a weaker style of leadership in Brussels. They should be more careful what they wish for. Friends of the EU should take no pleasure in its travails, because Britain is no unconquerable island so far as the virus is concerned, but equally should send any illusions about the recent performance of the EU and its agencies. The answer may be “more Europe”, as President Macron used to say, or an end to integration, but the problem of EU competence (in both senses) over public health is plain.Right now, the European Union finds itself in the embarrassing position of watching the British speed way ahead in the vaccination race (by fair means or foul), and in the more humiliating position of having to turn to Russia, of all places, for help. A third Covid wave is hitting parts of Europe hard. France is the latest to fall back into lockdown, even if Macron has tried to rebadge it as a “third way”. Hence the urgent need for vaccines in what the president calls “a race against time” for his country. More

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    UK urges EU to stay in vaccine export talks: ‘No single country can face this health emergency alone’

    The UK has urged Brussels to stay in talks about vaccine exports after one of the bloc’s top officials said there was “nothing to negotiate” and threatened to block shipments.Thierry Breton, the EU’s internal market commissioner, said there would be no exports of AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 vaccine outside the EU until the company had met its vaccine commitment to them.But UK officials urged the bloc to show “solidarity and cooperation” in its approach amid concern that Brussels and London could be dragged into a vaccine war.Mr Breton’s comments reflect a growing concern across the EU that the bloc is not benefiting from being a vaccine production hub, with much of its output shipped abroad while its member states’ vaccination programmes lag behind the UK.“If [AstraZeneca] does more, we don’t have any issue. But as long as it doesn’t deliver its commitment to us, the doses stay in Europe — except for Covax,” Mr Breton had said. Covax is an international vaccine programme that is aimed at delivering vaccines mainly to poor countries.Read more:The commissioner said the bloc trying to make sure AstraZeneca’s contract with the EU “is delivered — and of course we are here to also help our British friends … But we have nothing to negotiate”, according to a report in the Financial Times.AstraZeneca had signed a contract with the EU in August for the supply of 300 million doses of the Covid-19 vaccine with an option for a further 100 million doses. However, the supply has been slow. The company reportedly ended up slashing its commitment to 30 million against the initial pledge of 120 million to the EU in the first quarter.Inside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayInside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayMr Breton explained that coronavirus vaccine production from a troubled plant in Seneffe, Belgium, and the Halix factory in the Netherlands corresponded to a vaccine commitment made by AstraZeneca to the EU and thus must not be exported.The vaccine shortage has also led to pressure from within the EU as some member countries seek alternative vaccine supplies. For instance, Hungary started administering Russia’s Sputnik V jabs in February 2021 even as the EU has maintained that it does not need the Russian Covid-19 vaccine.The European Commission maintains that “vaccination is progressing steadily in the EU”“By the end of this week, 107 million vaccine doses will have reached EU countries,” the Commission said in a statement posted online on Wednesday.But last week the Commission said it would begin to use export controls on a case by case basis to restrict exports to countries whose vaccine programme was more advanced than the EU, or where there was plentiful domestic supply.A UK government official told The Independent: “We continue to discuss what more we can do to ensure a reciprocally beneficial relationship between the UK and EU on COVID-19. “As the Prime Minister said in previous statements, including one co-signed by other world leaders, no single country can face this health emergency alone, and we need to address this challenge through solidarity and cooperation.”The EU has so far given the go-ahead to vaccines developed by Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna, AstraZeneca-University of Oxford, and Johnson & Johnson. Until last week, it had delivered 88 million doses to its member countries and over 62 million doses were administered.The UK, meanwhile, has administered over 30.9 million first doses and 4.1 million second doses of the Covid-19 vaccine. More

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    Alex Salmond claims Sturgeon will ‘work’ with Alba Party after she stops being ‘upset’

    Alex Salmond has claimed Nicola Sturgeon has indicated she will work with his pro-Scottish independence Alba Party and others who back a second referendum on a breakaway.Mr Salmond suggested that the reality of creating a bigger majority for independence in the Scottish was beginning to dawn for the SNP leader, after a week of being “upset” over the creation of Alba.Repeatedly pressed on whether she would rule it out working with Mr Salmond’s party to help deliver indyref2, Ms Sturgeon told ITV on Wednesday: “It’s not for me to say what MSPs elected from other parties vote for in a Scottish parliament.”Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Thursday, Mr Salmond said: “I think that actually after, admittedly, after a week of being quite upset, I think that it was probably indicated by Nicola Sturgeon in her ITV interview yesterday, where she did concede that you have to work with people in the Scottish parliament.”He added: “Frankly, the cause of independence is much, much bigger than personalities. It’s a noble cause, it’s a huge cause for Scotland, and everybody now has to put aside differences and work in that national difference.”Asked how the two parties could work together, given all the recent acrimony between the two leaders, Mr Salmond said: “You won’t find a word of negativity of coming off the lips of any Alba Party candidate.”Reminded that one of his candidates, Dr Jim Walker, had called Sturgeon a “cow” on Twitter this week, Mr Salmond said: “And [he has] has apologised for it. If I may say, it was a Twitter debate before he became a candidate.”Inside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayInside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayMs Sturgeon has challenged Mr Salmond – cleared of 13 sexual assault charges last year – to apologise to the women “that he behaved inappropriately towards”.Asked if he had reflected on his behaviour towards women, the Alba leader said: “The case we forward at a trial, which is now a year ago, was that the claims against me were part fabrication, part exaggeration.“The most significant is not what I said or what I reflected on, the most significant thing is the verdict of the jury. My behaviour has been tested as probably no behaviour has been tested before, in a trial of my peers … And most fair-minded people think that’s fair enough.”Mr Salmond has persuaded two sitting SNP MPs and four councillors from Ms Sturgeon’s part to jump ship and join Alba. On Thursday, the former SNP MP Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh – who lost her seat in 2017 – was unveiled as an Alba candidate for the central Scotland region.Ms Sturgeon has denied her party is beset by divisions, claiming the SNP was Scotland’s most “united” force and support was “has never been higher”.Speaking on Good Morning Scotland on Thursday, she said: “I think if you look at the breakdown of opinion polls, that tests the views and attitudes of SNP voters, then you will find that, actually, the SNP is the most united of all the parties in Scotland.” More

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    Experts named in government’s ‘flawed’ race report ‘shocked’ to see names in evidence contributor list

    Two authors named as “stakeholders” in a landmark report into race disparities in Britain have hit out at claims they provided evidence, with one protesting: “I was never consulted”.It comes as the government faces a backlash over the findings of the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities, which concluded that the UK was no longer a country where the “system is deliberately rigged” against ethnic minorities.The appendix to the 258-page report — commissioned in response to the Black Lives Matter movement —  expressed thanks to stakeholders including professional bodies, charities, and academics for providing “evidence during the course of its work”.S.I Martin, an author who specialises in the field of black British history and literature, who is named in the report, told The Independent: “I was never consulted, I don’t know what record they have of contacting me.”“I just would not have agreed to have been consulted even if I had been asked, but I’ve not been asked. I have been invited to things in the past — not by this administration — I just don’t go, I just refuse. It’s just not something I do.”Pressed on his reaction to seeing his name in the report, the historian who founded the 500 Years of Black London walks, said it was a “growing shock”, asking: “How many other people have been roped unknowingly into this? Rubber-stamping this nonsense.“I am not naive enough either to expect either an explanation or an apology from anyone in government for this.”Inside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayInside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayDescribing the report as a “horrible, typical, right-wing fig leaf”, he went on: “I would ask them when did they consult? Who did they ask? Who are these stakeholders and participants? On which planet do they live that they can arrive at that conclusion?”A second academic, Stephen Bourne, a historian of black Britain, also told The Independent he felt “manipulated” at his name appearing in the report as being consulted by the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities.Mr Bourne, who described the report as “flawed” and insisted institutional racism does exist, claimed to have been contacted by No 10 adviser Samuel Kasumu. After having a conversation with him in June, he was later invited to a Downing Street roundtable of historians of Black Britain in October 2020, he said.“Nothing was explained to me,” he went on. “I wrote down some of their names of the people there [at the roundtable], and when I googled them and the penny dropped that they were this commission.”Mr Bourne, whose best-known work is ‘Black Poppies — Britain’s Black Community and the Great War’, added he later contacted Downing Street and read the “riot act” to Mr Kasumu.“How dare you do that, I said that is so unprofessional so rude to invite me to what I thought was going to be what we discussed, a round table discussion of historians of black Britain. And it turns out to be this commission which I’ve never heard of. I said you should have explained all of this”.Publishing the long-awaited report on Wednesday, the commission said the term institutional racism was “too liberally used” and that factors such as socio-economic background, culture and religion have a “more significant impact on life chances”.However, the authors said that “outright racism still exists”, the UK was not a “post-racial society”, and stressed: “We take the reality of racism seriously and we do not deny that it is a real force in the UK”.Speaking on Thursday, Boris Johnson said the government would respond fully to the commission’s report “in due course”, adding that there were “serious issues that our society faces to do with racism”.“If you look at it, they have come forward with about 24 interesting ideas to promote equality and to promote equality of opportunity, to give people of all communities, all races, all backgrounds in this country, more opportunity,” the prime minister added.“But also to understand the true nature of the barriers and the discrimination that they unquestionably feel. There are some interesting things in it, I’m not going to say we agree with every word, but we’re going to be responding in due course.”No 10 has been contacted for comment. More

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    Boris Johnson news – live: Experts named in race report ‘never consulted’, as PM’s top black adviser quits

    Boris Johnson reacts to resignation of aide in wake of race disparities reportTwo authors identified as stakeholders in a landmark report on race disparities in Britain are objecting to being listed as providing evidence for it, with one protesting: “I was never consulted”.S I Martin said: ““I just would not have agreed to have been consulted even if I had been asked, but I’ve not been asked.” And Stephen Bourne toldThe Independent he felt “manipulated”.The government is facing a backlash over the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities’ report, which concluded that Britain was no longer a country where the system is deliberately rigged against ethnic minorities.Amid the row, Boris Johnson’s most senior Black adviser is expected to resign from his role next month after previously describing tensions within government as “unbearable”.Downing Street sources have rejected the suggestion that Samuel Kasumu’s resignation was linked to the report.Tony Sewell, chairman of the commission, has dismissed accusations that the report sought to put a “positive spin on slavery and empire” and downplay the “evil of the slave trade”. In statement, he said such claims were absurd and maintained that “the report merely says that, in the face of the inhumanity of slavery, African people preserved their humanity and culture”.Inside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayInside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayShow latest update

    1617288796Doreen Lawrence says race report gives ‘racists the green light’ The Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities’ controversial race report gives “racists the green light”, Doreen Lawrence, a mother who has dedicated nearly two decades to demanding justice after her son Stephen was murdered in a racist attack, has said.“My son was murdered because of racism and you cannot forget that. Once you start covering it up it is giving the green light to racists,” Lady Lawrence told The guardian. Stephen was killed at a bus stop in 1993, with his death leading to a report that deemed Scotland Yard institutionally racist.“ You imagine what’s going to happen come tomorrow. What’s going to happen on our streets with our young people? You are giving racists the green light,” she said.Lady Lawrence said that when she first heard about the findings of the report, which concluded that structural racism is not an issue in the UK, her “first thought was that it has pushed [the fight against] racism back 20 years or more”. ““I think if you were to speak to somebody whose employer speaks to them in a certain way, where do you go with that now? If a person is up for promotion and has been denied that, where does he go with that now?” she said.“You know, all these things we’ve been working for and showing that structural racism exists – we talk about the pandemic when you look at how many of our people have died, all the nurses, the doctors, the frontline staff, of Covid, and to have this report denying that those people have suffered?”“They are denying that the likes of my son was murdered through racism and the fact that it took 18 years to get justice for him. The report is denying all those issues,” she said.Chantal Da Silva1 April 2021 15:531617287433Matt Hancock ‘very worried’ about impact of long Covid Health Secretary Matt Hancock has said he is “very worried” about the potential imapcts of long Covid after figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) suggested that almost one in seven people who test positive for coronavirus are dealing with symptoms three months on. “We can see the impact in these new statistics shown today and I understand the impact it has had on hundreds of thousands of people,” Mr Hancock said in an interview with Sky News.“It’s one of the many damaging problems of this virus,” he said.Mr Hancock said the government is “putting more research money into tackling and understanding long Covid because it appears to be several different syndromes”.“This is a very strange, very dangerous virus and it’s yet another reason for everybody to be cautious,” he said. “Enjoy the sunshine, by all means, but nobody is safe from this virus until we can make everybody safe.”Chantal Da Silva1 April 2021 15:301617285348PM skirts question on timing of Samuel Kasumu’s resignationPrime Minister Boris Johnson appeared to avoid answering a question on the timing of his most senior Black adviser’s resignation, with reports of Samuel Kasumu’s plans to depart No 10 coming to light amid outrage over the findings of a landmark report on race disparities in Britain.Asked about the optics of Mr Kasumu resigning following the release of the report, which concluded that structural racism is not an issue in the UK, Mr Johnson: “I worked very closely with Samuel in the last year or so and he’s done some great stuff.”“I thank him very much, particularly on helping to encourage vaccine take-up amongst more hesitant groups and communities. And, actually, we’re seeing some real success there,” he said, according to PA.“It is true that different groups have been coming forward at different paces, everybody is increasing their take-ups, so I thank him very much for that,” he said, while addressing reporters in Middlesbrough.The PM did not comment on whether Mr Kasumu’s reported decision had anything to do with the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities’ findings.Mr Johnson did acknowledge the backlash over the report itself, however, asserting: “Look, this is a very interesting piece of work. I don’t say the Government is going to agree with absolutely everything in it, but it has some original and stimulating work in it that I think people need to read and to consider.“There are very serious issues that our society faces to do with racism that we need to address.“We’ve got to do more to fix it, we need to understand the severity of the problem, and we’re going to be looking at all the ideas that they have put forward, and we’ll be making our response.”Asked to respond to accusations that the report was rigged by choosing commissioners who had already dismissed institutional racism, Mr Johnson said: “If you look at it, they have come forward with about 24 interesting ideas to promote equality and to promote equality of opportunity, to give people of all communities, all races, all backgrounds in this country, more opportunity. But also to understand the true nature of the barriers and the discrimination that they unquestionably feel.”“There are some interesting things in it, I’m not going to say we agree with every word, but we’re going to be responding in due course,” he said.Chantal Da Silva1 April 2021 14:551617284038Boris Johnson defends vaccine passports amid concernsPrime Minister Boris Johnson has defended the idea of using vaccine passports to help enable travel and potentially help open up the British economy. Speaking after Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer suggested that the British instinct could be against the notion of vaccine passports, which would serve as proof of coronavirus vaccination, Mr Johnson said such certificates would “definitely play a role in opening up travel. The passports “will be useful for us as we go forward,” he maintained, addressing reporters in Middlesbrough. The Government is currently reviewing the possibility of using such certificates to open up the British economy and give “maximum confidence” to companies and customers. It is possible that the passports would also show whether someone has Covid-19 antibodies or if they have had a recent negative test. Already, some countries are working on similar certificates that would help enable travel, with the EU seeking to provide digital green certificates showing whether someone has been vaccinated, has a negative test or has recently recovered from a case of Covid-19.“There’s definitely going to be a world in which international travel will use vaccine passports,” Mr Johnson said, according to PA.“You can see already that other countries, the aviation industry, are interested in those and there’s a logic to that,” he said.“I think when it comes to trying to make sure that we give maximum confidence to business and to customers here in the UK, there are three things – there’s your immunity, whether you have had it before, so you have got natural antibodies; whether you have been vaccinated; and then, of course, whether you have had a test.“Those three things working together will be useful for us as we go forward.”Chantal Da Silva1 April 2021 14:331617282974Mark Drakeford says there are ‘practical and ethical’ issues around vaccine passportsWales First Minister Mark Drakeford has said there are “many practical and ethical issues” around the potential introduction of vaccine passports to help open up UK economies.“I discussed this yesterday with Michael Gove, the minister in charge of the Cabinet Office, and the first ministers of Scotland and Northern Ireland,” Mr Drakeford said at the Welsh Government briefing.“We continue to work together on the issue of vaccine certification. There are positive prizes to be won from having a successful vaccine certification scheme but there are many practical and ethical issues that will need to be addressed and resolved successfully if those positive opportunities can be won from it,” he said, according to PA.“They are complex, but we are engaged on it together,” the first minister said. “We do have independent powers on all four nations on this matter but the fact we are discussing it regularly together, I think, improves the opportunity for us all to address those complex issues in a way that reaches some common solutions.”Chantal Da Silva1 April 2021 14:161617281610Alex Salmond says he believes women would vote for his party despite past allegationsAlex Salmond has said he believes women voters will still vote for the Alba Party, despite sexual misconduct allegations made against him in the past. “I think the candidates list demonstrates already that many formidable women campaigners are rallying to the Alba standard,” Mr Salmond said, speaking about the Alba Party’s participation in Holyrood TV debates, according to PA.“I expect we will see exactly the same thing as the campaign proceeds with the general voting public,” he said.In August 2018, it came to light that the Scottish government had investigated two allegations of sexual misconduct against Mr Salmond while he was first minister.Despite his past controversies, Mr Salmond said he believes his party would overtake the Scottish Liberal Democrats’ in membership numbers.Earlier, he had said thousands had already signed up to the party.Chantal Da Silva1 April 2021 13:531617278281Cross-party MPs call for change to assisted dying lawA cross-party group of more than 50 MPs and peers are calling on the government to instigate a review of the UK’s assisted dying laws.A joint letter to Justice Secretary Robert Buckland, coordinated by Humanists UK and campaign group My Death, My Decision, argues the UK is “falling behind the rest of the world” and that “our laws on assisted dying are letting down our citizens”.It adds: “It has now been half a decade since Parliament examined legislation on assisted dying, and 15 years since it formally scrutinised the issue via Lord Joffe’s Select Committee.“In these years, the evidence has materially changed, and that new evidence necessitates a fresh review.”The letter, signed by members of the Conservatives, Labour, Liberal Democrats, SNP, Green Party and crossbenchers, claims there has been “a significant shift in professional medical opinion and within the disability community”.It says Canada, Germany, Italy, New Zealand, and parts of the United States and Australia have changed or are due to change their law since 2015, while “several other nations, including Ireland, are actively considering similar proposals, reflecting that such changes can be achieved in a safe and compassionate way”.Conservative MP Crispin Blunt, co-chairman of the All-Party Parliamentary Humanist Group, who has signed the letter, said: “MPs owe their constituents a duty of compassion not to let the suffering of those who are terminally ill or incurably suffering go unnoticed.”Jane Dalton1 April 2021 12:581617277501British expats ordered back on plane at Spanish airport over Brexit rulesA group of British nationals living in Spain were turned away when they arrived at Alicante, and had to fly back to the UK in a dispute over post-Brexit paperwork at the airport. Adam Forrest reports: Jane Dalton1 April 2021 12:451617277054Experts identified in race report ‘shocked’ to see names on contributor listTwo authors named as “stakeholders” in a landmark report on race disparities in Britain have hit out at claims they provided evidence, with one protesting: “I was never consulted”. Report by Ashley Cowburn and Bethany Dawson:Jane Dalton1 April 2021 12:371617276619Boris Johnson ‘very hopeful’ Liberty Steel plants can be saved Boris Johnson has said he is “very hopeful” that Liberty Steel plants in the UK can be saved after it came to light that the company owns “many billions” to a collapsed financial backer.Speaking during a visit to Middlesbrough, the prime minister said Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng was in “daily contact” with the firm’s owners in a bid to hash out a solution.“I think British steel is a very important national asset. I think the fact that we make steel in this country is of strategic long-term importance,” he said.“We have learned during the pandemic that it is not a good idea to be excessively reliant in times of trouble on imports of critical things.”The prime minister said the UK needs a “strong steel industry” and said he was “very hopeful that we will get a solution”.“It would be crazy if we were not to use this post-Brexit moment not to use the flexibility we have to buy British steel. So that’s want we want to do,” he said.Liberty Steel boss Sanjeev Gupta had revealed that the company owed “many billions” to Greensill Capital but has said that none of the firm’s plants will shut down “under my watch”.Chantal Da Silva1 April 2021 12:30 More

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    Vaccine passports un-British, Keir Starmer suggests

    Sir Keir Starmer has given his most decisive view yet on plans for domestic “vaccine passports”, saying the proposed documents would go against the “British instinct”.The passes could be used to allow only vaccinated people into certain venues.“My instinct is that … if we get the virus properly under control, the death rates are near zero, hospital admissions very, very low, the British instinct in those circumstances will be against vaccine passports,” the Labour leader said in an interview with The Daily Telegraph.Boris Johnson signalled last week he would not be opposed to such a measure, telling MPs it “may be up to individual publicans” to enforce checks.But Sir Keir said it would be unfair of the government to leave it to pub landlords to decide if they should make such health enquiries, potentially causing people to feel ostracised.Read more:“I think that this idea that we sort of outsource this to individual landlords is just wrong in principle,” he said.Stressing that he wanted to find a cross-party consensus, and would only decide Labour’s official stance on the scheme once he had studied detailed proposals, Sir Keir said: “My instinct is that as the vaccine is rolled out, as the number of hospital admissions and deaths go down, there will be a British sense that we don’t actually want to go down this road.”Vaccine passports for international travel are, however, inevitable, he added. There is currently a review underway, being led by Michael Gove, to look into whether people should have to prove they have been vaccinated in certain social situations – like going to the pub – as lockdown measures ease.Inside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayInside Politics newsletterThe latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox every weekdayThe Liberal Democrats oppose the idea, as do some Conservative MPs.The prime minister is due to give an update on Mr Gove’s review on Monday.Sir Keir’s comments came as the UK’s daily Covid death rate continued to fall, with government figures on Wednesday showing an additional 43 people had died of the virus within 28 days of testing positive for it. It brings the nation’s total to 126,713.Additionally, the number of second dose coronavirus vaccines administered in the UK in a single day exceeded first doses for the first time earlier.But as this week’s hot weather, added to the easing of restrictions, encouraged thousands to parks and beaches, health secretary Matt Hancock reminded the public to “enjoy the sun but [to] do it safely”.“We have come so far, don’t blow it now,” he tweeted late on Tuesday, after reports of huge gatherings – with the police in Nottingham banning alcohol in parks as a result. Meanwhile, as the EU grapples with a third wave, Emmanuel Macron has ordered France into its third national lockdown in response to a surge of Covid-19 cases in the country.In a televised address on Wednesday evening, the French president said: “We must make an additional effort. No region is safe from this virus. Everyone should limit their contacts with other people.” More