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    Jeremy Corbyn joins immigration protesters outside Home Office

    Jeremy Corbyn joined immigration policy protesters outside the Home Office in central London on Monday, 18 December.It came after Rishi Sunak’s Safety of Rwanda Bill passed its second reading last Tuesday, pushing forward the controversial deportation scheme.The prime minister’s new planned legislation would deem Rwanda safe in British law after the original bill was struck down as unlawful by the Supreme Court.MPs approved the Safety of Rwanda Bill at its second reading by 313 votes to 269, majority 44.”Treat [refugees] like human beings and create safe passages,” Mr Corbyn urged. More

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    Rishi Sunak rules out a 2025 general election: ‘2024 will be an election year’

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailRishi Sunak has confirmed the next general election will be in 2024 – ruling out the prospect of a January 2025 contest.The prime minister told a gathering of journalists in Downing Street that the UK will go to the polls next year, putting Westminster on an election war-footing.The latest date an election can be held under current rules is January 2025, and with the Tories trailing Labour by around 20 points in the polls it was rumoured Mr Sunak would cling on and hope for a turnaround.But the PM has set the stage for a showdown with Sir Keir Starmer, who has led Labour to the cusp of power four years after its worst defeat since 1935 under his predecessor Jeremy Corbyn.An election is now expected in the autumn, although there is speculation one could be held as soon as next spring. Mr Sunak’s announcement comes amid a gloomy backdrop, with the PM warned he faces a “collapse” on the scale of Tony Blair’s 1997 landslide.Rishi Sunak wants to see flights to Rwanda take off before the next general election (James Manning/PA)Britain’s top pollster Professor Sir John Curtice told The Independent on Sunday that the PM faces a “very bleak situation”. The Conservatives could lose as many as 220 of their current total of 350 MPs in the election due next year, he claimed.“Sunak as a personality has failed to bring up his party,” Sir John told The Independent.Mr Sunak has also failed to deliver on four of the five key pledges to the public he set out in January.He promised to halve inflation, stop small boats crossing the channel, grow the economy, reduce the national debt and cut NHS waiting lists.Inflation has fallen from over 10 per cent at the start of this year to 4.6 per cent, still more than double the Bank of England’s target.But the PM’s other four pledges have floundered, including his promise to “stop the boats”.And he enters the new year braced for a fresh bout of Tory infighting over his beleaguered Rwanda deportation plan, which has split the party’s right and centrist wings.Sir Keir Starmer is hoping to win power after Labour faced its worst defeat since 1935 under his predecessor (Maja Smiejkowska/PA)In a bid to revive the scheme, after it was struck down by the Supreme Court, Mr Sunak is seeking to pass an emergency bill to deem the east African country a safe place to deport refugees.The PM won a crunch vote on the bill this month, but faces another battle with his MPs within weeks, with rebels on the Tory right and left threatening to scupper his plans.Prof Curtice also warned that Mr Sunak faces electoral oblivion even if his Rwanda policy gets off the ground.Asked if the Tories would do better in the election if the PM manages to start sending migrants to Rwanda, the polling guru said: “The short answer is no. Yes, some core voters are upset (about immigration). But it’s not the core vote you need to win back – it’s those who are saying they won’t vote Conservative.”Mr Sunak had blundered by not focusing on the economy and the NHS, he argued. “People are asking two main questions: ‘Can I afford to feed my kids?’ and, ‘If I fall ill, will the NHS look after me?’“Unless they come up with better answers, this government will struggle politically,” said Sir John, who is renowned for his near 100 per cent accurate predictions on polling day. More

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    UK presses for consular access to Jimmy Lai as Hong Kong trial enters second day

    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 emailsThe British government has called on Hong Kong to provide consular access to jailed media mogul Jimmy Lai as his landmark national security trial entered its second day on Tuesday.The 76-year-old British citizen and founder of the now-defunct pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily is facing charges of colluding with foreign forces to endanger national security and conspiring with others to release seditious publications.He was arrested in August 2020 during the Hong Kong administration’s crackdown on activists and China critics following the 2019 democracy movement.The trial of Lai – the most high profile of the nearly 300 arrested under the Beijing-imposed draconian national security law – has become a diplomatic focal point between China and the West, including the UK, over freedom of press and judicial independence.The UK and the US have called on China for the immediate release of Lai, saying that the trial is politically motivated. Lai was already serving five years and nine months for a fraud conviction over a lease dispute for his newspaper.”We’ll continue to press for consular access to Mr Lai,” Anne-Marie Trevelyan, the British minister of state for the Indo-Pacific, said in parliament on Monday.She added that the UK was unable to provide consular access “because we are not allowed to visit him in prison”.Conservative former minister Tim Loughton, speaking during an urgent question, told the Commons: “This pantomime trial of Jimmy Lai is just the tip of a huge iceberg of the CCP’s (Chinese Communist Party) industrial abuse of human rights and indifference to international rule of law.”Sir Julian Lewis, who chairs the Intelligence and Security Committee of parliament, said: “How many times must a totalitarian communist state behave like a totalitarian communist state before the government will recognise it as a totalitarian communist state?”Foreign secretray David Cameron previously said Lai was targeted “in a clear attempt to stop the peaceful exercise of his rights to freedom of expression and association”.The media tycoon on Tuesday walked into the West Kowloon Law Court smiling and waving to his supporters amid heavy police presence. He also blew a kiss to the public gallery as a supporter chanted: “Hang in there!”Diplomats from at least 10 consulates, including those from the UK, the US, EU, Canada, and Australia, were in attendance during the trial along with Lai’s wife, son, and daughter.The city-appointed judges – Esther Toh, Susana D’Almada Remedios and Alex Lee – heard Lai’s lawyers’ plea to dismiss the sedition charges due to the “time bar”.Robert Pang, the lead counsel for Lai, argued on Tuesday that the prosecutors had laid the charge too late for the alleged conspiracy that ran between April 2019 and June 2021.Mr Pang on Monday said Apple Daily published its final edition on 24 June 2021 and the charge would have expired on 24 December. But the defendant was brought before the court for the first time on 28 December, at least four days after the “time bar” had expired.But prosecutor Anthony Chau said the time limit should be set based on when the alleged conspiracy – involving at least 160 articles – actually ended.Mr Chau said it would be absurd if prosecutors were required to charge a suspect every time an alleged offence came to their knowledge, making the case “fragmented” and “impracticable”.The judges said they would make a decision on Friday. The trial is expected to last about 80 days without a jury.The US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller reiterated calls for Lai’s release. “We have deep concerns about the deterioration in protection for human rights and fundamental freedoms in Hong Kong and that includes the rule of law,” he said.Beijing has dismissed the criticism from Western governments, saying that Washington and London made irresponsible remarks and that go against international law and the basic norms of international relations. More

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    Mission: Impossible theme interrupts House of Lords ceremony

    A House of Lords introduction ceremony was interrupted by the Mission: Impossible theme tune on Monday, 18 December.Robert Douglas-Miller, who was appointed a life peer by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak in order to take up his Government post as an environment minister, was about to swear the oath of allegiance to the King when the film’s song played from Lord Woodley’s phone.The Labour peer later spoke in the chamber, apologising for the interruption.“I have never been so embarrassed in all my life, I am sincerely sorry,” he added. More

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    Listen: LBC caller pretends to be Lee Anderson’s son as MP responds to ‘vile hoax’

    A man pretending to be the son of Conservative MP Lee Anderson appeared on an LBC radio call-in claiming his father was a violent drunk.The alleged prank call, which took place on Rachel Johnson’s phone-in show on Sunday (17 December), has been described as a “vile hoax” by the Tory deputy chairman.The man called himself ‘Charlie Anderson’ from Ashfield, Mr Anderson’s constituency, and claimed to be the MP’s son.The call was promptly cut off by Ms Johnson, who said it sounded like a “very personal issue”.Mr Anderson has since demanded both police and LBC bosses look into what happened.Taking to X, formerly Twitter, Mr Anderson said: “To be clear, this is a vile hoax and a slur on my family.”For clarity I do have a son called Charlie but he is 33 not 23 as the male says in this clip. The voice is a completely different accent to my son’s.”The person who has made this hoax call is sick. I shall be reporting this to the police and so should @LBC.” More

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    Michelle Mone squares up to Rishi Sunak after PM’s intervention over PPE scandal – latest

    Lying to press over PPE contract was ‘not a crime’ says Michelle MoneSign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailMichelle Mone has hit out at Rishi Sunak after the prime minister said he was taking the scandal surrounding her involvement in lucrative PPE contracts “incredibly seriously”.The baroness is facing calls to be barred from the House of Lords after she admitted standing to benefit from £60m in profit over a contract signed with PPE Medpro at the height of the Covid crisis after she recommended it to ministers.The Tory peer and Ultimo bra tycoon has taken a leave of absence from the Lords for more than a year as she bids to “clear her name” over the scandal. But she is free to resume membership, piling pressure on the PM to ensure she does not return to the upper House.After Mr Sunak said he was taking the scandal “incredibly seriously”, Ms Mone said: “What is Rishi Sunak talking about? I was honest with the Cabinet Office, the government and the NHS in my dealings with them.“They all knew about my involvement from the very beginning.”Show latest update
    1702941430Full report: Michelle Mone hits back at Rishi SunakMichelle Mone has hit back at Rishi Sunak over his intervention in the PPE row, insisting ministers knew about her involvement in the lucarative contract from the beginning.The peer is facing calls to be barred from the House of Lords, with the PM insisting today that Downing Street was taking the case “incredibly seriously”.Our political correspondent Archie Mitchell has the full report: Andy Gregory18 December 2023 23:171702938550Watch: Michelle Mone admits she could benefit from £60m PPE contractBaroness Michelle Mone admits she could benefit from £60m PPE contractAndy Gregory18 December 2023 22:291702936090Michelle Mone hits out at ‘very biased’ Twitter community noteMichelle Mone has criticised a “community note” on Twitter/X, claiming it is “very biased and factually incorrect”.The social media service adds context brought by other readers to certain tweets, in this instance saying: “Michelle Mone helped PPE Medpro secure a £122 million contract to supply hospital gowns, later deemed defective, not sterile and unsuitable for NHS use ‘for any purpose’”.“The Government is now suing the firm – which Mone admits profiting from – to recover the money wasted.”In a later post, Ms Mone said: “This label by @CommunityNotes is biased and factually incorrect. An email sent in 2020 by the Cabinet Office to PPE Medpro said our gowns had been ‘approved by technical’. We dispute all claims by the government that the product was defective, and intend to clear our name.”Andy Gregory18 December 2023 21:481702934170Letters | Was lying really Michelle Mone’s ‘only mistake’?In a letter to The Independent, Tim Sidaway, one of our readers in Herefordshire, has written:Michelle Mone says her “only mistake” was repeatedly lying (my words, as she couldn’t bring herself to admit it as it is) by denying any benefit from the PPE deal made with her husband’s company at the height of the pandemic.What about recommending the deal in the first place, knowing that her family would benefit? What about failing to declare an interest to the Lords, against procedure? And then threatening legal action to protect her lies?At least her claims regarding government malfeasance and incompetence are believable.Andy Gregory18 December 2023 21:161702931650Michelle Mone appeared to fight back tears in Medpro-funded filmDavid Oliver, a former president of the Royal College of Physicians, told the Sunday Times he had been “used’. It was called The Interview: Baroness Mone and the PPE Scandal and presented and produced by Mark Williams-Thomas, a former detective and award-winning investigative journalist. Defending the programme he told the paper it was split into “two distinct parts”, the first on the government’s handling of PPE and the second half on PPE Medpro and Mone.Kate Devlin, Politics and Whitehall Editor18 December 2023 20:341702929790‘It’s not my yacht, it’s not my money,’ says Michelle MoneMichelle Mone has admitted that a 30 per cent profit had been made on PPE contracts, of around £60 million. But she denied to the BBC that she had bought a yacht with the money and insisted the cash was her husband’s money.“It’s not my yacht, it’s not my money,” she said. “That cash is my husband’s cash, it’s just like my dad going home with his wage packet on a Friday night and giving it to my mum. So she’s benefiting from that as well, but that cash is not my cash and is not my children’s cash. “If one day, God forbid, my husband passes away before me then I am a beneficiary as well as his children and my children.”But she insisted if he divorced her she would receive nothing.Andy Gregory18 December 2023 20:031702927810Deputy PM ‘doesn’t accept’ Michelle Mone’s claim she was ‘scapegoat’ in PPE scandalOliver Dowden has said he “doesn’t accept” Baroness Michelle Mone’s claim that she and her husband Doug Barrowman were made “scapegoats” for the government’s wider failings over PPE during the Covid pandemic.Speaking to Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips on Sky News, the deputy prime minister added: “There’s a limit to what I can say, but I don’t recognise that.”It came after Lady Mone apologised for denying her links to the PPE Medpro firm which was awarded government contracts worth more than £200m to supply PPE after she recommended it to ministers.Oliver Dowden ‘doesn’t accept’ Michelle Mone’s claim she was ‘scapegoat’ in PPE scandalHolly Patrick18 December 2023 19:301702926070No ‘VIP lane’ existed for PPE, says Conservative former ministerIn case you missed it, a Tory ex-Treasury minister this month denied the existence of a so-called VIP lane over personal protective equipment (PPE) as the government scrambled to find sufficient kit in the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic.The idea of there existing a VIP lane is “misconstrued”, Lord Agnew told BBC Newsnight, saying: “I don’t call it the VIP lane at all. We were getting hundreds of offers a day to help from largely very decent people who were as worried as we were in government.“And we had to find some way of getting the more critical ones through into the procurement triaging system. So that’s all it was. The idea of it being a VIP line is very misconstrued.”Lord Agnew resigned in January this year from his ministerial posts over what he described at the time as the “schoolboy” handling of fraudulent Covid-19 business loans.Andy Gregory18 December 2023 19:011702924090Michelle Mone says she ‘regrets’ denying links to PPE MedproBaroness Michelle Mone apologised after denying her links to the PPE Medpro firm which was awarded contracts worth more than £200m to supply personal protective equipment after she recommended it to ministers, reports my colleague Holly Patrick.The Conservative peer was questioned by the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg on Sunday on the controversy surrounding the firm, which is being investigated by the National Crime Agency (NCA).“I wasn’t trying to pull the wool over anyone’s eyes. I regret and I’m sorry for not saying straight out ‘yes I am involved’,” Lady Mone said.Andy Gregory18 December 2023 18:281702922380Opinion | The Michelle Mone interview was the worst PR comeback since Prince AndrewIn his column on Michelle Mone’s BBC interview, our associate editor Sean O’Grady writes:“I’m not sure who’s advising Baroness (Michelle) Mone and her hubby Doug Barrowman these days.“Hannah Ingram-Moore maybe, who, during a catastrophic interview earlier this year with Piers Morgan, destroyed the charitable foundation set up in the name of Captain Sir Tom Moore, her dear old dad and national treasure?“Or maybe Lady Mone was recently at a perfectly normal shooting party and bumped into his former royal highness the Duke of York, a chap always ready with a few useful tips about getting out of a fix.“Whoever is at the ignoble lady’s elbow these days isn’t serving her interests terribly well. Presumably advised to do so as part of some PR charm offensive, the pair offered themselves up to Laura Kuenssberg for an interview to explain how they’d been scapegoated over the coronavirus personal protective equipment (PPE) affair, and how the mess (which wasn’t really a mess, because nothing was wrong anyway) was all everyone’s else’s fault and nothing to do with them.”Andy Gregory18 December 2023 17:59 More

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    Should Michelle Mone be expelled from the House of Lords following PPE scandal? Join The Independent Debate

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailA Tory minister has called for Michelle Mone to be barred from the House of Lords, after she admitted she stands to benefit from £60million in profit over a PPE contract signed at the height of the Covid pandemic.On Sunday, the Tory peer said she was “sorry” for denying her links to PPE Medpro, which was awarded government contracts worth more than £200 million to supply personal protective equipment after she recommended it to ministers.Despite the apology, a defiant Baroness Mone added: “I don’t honestly see there is a case to answer. I can’t see what we have done wrong.”Baroness Mone has been on a leave of absence from the Lords for more than a year as she bids to “clear her name” over the scandal. She claims she is being used as a scapegoat for the government’s Covid failings.Now a disastrous BBC interview has seen her face renewed criticism, with energy efficiency minister Lord Callanan calling for her not return to the House of Lords, adding he “would hope that she would see sense”.Meanwhile, ITV’s Susannah Reid said: “She thinks she is the victim because of the press intrusion… [it is] utterly remarkable she does not see how sensitive this is for people.”And amid the criticism, Labour’s Wes Streeting has hit out at those he said had wanted to “make a quick buck at someone else’s expense” during the Covid crisis.We want to know if you think Baroness Mone should be barred from the House of Lords following her latest admission.Or do you agree that there isn’t “a case to answer” and Baroness Mone is being used as a “scapegoat” for the government’s Covid failings?If you want to share your opinion then add it in the comments and we’ll highlight the most insightful ones as they come in.All you have to do is sign up and register your details – then you can then take part in the discussion. You can also sign up by clicking ‘log in’ on the top right-hand corner of the screen.Make sure you adhere to our community guidelines, which can be found here. For a full guide on how to comment click here.Join the conversation with other Independent readers below or by clicking here. More

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    Albanian lawmakers discuss lifting former prime minister’s immunity as his supporters protest

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster email Supporters of Albania’s opposition Democratic Party protested against the government Monday while a parliamentary commission discussed whether to lift the immunity from prosecution of the party’s leader, former Prime Minister Sali Berisha. Prosecutors asked lawmakers last week to strip Berisha of his parliamentary immunity because he did not abide by an order to report to them every two weeks and not travel abroad while he is being investigated for corruption.Cordons of police officers surrounded the Parliament building Monday as a commission discussed the immunity request. If granted, the full Parliament is expected to vote Thursday to clear the way for prosecutors to put Berisha under arrest of house arrest. Berisha, 79, was charged with corruption in October for allegedly abusing his post to help his son-in-law, Jamarber Malltezi, buy land in Tirana owned by both private citizens and the country’s Defense Ministry, and to build 17 apartment buildings on the property. Berisha and Malltezi both have proclaimed their innocence and alleged the case was a political move by the ruling left-wing Socialist Party of Prime Minister Edi Rama. Berisha said he considered the prosecutors’ demands on reporting regularly and remaining in Albania to be unconstitutional.Socialists hold 74 of the 140 seats in Parliament, enough to pass most of laws on their own. Since October, Democratic Party lawmakers have regularly disrupted voting sessions to protest what they say is the increasingly authoritarian rule of the Socialists. Last month, they lit flares and piled chairs on top of each other in the middle of the hall the minute Rama took his seat to vote on next year’s budget. The disruptions are an obstacle to much-needed reforms at a time when the European Union has agreed to start the process of harmonizing Albanian laws with those of the EU as part of the Balkan country’s path toward full membership in the bloc.Berisha pledged to take the protest from the Parliament into the streets.“I call on each Albanian to consider their future, the country’s future. We are in a no-return battle,” he said before joining the hundreds of protesters outside the building Monday.Berisha served as Albania’s prime minister from 2005-2013, and as president from 1992-1997. He was reelected as a lawmaker for the Democratic Party in the 2021 parliamentary elections.The United States government in May 2021 and the United Kingdom in July 2022 barred Berisha and close family members from entering their countries because of alleged involvement in corruption.___Follow Llazar Semini at https://twitter.com/lsemini More