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    Rachel Reeves and Keir Starmer clash over whether working people have savings after Labour tax pledge

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailRachel Reeves has clarified Sir Keir Starmer’s definition of “working people” days after the party pledged not to raise taxes on workers if it got into power.The shadow chancellor backed up the promise in the party’s manifesto in a video message where she said she would not put up income tax, National Insurance or VAT.But after Sir Keir appeared to omit pensioners and savers when asked for his definition of “working people”, senior Tories claimed it indicated the party actually intended to raise taxes. Asked what he meant by “working people” in a radio interview on LBC on Tuesday, Sir Keir said: “People who earn their living, rely on our [public] services and don’t really have the ability to write a cheque when they get into trouble” he said.“So the sort of people I’m meeting pretty well every day now. It’s quite a big group because these days there are many people obviously not so well off.”Rachel Reeves told Kay Burley that ‘working people’ didn’t mean people without savings More

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    Rishi Sunak dubbed ‘pound shop Farage’ during hour-long LBC mauling

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailRishi Sunak has endured a brutal hour-long radio phone in which he was accused of “lying through his teeth” and dubbed a “pound-shop Nigel Farage” over his record on LGBT rights.The prime minister faced a grilling from callers furious at the Conservatives’ 14-year record on the state of the NHS and housing – as well as the party’s decision to accept millions from controversial donor Frank Hester.In a sign of the electoral challenge facing Mr Sunak, he was given a markedly frostier reception than Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, who faced LBC listeners 24 hours earlier.Rishi Sunak was accused of ‘lying through his teeth’ in the phone-in More

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    Boris Johnson to go on second holiday instead of joining Tory election campaign trail

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailBoris Johnson is no longer set to join the Tory election campaign trail amid fears he will alienate Conservative voters in seats the party desperately needs to hold. Instead, the former prime minister is expected to take a second summer holiday – having just returned from Sardinia. Mr Johnson has been pulled into the fight to stave off an electoral wipeout and letters signed by the ex-PM exhorting thousands of voters to back the Conservatives are due to land on doorsteps within days. But he is not now thought to be joining his party’s ground war, as its tries to save ‘blue wall’ seats in the south of England. Rishi Sunak and Boris Johnson More

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    Labour suspends candidate over pro-Russian social media post

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThe Labour Party has suspended a candidate following reports he shared “pro-Russian” material online. Andy Brown, who is standing in Aberdeen North and Moray East, reportedly shared an article from Russian state media outlet RT following the Salisbury poisonings, which claimed the Novichok nerve agent used in the attack was “never produced in Russia”.The article, shared by Mr Brown in April 2018, also claimed the toxin “was in service in the US, UK, and other Nato states”. Dawn Sturgess, 44, died after being exposed to the nerve agent Novichok, which had been left in a discarded perfume bottle in Amesbury, Wiltshire, in July 2018.Andy Brown is standing in Aberdeen North and Moray East More

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    Britain’s rollercoaster-riding Liberal Democrat leader embraces stunts to gain election attention

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster email Most politicians try to avoid slips, stumbles and undignified photos. Not Ed Davey.The leader of Britain’s centrist Liberal Democrats has turned the country’s six-week general election campaign into a showreel of self-deprecating fun.Davey, 58, has tumbled off a paddleboard into England’s biggest lake, screamed atop a rollercoaster, splashed down a waterslide, careened downhill on a bike and tackled an assault course. He’s also built sandcastles, made pancakes, competed in wheelbarrow races and had a summer fashion makeover on morning television.The zany stunts are the party’s answer to its electoral challenge: It’s not easy being the third- or fourth-placed runner in a two-horse race between the U.K.’s two main parties, the ruling Conservatives and their rival, the Labour Party. It’s even harder if, like Davey, you lead a moderate party in an age of extremes.“We can marry having a bit of fun with some serious messages,” Davey said during a campaign stop in Carshalton, on the outskirts of London. “When I fell off a paddleboard in Lake Windermere, yeah everyone thought it was a laugh, but actually it was making a serious point about sewage.“If you do it the traditional way, you make a speech at a lectern, you might get a tiny bit of coverage but people aren’t that engaged with it,” he added. “I think that by taking a slightly different approach – with a bit of humor, a bit of emotion — you can get people’s attention.”Davey spoke to The Associated Press after visiting Nickel Support, a center for learning-disabled adults. He helped make spicy relish, dicing chili peppers before sticking on labels declaring the contents “Interestingly Different” onto jars.“If that doesn’t describe the Lib Dem campaign, I don’t know what does,” Davey said.Davey’s party was long the third-largest in Britain’s Parliament, but in recent years sank to fourth place behind the Scottish National Party. In campaigning for the U.K.’s July 4 election, Davey is competing for attention not just against Conservative Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Labour Party leader Keir Starmer – who is widely expected to be heading for victory – but also against the noisy populism of Nigel Farage and his hard-right party Reform U.K.Hence the stunts. The last British politician this fond of playing to the camera was former Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who famously got stuck mid-air on a zipline while waving Union Jacks. Unlike the deliberately buffoonish Johnson, Davey’s image is that of a stolid middle-aged, middle-of-the-road politician.And while Davey’s pratfalls have been zany, his first election broadcast was heartfelt. Davey talked in the video about losing his father when he was four, and a decade later caring for his mother when she had terminal cancer. He spoke of the joys and challenges of looking after his disabled teenage son, John, who has a neurological disorder.Improving Britain’s overstretched health and social care systems is at the core of the Liberal Democrats’ promises to voters, alongside clamping down on sewage-dumping water companies, lowering the voting age to 16 and rejoining the European Union’s single market.Davey’s campaign style has drawn mixed reviews. Evening Standard columnist Tanya Gold accused him of debasing politics with “infantilism and irresponsibility.” But there’s evidence voters are noticing. Polls suggest an uptick in support for the party, though many voters struggle to name its leader.In Carshalton, where urban south London shades into leafy suburbia, office worker Connor Filsell, an undecided voter, drew a blank until a reporter mentioned the rollercoaster episode.“Oh, that was him! I feel bad – I should really know,” he said.Many houses in Carshalton display orange Lib Dem signs supporting local candidate Bobby Dean. The party lost to the Conservatives here by just 600 votes in 2019, and aims to win it back, along with other Conservative-held seats in the south and southwest of England.The party is wary of overconfidence. It’s still haunted by 2010, when then-leader Nick Clegg’s charm sparked a wave of “Cleggmania” that propelled him into the post of deputy prime minister in a coalition government with the Conservatives.What happened next became a cautionary tale. The Lib Dems had campaigned on a pledge to oppose any increase in university tuition fees. Months after the election, the coalition government tripled them. Voters punished the party at the next election, reducing the Liberal Democrats from 57 seats in the House of Commons to just eight. Davey was a minister in the coalition government, and gets awkward questions about his role between 2010 and 2012 overseeing the state-owned Post Office at a time when its executives were falsely accusing branch managers of theft because of a faulty IT system.Davey’s party makes fewer headlines than Farage’s populist Reform, though the Lib Dems will almost certainly get more seats. Davey’s aim is to restore his party, which won 11 seats in 2019, to third place in Parliament. Some polls suggest that, if voter support for the Conservatives truly collapses, it could even come second.He says the party’s pitch to jaded voters is that it’s “a reasonable alternative” to the Conservatives.“I think most people are sensible and mainstream, want practical polices,” Davey said. “And I don’t think we should allow the extremists to dominate the airwaves, whether it’s Nigel Farage or, dare I say, Donald Trump.” More

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    Calls for Covid fine amnesty by senior Tories to ‘wipe slate clean’ for nearly 30,000 prosecuted

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThe former justice secretary has called for an amnesty for more than 29,000 people convicted for breaking Covid rules.Sir Robert Buckland, who oversaw the courts during the pandemic, said the 29,383 people fined over Covid rule breaches should have their “slates wiped clean”.Among who received fines for breaching Covid regulations were prime minister Rishi Sunak and then-prime minister Boris Johnson in what became known as the Partygate scandal.But Sir Robert said the individuals risked seeing their career prospects being hampered by convictions during what was an “exceptional time”.Speaking to The Daily Telegraph, Sir Robert said: “It is not proportionate or necessary at a time when we want to encourage and support as many people back to work as possible. If it is not being recorded in the usual way as a previous conviction, I would wipe the slate clean.”His calls were backed by former cabinet ministers Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg and Sir David Davis.Sir Robert Buckland said those fined during the pandemic should have their ‘slates wiped clean’ More

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    Join The Independent Debate and tell us the biggest issue informing your vote this general election

    Sign up to our free Brexit and beyond email for the latest headlines on what Brexit is meaning for the UKSign up to our Brexit email for the latest insightIt won’t be long before the UK goes to the polls to decide who their next prime minister should be.In the build-up to July 4, we have seen vigorous campaigning from all parties as they vie for votes up and down the country.All the large parties have now released their election manifestos, laying out their vision for the future of Britain. Labour wants to add 20% VAT to private school fees, to pay for 6,500 extra teachers in England’s state schools. The party also aims to build 1.5 million new homes in the next five years and says it will restore plans to ban the sale of new petrol and diesel cars from 2030.Meanwhile, part of Rishi Sunak’s plan to get people onto the property ladder is a resurrection of the Help to Buy scheme, which would provide first-time buyers with an equity loan of up to 20% towards the cost of one of these new homes.The Conservative Party’s manifesto also pledges to abolish National Insurance for the self-employed, implement tougher sentences for offences including knife crime, grooming and assaults against retail workers, and underlines the plan to send some asylum seekers to Rwanda, saying there will be a “regular rhythm of flights every month.”Two of Reform UK’s core five pledges also involve migration. The party says it would freeze non-essential immigration, but concedes there would be exceptions with work in healthcare considered essential.The Liberal Democrats plan to introduce free personal care in England, similar to the system that operates in Scotland where people needing help with daily tasks do not have to pay. While each party passionately puts forth its case to the electorate, it is ultimately down to voters to decide what – and who – they think will take the country forward. We want to know the issues that matter the most to you in this general election campaign. Will you be swayed most by a party’s stance on Brexit? Or is an iron-clad plan to tackle the rising cost of living your number one priority?Share your thoughts by adding them in the comments — we’ll highlight the most insightful ones as they come in.All you have to do is sign up and register your details — then you can take part in the discussion. You can also sign up by clicking ‘log in’ on the top right-hand corner of the screen.Make sure you adhere to our community guidelines, which can be found here. For a full guide on how to comment click here.Join the conversation with other Independent readers below. More

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    Private school or Russell Group university ‘may lead to better health’

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailChildren who go to private school or a Russell Group university may have better health in mid-life, research suggests.A new study found that, by age 46, those who went to private school were more likely to be a healthy weight, have lower blood pressure and perform better on one cognitive task than those who went to state schools.Meanwhile, people who went to a Russell Group university – which includes Oxford, Cambridge, Birmingham, Bristol, Warwick, University College London and York – performed better on memory tests such as recalling words and naming animals, and tests designed to check attention and visual abilities.For example, attending private school was linked with a 14% lower body mass index than people in state schools, while attending a Russell Group university was linked to a 16% better memory recall and 10% better naming ability.The researchers said the findings back up previous studies, which have found a link between education and good health.They suggested several factors may explain the results, such as smaller class sizes and more activities at private schools; better job prospects leading to more money and improved health; peers at private schools and higher-level universities potentially displaying healthier behaviours; and more experienced teachers and high-achieving peers influencing people’s health throughout their life.The team, including from University College London, concluded that after adjusting for factors such as whether parents had degrees and were involved in their child’s education, “private school attendance was associated with better cardiometabolic outcomes than comprehensive school attendance.“After being fully adjusted, attending higher-status universities was associated with better cognitive function, while having no degree was linked to poorer health compared with normal status university attendance.”The study, published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, included 8,107 people born in 1970, of whom 570 attended private school and 554 went to a Russell Group university.The authors said the study was observational and things such as the influence of family income can be hard to fully capture.Children in the study also went to school in the 1980s and 1990s amid significant reforms in the UK education system, they said.Future policies aimed at reducing health inequalities could take education quality into account as well as attainmentStudy authorsThe authors said: “The generalisability of the results to the present day remains unclear, especially given the changes in the education system in recent years.”They added: “Our findings suggest that the type of education could potentially contribute to understanding the links between education and health. Moreover, if this association is causal, future policies aimed at reducing health inequalities could take education quality into account as well as attainment.“This is particularly important given the increases in university attendance, in which other aspects of the education experience may better distinguish health inequality.” More