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    Tory MP Paul Scully resigns after warning of ‘no-go areas’ in London and Birmingham

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailTory MP Paul Scully has announced he is stepping down at the next general election after comments he made about “no go” areas in London and Birmingham were met with uproar.Mr Scully evoked ire after he said that parts of Tower Hamlets and Birmingham Sparkhill were “no go areas” due to people “abusing” their own religion.The former minister has now announced his resignation. Posting on social media site X, Mr Scully said:“I have told my local association that I won’t be contesting the next General Election. Over the last nine years it’s been a privilege to represent in Parliament, the area which I called home for 35 years”He added: “Fuelled by division, the party has lost its way and needs to get a clear focus which I hope the budget can start to provide. It needs a vision beyond crisis management which can appeal to a wider section of the electorate including younger people…”Mr Scully came under fire for comments made during a BBC London interview last week where he suggested that “parts of” Tower Hamlets and Birmingham Sparkhill are “no-go areas mainly because of doctrine and mainly because people are sort of abusing in many ways their religion”.His comments received criticism from both Labour and the Tories, as Conservative mayor Andy Street said “it really is time for those in Westminster to stop the nonsense slurs and experience the real world. I for one am proud to lead the most diverse place in Britain.” Labour MP Jess Phillips added: “As one of the MPs for Sparkhill I am expecting an apology for this utter drivel.” Mr Scully made his comments following the suspension of former deputy-chairman Lee Anderson from the Conservative party after he refused to apologise for claiming “Islamists” had achieved “control” over London. Mr Scully said Mr Anderson was “trying to reflect” concerns about their neighbourhoods changing “in a really clumsy way”.Both Sparkhill and Tower Hamlets have large Muslim populations. Ali Milani, chairman of the Labour Muslim Network, told BBC London that Scully was perpetuating an “Islamophobic myth that has been continuously perpetuated.” More

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    George Galloway makes dig at MPs as he returns to Commons

    George Galloway took a dig at politicians as he arrived at Parliament to be sworn in as the new MP for Rochdale on Monday (4 March).Mr Galloway was announced as the winner of the Rochdale by-election in the early hours of Friday (1 March), with the Workers Party of Britain leader receiving just under 40 percent of the vote.Mr Galloway arrived at Parliament in a dark Volvo driven by an aide on Monday morning, as he was greeted by photographers and camera crews.He said: “I always loved the building – the people in it, not quite so much.”Mr Galloway will meet Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle ahead of his introduction. More

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    Minister confronted over ‘Donald Trump is a cancer’ tweet

    Treasury minister Bim Afolami has defended a tweet he made about Donald Trump, calling the former US President “a cancer”.Mr Afolami was confronted about the tweet he made back in 2021, when he appeared on Nick Ferrari’s LBC breakfast show on Monday (4 March).The MP insisted the UK will have a good relationship with whoever is elected US President in November, when the LBC presenter said: “I wonder how a tweet of yours from a few years back helps that relationship…”After reading out Mr Afolami’s previous tweet, Mr Ferrari asked: “Very personal, so I’ll ask for a third time, is it appropriate?Mr Afolami replied: “I think it was appropriate.” More

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    Everything we learnt about Jeremy Hunt’s ‘prudent’ budget from Sunday interviews

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailAs the government prepares to unveil it’s last Spring budget before a general election, the chancellor Jeremy Hunt had his annual pre-statement grilling on the Sunday news shows.It is widely expected that Mr Hunt will look to cut taxes and commit to minimal public spending increases as the conservatives commit a last-ditch attempt to win back the electorate.But recent OBR forecasts have given the chancellor less headroom for tax cuts than previously thought, leading the chancellor to dampen expectations around the sort of tax reductions the public can expect.Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said he ‘won’t take risks’ with the UK economy Here’s a look at everything else the chancellor hinted would likely come up in Wednesday’s budget.The government has made progress on the economyWe can expect the chancellor to say the government has made good progress on the economy, as he pointed to reducing inflation and the downgraded “technical” recession. On the BBC’s show with Laura Kuennsberg, Mr Hunt said inflation had fallen from 11 per cent when Rishi Sunak became prime minister to it’s current level of 4 per cent, telling Ms Kuennsberg: “it’s fallen much faster than people predicted”.Despite the UK officially entering a technical recession last month, Mr Hunt said the recession is “much more healthy” than the Bank of England had previously thought.He added that the economy has been “much, much more resilient than people predicted”.The Bank of England said the UK fell into a ‘technical recession’ last month No radical tax-cutsThough the chancellor is a keen proponent of tax cuts, he made it clear that the government will not be committing to any radical tax reductions and was keen to manage expectations around the sort of tax-cuts that can be expected. Talking to Sky News’ Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips, Mr Hunt said:“When it comes to tax cuts, I do believe that if you look around the world, countries with lower tax tend to grow faster — North America, Asia — and so I do think in the long run we need to move back to being a lower taxed, more lightly regulated economy.”But he cautioned:“It would be deeply unconservative to cut taxes in a way that increased borrowing, wasn’t fully funded.“If I think of the great tax-cutting budgets of the past, Nigel Lawson’s budget in 1988 — the reason that was so significant is because those tax cuts were permanent.“People need to know that these are tax cuts you can really afford, so it will be responsible and everything I do will be affordable.”Though the chancellor would not be drawn into what specific tax cuts the government is considering it is widely tipped that they may introduce further cuts to national insurance or income tax.Jeremy Hunt has said he hoped to “make some progress on that journey” of cutting taxes, describing the 2p cut to national insurance at the autumn statement as a “turning point”.Talking to Sky News he said: “All conservatives believe that the state has a moral duty to leave as much money in people’s pockets as possible because it belongs to the people who earn that money.”Fiscal rules are here to stayDespite opposition from the former Bank of England chief economist, Andy Haldane, Jeremy Hunt insisted that fiscal rules are here to stay.The sustainable investment rule aims to keep debt at a level that does not prove unsustainable or unfair to future generations.Mr Haldane told the BBC that he wanted to hear that “fiscal rules might be tweaked” as “they’re stuning growth for me right now”.He explained that the government’s own self-imposed rules around debt is “constraining our capacity to invest as a nation and therefore grow tomorrow”.However, Mr Hunt insisted that he would not alter the fiscal rules “because I think people would interpret that as Britain losing control of its finances”.He told the BBC: “The reason we have them is to give confidence to the British people and to the world that we are a country that pays back our debt. And if we didn’t have them, people would worry that Britain was going to go on an endless borrowing binge.”Hunt economic adviser Andy Haldane has called for the fiscale rules to be ‘tweaked’ There will be “no gimmicks”Mr Hunt insisted that his budget would be a “responsible” centred on a long-term plan for economic growth. When asked by Ms Kuennsberg if Mr Hunt was considering scrapping the non-dom tax scheme to fund small tax-cuts, the chancellor said the country “sees through gimmicks and we are not going to do gimmicks on Wednesday”.Though Mr Hunt did not rule out stealing the Labour policy, he suggested that all measures taken would be long-term policies as opposed to short-term fixes.Focus on public service “productivity” to unlock moneyThe government have already announced it is undertaking a “public sector productivity drive” in a bid to improve services without ramping up government spending.The announcement features a number of cost-saving measures, including the implementation of artificial intelligence and digitisation across government and the creation of 200 additional child social care places in England.Mr Hunt expanded on announcement this morning, telling the BBC that “we have to think not about the money we’re putting in but whether we can do things more efficiently so that we get more out”.Thus far, Mr Hunt has indicated that the government will not be engaging in any mass public sector spending programmes and will instead free up money by looking to eliminate Whitehall waste and focus on improving productivity and efficiency.There will be minimal public spending increasesDespite squeezed public services, Mr Hunt has maintained that the government will not commit to any mass public-sector spending programmes.The chancellor told the BBC that he didn’t believe in “forever expanding the welfare state” because “I don’t think that’s compatible with bringing the tax burden down in a society that makes work pay”.Last month left-wing thinktank the Resolution Foundation warned that the chancellor’s current spending projections mean that increasing day-to-day spending on public services by 1 per cent was a “fiscal fiction”.It explained that given health, education and defence budgets are all protected, unprotected departments, such as the Home Office, MoJ and local government will see per capita cuts of 17 per cent by 2028-29.On Times Radio, Mr Hunt said “It’s wrong to say the only way to improve public services is by putting more money in”.When asked if the government wouldn’t spend more, Mr Hunt said it was “the wrong question to ask”, but notably refused to answer if public services were in a good state right now. 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    Sadiq Khan responds to Lee Anderson comments: ‘Poison of Islamophobia continues’

    Sadiq Khan hit out at the “poison” of Islamophobia as he responded to Lee Anderson’s comments in a speech at the London Labour Conference on Saturday, 2 March.The Ashfield MP received widespread criticism and had the Tory whip suspended after claiming the London mayor is being controlled by “Islamists”.Mr Anderson has refused to apologise for the remarks despite Rishi Sunak labelling them as “wrong” and has not ruled out standing at the next election.Mr Khan criticised Mr Sunak for “failing to condemn [Mr Anderson’s] words for what they are.” More

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    Jeremy Hunt unable to name ‘extremist’ groups Sunak says hijacked pro-Palestine marches

    Jeremy Hunt was unable to name “extremist” groups Rishi Sunak said hijacked pro-Palestine marches in his speech on Friday.Speaking to Trevor Phillips on Sky News on Sunday (3 March), the chancellor said he could not give them the name of a group, but that he and the prime minister were talking about “scenes on television” and emails he says he’s received “from people who’ve been terrified by what they’ve seen in some of these protests.”Mr Hunt was asked several times to name groups referenced by Mr Sunak in his speech but did not.Mr Sunak said the UK’s streets had been “hijacked” by people “hostile” to British values during protests in support of a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war. More

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    Watch: Jeremy Hunt plays down expectations of tax cuts ahead of spring Budget

    Jeremy Hunt has played down expectations of tax cuts ahead of the spring Budget due to be announced on Wednesday, 6 March.Speaking to Sky News’ Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips programme on 3 March, the chancellor said the fiscal event will see a “prudent and responsible Budget for long-term growth.”It would be deeply unconservative to cut taxes in a way that increased borrowing, wasn’t fully funded.”It comes as Mr Hunt is and Rishi Sunak are reportedly due to meet on Sunday evening to decide whether a 2p cut to income tax is affordable in Wednesday’s statement. More

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    UK Terror threat at highest level since 9/11

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThe threat of an imminent terror attack in the UK is rising, senior security officials have allegedly arned MPs.The Mail on Sunday has reported that politicians are increasingly being warned about the danger of terror attacks following an “upsurge in extremist activity” as a result of the conflict in the middle east.One MP with knowledge of the most recent briefings reportedly told the Mail: ‘The level of extremist chatter is off the scale. This is something they’ve seen growing and growing.’Referring to intelligence from the last two weeks, the politician added: ‘It’s like when the Twin Towers came down in 2001, there was a big spike of hate.’ MPs are reportedly concerned about the rising threat level in the UK The claims come just days after the government’s independent reviewer of terrorism said that the Israel/Palestine conflict has presented a “risk to our democracy”.Talking to Times Radio, Jonathan Hall KC said:“When you see last week, MPs literally scared to show [in parliament], apparently wanting to change their behaviour in parliament because of threats that they’ve been receiving.He added: “If those are done in order to affect the way in which the government acts and way parliamentarians operate, then actually that does begin to fall within the scope of terrorism and might even call for counterterrorism response.”In October 2021, David Amess, the Conservative MP for Southend West, was fatally stabbed at a constituency surgery in Essex. The attack was committed by a British Islamic State sympathiser and was around the time parliament voted to carry out airstrikes in Syria.Just five years earlier, Labour MP Jo Cox died after being shot and stabbed multiple times in Birstall, West Yorkshire by a right-wing terrorist. The current terrorism threat level is current at “substantial”, but the Mail reports concerns amongst MPs that it should be raised to “severe” to reflect the level of extremist chatter reaching its highest since the terror attack in New York on September 11, 2001.Prime Minister Rishi Sunak gives his speech on extremism in Downing Street In a speech last week, the Prime Minister warned that extremists are trying to “tear us apart” and called on the country to unite to ‘beat this poison’.His comments followed the election of Workers Party MP George Galloway in the Rochdale by-election, who centered his campaign on the conflict in Gaza.Mr Sunak said that it was “beyond alarming” that the Rochdale by-election “returned a candidate who dismisses the horror of what happened on October 7th, who glorifies Hezbollah and is endorsed by Nick Griffin”.Mr Galloway said he “abhors extremism” and has said he is “not responsible” for who endorses him.The prime minister has since pledged to “redouble our support for the Prevent programme”, which tries to steer people away from radicalisation, and has instructed the Home Office to use existing laws to block hate preachers from entering Britain. The Home Office has been approached for comment. More