More stories

  • in

    Anti-Corbyn Labour officials covertly diverted election funds away from winnable seats, Forde report finds

    Anti-Corbyn Labour officials secretly diverted 2017 election resources to candidates hostile to the leadership and away from “winnable seats”, a party inquiry has found.The long-awaited Forde Report, which has been seen in full by The Independent ahead of its publication, says senior staff hostile to Jeremy Corbyn set up a parallel operation to “covertly divert money and personnel” to their favoured candidates.The report, commissioned by Keir Starmer in the early days of his leadership, found that a “toxic” atmosphere prevailed in Labour HQ, with staff communicating via “WhatsApp ‘echo chambers'”, which amplified hostility and “allowed the boundaries of acceptable conduct to become blurred”.The Forde Inquiry was set up to look into allegations detailed in a party dossier leaked in April 2020 which contained transcripts of private WhatsApp messages from staff suggesting officials worked to politically undermine the party’s leadership.”Members of the SMT WhatsApp groups were focused on what they saw as protecting the party form Jeremy Corbyn rather than helping him to advance his agenda,” the Forde report concluded.Recommended”Though staff did not generally seek to exacerbate LOTO’s [Leader of the Opposition’s office] operational problems, which were seen as self-inflicted, they often passively observed or even welcomed them.”Some comments do appear to show straightforward attempts to hinder LOTO’s work (in their view, for the party’s greater good).”WhatsApp transcripts included in the original 2020 dossier analysed by the inquiry had suggested that some staffers became despondent as Labour climbed in the polls during the election campaign despite their efforts. One election night chat log showed that upon seeing exit polls showing Labour had overturned the Tory majority, one senior official said the result was the “opposite to what I had been working towards for the last couple of years”, describing themselves and their allies as “silent and grey-faced” and in need of counselling.But perhaps the most controversial of the claims in the original dossier was that staff diverted tens of thousands of pounds away from winnable sets and to protect candidates hostile to the leadership.On this matter, the Forde report concluded: “Some senior HQ staff had the ability to implement resourcing decision covertly. “A handful of staff in Ergon House created an additional fund for printing costs under the code GEL001 (spending some £135,000 in total on campaigns supportive of sitting largely anti-Corbyn MPs and not on campaigns for pro-Corbyn candidates in potential winnable seats).The report says staff “genuinely considered that a primarily defensive strategy would secure the best result for the party”, though it notes that “some had mixed feelings about what the better than anticipated result would mean for the party’s future and their own roles”.The Ergon House operation “covertly” diverted money and personnel “without authority” and that whilst “not illegal” was “wrong”,’ the report concludes. The report says that in general “a toxic atmosphere” prevailed in the party, stating that “Jeremy Corbyn’s election marked the first time that the leader was seen as so out of step with the predominant political view of most of the permanent staff”, meaning that “conflict reached a level of intensity not previously seen”.”Among senior HQ staff, communication via WhatsApp ‘echo chambers’ amplified the hostility and allowed the boundaries of acceptable conduct to become blurred; this resulted in conduct on the part of some senior staff which was wholly unacceptable,” it said.The inquiry also found “undoubted overt and underlying racism and sexism apparent in some of the content of the WhatsApp messages between the party’s most senior staff” as well as a wider culture of discrimination.Describing the party as being in “an untenable situation” on discrimination, the inquiry said: “The evidence received pointed to a perception that some protected characteristics were regarded, by the party, more highly than others. Equally, this meant that some were less highly regarded.”One recurrent theme during the witness interviews was a professed commitment to combatting discrimination towards those with protected characteristics. There was a near universal acceptance of the need for the Party to be a ‘broad church.”However, many of the individuals laying claim to these worthy ambitions had a very strong, even unbending view of what the Party should represent, who it should represent and how it should fight elections effectively. It was concerning to me that many failed to examine their own actions which were demonstrably unlikely to achieve that aim.”While the Forde inquiry says the original dossier and its leaking was clearly a “factional” tool, it says: “There are relatively few examples where we think the leaked report’s framing is substantially misleading … In the main, our view is that the messages quoted in the leaked report fairly represent the tone and contents of the discussions about Jeremy Corbyn, this staff, and the party’s Left in the SMT WhatsApp groups, and across the selected instant message charts. There are a significant number of comments in the transcripts which were not quoted in the leaked report but which demonstrate the same kind of hostility as those that were.”But the report also warns that Labour in 2017 was in a “debilitating inertia, factionalism and infighting which then distracted from what all profess to be a common cause – electoral success”.Labour won 40 per cent of the vote in 2017, removing Theresa May’s majority against expectations and ushering in a politically febrile hung parliament. The party went onto lose badly in 2019, riven by splits in its voter coalition over how to respond to Brexit and Mr Corbyn’s by then low personal ratings.The Forde Inquiry also looked into the evidence that Mr Corbyn and his office or allies interfered in antisemitism complaints processes.The inquiry found that it had “not received clear and convincing documentary evidence that there was a systemic attempt by the elected leadership or LOTO to interfere unbidden in the disciplinary process in order to undermine the party’s response to allegations of antisemitism”.It continues: “In our view, the problem was principally a lack of clarity (on both sides) about how involved LOTO should be; and this was aggravated by the mutual antagonism between HQ staff and LOTO.”The report adds that while LOTO staff “provided input into specific cases after it was sought” this was done “for the most part, reasonable and in good faith”. These contributions were then used by Mr Corbyn’s factional opponents “to form the basis of wholly misleading media reports which suggested LOTO staff had aggressive imposed themselves on the process against HQ’s wishes”.The report says that there “were structural problems with the party’s disciplinary system which meant it was not fit for purpose”, which were “seriously compounded by factionalism”.One example given by the report is that staff were “diverted” to take part in “validation exercises” ahead of the 2015 and 2016 leadership elections which “cemented a lack of trust between LOTO and HQ which further hampered the party’s ability to deal with antisemitism complaints effectively”.Labour MP Jon Trickett, previously the party’s national campaign coordinator in the run-up to the 2017 election, described the revelations as “a betrayal of millions of Labour voters”.And Hilary Schan, co-chair, of left-wing campaign group Momentum said the Forde Report was “a damning indictment of the Labour Right’s attempts to destroy from within the Corbyn leadership”.“The Report confirms it conclusively: right-wing Labour staff members worked to undermine the Party’s general election chances and its own complaints system, including on antisemitism, while engaging in racist and misogynistic behaviour towards MPs and members, all out of an overwhelming hatred for the Left,” she said.“Disgracefully, while tens of thousands of Labour members were pounding the streets to kick the Tories out in favour of a socialist Labour government, these right-wing factional operators were wreaking havoc on the Party from within. “Going forward we need more than just apologies. In addition to careful consideration of the Report’s findings, we need guarantees from the Labour leadership that those involved in this sabotage never again join or work for the Party. We need the delayed implementation of Labour’s BAME structures to be accelerated, given the widespread racism exposed within Labour and the Leadership’s documented failures to address it. “And we need Keir Starmer himself to commit to stop disregarding Labour’s rules to benefit his own factional agenda, as he has recently on Parliamentary selections. Keir Starmer has faced major questions over his commitment to both anti-racism and democracy – now is his opportunity to answer them.”RecommendedLuke Akehurst, a member of Labour’s NEC and chair of the moderate campaign group Labour First, said: “It’s been a long time coming, but at last all the trolls writing ‘where is the Forde report’ will have to compose a new tweet to cut and paste in reply to anything and everything.”The Labour Party has been approached for comment on the contents of the Forde report. More

  • in

    Tory MP Tobias Ellwood has whip removed ‘for failure to support’ Boris Johnson’s government

    Senior Conservative MP Tobias Ellwood has had the whip removed after “failing to support” Boris Johnson’s government in a confidence vote last night.It comes after the prime minister won the vote with a majority of 111 after announcing a fortnight ago he will resign from No 10 upon a new Tory leader being elected by the party’s membership in September.But a spokesperson for the Tory whips’ office said: “Tobias Ellwood MP has lost the Conservative Party whip following his failure to vote in support of the government in the confidence vote last night.”Mr Ellwood, a frequent critic of Mr Johnson who had called for him to resign, posted on social media on Monday that he was in Moldova meeting the country’s president Maia Sandu.The senior Tory MP, who chairs the Commons Defence Committee, said: “Odessa’s just 100 miles away. After Donbas — Russia’s expected to head West and if Odessa falls Moldova could easily be next.Recommended“Nato must learn from Ukraine and not leave it too late this time,” he added.But it is understood Mr Ellwood was reminded that the confidence vote was taking place on Monday evening in the Commons and informed of the repercussions if he failed to attend.A Tory source added: “Other Conservative MPs cancelled foreign trips, left poorly relatives and one MP’s mother died on the morning of the vote and still attended and voted.”In a statement, the senior MP said: “Following my meeting yesterday with the president of Moldova I was unable to secure return travel due to unprecedented disruption both here and in the UK.“I am very sorry to lose the whip but will now continue my meetings in Ukraine promoting the prime minister’s efforts here and specifically seeking to secure the reopening of Odesa port – so vital grain exports can recommence.”The decision by Mr Johnson and the whips’ office also means that Mr Ellwood, who has supported Penny Mordaunt in the Tory leadership contest, will not be able to vote in the fourth ballot of MPs this evening.One senior Tory MP told The Independent that stripping Mr Elwood of the whip “seems like pure spite when everyone knew that the government was going to win the vote anyway and he was overseas”.They added: “He can be infuriating, he’s obviously not always a team player, but this is going a bit far in my view.”Another added: “It’s clearly just lashing out. It’s like they way he sacked Michael [Gove] all over again. It’s violent death throes from No 10.”Tory leadership: Boris Johnson’s government wins confidence with 349 votesAccording to the division list 12 Conservatives did not vote after the confidence motion debate, but Nadine Dorries, a cabinet minister loyal to Mr Johnson, said any suggestions that the prime minister was trying to remove a vote for Ms Mordaunt by stripping the whip from the MP was “wholly untrue”.She responded to such a claim on Twitter, saying: “This is wholly untrue and frankly utterly ridiculous. “Every single MP of every party is under no illusion regarding the price to be paid in not voting during a Gov confidence motion. It’s a very clearly defined and historic red line. Tobias could have voted like everyone else.”Responding to the move, Wendy Chamberlain, the Liberal Democrat chief whip, added: “It is telling that Boris Johnson acted swiftly to punish Tobias Ellwood this time, but dragged his feet for days when it came to suspending the whip from his loyal supporter Chris Pincher. Recommended“This petty act shows there is no room in the Conservatives any more for those who refuse to prop up Johnson. “The Conservative leadership candidates should condemn this move and make clear they will restore the whip to Tobias Ellwood.” More

  • in

    4 contenders battle in bitter race to replace Boris Johnson

    The fractious race to replace Boris Johnson as Britain’s prime minister narrowed on Tuesday, with four candidates battling for two spots in a run-off vote by members of the governing Conservative Party.After three rounds of voting by party lawmakers, former Treasury chief Rishi Sunak leads the shrinking field and has all but secured his place in the final pair. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, Trade Minister Penny Mordaunt and former Equalities Minister Kemi Badenoch are vying for the second place.All are running to succeed Johnson, who quit as party leader this month after snowballing ethics scandals sparked mass resignations in his government.Tory lawmakers will vote Tuesday and again on Wednesday, with the last-place challenger eliminated each time. The two finalists will go to a runoff vote by all 180,000 members of the Conservative Party, with a winner announced Sept. 5.The remaining candidates are courting supporters of Tom Tugendhat, an influential lawmaker who was eliminated from the contest on Monday.RecommendedMordaunt came second on Monday, with 83 votes to Sunak’s 115. Truss got 71 and Badenoch 58 — but any of the three could still make the cut if they can win over supporters of axed contenders.Both Mordaunt and Badenoch tweeted praise for Tugendhat after Monday’s vote. Truss promised to increase military spending from 2% to 3% of gross domestic product — a key issue for Tugendhat, a former soldier who chairs the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee.The bitter campaign has exposed deep divisions in the Conservative Party at the end of Johnson’s scandal-tarnished reign. Opponents have rounded on Sunak for raising taxes in response to the economic damage wrought by the coronavirus pandemic and the war in Ukraine. Sunak has hit back that his rivals are peddling economic “fairy tales.”In a contest where every vote counts, the electorate of 358 Conservative legislators was reduced Tuesday to 357. Tobias Ellwood, a Johnson critic who supports Mordaunt, was suspended from the party group in Parliament for failing to vote in a confidence motion on Monday.The government easily won the vote thanks to the big Conservative majority, but Ellwood was punished for not cutting short a trip to Moldova to return for it.Ellwood, who heads Parliament’s Defense Committee, said he had been unable to return “due to unprecedented disruption both here and in the U.K.,” where a heat wave is adding to summer travel chaos.“I am very sorry to lose the whip but will now continue my meetings in Ukraine promoting the prime minister’s efforts here and specifically seeking to secure the reopening of Odesa port — so vital grain exports can recommence,” Ellwood said.Recommended___Follow all of AP’s coverage of British politics at https://apnews.com/hub/boris-johnson More

  • in

    Labour set to publish long-awaited Forde report into leaked dossier

    Labour is on Tuesday set to publish the long-awaited Forde report into the contests of a leaked dossier about the handling of the party’s antisemitism crisis.The report, a copy of which is now with party general secretary David Evans, will be presented to the party’s ruling national executive committee later today.Keir Starmer commissioned the investigation in the early days of his leadership after a leaked dossier emerged containing evidence that Labour officials worked to undermine then leader Jeremy Corbyn. Sir Keir appointed Martin Forde QC to look into the allegations in the dossier, which included evidenced suggestions of bullying, racism and sexism – as well as intense factionalism in the handling of antisemitism complaints. Much of that evidence was based on leaked WhatsApp messages between officials from the party’s centrist faction working in Labour’s HQ but opposed to the party leadership.RecommendedThe report has been much delayed, with reasons cited including legal action against Labour by some of those named in the leaked dossier, an investigation by the information commissioner into claimed data breaches, and the party’s own decision to sue people it accused of leaking the original dossier.The national executive committee will agree at Tuesday lunchtime whether or not to publish the document, with Mr Evans expected to recommend its publication “as soon as possible today”.It is likely that the report will be released on Tuesday afternoon, as the NEC meeting begins at 12pm and allies of Mr Evans have a majority on the committee.A Labour Party spokesperson said: “Labour’s general secretary, David Evans, has now received the Forde report and he will be taking it to today’s National Executive Committee meeting with a clear recommendation that the NEC agree the publication of the report as soon as possible today.” More

  • in

    Tory members don’t care about net zero ‘because 90% will be dead’, Conservative MP says

    Tory party members care little about whether the UK hits ‘net zero’ carbon emissions by 2050 “because 90 per cent of them will be dead”, a Conservative MP says.Chris Skidmore admitted a survey which put the climate emergency at the bottom of the list for the people who will choose the next prime minister is “rather depressing”.But he said it could be turned around if the debate is recast – to ram home the need to take immediate action to bring down emissions, rather than by the middle of the century.“They would say that because, when you cast the question as net zero by 2050, probably 90 per cent of them will be dead,” said Mr Skidmore, a campaigner for the legal commitment.He told The Independent: “To many older party members, 2050 seems far away and they wonder whether they will be around in 28 years’ time.Recommended“But it is a quick time in reality, because we need action straight away. People will die in the heatwave today when they would not have if their homes were insulated.“So, what we need to do is recast the debate, the conversation, about net zero, then it would be a higher priority for our members,” the MP for Kingswood said.The call comes amid growing alarm at how the Tory leadership debate is focusing on tax cuts and trans rights issues, rather than the climate – even as the nation boils.Kemi Badenoch, one of four surviving contenders ahead of the fourth ballot of MPs, branded the 2050 net zero commitment “unilateral economic disarmament” and vowed to axe it if elected.A poll of the general public, in April, found that 64 per cent of all voters support the government’s commitment to hit net zero, with only nine per cent opposed.But, in stark contrast, this week’s YouGov poll of Conservative members – who will choose between the final two candidates to replace Boris Johnson – put the issue bottom of a list of ten policy areas.Top was winning the next election (56 per cent), with cutting personal taxes, increasing defence spending and strengthening Britain’s global standing the next most important.Alok Sharma, the cabinet minister who led the Cop26 climate talks in Glasgow last year and still holds the presidency, has hinted he could resign if the climate crisis is downgraded.Liz Truss, the foreign secretary who is challenging Penny Mordaunt for what is expected to be the second place on the final ballot, alongside Rishi Sunak, has also pledged to row back green measures.She said she suspend the green levy on home energy bills in order to help households struggling with the cost of living, at a cost of £4.2bn a year.RecommendedAfter “green” hustings on Monday, Mr Skidmore suggested the public need not be “terrified that someone would think they have a mandate to unpick our climate commitments.He said all the candidates were now “on the record supporting net zero and our climate commitments”. More

  • in

    Tory leadership candidate Kemi Badenoch performs double U-turn on net zero

    Conservative leadership candidate Kemi Badenoch has performed a double U-turn on whether she supports climate change targets, backing and then rowing back from the policy.Ms Badenoch, a right-winger who has focused her campaign on culture war issues, attracted criticism after she described net zero targets as “unilateral economic disarmament” early in the contest. There is a scientific consensus that the earth will face catastrophic levels of climate change unless carbon emissions are reduced to a net zero by 2050 – with some calling for an earlier target.But under pressure at a climate hustings on Monday she then told an audience that she backed the policy, joining the four other candidates in the scientific mainstream.Yet soon after the debate she reverted to type, taking to the Murdoch-owned TalkTV news channel to again voice doubts about the policy.Recommended“Yes, there are circumstances where I would delay it,” she told TalkTV’s The News Desk programme when asked about net zero.”But I think that the target itself is a bit of a red herring. We need to look at the plan.”I believe there is climate change and that’s something we do need to tackle, but we have to do it in a way that doesn’t bankrupt our economy. “We’ve got to take people with us. What would happen if we moved it to 2060 or 2070? We’re not going to be here. Let’s be realistic”.The net zero 2050 target was written into law by Theresa May and continued by Boris Johnson. RecommendedUnder the plan the UK would have to emit no more carbon than it absorbs by 2050, bringing it into line with its Paris climate commitments.Ms Badenoch remains in the race to replace Boris Johnson, alongside Liz Truss, Rishi Sunak and Penny Mordaunt. Tory MPs will vote later on Tuesday on which candidate to eliminate next. More

  • in

    What time is Tory leadership vote today and when will result be announced?

    The next round of voting in the Conservative Party leadership contest takes place on Tuesday, with the race to succeed Boris Johnson as prime minister heating up.Former chancellor Rishi Sunak appears to be the clear frontrunner, securing 115 votes in the third round – just shy of the 120 needed to secure a place in the final two. He has picked up the support of Jeremy Hunt, Sir Gavin Williamson, Oliver Dowden, Dominic Raab, Grant Shapps and Steve Barclay along the way.Penny Mordaunt appears to be second favourite on 82 votes, followed by foreign secretary Liz Truss on 71 and Kemi Badenoch on 59.Tom Tugendhat was eliminated from the race following the third round of voting on Monday.RecommendedThe Mordaunt, Truss and Badenoch campaigns will spend the day attempting to woo Tom Tugendhat and his supporters following the Foreign Affairs Committee chairman’s elimination from the race.The 31 votes up for grabs could prove decisive in shaping the rest of the race, with his support thought more likely likely to head to Ms Mordaunt or Mr Sunak than the more right-leaning Ms Truss or Ms Badenoch.The fourth round of voting opens at 12pm on Tuesday and will run until 2pm. We can then expect to see the results published at around 3pm. More

  • in

    ‘Decades’ to fix buckling rail lines and melting tarmac for climate crisis, cabinet minister warns

    It will take “decades” to fix the UK’s crumbling infrastructure for the climate emergency, a cabinet minister has warned, as the country braces for its hottest day ever.The problems of rail lines buckling, overhead lines sagging and road tarmac melting will be repeated for many, many years to come, Grant Shapps said in a gloomy message to the public.The transport secretary agreed the government received advance warning of the current heatwave – but argued it takes “decades to build and replace” the infrastructure affected.“A lot of our infrastructure is just not built for these types of temperatures,” Mr Shapps said, adding: “And we’re going to see this a lot more regularly.“We know that we’ve seen many of the hottest days ever recorded have come in the last 10 to 15 years. So we’re going to see this more – and it’s a huge infrastructure to replace.”RecommendedAsked, on Sky News, if “we are going to have this sort of problem for decades to come”, Mr Shapps replied: “We are. And ditto with things like tarmac on the roads.“There’s a long process of replacing and upgrading it to withstand temperatures, either very hot or sometimes much colder than we used to – and these are the impacts of global warming.”The rail network is only able to with stand temperatures of 35C – lower than Spain (45C) and Saudi Arabia (50C) – because heat above 40C “seemed impossible”.“It has never been imagined that the UK would need it. Clearly we will do in the future,” Mr Shapps said.The admission comes after a Cabinet Office minister declined to give evidence on adapting infrastructure for climate change – in what Labour branded the latest evidence of Boris Johnson’s “zombie government”.Michael Ellis, who attends cabinet, cancelled his appearance before the Joint Committee on National Security Strategy with only a week’s notice.The committee hit back by announcing there appeared to be no minister responsible for the strategy for climate resilience, which suggested a “major hole at the centre of government”.Margaret Beckett, the senior Labour MP, said: “We’re rather shocked that the Cabinet Office decided they would not send a minister to give evidence on this topic.”It suggested “there is not much happening in the Cabinet Office to address this very real risk to national security, or at least that the minister is not involved in it”, she said.RecommendedRoger Hargreaves, head of the Civil Contingencies Secretariat at the Cabinet Office, who stepped in for Ellis, said the minister is not responsible for co-ordinating policy for critical national infrastructure.But, when asked by the former cabinet secretary Lord Butler if Mr Ellis has overall responsibility for resilience strategy, Mr Hargreaves replied: “Yes.” More