Starmer meets with Senate leaders and German chancellor during visit to Capitol HillSupport trulyindependent journalismFind out moreCloseOur mission is to deliver unbiased, fact-based reporting that holds power to account and exposes the truth.Whether $5 or $50, every contribution counts.Support us to deliver journalism without an agenda.Louise ThomasEditorSir Keir Starmer is facing a backbench rebellion to scrap the two-child benefit cap after figures revealed that 1.6 million children are affected by the policy.In response to the latest figures, work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall warned child poverty is a “stain on our society” with Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar pressuring the PM to scrap the cap.A bitter civil war erupted among Reform UK members after Nigel Farage unveiled his new team in a huge shake-up to “professionalise” the party.Mr Farage announced that Ben Habib had been sacked from his role as deputy leader and appointed new MP for Boston and Skegness Richard Tice instead.But Mr Habib said he is now evaluating his position within the party “more generally” after the sudden ousting. Ashfield MP Lee Anderson is now the new chief whip and donator and entrepreneur Zia Yusuf the new Reform chairman. In Washington, Sir Keir is set to meet world leaders and discuss long-term support for Ukraine’s entry process into the Nato alliance. Show latest update 1720709228News website claims Hannah Blythyn not source of Gething leakHannah Blythyn was not the source of a leak which triggered her sacking from the Welsh Government, the website which originally reported the story has said.The Labour former social partnership minister was removed from the Welsh Government by Vaughan Gething in May, after messages from the Covid pandemic were leaked to the media.The leaked messages showed Mr Gething claiming he would delete all correspondence from a WhatsApp group of Welsh ministers.Delyn MS Ms Blythyn said this week in the Senedd that she could “look all my colleagues who sit on these benches in the eye” and say she had not leaked to the media.The embattled First Minister told the Senedd on Wednesday the messages could only have come from her phone, adding that there had been a “breach of trust”.But Nation.Cymru, the website which originally broke the story, has now said she was not the source of the information.A statement from its chief executive, Mark Mansfield, said protecting journalistic sources was very important, and added: “Given the strong public interest and importance of this story and out of concern for Hannah Blythyn’s wellbeing, we have decided that the right thing to do is to state publicly that she was not the source of our story and that at no stage before or since publication of it have we had any contact with her about it.”( More