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    West is facing ‘moment of peril’ after Iran vows retaliation for US strikes

    David Lammy has warned the West is facing a “moment of peril” after Iran vowed to retaliate following US strikes on three nuclear facilities. It comes after Donald Trump’s regime conducted airstrikes at Fordo, Isfahan and Natanz despite Sir Keir Starmer pushing for de-escalation in the preceding days.Asked how concerned the government is about possible retaliation, the foreign secretary warned: “This is a moment of peril.” Britain’s foreign secretary David Lammy makes a statement following their meeting with Iran’s foreign minister on Tehran’s nuclear programme More

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    David Lammy refuses to say whether US attack on Iran was ‘right’ or ‘legal’

    Foreign secretary David Lammy has refused to defend Donald Trump’s attack on Iran and confirm it was either legal or even “the right thing to do”.In an awkward interview on BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme, Mr Lammy was asked four times if Donald Trump’s airstrikes on Iranian nuclear facilities were legal.“We were not involved, it is for the Americans to discuss those legal issues,” he responded, avoiding the answer.The questions followed reports that UK attorney general Lord Hermer has suggested it would not be legal for the UK to launch such attacks.David Lammy was unable to say if the US attack was legal or right More

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    Starmer backs Trump’s bombing of Iran saying it ‘can never be allowed to develop nuclear weapon’

    Keir Starmer has backed Donald Trump’s dramatic decision to bomb Iran overnight.The US president said the attacks carried out at Fordow, Natanz and Esfahan were “very successful”. In a statement the prime minister said: “Iran’s nuclear programme is a grave threat to international security. Iran can never be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon and the US has taken action to alleviate that threat.“The situation in the Middle East remains volatile and stability in the region is a priority. We call on Iran to return to the negotiating table and reach a diplomatic solution to end this crisis”. It comes just 48 hours before Sir Keir is set to join other world leaders including representatives of the Trump administration for a major summit of NATO in the Hague.Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has backed the bombing More

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    Every time Starmer wants us to think the best of Trump, the US president proves him wrong

    Just five days ago Sir Keir Starmer sat down with the travelling pack of UK journalists at the G7 in Canada and assured them and their readers that Donald Trump would not attack Iran.He said: “There is nothing the president said that suggests he’s about to get involved in this conflict, on the contrary, the G7 statement was about de-escalation.”I think what he said was he wanted to go beyond a ceasefire effectively and end the conflict. And I think he’s right about that. I mean, a ceasefire is always a means to an end.”That is consistent with what we agreed around the table yesterday. And throughout the dinner yesterday I was sitting right next to President Trump, so I’ve no doubt, in my mind, the level of agreement there was in relation to the words that were then issued immediately after that, pretty soon after the dinner.”Donald Trump and Keir Starmer have a good relationship – but they are not always on the same page More

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    Reform UK would win if general election held tomorrow, poll suggests

    Reform UK has taken a dramatic nine-point lead over Labour, a new poll has revealed. The Ipsos survey showed Reform had 34 per cent of the vote share, compared to Labour’s 25 per cent.This means that if a general election were held tomorrow, Reform’s leader Nigel Farage would probably be elected prime minister. Meanwhile, the Conservatives had only 15 per cent of the estimated vote share in the lowest result ever recorded by Ipsos, and the highest ever for Reform.The figures from the polling of 1,180 people show Labour’s plunging popularity, after winning the 2024 general election with the biggest majority since Tony Blair.Only 19 per cent say they are satisfied with the work he is doing, while 73 per cent were dissatisfied, according to the poll.The figures showed that 54 per cent of Labour voters and 48 per cent of Tory voters have changed their support, with a high proportion of defectors from both going to Reform. The figures from the polling of 1,180 people reveal Labour’s plunging popularity More

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    More than 1 million private rental homes are substandard, new analysis reveals

    Almost a quarter of privately rented homes in the UK fail to meet basic living standards, shocking new analysis has revealed.According to data from independent House of Commons library researchers, more than a million rented homes do not meet the Decent Homes Standard – which is 21 per cent of the private market.It comes as the UK recorded a new hottest day of the year as temperatures soared in a 33C heatwave on Saturday.With a growing number of people forced to rent, almost one in five homes (19 per cent) in the UK are from the private rental market.Rayner has promised rent reform More

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    Why the ‘individual conscience vote’ of MPs had its own assisted death last week

    Two votes in the Commons, split by four days, have laid the ground for a seismic shift in British social policy, making last week one of the most significant in the modern history of parliament.But while the votes on abortion (Tuesday) and assisted dying (Friday) were officially matters of individual conscience, the evidence from both suggests that the UK is now closer than ever to a US-style party politicisation of moral issues.If you vote Labour or Lib Dem, you are much more likely to get a “pro-choice” MP; if you vote Conservative or Reform, you are more likely to get one who is “pro-life”. This is not an accident: it is increasingly by design.Tonia Antoniazzi, Labour MP for Gower, laid down the motion on abortion More

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    Peers clash with Esther Rantzen over plans to delay and change assisted dying bill

    Dame Esther Rantzen has been told she does not understand how British parliamentary democracy works after she suggested that members of the House of Lords should not hold up the assisted dying legislation.Kim Leadbeater’s bill passed by a narrow majority of just 23 on its third and final reading vote in the Commons on Friday, but now faces a long haul in the Lords as peers prepare to lay down hundreds of amendments.There is a danger that the bill will get held up so much that it will not have time to pass into law, and Dame Esther hit out at peers who effectively want to use procedure to ensure it falls.Esther Rantzen thanked MPs for backing the bill More