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    Business bosses desert Tories and defect to Labour

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailMore than 120 business leaders have backed Labour as the “party of change” ahead of the 4 July general election.Founders, executives and investors from a range of sectors attacked 14 years of “instability, stagnation, and a lack of long-term focus” under the Conservatives.And, in a letter published in The Times, they called for Labour to be given the chance “to change the country and lead Britain into the future”.Business chiefs have flocked back to Labour under Sir Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves More

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    Labour government can be both pro-business and pro-worker, argues Reeves

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailA Labour government can be both pro-business and pro-worker, Rachel Reeves will argue in her first major election speech on Tuesday.Ahead of the upcoming general election on 4 July, the shadow chancellor is expected to tell business leaders that, having brought business back to Labour, the party can now “bring growth back to Britain”.She will also tell working people that, by bringing business back to Britain, her party will in turn “deliver a better future” for them.A Labour government can be both pro-business and pro-worker, Rachel Reeves is set to argue in her first major election speech on Tuesday More

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    Sunak’s new ‘triple lock plus’ pension pledge as Tories try to win back older voters

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThe Tories are to unveil a new deal for pensioners to boost their incomes with a “triple lock plus” pledge.With the Conservatives more than 20 points behind Labour in the polls, Rishi Sunak has reached for the playbook of one of his predecessors, David Cameron, in making an offer to the Conservatives’ traditional so-called “grey vote” base.The prime minister will offer to protect the triple lock on the state pension brought in by Lord Cameron in 2010 which means that it is guaranteed to go up by the highest rate of inflation or 2.5 per cent, whichever is the largest increase.The PM will also announce on Tuesday that from April next year the income tax personal allowance for pensioners will be increased in line with the triple lock.The pledge would mean both the state pension and pensioners’ tax-free allowance will always rise in line with the highest of earnings, wages or 2.5 per cent.This comes because the reduction in national insurance contributions (NICs) from 12 per cent to 8 per cent does not affect pensioners who do not pay that tax.‘We are on the side of pensioners’, says the PM More

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    Labour expected to proscribe Iran’s Revolutionary Guard as 550 parliamentarians demand action

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailA group of 550 parliamentarians have made a final bid before the elecxtion to get the next government to proscribe Iran’s Revolutionary Guard (IRGC) as a terrorist group.The move by MPs and peers on the British Committee for Iran Freedom has been consistantly resisted by the Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) even though the USA has led the way on the issue.It is understood that shadow foreign secretary David Lammy have suggested that if he is in charge of the FCDO after 4 July there could be a change of policy.A source close to Mr Lammy said: “Our longstanding position is that we supports proscribing the IRGC either through the existing process, or through creating a new process of proscription for hostile state actors.”Shadow foreign secretary David Lammy (Jordan Pettitt/PA) More

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    Theresa May: Compromise should not be a poisonous word in politics

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailTheresa May urged compromise as an honourable solution in politics during a period she describes as the most divisive for Westminster she has experienced in her lifetime.“Compromise is not a poisonous word. You should not have to be 100 per cent with someone or 100 per cent against. Polarisation is bad for politics,” she said.She was speaking at the Hay-on-Wye literary festival where she lambasted her “bete noire” – social media. “It amplifies extreme views which then become accepted views unless we are very careful,” she said.The former prime minister was reflecting on a parliamentary career which began when she was elected the Conservative MP for Maidenhead in the second-worst defeat for her party in its history.As party chair, she famously warned the Tories of not being “the nasty party” and would later go on to be home secretary for the entire David Cameron government.Ms May emerged as the leader to replace Mr Cameron from a brutal contest in the wake of the EU referendum which saw her as the last candidate standing.But by early 2019 she was forced out by an increasingly fractious party fighting a civil war with itself.Perhaps reflecting on Boris Johnson taking over from her, she said: “We live today in a world of celebrity. It becomes more about the celebrity and not the politics.”“No one can accuse me of being the celebrity. I was the Maybot,” she joked about her being characterised as wooden by media pundits.She also spoke of the unfair treatment of her final appearance outside No 10 Downing Street when she was filmed crying at the end of her farewell address.“A man in that position would have been applauded, while in a woman it is seen as a sign of weakness,” she said.Ms May explained that she regretted showing so much emotion but that it was an impulsive reaction to how much she cared about trying to do the best for her country. She won a round of applause at the festival for her candour as well as for her campaigns to help victims of modern slavery.She also spoke movingly of equality for women.“Fortunately, my parents were always supportive and wanted me to do my best and what was needed to achieve that,” she said.She recalled how in the 1980s when she was helping a local school to find a new headteacher, one candidate had said that some girls could just become hairdressers rather than strive to seek other more ambitious career paths.She disagreed with such closing down of opportunities for women, and chose a teacher who wanted to empower choice and opportunity. “If you ignore 50 per cent of the talent in the world you are losing out on having 100 per cent of people with a chance to make things better,” she said.She was asked about the absence of Brexit as a subject in the upcoming general election after Michael Heseltine said in The Independent that the refusal to have it as a central subject made this the most dishonest election ever.On Brexit she refused to brand it as a failure or a success, though she conceded there were local firms which had suffered as a result of the border controls. She said it was too early to make a final judgement, as Covid and the Ukraine war skewed the analysis.Finally, on holding hands with Donald Trump in the famous footage of her with the then US President at the White House, she insisted she had not grabbed his hand.“I should point out that he held mine! We were walking along, and he said ‘there’s a bit of a slope here’. I was not worried. I had a pair of kitten heels on. Was he genuinely being a gentleman or was he worried about walking down the slope ?” Ms May did not disclose his intention. More

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    Tory MP claims she defected to Reform before Conservative Party suspended her

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailA Tory MP who is leaving parliament has claimed she quit the party and backed Reform UK in the Shropshire seat she is vacating before the Conservatives suspended her.Outgoing Telford MP Lucy Allan said Reform’s Alan Adams would offer an alternative to “more of the same politics and more of the same politicians” as she publicly endorsed him to replace her in her constituency at the upcoming general election rather than her own party’s candidate.The Tory party responded by suspending her with immediate effect on Monday, but she claimed she had already resigned to support Mr Adams rather than Conservative Hannah Campbell.Tory MP Lucy Allan, who is leaving parliament, has claimed she quit the party and backed Reform UK in the Shropshire seat she is vacating before the Conservatives suspended her More

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    Now it’s personal: Poll shows voters like and trust Keir Starmer more than Rishi Sunak

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailIf the outcome of the election is decided by personality and not politics, Sir Keir Starmer has one foot in Downing Street already.That is the clear conclusion of an exclusive survey for The Independent by pollsters Redfield and Wilton.It came on the day that Sir Keir gave his first keynote speech of the general election campaign, focusing very much on his personal story and his family’s struggle with poverty while attempting to quell doubts over what sort of prime minister he would be.The survey of 1,500 adults showed that if you ask voters who they would rather go to the pub with, lend money to, get them to help put up a shelf, make them laugh, join their quiz team or cry on their shoulder – then Mr Starmer wins hands down every time.The widest gap is over which one you would ask to do a DIY task, with Mr Starmer ahead by 39 per cent to 17 per cent, and the closest on who you would want on a pub quiz team, with the Labour leader ahead 38 per cent to 28 per cent.Based on the evidence of the Redfield and Wilton poll, the brutal truth for Rishi Sunak is that his opponent is seen as more practical, fun, blokey, trustworthy and knowledgeable.There is no avoiding it: they like Sir Keir more than they like Mr Sunak.The results are less clear cut when voters are asked which wild animal the leaders most resemble.Labour Party leader Sir Keir Starmer makes his first keynote speech of the general election campaign during a visit to Lancing in West Sussex More

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    Sunak denies he plans to leave for California after an election defeat

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailRishi Sunak has dismissed jibes that he plans to jet off to California for a new life after what some believe is an inevitable election defeat.Speaking to ITV’s Robert Peston, Mr Sunak has pledged to stay in the UK whether his party wins or loses the election on 4 July. It comes after gossip that he had called the election early so he could arrange his daughters’ schooling in a new home in the USA in time for September.Responding to a direct accusation about his alleged plans to move to California from former Tory minister Lord Goldsmith, Mr Sunak retorted: “It’s simply not true. I mean, it’s just simply not true.”Asked if he is committed to staying in the UK, he said: “Of course I am. Of course, and this is my home. I mean, my football team just got promoted back in the Premiership and I hope to be watching them for years to come in the Premier League.”Prime minister Rishi Sunak during his visit to Chesham United Football Club More