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    Lords erupts in laughter as member makes dig at Liz Truss after UN criticism

    The House of Lords erupted in laughter as a member made a joke about Liz Truss in front of Lord David Cameron during questions on Tuesday, 16 April.Former Labour MP Lord Bruce Grocott asked the foreign secretary if he had a message for those who “can’t see a purpose” for the former prime minister following similar comments she made about the United Nations.In response, Lord Cameron said: “I take the view that the United Nations has many problems… but nonetheless, it’s important we have an international body where issues can be discussed, where countries can come together.” More

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    Cabinet minister Kemi Badenoch says she will vote against Rishi Sunak’s flagship smoking ban

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailBusiness secretary Kemi Badenoch has said she will be voting against Rishi Sunak’s flagship plan to ban young people from ever smoking.Ahead of a vote on Tuesday night, Ms Badenoch announced her decision on social media, saying: “We should not treat legally competent adults differently in this way, where people born a day apart will have permanently different rights.”She added: “I do not support the approach this bill is taking and so will be voting against it.”The cabinet minister’s decision comes after hours of speculation as to whether or not she would back the prime minister’s public health proposals.There have been divisions within the Conservative Party over the bill as senior Tories from the right of the party – including former prime minister Liz Truss – have expressed concerns over the workability of the legislation and its impingement on personal freedom.Mr Sunak earlier urged his cabinet to think of “future generations” and back the plan as he sought to avoid humiliation at the hands of his own party.No 10 said the prime minister believes that building “a better future for our children” involves tackling the habit, which costs 80,000 lives a year.But he is braced for more than 50 Tory MPs to defy his call and vote against the plans, which would prevent those born after 1 January 2009 from ever buying cigarettes.Rishi Sunak has urged his cabinet to back the bill More

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    Belgian police shut down a far right conference as it rallies ahead of Europe’s June elections

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster email Belgian police shut down a gathering of far-right politicians and supporters on Tuesday, citing concerns about public order, while attendees protested curbs on free speech and vowed to find another venue for Day 2.The annual National Conservative conference, held this year in Brussels, comes ahead of Europe-wide elections. As campaigning for the June 6-9 event heats up, mainstream parties fear that disenchanted voters might turn to the people at NatCon 2024.“This is what we’re up against. We’re up against a new form of evil ideology,” Nigel Farage, the man credited with taking Britain out of the European Union, told the gathering of a few hundred stridently nationalist and fundamentalist Christian politicians and think-tankers.Anti-migrant sentiment featured in a number of speeches. Some targeted what they saw as the follies of climate policy, “narco-socialism” or “woke indoctrination,” often with sharp opposition to multinational organizations like the EU.Lashing out at the bloc’s treaties, and the pledge in the preamble of the founding EU texts to an “ever-closer Union” among the 27 member countries, Polish lawmaker Ryszard Legutko said it all makes “medieval monks look almost like intellectual anarchists.”Surveys suggest that mainstream political parties are likely to retain power after the June elections, but quite possibly with a reduced majority.Belgian police quietly shut down the conference by barring attendees from re-entering the venue if they dared to leave. A dozen or so officers blocked the main entrance. It was the third venue for the gathering after the owners of two other locations shied away when anti-fascist protesters vowed to disrupt proceedings.This year’s NatCon, organized by the conservative U.S. think tank the Edmund Burke Foundation, was held under the banner of “National Conservatism, Preserving the Nation-State in Europe.”French far-right figurehead Eric Zemmour was scheduled to criticize the EU’s new migrant and asylum rules but was turned away by police. Suella Braverman, who served as U.K. home secretary for just over a month in 2022 before being fired, railed for 27 minutes against the European Court of Human Rights.Politicians and former leaders from Spain, Poland and the Netherlands were also on the agenda. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban was due to speak on Wednesday.“I guess they couldn’t take free speech any longer,” Orban posted on the social media platform X. “The last time they wanted to silence me with the police was when the Communists set them on me in ’88. We didn’t give up then and we will not give up this time either!”Speakers summoned the grand ideas of figures like the Pope, Homer, Dostoyevsky, Leo Strauss, Tocqueville and Gramsci. English was the common language, spattered with classical Latin. Modern liberal democracy was likened to a form of “neo-Marxist authoritarianism.”Mostly though, those who could speak before the gathering was shut down for the day focused on their “enemies” among the mainstream political parties.“We have to know our enemies are in panic and they show it every day,” said EU lawmaker Hermann Tertsch, from Spain’s far-right Vox party. “The enemy knows their time is running out.”As Brussels police warned that the conference’s time was limited, too, Edmund Burke Foundation Chairman Yoram Hazony invited participants to stay as long as they dared.“The new democracy works in mysterious ways. Your goal as someone in the new democracy is to prevent the other guy from speaking,” Hazony said. More

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    Liz Truss makes hilarious new book blunder live on air

    Liz Truss held her new book upside down as she promoted it on American TV on Tuesday (16 April).The former prime minister was speaking to Fox News about her decision to endorse Donald Trump when she attempted to plug her new memoir. “Here’s my new book!” Ms Truss said, beaming as she held the back cover up to the camera.She then realised her mistake, flipping it and revealing the front, upside down.Her book, Ten Years to Save the West, features several bizarre revelations from her short time in No 10. More

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    Watch live: Rwanda bill returns to House of Lords after MPs reject amendments

    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 live as Rishi Sunak’s controversial Rwanda asylum bill returns to House of Lords on Tuesday (16 April) after MPs rejected a series of amendments.The parliamentary “ping-pong” over the Government’s Rwanda scheme continues as peers are set to once again debate legislation declaring the east African nation safe for refugees.The Government successfully overturned six House of Lords amendments on Monday as MPs voted to return the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill to its original form two years after the UK first announced its deal with Rwanda.The legislation seeks to compel judges to regard Rwanda as safe in a bid to clear the way to send asylum seekers who cross the Channel in small boats on a one-way flight to the country.The Bill now returns to the House of Lords, where peers could further prolong the parliamentary wrangling by making yet more changes.It is not yet clear if the Lords will make another attempt to amend the Bill, which it has already done twice now, or if peers will concede defeat and allow the legislation through.If peers vote to approve another series of amendments, the Bill will return to the Commons on Wednesday for more votes before once again being passed back to the Lords.The legislation will only receive royal assent and become law once both Houses have agreed on its final wording in a process known as parliamentary ping-pong.Among the amendments overturned by MPs on Monday were proposals to ensure the Bill has “due regard” for domestic and international law and that Rwanda is only regarded as safe for as long as the provisions of the UK’s treaty with that country are in place. More

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    Police order closure of right-wing conference attended by Nigel Farage and Suella Braverman

    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 emailsPolice in Brussels have stormed a right-wing conference attended by Nigel Farage and Suella Braverman after orders for the event to be shut down. Local authorities ordered the controversial National Conservatism (NatCon) Conference to be closed to “guarantee public safety”.Ms Braverman, the former home secretary, and Mr Farage, the former Ukip leader, were among the political names advertised to speak at the event on Tuesday alongside right-wing Hungarian autocrat Viktor Orban. Officers arrived after the event began at the Claridge venue in central Brussels to tell organisers the event would be shut down. According to a report on social media, police arrived while Mr Farage was addressing the event, giving attendees 15 minutes to leave the venue. However, officers did not appear to force the event to shut down and speeches continued.Police have now said they will not let anyone else into the venue and people can leave and not re-enter. The conference has already had to move location twice after mayors within the Brussels region refused the meeting’s chosen venues. Police officers at the venue after the National Conservatism Conference was ordered to be shut down More

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    Labour reports Tory mayoral campaign to CPS for ‘scaremongering’ over road charging claims

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailLabour has referred Sadiq Khan’s Conservative rival in the London mayoral race to the Crown Prosecution Service in a row over an election leaflet.The party has asked the Director of Public Prosecutions to investigate whether a Susan Hall campaign leaflet claiming Sadiq Khan was planning to introduce road charging in London was properly labelled as political advertising.Mr Khan has repeatedly ruled out introducing such a system.Karen Buck MP, chair of Mr Khan’s campaign, said: “We’re now seeing tactics being used by the Tories which rival even those used in their disgraced 2016 mayoral campaign.“The Tories are scaremongering people who are already worried about their bills thanks to the catastrophic cost-of-living crisis they created. These tactics are legally questionable and certainly mark another low in this desperate Tory campaign characterised by dirty tactics and lies.“Sadiq has ruled out ever bringing in pay per mile as long as he’s mayor – no ifs, no buts.”Alongside a picture on social media platform X, formerly Twitter, Ms Hall said: “Stop Sadiq Khan’s pay-per-mile plans. Vote for change.”In a separate post Ms Hall said: “He’s (Mr Khan) spent £150m on tech for pay-per-mile already.”Mr Khan has in the past considered, and spoken favourably about, a pay-per-mile system which would replace other charges, such as the Ultra-low Emission Zone (Ulez).However, he has since abandoned that position and ruled out introducing such a system while he is Mayor of London. Meanwhile, Transport for London (TfL) has said that “no such scheme is on the table or being developed”.“As of January 2024, approximately £3m had been spent on elements of the Future RUC (road user charging) project and it is now closed,” TfL added.The row came after Mr Khan pledged to wipe out rough sleeping in the capital by 2030 if he is re-elected as London mayor.In a speech on Monday, the Labour incumbent will promise to end “once and for all” the “indignity, fear and isolation” felt by those enduring a life on the street.The number of people recorded sleeping rough in London has hit a record high, data shows, with homeless charities branding the statistics a “disaster”. More

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    When is the deadline to register to vote in the local and London mayoral elections?

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThere are just hours left to register to vote in the upcoming local, mayoral and police commissioner elections taking place on 2 May. Potential voters who have not yet registered, or are not sure if they are eligible, have until 11.59pm on Tuesday night to submit their application.This can be done online on the government’s register to vote website.Nearly 2,700 council seats in England are up for grabs across 107 local authorities, while 37 police and crime commissioners in England and Wales will also be chosen.Polls are also taking place to elect some of the most high-profile mayors in the country, including in London, Greater Manchester and the West Midlands.Around 44 million people are estimated to be eligible to vote in the elections on 2 May, but as many as seven million people are either incorrectly registered or missing from the register entirely, according to the Electoral Commission, which oversees all elections in the UK.All voters in England and Wales will be able to cast a ballot in at least one election on May 2 More