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    Yvette Cooper calls for Suella Braverman to be sacked after comments on Met police bias

    Yvette Cooper suggested that Suella Braverman should be sacked for her comments accusing the Metropolitan Police of “playing favourites” by allowing a pro-Palestine march on Armistice Day to go ahead.Asking an urgent question in the House of Commons on Thursday (9 November), the shadow home secretary said: “Does this Government still believe in the operation independence of the police, and how can it do so while this Home Secretary is in post?”It comes after the Home Secretary wrote in the Times claiming Islamists were using Saturday’s march to express “primacy” and compared it to extremist rallies in Northern Ireland with links to terrorism. More

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    Emotional Labour MP wipes away tears as she urges Government to ‘end bloodshed’ in Gaza

    Labour MP Naz Shah wiped tears from her eyes with a tissue in the Commons shortly after telling MPs of the plight of children in Gaza.Ms. Shah called for the UK to “ramp up its effort to end the bloodshed”.Ms. Shah, who is a shadow Home Office minister but was speaking from the backbenches, said “every day we see footage of heartbreaking stories” of children in Gaza.The MP was emotional as she described footage of children caught up in the conflict, some believing they had died and others preparing for death, others holding a press conference “to call on the world to let them live”. More

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    Energy bills will be cheaper ‘within next ten years’, says Tory MP Andrea Leadsom

    Andrea Leadsom has claimed energy bills will go down in price “within the next 10 years” under a Conservative government.The Tory MP claimed the UK is “looking at electricity reform” when asked about the issue of Britons being unable to afford rising costs during an appearance on BBC’s Politics Live.“All I’m asking, is when will it come down?” Jo Coburn asked, repeating her original question.“Within the next 10 years,” Ms Leadsom replied.Speaking on his ITV show on Tuesday night (7 November), Martin Lewis delivered a warning to consumers, saying “it isn’t looking” good for energy price rises in the future. More

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    SNP politician criticises ‘pomp’ of King’s speech amid cost of living crisis

    Scottish National Party MP Kirsty Blackman criticised the “pomp” of Tuesday’s State Opening of Parliament amid the cost of living crisis.Appearing on the BBC to discuss King Charles III’s first delivery to parliament as monarch, Ms Blackman questioned if all the “sapphires and rubies” on display were the “right image that anybody wants to be to be seeing”.“People are sitting at home unable to pay their electricity bills and they’re sitting at home trying to work out how they are getting to the next week,” she said.“And then you see all of this pomp and ceremony, you hear about these sapphires and rubies, and it just feels so far removed from the daily lives and the daily struggles that so many people are going through.” More

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    Olivia Pratt Korbel’s mother emotional as King’s Speech announces laws forcing killers to attend sentencing

    Olivia Pratt-Korbel’s mother became emotional after discussing new laws to ensure criminals attend their sentencing hearings which were included in the King’s Speech on Tuesday (7 November).Thomas Cashman was jailed for life after he shot and killed Cheryl Korbel’s nine-year-old daughter at her home in Liverpool, on 22 August 2022.He refused to come up to the dock when he was sentenced.Ms Korbel told Good Morning Britain the “silence” is the hardest part of her life since her daughter was killed and praised the proposed law change as “a very important step forward.” More

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    Lindsay Hoyle’s shuffle draws laughs from MPs at State Opening of Parliament

    Sir Lindsay Hoyle drew laughs from MPs as he shuffled past a front bench in the House of Commons during the State Opening of Parliament on Tuesday, 7 November.The Speaker of the House of Commons left his seat to follow Black Rod, who had summoned MPs from the Commons chamber to the House of Lords to hear the King’s Speech.MPs followed the officials to the Lords’ chamber behind Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer.This year’s King’s Speech was the first by King Charles III since he assumed the throne, and the first of Mr Sunak’s time as prime minister. More

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    Watch in full: King Charles’s speech at State Opening of Parliament

    Watch the full version of King Charles III’s first King’s Speech as monarch at the State Opening of Parliament on Tuesday, 7 November.The speech was written by the government to set out the legislative programme for the coming parliamentary session and read out by His Majesty in the House of Lords.Twenty bills and one draft bill were included in the speech, including measures to stop children turning 14 this year or younger from ever legally buying cigarettes or tobacco in England and a long-awaited ban on “no-fault” evictions in rental properties. More

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    King Charles booed by protesters after State Opening of Parliament: ‘Not my King’

    Protesters booed as King Charles III and Queen Camilla travelled in the Diamond Jubilee State Coach following the State Opening of Parliament on Tuesday, 7 November.Anti-monarchy campaign group Republic said the demonstration in Westminster was staged “to protest for democracy and the right to elect our head of state.”Boos can be heard in footage broadcast on Sky News as protesters held up yellow signs saying “Not my King.”The group were also present at the King’s coronation in May – six group members were detained ahead of a pre-agreed protest, prompting criticism of the Metropolitan Police. More