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    State involvement in MoD cyber attack cannot be ruled out, Grant Shapps says

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailGrant Shapps has said that “state involvement” in the large-scale cyber attack on the Ministry of Defence (MoD) cannot be ruled out amid speculation China carried out the hack.The Defence Secretary said there is evidence of “potential failings” of the contractor operating the payroll system that was hacked, “which may have made it easier for the malign actor” to gain access to the bank details of service personnel and veterans.Labour’s shadow defence secretary John Healey named the contractor as SSCL.The firm says it provides business process services to 22 government departments and agencies and is responsible for paying 550,000 public servants.Confirming the contractor was SSCL, Mr Shapps said he had asked for a review of the company’s work across government.Up to 272,000 service personnel may have been hit by the data breach, Mr Shapps told MPs.He set out an eight-point plan to support and protect those potentially affected.The Cabinet minister declined to identify the culprit, telling the Commons: “For reasons of national security, we can’t release further details of the suspected cyber activity behind this incident.“However, I can confirm to the House that we do have indications that this was the suspected work of a malign actor and we cannot rule out state involvement.”He also said: “We’ve launched a full investigation, drawing on Cabinet Office support and specialist external expertise to examine the potential failings of the contractor and to minimise the risk of similar incidents in the future.”Initial investigations have found no evidence that any data has been removed, but affected armed forces personnel have been alerted as a precaution.The payment network is “an external system completely separate to the MoD’s core network”, Mr Shapps stressed.The system holds personal data – including names, bank details and some addresses – of regular reserve personnel and some recently retired veterans.Changes are being made to the system to ensure it is secure before payments are recommenced, the Defence Secretary said.The senior Tory apologised “to the men and women who are affected by this”, adding “it should not have happened”.SSCL says on its website that it plays a “central role in delivering the MoD’s vision to transform core payroll, HR and pension services” for 230,000 military personnel and reservists and two million veterans.The firm, a subsidiary of the Paris-based tech company Sopra Steria, says it processes more than £363 billion in payments each year, 6.77 million transactions and 1.5 million invoices.The company, which says its “vision is to empower the UK public sector with digital solutions and innovative services”, also processes 1.2 million recruitment applications a year.Prime Minister Rishi Sunak earlier also declined to say who was behind the cyber attack, but said the UK is taking the powers necessary “to protect ourselves against the risk that China and other countries pose to us”.Conservative former leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith said he was “concerned” the Government was not able to point the finger at China.“I think the Government is a bit conflicted about this,” he told Sky News, claiming the Foreign Office did not want to “upset China”.“The truth is we know that China is the malign actor they’re referring to.”A spokesperson for the Chinese embassy said claims Beijing was behind the attack were “completely fabricated and malicious slanders”.They said: “China has neither the interest nor the need to meddle in the internal affairs of the UK.“We urge the relevant parties in the UK to stop spreading false information, stop fabricating so-called China threat narratives, and stop their anti-China political farce.”Labour’s Mr Healey said: “The MoD’s data security record is getting worse while threats against the UK rise – with a three-fold increase in MoD data breaches over the last five years.“Such flaws in our cybersecurity must be fixed.”The revelation of the MoD data breach comes after the UK and the US in March accused China of a global campaign of “malicious” cyber attacks in an unprecedented joint operation to reveal Beijing’s espionage.Britain blamed Beijing for targeting the Electoral Commission watchdog in 2021 and for being behind a campaign of online “reconnaissance” aimed at the email accounts of MPs and peers.The Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) also uses SSCL as payroll network provider.The Met said: “There is currently no evidence to suggest that there has been any compromise of the MPS payroll service.” More

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    Top EU politician who survived Iran assassination plot delivers ‘end appeasement’ plea to Cameron

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailA senior EU politician who survived a shocking assassination attempt last year has asked parliamentarians to tell foreign secretary Lord Cameron to end Britain’s “appeasement of Iran”.Spanish politician Alejo Vidal-Quadras, the former first vice president of the European Parliament, was in London today to talk to MPs and peers about the need to proscribe Iran’s Revolutionary Guard (IRGC).But attempts for him to meet a minister fell on deaf ears.Professor Vidal-Quadras describes himself as “lucky” after surviving an assassination attempt on 9 November last year which saw a bullet miss his jugular and pass through his jaw.He was in London with “a simple message” to “end the appeasement” of the regime in Iran and call on the UK to join the US in proscribing the IRGC as a terrorist organisation.Alejo Vidal-Quadras was shot in an assassination attempt More

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    Mel Stride dodges question over NHS waiting lists as he’s grilled on benefits crackdown

    Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride was put on the spot about NHS waiting lists as he was grilled on changes to benefits in the UK.The Tory minister was grilled on the government’s WorkWell scheme, which includes a review of payments to people with mental health conditions, when he appeared on Good Morning Britain on Tuesday (7 May).Presenter Susana grilled Mr Stride after a woman was forced to pay for her own hip replacement as she could not wait 18 months for surgery and could not work because of the pain.Mr Stride replied: “I can’t comment on the specific example.” More

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    Labour questions continued arms exports to Israel with Rafah humanitarian crisis

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailDavid Lammy moved Labour closer to calling for an outright ban on arms sales to Israel as the row over the Middle East crisis exploded in the House of Commons.With Labour under pressure from its own MPs and activists to take a harder line against Israel on the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, Mr Lammy used an urgent question to ratchet up his party’s position.It follows concerns in the party leadership that Muslims and others are not voting Labour because of its position on the conflict.But with Israeli tanks moving on Rafah, Mr Lammy made it clear to Tory deputy foreign secretary Andrew Mitchell that banning arms sales to Israel should now be on the table. Shadow foreign secretary David Lammy More

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    Pollsters tell Sunak he is wrong over ‘hung parliament’ prediction

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailPollsters have dismissed Rishi Sunak’s claims that his party still has a fighting chance with a general election likely to produce “a hung parliament.”The prime minister is set to try to persuade MPs tomorrow that the result will be closer than many people predict at the first of two briefing sessions on the local elections alongside his party chairman Richard Holden and head of election strategy Isaac Levido.The session will include a full assessment and breakdown of what the disastrous local election results mean after the Tories lost almost 500 council seats, the Blackpool South by-election and, most devastatingly, the West Midlands mayor.Mr Sunak though has already made his “hung parliment” claims based on the vote share in the local elections. Thi was based on Labour’s vote share being 34 percent to the Tories’ 27 percent with the seven point lead much lower than the one shown in most national polls. Rishi Sunak defended the claim the general election will lead to a hung parliament More

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    Watch again: Grant Shapps updates MPs after Ministry of Defence cyberattack

    For free real time breaking news alerts sent straight to your inbox sign up to our breaking news emailsSign up to our free breaking news emailsWatch again as Grant Shapps updated MPs on Tuesday 7 May after a Ministry of Defence data breach.Mr Shapps speec came after reports revealed that the Ministry of Defence was targeted in a cyberattack on a third party payroll system including the details of tens of thousands of British armed forces and veterans.Senior Tory Tobias Ellwood said the targeting of a payroll system “points to China” and could be part of “strategy to see who might be coerced”. China said it “firmly opposes and fights all forms of cyberattacks”.Downing Street refused to accuse a specific state for the cyberattack. More

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    Watch: Tory MP Paul Scully says he expects Labour to win general election

    A Tory MP has suggested Labour will win the general election.Paul Scully, who is standing down at the next vote, shared a bleak outlook for Rishi Sunak’s government. “There is a scenario we can get to, if we come up with a vision and sell that vision to the country, rather than just going from crisis to crisis… that you can get to a hung parliament or reduce the losses,” he told BBC Politics on Tuesday 7 May.”My personal view, is that Labour is going to win the election.” More

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    UK politics – live: Tory MP says he expects to lose election as No 10 refuses to blame China for MoD ‘hack’

    (Getty Images) Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inbox Get our free View from Westminster email A Conservative MP has publicly admitted he personally expects the Tories to lose the next general election, when asked about Rishi Sunak’s claim that Britain is on course for a hung […] More