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    Rishi Sunak eyeing early October election to avoid clash with US

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailRishi Sunak is planning a general election for the first two weeks of October, The Independent understands. Sources say Downing Street is eyeing an election earlier in the month with the PM unlikely to wait until November, as has been mooted in some quarters, because it would clash with the US presidential election.One source said a November election was a “non-starter” because of the noise a US election would generate likely drowning out any Tory messaging in the final weeks of campaigning. Yesterday, The Sun reported that the prime minister is “moving away” from a November election, in part over fears of “global insecurity” triggered by the controversial Mr Trump winning the US presidential election.The former US president has publicly sowed doubts on the legitimacy of the 2020 US presidential election which saw Joe Biden take the presidency from Mr Trump. He is now being indicted for the mishandling of official information and conspiracy to defraud the US government.However, Mr Trump is currently leading in the race for the Republican nomination and is ahead of Joe Biden, the Democrat’s candidate and incumbent president, in many opinion polls across the US. Donald Trump has been charged with incitement of insurrection against the US government Mr Sunak has to call an election by January 2025, but it is up to him what date he chooses. He recently told reporters that the election would be this year, leading many to predict it would fall in Spring or the Autumn.A polling day of November 14 had been widely tipped, but with the US going to the polls on November 5, multiple Conservative figures have now suggested that has been ruled out.Latest polling shows the prime minister is 20 points behind in the polls – leading many to suggest the prime minister would push the election to the last possible date.Meanwhile Labour officials are preparing to to fight an election as soon as May, and have been ordered to submit their policies for the party’s manifesto by Friday.Labour are preparing for an election as early as May An October general election would disrupt party conference season – a time which has typically been used by parties to bring in cash for campaigns.But the Conservatives are unlikely to be concerned about their finances after having brought in £16.5 million in donations in the last few months.Downing Street have declined to comment on the claims. More

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    New funding for computer chips ‘to boost AI and net zero tech advances’

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailMore than £25 million in new funding has been unveiled for British scientists working on computer chips that could power advances in artificial intelligence (AI) and tech to help the UK reach net zero.The Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) has announced the new cash injection to coincide with the one-year anniversary of the department’s creation.It will see research centres in Southampton and Bristol given £11 million each to aid scientists in their work on computer chips, including semiconductors, which are a key component in nearly every electrical device in the world, from mobile phones to medical equipment.The increasing global reliance on technology has seen semiconductors become recognised as an area of global strategic significance.Currently, the semiconductor production sector is dominated by Taiwan.This isn’t just about fostering growth and creating high-skilled jobs, it’s about positioning the UK as a hub of global innovation, setting the stage for breakthroughs that have worldwide impactTech and digital economy minister Saqib BhattiDSIT said the new investment will help convert UK-based scientific findings into business realities by supporting promising research and projects, and giving researchers access to state-of-the-art technology for testing prototypes.Minister for tech and the digital economy Saqib Bhatti said: “This investment marks a crucial step in advancing our ambitions for the semiconductor industry, with these centres helping bring new technologies to market in areas like net zero and AI, rooting them right here in the UK.“Just nine months into delivering on the National Semiconductor Strategy, we’re already making rapid progress towards our goals.“This isn’t just about fostering growth and creating high-skilled jobs, it’s about positioning the UK as a hub of global innovation, setting the stage for breakthroughs that have worldwide impact.”Elsewhere, an additional £4.8 million of funding has been pledged for 11 semiconductor skills projects around the country, with the aim of raising awareness of the semiconductor industry and addressing skills gaps in the UK workforce.The latest investment is part of the Government’s £1 billion National Semiconductor Strategy, a 20-year plan to grow the UK’s semiconductor sector. More

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    Keir Starmer compares himself to Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta for ‘turning around’ Labour Party

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailSir Keir Starmer has compared himself to the Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta, suggesting they have both turned around brands which have seen better days. The Labour leader said his party “lost its way” under previous leader Jeremy Corbyn but that it has been changed permanently under his leadership. After defeating Liverpool at the weekend, Arteta said his team had turned a corner and were back in the race for the Premier League title. Asked to pick which football manager he is most like, Sir Keir, a lifelong Arsenal fan, was quick to point to the Spaniard.Speaking to Times Radio, he said: “That’s actually an easy one for me at the moment because I feel an affinity with Arteta, the Arsenal manager, because again, if you look at his journey, he was appointed, it was hard to turn that Arsenal team around.Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer“To start with, people said he can’t do it, there was talk about whether he should continue, and look what he’s done now.”The Arsenal manager was seen high-fiving fans after Arsenal defeated Liverpool at the weekend. It came as Sir Keir said £28bn is “desperately needed” to achieve clean power by 2030 amid confusion over the party’s commitment to the pledge.The Labour leader insisted he had been “unwavering” when it came to the party’s green energy plans and denied it was “scaling back” policies as this year’s general election looms.But he again insisted he would only spend the money if it was available under his party’s “fiscal rules”.Sir Keir originally announced £28bn a year would be invested in sustainable projects if the party wins power but has since said the figure will instead be a target for the second half of a first parliament.Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta celebrates after his side’s win over LiverpoolAsked about the pledge in an interview aired on Tuesday, Sir Keir told Times Radio: “We’re going to need investment, that’s where the £28bn comes in. That investment is desperately needed for that mission.“You can only understand the investment argument by understanding that we want to have clean power by 2030 … We need to borrow to invest to do that.“That’s a principle I believe in and I’m absolutely happy to go out and defend. And of course, what we’ve said as we’ve got closer to the operationalisation of this, is it has to be ramped up, the money has to be ramped up, the £28bn et cetera, and everything is subject to our fiscal rules.”It comes after shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves last week promised “iron discipline” in sticking to Labour’s fiscal rules, which include getting debt falling as a percentage of GDP. More

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    Liz Truss claims ‘wokery’ being spread in schools and universities

    Liz Truss claims “wokery” is being spread in schools and universities across the country.The former prime minister was speaking after a launch rally of the new faction – dubbed the PopCons in Westminster – in central London on Tuesday (6 February).The group aims to pile pressure on the Prime Minister to cut taxes, to adopt hardline policies on immigration and leave the European Convention on Human Rights.In an interview with GB News, Ms Truss was asked about the new grassroots movement.She said: “We’re seeing the spreading of wokery, of left-wing ideas. PopCon is about combatting that.” More

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    Public don’t want to admit they’re Tories, says Liz Truss

    Britain is full of people who don’t want to admit they’re Tories, Liz Truss told the launch rally of the new Popular Conservatism (PopCon) movement on Tuesday, 6 February.Speaking in central London, the short-lived former prime minister said: “Britain is full of secret Conservatives – people who agree with us but don’t want to admit it because they think it’s not acceptable in their place of work, it’s not acceptable at their school.”Ms Truss also hit out at Rishi Sunak’s government for failing to take on “left-wing extremists” she claimed had gained control of UK institutions. More

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    Tory MP claims there is ‘direct link’ between drill music and young people carrying knives

    A Tory MP has claimed there is a “direct link” between drill music and young people carrying knives.Nickie Aiken urged the government to look at record labels that produce music “celebrating gang culture”.Speaking in the House of Commons on Tuesday, 6 February, the Cities of London and Westminster MP said: “There has got to be a direct link to young people feeling encultured that it’s the right thing to do to carry a knife and perhaps be willing to use it.”Ms Aiken also pushed the government to “look at more flexible legislation around the words of blades” rather than being specific about particular products. More

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    Liz Truss ‘PopCons’ comeback bid hit by chaos as key Tory allies drop out

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailLiz Truss’ attempt to restart her political career with the launch of a new right-wing Tory faction was hit by chaos – as some of her closest former allies stayed away.The launch event for Popular Conservatism – also known as the PopCons – was rocked by former Truss chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng’s announcement that he was quitting parliament at the general election.Close Truss associate Sir Simon Clarke was forced out of the event because of his call for Rishi Sunak to be replaced – with Ms Truss keen to avoid looking too disloyal.There was a further blow when Ranil Jayawardena, another key Truss ally and ex-environment minister in her short-lived government, decided to pull out of the event at the last minute.It came as Nigel Farage – a star guest at the PopCons launch – dismissed the new group by insisting Mr Sunak would completely ignore all their ideas.Ms Truss hit out at Mr Sunak’s government for failing to take on “the left-wing extremists” at her launch event speech, attended by allies like Dame Priti Patel, Lee Anderson, and Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg.The former PM – who spent only six weeks at No 10 before announcing her resignation in disgrace – said Britons want to see lower immigration and want illegal immigrants deported, but efforts are “constantly being stymied”.Former PM Liz Truss during the launch of Popular ConservatismShe also hit out at the Sunak government for allowing people to choose their gender and for “pandering to the anti-capitalists”, while ordinary people believe “the wokery that is going on is nonsense”.Ms Truss also claimed the ideology of leftists disguising themselves as environmentalists is about “taking power away from families and giving it to the state”.Using the conspiratorial rhetoric of Donald Trump, she said the left “have been on the march” in government institutions and corporations around the world.As well as talking up a shadowy left-wing cabal, Ms Truss also claimed that Britain was “full of secret Conservatives”, saying there were plenty of people who “agree with us but don’t want to admit it because they think it’s not acceptable at their place of work, at their school”.Ms Truss also said she never got invited to dinner parties. “Too many of our colleagues are looking at what jobs they get when they leave parliament, they want to be popular at London dinner parties … I never get invited to these parties.”But Mr Kwarteng – once Ms Truss’s once-closest friend in politics – overshadowed Monday’s launch event by revealing on X that he will be standing down in his Surrey seat of Spelthorne.The chancellor responsible for the mini-Budget debacle has fallen out with his former boss – saying she was “not wired” to ever be PM and would have “blown up” something even if they had survived the economic disaster caused by their unfunded tax cuts.Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg during the launch of Popular Conservatism Ms Truss’ closest ally Mark Littlewood, the leader of Popular Conservatism, insisted that he was not interested in ousting Mr Sunak – claiming “this isn’t about the leadership of the Conservative party.”The right-wing economist – handed a peerage in the Truss resignation honours – also said it was not about seeking to “replicate or replace” any of the many existing right-wing caucuses of Tory MPs.Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg also launched an attack on “unaccountable” officials and courts, as he sought to draw parallels with the anger of British voters and the protests by farmers in France and Germany.In his headline speech, Sir Jacob said: “The age of Davos man is over, of international cabals and quangos telling hundreds of millions of people how to lead their lives.” He also railed against an “activist judiciary” and an “out-of-touch oligarchy”, as he and other right wingers push to quit the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).Fellow right-winger Lee Anderson used his speech to claim that only “odd weirdos” care about achieving net zero in the battle against climate change.Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg, Mhairi Fraser, Lee Anderson and Liz TrussThe Tories’ former deputy chairman – who quit his role because he rebelled on Mr Sunak’s Rwanda bill – claimed net zero “never comes up” the doorstep and urged the PM to ditch green levies.Meanwhile, new right-wing favourite Mhairi Fraser, a prospective Tory candidate, attacked Mr Sunak’s “ludicrous” youth smoking ban and other “nanny state policies”.Mr Farage was largely dismissive of the event – insisting that he was only there to cover it for GB News – as he denied he was interested in joining the Conservative party in future.“I’m not looking to join the Tory party,” said the Reform UK president. “Not at the moment, given what they stand for. And as far as this group’s concerned – I’d rather be part of Reform because that’s the real thing.”Nigel Farage listens to Tory speakers at Popular Conservatism launchMr Farage said none of the PopCons’ ideas will make it into the Tory manifesto, arguing that the party is now “so far away from the centre of gravity of most Conservative voters it is almost untrue”.Other senior Tories at the PopCons launch were staunch Boris Johnson allies and leading Sunak critics like Andrea Jenkyns and Lord David Frost – the peer thought to be behind a push to get rid of the current PM.Other right-wingers in attendance were Truss loyalists Sir Jake Berry, and ex-Truss whip Wendy Morton, and the new Tory deputy chairman Brendan Clarke-Smith.Polling published on Monday suggested Ms Truss is the very least popular politician with the British public, despite her claim to be in touch with “popular” ideas. Her net favourability score is minus 54 per cent, compared with Mr Sunak’s minus 27 per cent, a survey by Savanta found.The mini-Budget debacle masterminded by Ms Truss and Mr Kwarteng saw a collapse in the pound and a spike in interest rates as markets betted against Britain. The staggering episode cost the country £30bn, according to the Resolution Foundation, and saw poor Tory poll ratings plummet further. More

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    Only ‘odd weirdos’ care about net zero, says senior Tory Lee Anderson

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailSenior Conservative right-winger Lee Anderson has claimed that only “odd weirdos” care about achieving net zero in the battle against climate change.The Tories’ former deputy chairman – who quit his role because he rebelled on Rishi Sunak’s Rwanda bill – urged the PM to ditch green levies.Mr Anderson appeared alongside Liz Truss and Jacob Rees-Mogg at the launch of a new Tory faction called Popular Conservatism – also known as the PopCons.The right-winger said “net zero never comes up” with voters on the doorstep, apart from the “odd weirdo in the corner” who supports the Green Party.Not many of his constituents “lie awake at night worrying about net zero”, the Ashfield MP told the group’s launch, arguing that they care far more about their own fuel bills.Speaking about the need to ditch the green levies which pay for investment in transition away from fossil fuels, Mr Anderson said: “We should have an opt-in, opt-out on our fuel bills.”Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg, Mhairi Fraser, Lee Anderson and Liz TrussMr Anderson also joked that both he and right-wing ally Sir Jacob “have one thing in common here – we were both born on estates … His was a country estate, I was born on a council estate.”It came as Mark Littlewood, leader of the Popular Conservatives, insisted that he was not interested in ousting Rishi Sunak – claiming “this isn’t about the leadership of the Conservative party.”The right-wing economist – a key Truss supported who was handed a peerage in her resignation honours – also said it was not about seeking to “replicate or replace” any of the many existing right-wing caucuses of Tory MPs.Railing against the Sunak government and the Whitehall institutions, he said low taxes have proven to be “frustratingly elusive” – attacking bureaucrats who “share the same sort of leftist groupthink”.Mr Rees-Mogg also launched an attack on “unaccountable” institutions and drew parallels with the anger of British voters and the protests by farmers in France and Germany.Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg during the launch of Popular Conservatism And new right-wing favourite Mhairi Fraser, a prospective Tory candidate, attacked Mr Sunak’s “ludicrious” youth smoking ban and other “nanny state policies”.Nigel Farage denied he is seeking to join the Conservative party or the PopCon movement “at the moment” – insisting that he was only there to cover it for GB News.“I’m not looking to join the Tory party, you must be joking,” said the Reform UK president. “Not at the moment, given what they stand for. And as far as this group’s concerned – I’d rather be part of Reform because that’s the real thing.”Mr Farage said none of the ideas that will be discussed at the Popular Conservatism launch will make it into the next Tory manifesto.“Whilst there were some big names like Liz Truss, Jacob Rees-Mogg – I saw Priti Patel coming into the audience earlier – they are a very small minority within the parliamentary Conservative party.”The hard-right populist said the party is now “so far away from the centre of gravity of most Conservative voters, it is almost untrue”.Asked whether he will remain a GB News presenter or stand as a Reform candidate, Mr Farage said: “I’m very happy with life as it is, thank you very much indeed – doesn’t mean I won’t change my mind.” More