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    Polish voters choose mayors in hundreds of cities in runoff election

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster email Polish voters are casting ballots Sunday to chose mayors in hundreds of cities and towns where no candidate won outright in the first round of local election voting two weeks ago.Mayors will be chosen in a total of 748 places, including in the cities of Krakow, Poznan, Rzeszow and Wroclaw. Those are places where no single candidate won at least 50% of the vote during the first round on April 7.The local and regional elections are being viewed as a test for the pro-European Union government of Prime Minister Donald Tusk four months after it took power at the national level.Tusk’s party did well in big cities including Warsaw, where his party’s candidate, Rafał Trzaskowski, easily won reelection as mayor two weeks ago.However, Tusk failed to win a decisive victory overall. The main opposition party, Law and Justice, which held power at the national level from 2015-23, won a greater percentage of votes in the provincial assemblies.Tusk’s socially liberal Civic Coalition has strong support in cities while Law and Justice has a stronger base in conservative rural areas, particularly in eastern Poland.In the election of the provincial assemblies, Law and Justice obtained 34.3% of the votes nationwide and Tusks’ Civic Coalition got 30.6%. More

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    Rishi Sunak appalled at Met over ‘openly Jewish’ remark at pro-Palestine march

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailRishi Sunak is “appalled” at the Metropolitan Police’s handling of a pro-Palestinian march at which officers threatened a man with arrest and told him he was “openly Jewish”. Downing Street said the prime minister expects the commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, Sir Mark Rowley, to “account” for the events, which have led to calls for the Met boss to step down. Sir Mark has been summoned to a meeting with the policing minister Chris Philp this week after the incident prompted anger within the government. But No 10 stopped short of echoing former home secretary Suella Braverman’s call for the commissioner to resign. The row erupted after it emerged that the head of the Campaign Against Antisemitism (CAA), Gideon Falter, was threatened with arrest near a pro-Palestine protest on 13 April, with one police officer describing him as “openly Jewish”.Another officer told Mr Falter he would be arrested if he did not leave the area, because he was “causing a breach of peace with all these other people” and his presence was “antagonising”.The CAA has since called on Sir Mark to resign or be removed from his post.A government source said: “The PM has seen the footage and is as appalled as everyone else by the officer calling Mr Falter ‘openly Jewish’. “He expects the Met commissioner to account for how it happened, and what he will do to ensure officers do more to make Jewish communities in London feel safe.”Gideon Falter speaks with a police officer during the march More

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    Truss insists she doesn’t want to be PM again as she refuses to apologise for mortgage rate crisis

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailLiz Truss has claimed she does not want to be prime minister again, a week after saying she had “unfinished business” with the Conservative Party.Britain’s shortest-serving prime minister, famously outlasted by a lettuce, previously declined to rule out standing to be Tory leader, saying it was “never wise to rule anything out in politics”.But in an interview with Sky News on Sunday, Ms Truss appeared to do just that, saying her new book was “not trying to reinstate myself as prime minister”.Asked directly whether she would like to return to Downing Street, she said: “No.”She also again refused to apologise for the banking crisis, which led to her being ousted from power by her own MPs after less than six weeks, saying that “mortgage rates have gone up across the world”. But she did apologise for an antisemitic quote that made its way into her book, saying she was “very sorry” about that. Defending her economic record, she reiterated her criticism of Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey, even as she admitted she had never met him in person. She said: “The issues that I faced in office were issues of not being able to deliver the agenda I’d set out because of a deep resistance within the British economic establishment.“I think it’s wrong to suggest that I’m responsible for British people paying higher mortgages.“That is something that has happened in every country in the free world.”Liz Truss claims she does not want to be prime minister again More

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    Sadiq Khan taunts Donald Trump during Eid celebrations: ‘This is how we run in London’

    The mayor of London celebrated Eid on Saturday 20 April by watching comedians and musicians in Trafalgar Square.Sadiq Khan taunted former US president Donald Trump as he addressed crowds from the stage in central London.It was the 19th annual Eid in the Square festival marking the end of Ramadan, Islam’s holy month of fasting.Mr Khan told cheering onlookers: “I’m going to take a selfie and I’m going to send it to a good friend of mine, Donald Trump.“I’m going to say listen, ‘bruv’, this is how we run in London – I’m going to show him that our diversity is a strength not a weakness.” More

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    Labour plots new campaign to win over Tory-supporting pensioners

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailLabour is plotting a new campaign to win over Tory-supporting pensioners in a move aimed at wiping out one of the government’s few remaining electoral strengths.It comes as evidence shows the Conservatives are currently performing as badly among the demographic as the party was under former prime minister Liz Truss, who lasted a mere 49 days in office before she was forced out.With local elections in England coming up in less than two weeks, The Observer reported Sir Keir Starmer’s top officials are understood to be refocusing their campaign after noticing pensioners’ growing concern over how a Tory tax-cutting pledge might hit pensions and the NHS.The change in approach – involving a national media and targeted digital advertising campaign from Sunday – comes after the chancellor signalled employee national insurance contributions would eventually be scrapped, with Labour claiming the decision would cost around £46bn per year.The results of a private focus group run by Sir Keir’s party this week led its most senior officials to believe Jeremy Hunt had made a mistake with his announcement, with older voters fearful of the impact of the removal of national insurance on the struggling health service. Insiders told The Observer that the move was being compared to Ms Truss’s doomed proposal for £45bn in unfunded tax cuts by “pensioner hero voters”, a group who previously supported the Tories but are considering a switch to Labour.Evidence shows the Conservatives are currently performing as badly among the demographic as the party was under former prime minister Liz Truss More

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    Claims government officials working on small boats policy referred to ‘bloody migrants’

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailCabinet Office officials working on the government’s small boats plan reportedly referred to “bloody migrants” and told colleagues they were expected to leave their “humanity at the door” in a sign of civil service tensions over the controversial policy,Rowaa Ahmar, a former senior civil servant who has withdrawn a discrimination case against the Cabinet Office, has described “inhumane conversations” in the illegal migration taskforce.She was head of policy at the department before resigning in 2022 and later accused individuals at the heart of Boris Johnson’s government of bullying, discrimination and gaslighting.The former civil servant, who is of Egyptian and French dual heritage, also made allegations of “systemic racism” against the Cabinet Office.“I was privy to some inhumane conversations using the words ‘let’s boomerang them’, ‘bloody migrants’, ‘let’s take them in Cat C and treat them as prisoners,’” she told The Guardian. “I can’t reveal the legal advice, but I was pushing for the legal advice to be respected.”Ms Ahmar, who previously worked at the Treasury, had lodged two claims with an employment tribunal, claiming she was subject to “direct discrimination and harassment on the grounds of her sex and race” as well as “victimisation”.Tribunal documents made public following a successful application by news organisations show she accused the head of the civil service, Simon Case, of showing a “lack of support” and “cold-shouldering” her allegations of racism and harassment after she resigned.She said that after beginning her role as head of policy for the illegal migration task force on 4 January 2022, she found civil service directors viewed the “ultra-hostile environment” towards migrants as “practical, necessary and gratifying”.Rowaa Ahmar, a former senior civil servant, has withdrawn a discrimination case against the Cabinet Office More

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    Blackpool South voters turn on ‘Richy’ Rishi Sunak ahead of crunch by-election

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailDisillusioned Conservative voters in Blackpool South have turned on “Richy” Rishi Sunak ahead of a crunch by-election, a focus group conducted with The Independent reveals.With two weeks until the contest to replace disgraced former MP Scott Benton, a group of 10 Tory 2019 voters said the prime minister is “weak” and “just does not have a voice”.Working in a range of industries, the group described Blackpool’s descent from a bustling beachside resort a town riddled with shuttered shops, antisocial behaviour and an overstretched health service which has driven some to go private.Voters ‘felt that politicians had neglected Blackpool and that they were only in public life for themselves’ More

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    Watch tetchy exchanges during Post Office inquiry: ‘I suggest you are lying’

    Post Office legal chief Rodric Williams has been accused of “lying” after failing to admit that the organisation feared an Alan Bates victory would lead to a “cascade of criminal appeals”.Mr Williams, who is currently head of legal in the Post Office’s dispute resolution and brand team, was being questioned over his previous role as a litigation lawyer during the Horizon scandal.He told the probe he was “truly sorry” for being associated with the “greatest miscarriage of justice we’ve seen” but was also accused of “lying” during his questioning on Friday 19 April. More