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    Key revelations from Liz Truss’s memoir: Meeting the Queen, fleas in No.10 and an I-told-you-so

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailDetails of her first and last meeting with the late Queen and fleas being in No. 10 are among the stories revealed in Liz Truss’ new memoir.The first excerpt of her book, titled Ten Years to Save the West, made several candid confessions including how her husband predicted how her short premiership would end in tears and that she did not listen to the Queen’s advice.The bombshell revelations include that she spent several of her six weeks as prime minister “itching” because Downing Street was “infested” with the pests.In extracts from the book published by the Daily Mail, Truss admitted she went into “a state of shock” when told of Queen Elizabeth II’s death in 2022.Of her historic meeting at Balmoral in Scotland, which occurred just two days before the monarch’s death, Truss says the 96-year-old Queen “seemed to have grown frailer” since she had last been in the public eye.Liz Truss Book More

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    Liz Truss book – latest: Memoir reveals that ex-PM’s husband predicted premiership ‘would all end in tears’

    Liz Truss Book (PA) Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inbox Get our free View from Westminster email Liz Truss has detailed her short tenure in Downing Street including her meeting with the late Queen in her new memoir. In the first excerpt of her book, titled […] More

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    Public row between Wes Streeting and Diane Abbott over the use of the private sector

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailA public row has erupted between a member of Labour’s front bench and ex-Labour MP Diane Abbott over the use of the private sector.Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting suggested Ms Abbott was being hypocritical for saying there was no principled case for using private healthcare to cut NHS waiting lists – as he highlighted how she had sent her son to a private school.Ms Abbott, who had the Labour whip withdrawn last April over claims of antisemitic comments, hit headlines in 2003 when it was revealed that she put her son in a £10,000-a-year school instead of a comprehensive as then prime minister Tony Blair aspired to improve education.She and Mr Streeting became embroiled in a spat on social media when the Labour frontbencher referred to “the principled case for using the private sector to cut NHS waiting lists while we rebuild our NHS – and why the alternative is working class people waiting longer”.Ms Abbott, a former shadow home secretary, contradicted him, adding the comment: “There is no principled case for using the private sector. Just as the “spare capacity” in private health Wes talks about does not exist. Only NHS doctors, nurses and the £million contracts Wes will give them.”But Labour’s health spokesman hit back, quote-tweeting her, and adding: “But you used the private sector while a Labour government improved public services,” implying she was guilty of double standards.He highlighted how she told The Mirror in 2012: “Since I made that decision, Labour built five new secondary schools in Hackney, one of them with some of the best GCSE results in the country. I wouldn’t have to make the same choice today.”Ms Abbott has previously claimed Mr Streeting is not prepared to invest enough money in the NHS More

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    Former health minister describes being targeted by honeytrap schemes

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailLord Bethell has admitted that he was targeted by the “most extraordinary” honeytrap schemes when he was a minister.The former health minister said he was less suspectable to scams because he “blew off a lot of steam” in his Ministry of Sound days. Lord Bethell managed the well-known London nightclub for nearly a decade before entering government. Speaking to Carole Walker on Times Radio, he said: “I get the most extraordinary propositions. Yes. A very great many of them, particularly during Covid, when I was a minister. Some of them have pretty pictures attached to them. Some of them were of a financial nature. “The whole time we are under, you know, I don’t mean to be dramatic, but we are under threat, parliamentarians, all the time. And we should know it and take precautions accordingly.”He added: “I’ve come into politics quite late in my career. I spent ten years at the Ministry of Sound and blew off a lot of steam before I went into politics. So I am in a slightly different position than poor old Will Wragg. When I was 36, I didn’t have a very good judgement at all.”Lord Bethell, former health minister, has described how he was targeted by honeytrap schemes More

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    Angela Rayner tax claims: Why are police investigating sale of Labour deputy leader’s council house?

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailPolice have launched an investigation into Labour’s deputy leader Angela Rayner as speculation over whether she broke electoral law continues.The investigation opened upon “reassessment of information” given to the police by deputy chairman of the Conservative Party, James Daly, about information she gave about her living situation a decade ago.A spokesperson for Greater Manchester Police has said that they are looking into whether any offences have been committed. Ms Rayner responded to the announcement by saying that she will stand down if a crime is found. Ms Rayner has been facing scrutiny about whether she paid the right amount of tax on the 2015 sale of her council house because of confusion over whether it was her principal residence.Ms Rayner has denied any wrongdoing and insisted that controversy over her tax affairs is “manufactured”.Here’s what we know so far about the investigation:( More

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    Liz Truss wanted to sack Bank of England governor and blames Boris’s dog for fleas in No 10

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailLiz Truss has suggested Boris Johnson’s dog left fleas in No 10 and revealed she wanted to sack the governor of the Bank of England in extraordinary extracts from her new book. The bombshell revelations include that she spent several of her six weeks as prime minister “itching” because Downing Street was “infested” with the pests. And her disastrous economic policy – which led to her being ousted from office – could have been even more extreme because she wanted to “appoint new senior leaders” in the UK’s central bank. She admitted the move would have “amounted to a declaration of war on the economic establishment”. She also: Ordered furniture for Downing Street but was forced to resign before it arrived Reveals she worried about how to get her hair done ahead of meetings with world leaders Says she felt like a prisoner in No 10 and struggled even to get medicine for a cough Says Boris Johnson asked at a meeting when he was PM: “Raise your hand if you want a steel industry in Britain”Planned her disastrous economic policy at Chevening alongside the current cabinet secretary Simon CaseDuring her short time in office her daughters “did get to visit the nuclear bunker”In extracts from the book published by the Daily Mail, she talked of her ruinous economic policy. Former Bank of England governor, Mark Carney, has accused Ms Truss of turning Britain into “Argentina on the Channel” with her economic policy, saying she had a “basic misunderstanding of what drives economies”.However, Ms Truss revealed she wanted to go even further and faster with the policies that would eventually drive her from office.One option, discussed during planning sessions with Mr Case and others, included appointing “new senior leaders in the Bank of England and Treasury who were prepared to challenge the status quo. But this would have amounted to a declaration of war on the economic establishment”. It would also have taken too long, she noted. In the end, she decided to “try to work constructively with the governor” of the bank. Explaining her desire to shake up the system, she said that when Mr Johnson was PM he asked in a meeting for those who “want a steel industry in Britain” to put up their hands. Treasury officials “sat on their hands”, she said. She was also scathing about the realities of living in No 10. “The place was infested with fleas,” she wrote. “Some claimed that this was down to Boris and Carrie’s dog Dilyn, but there was no conclusive evidence. In any case, the entire place had to be sprayed with flea killer. I spent several weeks itching.” The “most difficult thing to get used to”, she wrote, was that “spontaneous excursions were all but impossible: I was effectively a prisoner”.She recruited her teenage daughters, Liberty and Frances, to run errands “because it was easier for them to leave the buildings without being spotted”. Of their time in one of the most famous addresses in the country she said: “I’m pleased they at least managed to fit in a sleepover with their friends. And they did get to visit the nuclear bunker.” But at one point, suffering from a cough, “my diary secretary had to go out in the middle of the night to buy me some medicine”, she said. She also complained about the “lack of personal support” for the PM, which she describes as “pretty shocking”. “Despite now being one of the most photographed people in the country, I had to organise my own hair and make-up appointments,” she wrote. She also hit out at her successor Rishi Sunak. Who she defeated to become prime minister but was forced to hand over to less than two months later. Writing about his initial leadership campaign she said that “junior ministers and aides “had apparently been told by his backers that if they wanted a place on Rishi’s team, they’d have to join the revolt against Boris and resign at once. Many duly did”. She added: “Although there was never any suggestion that Rishi himself indulged in such underhand behaviour, reports circulated that MPs were being warned to support him or remain permanently out in the cold.” In the book the former PM, who was famously outlasted by an iceberg lettuce in a blonde wig, attempted to explain the failures of her time in office – including her radical policies. Ten Years Tto Save the West also documents her historic meeting with the late queen at Balmoral in Scotland just days before she passed away. According to Ms Truss, the 96-year-old monarch had given the prime minister two words of advice: “Pace yourself.” The former Tory leader wrote that maybe she should have listened.Since leaving No 10, Ms Truss has been a consistent thorn in Mr Sunak’s side. She is leading opposition to his smoking ban plans, calling the move “profoundly un-Conservative”. She has also regularly appeared at Conservative meetings on both sides of the Atlantic claiming that the “deep state” had “sabotaged” her tax-cutting plans from Kwasi Kwarteng’s notoriously disastrous 2022 mini-Budget.Questioned about her comments last month, Mr Sunak said if he was part of the “deep state”: “I probably wouldn’t tell you if I was, would I?”On the smoking ban he has also insisted there is nothing “un-Conservative about caring about our children’s health,” adding: “I respect that some people will disagree with me on this but … I think this is the right long-term thing for our country. “Smoking causes one in four cancer deaths. It’s responsible for a hospital admission every minute.” More

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    Angela Rayner: I’ll step down if police find I committed a criminal offence

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailAngela Rayner has promised to step down if police find she committed a criminal offence in the ongoing row over the sale of her council house a decade ago. Greater Manchester Police (GMP) is looking into claims she gave false information about where she was living, which she denies.Ms Rayner insists the controversy over whether she should have paid capital gains tax on the sale has been “manufactured,” and has accused the Conservatives of attempting to “smear” her. “I am completely confident I’ve followed the rules at all times,” she said in a statement on Friday evening. “We have seen the Tory party use this playbook before – reporting political opponents to the police during election campaigns to distract from their record. I will say as I did before – if I committed a criminal offence, I would of course do the right thing and step down. The British public deserves politicians who know the rules apply to them.”The police investigation came as Rishi Sunak suffered his own setback, with the resignation of a third minister in as many weeks. Energy minister Graham Stuart said he would “fully support” the prime minister from the backbenches but wanted to focus on issues in his constituency instead. The MP for Beverley and Holderness in Yorkshire has a majority of more than 20,000 – but Labour last year overturned a similar figure in a similar Tory stronghold, Selby and Ainsty.Labour deputy leader Angela Rayner has faced Tory accusations over her living situation in recent weeks More

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    Energy minister quits as Tory exodus continues ahead of election

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailRishi Sunak’s government has suffered another blow after his energy minister announced he was quitting. Graham Stuart said he would “fully support” the prime minister from the back benches but wanted to focus on local issues instead.He is the third senior minister to quit in recent weeks as the Tories face the prospect of a disastrous general election defeat. His announcement comes a month after former armed forces minister James Heappey announced he was leaving government and standing down as an MP at the election.Education minister Robert Halfon also resigned and will not stand again, while Ben Wallace quit as defence secretary last year. Liberal Democrat deputy leader Daisy Cooper said the drumbeat of Conservative resignations was becoming “deafening” as ministers find “any excuse they can to get away from this deeply unpopular Conservative government”. Mr Stuart is the MP for Beverley and Holderness in Yorkshire, where he has a majority of more than 20,000. But Labour overturned a similar majority in what was considered a Tory stronghold in Selby and Ainsty last year. Mr Stuart said he will turn his focus to issues such as making roads safer, broadband delivery and increasing the number of defibrillators in his constituency. Graham Stuart has quit to focus on local issues in his Yorkshire constituency More