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    Tech giants ‘could severely disable UK spooks from stopping online harms’

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailSilicon Valley tech giants’ actions could “severely disable” UK spooks from preventing harm caused by online paedophiles and fraudsters, Suella Braverman has suggested.The Conservative former home secretary named Facebook owner Meta, and Apple, and their use of technologies such as end-to-end encryption as a threat to attempts to tackle digital crimes.She claimed the choice to back these technologies without “safeguards” could “enable and indeed facilitate some of the worst atrocities that our brave men and women in law enforcement agencies deal with every day”, as MPs began considering changes to investigatory powers laws.The Investigatory Powers (Amendment) Bill includes measures to make it easier for agencies to examine and retain bulk datasets, such as publicly available online telephone records, and would allow intelligence agencies to use internet connection records to aid detection of their targets.We know that the terrorists, the serious organised criminals, and fraudsters, and the online paedophiles, all take advantage of the dark web and encrypted spacesSuella BravermanAs the Commons started scrutinising the changes, Ms Braverman said: “We know that the terrorists, the serious organised criminals, and fraudsters, and the online paedophiles, all take advantage of the dark web and encrypted spaces to plan their terror, to carry out their fraudulent activity, and to cause devastating harm to some innocent people such as children in the field of online paedophilia.”In a question to Home Secretary James Cleverly, she asked: “Does he share my concern and indeed frustration with certain companies like Meta and Apple?“The former that has chosen to roll out end-to-end encryption without safeguards, the latter which has rolled out advanced data protection, which will allow these bad actors to go dark, which will severely disable agencies and law enforcement from identifying them and taking action, and which will enable and indeed facilitate some of the worst atrocities that our brave men and women in law enforcement agencies deal with every day?”Mr Cleverly replied that the Government took harm done to children “incredibly seriously”, and valued the “important role” that investigatory powers have.He added: “We will continue to work with technology companies, both those well established at the moment, and those of the future, to ensure that we maintain the balance between privacy and security as we have always done, but ensure that these technology platforms do not provide a hiding place for terrorists or serious criminals and those people taking part in child sexual exploitation.”Labour former minister Kevan Jones urged the Government to ensure that there was “judicial oversight” of new powers to snoop on bulk datasets.Mr Jones, a member of Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee, added: “Isn’t it the fact that if we are going to give these powers to the security services – which I approve of – that to ensure that we can say to the public that these are proportionate and also that there is an independent process in ensuring that these can’t be abused, surely judicial oversight throughout this should be an important thing?”Mr Cleverly insisted there was oversight, including through the Intelligence and Security Committee.When the Bill was considered by the House of Lords, ministers agreed to tighten new rules on the interception of MPs’ communications.But SNP MP Joanna Cherry suggested it could still “open the door even further than its parent Bill on the surveillance of trade unions”.The Edinburgh South West MP asked: “I wonder whether he will agree with me that there should be no place for the surveillance of trade unions in a democracy, and if he agrees with that, will he consider amendment to the Bill to make sure it doesn’t happen?”Security minister Tom Tugendhat addressed concerns about trade unions, telling the Commons that rules around MPs’ communications had only been placed in the Bill because of the “particular” nature of their roles.Mr Tugendhat added: “That doesn’t mean that any attitude against any other individual should be used cavalierly. It is not a question of the role or the post that a person holds, but their rights as a British citizen, and those rights as a British citizen should be absolutely guarded from intrusion or aggression from the state without exceptionally good reason.”Labour shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper said her party would support the Bill and would “work with the Government to get the details of it right”.Apple and Meta were contacted for comment. More

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    Rishi Sunak’s GB News appearance probed by Ofcom after 500 complaints

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailRishi Sunak’s appearance on GB News has been put under investigation by the broadcast watchdog after receiving hundreds of complaints. Ofcom said the so-called People’s Forum garnered around 500 complaints and it was investigating the show under its impartiality rules. The rules state that broadcasters must present news shows with due accuracy and impartiality. Ofcom pointed to provisions in the broadcasting code requiring outlets to ensure an “appropriately wide range of significant views must be included and given due weight in such programmes”. Rishi Sunak during GB News’s People’s Forum earlier this month The show, People’s Forum: The Prime Minister, was broadcast on GB News last Monday and saw Mr Sunak quizzed over the NHS, his Rwanda asylum plan and why right-wing voters should back the Tories. Facing a cross-section of voters in County Durham, one audience member pressed him on why traditional Tory voters should back his party over the Nigel Farage-founded Reform UK.The 60-minute question and answer session took a similar format to the PM Connect events Mr Sunak has held around the country.The SNP’s John Nicolson, a member of parliament’s culture committee, said he was “glad” to see Ofcom investigating the event. He said: “I’m glad to see Ofcom investigate GB News again for another flagrant breach of the Ofcom impartiality rules. However I’m not at all convinced that GB News cares much about Ofcom or takes the regulator seriously.” GB News is currently being investigated by Ofcom for a number of other shows, including many over impartiality issues.The issue of political figures such as Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg and current Conservative deputy chair Lee Anderson presenting topical programmes has also been contentious.Former pensions minister Esther McVey and backbencher Philip Davies are also presenters on GB News, and former culture secretary Nadine Dorries began hosting a programme on TalkTV before she quit as an MP.Labour’s shadow foreign secretary David Lammy also hosts a show on LBC.Mr Sunak’s official spokesperson said the PM did not regret taking part in the programme and said it is “a matter for Ofcom, which is rightly an independent regulator”.“The prime minister undertakes interviews from a range of broadcasters, outlets and other media,” the spokesperson said.He added: “Media appearances such as the one he conducted last week are an important part of the democratic process.” More

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    Boris Johnson ‘would bring back half of lost Tory votes’ and is favourite to replace Sunak, poll finds

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailBoris Johnson would win back voters lost under Rishi Sunak and is still the preferred choice to replace him as leader, a new poll suggests.The survey of 13,534 Conservative voters found that the former prime minister remains the most popular candidate to succeed Mr Sunak – beating ten senior Tories including Lord Cameron, Suella Braverman and Kemi Badenoch.The study, which was commissioned by long-standing party supporter Lady McAlpine, found that just over half of those who voted Conservative in 2019 – but who now intend to vote for a different party – would vote for Mr Johnson again. In comparison, just 39 per cent of those polled said they would vote for Mr Sunak over Labour leader Keir Starmer. The latest study comes just weeks after a Tory bust-up over secretive polls, including the bombshell “Labour landslide” poll that warned of a Tory wipeout unless Mr Sunak was removed as leader. The research was commissioned by an anonymous group linked to Lord Frost and was widely seen as an attempt to oust the PM. It prompted calls from Tory grandee Lord Hayward for tighter rules on polling ahead of a general election.Speaking to the Independent, Lord Hayward warned that the newest polling may also have backfired: “The plotting right may be disappointed by the results, because they might have wanted more people to come out ahead of Rishi Sunak – the only person who’s come out ahead of Sunak is someone who’s not an MP”.He also highlighted Mr Johnson’s divisiveness as another reason why his return to Cabinet was unlikely, adding: “You don’t only judge a party leader on the basis of what leader you want, but you also need to know how ‘anti’ people are.“There is no doubt Boris engenders support amongst people – but he also engenders an enormous amount of opposition”.The result also follow a difficult week for the PM as the Conservatives faced a double by-election drubbing and the country entered a technical recession.On Friday, Labour snapped up two new seats in Wellingborough and Kingswood, achieving the second largest swing from Tory to Labour at any by-election since the Second World War.The defeat has triggered calls from those within the party for the prime minister to “change course” and adopt more Conservative values, such as lower taxation, harsher immigration quotas and to rollback net zero targets.The poll also asked voters about other Conservative figures, including Suella Braverman, the former home secretary, and Penny Mordaunt, the Commons Leader, who both received 23 per cent versus Sir Keir, with Priti Patel polling at 22 per cent and Ms Badenoch 19 per cent. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is facing calls from colleagues within his party to change direction Some 45 per cent of 2019 Conservatives said that they could be persuaded to vote for the Tories again if Mr Sunak were not leader, while eighty per cent of “one-time Conservatives” agreed that the party would have a higher chance of winning if they had a leader who embraces “traditional Conservative values”.According to the poll, Labour current has a 22-point lead to the Tories, who are on 20 per cent, 13 per cent for Reform and 10 per cent for the Liberal Democrats.The latest poll has given Keir Starmer a 22-point over the Conservatives Whitestone Insight, who ran the poll, said that “replacing Rishi Sunak” could mean “the difference between wipeout, noble defeat, or possibly even somehow clinging on to power.”Lady McAlpine said that she believed that a Tory victory would be possible should Boris Johnson lead a “new squeaky clean Conservative Party”. She told the Telegraph: “If we have the brains, they’re not evident and that’s because the personality is not there, the charisma is not there. To be a leader, you have to have enormous charisma to be a good leader.”Mr Johnson left parliament last year after he was found to have wilfully misled MPs about his role in the partygate scandal. The former prime minister had been forced to resign over his handling of the scandal and was then forced out following an excoriating parliamentary report into his conduct. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has remained positive in spite of the difficult by-election results, having admitted the results were “particularly challenging” but has insisted “our plan is working” and he can “give everyone the piece of mind that there is a better future for them and their families”. More

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    Keir Starmer under growing pressure to back immediate Gaza ceasefire as Momentum launches campaign

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailSir Keir Starmer is under growing pressure to back an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, as left-wing organisation Momentum relaunches a mass email campaign targeting MPs ahead of a crunch Commons vote this week.The grassroots group is planning a ‘lobbying blitz’, encouraging people to call upon Labour MPs to back the SNP’s amendment, demanding an immediate ceasefire.This issue, to be debated on Wednesday, has become one of the greatest challenges for the Labour leader and comes three months after a third of his MPs rebelled against the party whip over a similar call.Momentum supporters flooded Labour MPs with more than 5,000 emails in November and the group is urging people to do the same this week.The campaign comes just days after Scottish Labour’s conference unanimously backed an immediate ceasefire, with Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar declaring himself proud of the vote and calling the SNP’s amendment “perfectly reasonable”.Scottish Labour MPs have been warned to back a Westminster ceasefire vote after conference backed a motion on ending the conflict. (Jane Barlow/PA)Speaking at the conference, Sir Keir endorsed a permanent ending of hostilities in Gaza, but stopped short of calling for an immediate ceasefire.Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting said Labour was considering whether to back the SNP amendment. Speaking to Talk TV, he said Labour would see what the final motion looked like but added the party would not be pushed around by protesters or political opponents.In November, when the party resisted calls for a permanent ceasefire, ten frontbenchers resigned their roles and 56 Labour MPs – around a third of the party – voted against the whip.Jess Phillips resigned her shadow cabinet position to back the amendment, stating: “I am taking a position with my heart, my head,and my constituents.”Since then, the Palestinian death toll has risen to nearly 30,000, including more than 10,000 children, according to official figures from Palestine’s Hamas-run health ministry.Last month the International Court of Justice ruled that Israel’s war on Gaza could plausibly constitute a genocide and ordered the country to take necessary precautionary action. The Israel/Palestine conflict has spilled over into the UK’s domestic politics as protestors demand the government back an immediate ceasefire in the region The UN special rapporteur on the occupied territories Francesca Albanese has said that Israel appears to be in breach of the orders issued by the ICJ and requires it to take immediate steps to protect Palestinians’ rights. The conflict in Gaza has split the Labour party and caused some Muslim voters to withdraw their support. More than 50 Labour councillors have resigned from the party over Mr Starmer’s stance on Gaza with the party losing its majority on four councils.A YouGov poll has shown that two thirds (66 per cent) of the public back an immediate ceasefire, including more than 80 per cent of Labour voters. Prominent Labour figures including Sadiq Khan, Andy Burnham and Anas Sarwar have all backed an immediate ceasefire, alongside Labour’s affiliated trade unions, the TUC and numerous Labour councils.Momentum is encouraging its members to pressure these MPs to “vote with their conscience” and back the SNP amendment.Some Labour MPs have already come out in support of the amendment. Beth Winter, MP for Cynon Valley, said on social media site X that the party “must support an immediate ceasefire”.”I agree with Anas Sarwar,” she said. “The ceasefire motion before parliament is positive. We can’t afford two political parties having a go at each other when in what matters is the lives of people in Israel and Palestine. We must support an immediate ceasefire. “Mary Foy, MP for Durham has also called for a ceasefire. Posting on X, she announced that she won’t be able to vote for the amendment on Wednesday because she has suffered a bereavement, but she had “every intention of participating in the opposition day debate on Wednesday and voting for an immediate ceasefire”.Hilary Schan, co-chair of Momentum, said it was “vital that every Labour MP votes for an immediate end of the bloodshed” on Wednesday.“Every day we witness more horrific atrocities committed by Israel in Gaza – and it has to stop. Simply put, that means an immediate ceasefire and an end to Israel’s brutal war. With the Government continuing to give cover to Israel, it’s vital that every Labour MP votes for an immediate end to the bloodshed when given a choice on Wednesday.”He added: “We must use every avenue to exert pressure for peace. History will not look kindly on those who fail to do the right thing.”Labour has been approached for comment. More

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    Ministers push ban on mobile phones in school – even on breaks

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailSchools in England have been told they should ban pupils from using mobile phones and start searching students for the devices. Ministers want children to be barred from using devices on breaks as well as in class.In new guidance, they say headteachers “can and should identify mobile phones … as something that may be searched for” as part of their school behaviour policy. However, the guidance is non-statutory, meaning it is up to individual heads to decide their own policies and whether or not phones should be banned.One union branded the move a “non-policy for a non-problem”, arguing that most schools already ban phones during school hours.Unveiling the guidance, education secretary Gillian Keegan said schools were “places for children to learn and mobile phones are, at a minimum, an unwanted distraction in the classroom”. She said she was giving teachers the tools to improve behaviour and to “do what they do best – teach.” The guidance warns that, in some schools, the use of mobile phones remains a “daily battle”.It tells teachers that ministers believe “all schools should prohibit the use of mobile phones throughout the school day – not only during lessons but break and lunchtimes as well”.New government guidance says headteachers ‘can and should identify mobile phones … as something that may be searched for’ as part of their school behaviour policy The government argues that removing mobile phones can help children and young people spend more time being active and socialising face to face with their peers, which will help their mental health. In a foreword to the document, Ms Keegan said it would provide “clarity and consistency” for teachers and that there is currently “a large variation in how different schools are managing the use of mobile phones”.It suggests four ways school can ban mobiles. These include a rule of no mobiles on the school premises; that phones must be handed in on arrival; that they must be kept in a secure location, which the pupil does not access to, or that pupils can keep possession of their devices as long as they are “never used, seen or heard” – with strict consequences for breaches.However, it also notes some circumstances where pupils with medical conditions should use a phone, including those with diabetes who might use an app to monitor their glucose. The new guidance was hailed as a significant step by Ms Keegan, who originally pledged to bring forward reforms banning mobile phone use in schools at last October’s Tory conference.Tom Bennett, who advises the Department for Education on behaviour, said: “Many schools already have some kind of policy on phones, but this guidance provides a clear steer for everyone, including parents, about what’s right and what’s not for the wellbeing of the child.”The government pointed to recent official data that showed that nearly one in three – 29 per cent – secondary school pupils said mobile phones had been used when they were not supposed to be.But the Association of School and College Leaders general secretary Geoff Barton said that the “compulsive use” of devices was not happening in schools but “while children are out of school”.He said: “Most schools already forbid the use of mobile phones during the school day or allow their use only in limited and stipulated circumstances.“We have lost count of the number of times that ministers have now announced a crackdown on mobile phones in schools. It is a non-policy for a non-problem.“The government would be far better off putting its energies into bringing to heel the online platforms via which children are able to access disturbing and extreme content.” More

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    Starmer hits out at claim Tories can’t win election ahead of difficult Gaza ceasefire vote

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailKeir Starmer has hit out at claims the Conservatives cannot win the next election as Labour faces another difficult week over its stance on Gaza.The Labour leader said it was “ridiculous” to suggest Rishi Sunak could not secure another term as prime minister. His warning to his party, and its potential voters, came as the SNP offered Sir Keir a meeting over this week’s expected Commons vote on a ceasefire in the Middle East. Sir Keir suffered a blow before Christmas when 10 of his frontbenchers quit or were sacked after a mass rebellion over a similar vote. Labour has yet to say how it will instruct its MPs to vote this week, saying it needs to see the wording of the SNP motion. Sir Keir told Scottish Labour’s conference in Glasgow that Labour wants “a ceasefire that lasts” in Gaza.He told delegates: “We all want to see a return of all the hostages taken on 7 October, an end to the killing of innocent Palestinians, a huge scaling up of humanitarian relief and an end to the fighting. Not just for now, not just for a pause, but permanently. A ceasefire that lasts. That is what must happen now. The fighting must stop now.”Earlier, Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar called on the SNP, which faces losing potentially dozens of seats to Labour at the election, to work with them on the ceasefire motion.In his speech, Sir Keir warned some communities have found a new “political home” in the SNP and winning them back would be hard.He added: “No matter what the SNP say, the Tories can win the next election. Of course they can, politics is volatile. It’s ridiculous to say otherwise.“So I would also say this. Imagine – even if only for a second – what it will feel like if you wake up on the day after the election, and the Tories are back. Encouraged again, emboldened again, entitled again.”Keir Starmer issued his warning at Scottish Labour’s conference in Glasgow Earlier, former Labour leader Lord Kinnock said he was “convinced now that we’re not going to lose”.Asked on Sky News whether Sir Keir would be in No 10, he said: “Yes. And I look forward to that very much because I think he would be a mature, honest, dependable leader of a party. And by God, we need all that now.”Last week Labour was forced to ditch its candidate in the upcoming Rochdale by-election after he claimed Israel had allowed the Hamas massacre that killed 1,200. More

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    Ex-Post Office chair says government told him to delay compensation for postmasters until election

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailLabour has demanded answers after the former chairman of the Post Office said he was told to “stall” on compensation for subpostmasters ahead of the general election.Henry Staunton was ousted last month after less than a year in the role after the business secretary Kemi Badenoch declared “new leadership” was needed. Her intervention came as politicians faced intense pressure over an ITV drama which highlighted the appalling miscarriage of justice. Hundreds of postmasters were wrongfully prosecuted over a decade and a half because of faulty IT software, called Horizon. No 10 has confirmed the estimated final compensation bill is around £1bn. Mr Staunton, the former boss of WH Smith, said a senior civil servant suggested holding back spending ahead of the election.He told The Sunday Times: “Early on [in the role], I was told by a fairly senior person to stall on spend on compensation and on the replacement of Horizon, and to limp, in quotation marks – I did a file note on it – limp into the election.“It was not an anti-postmaster thing, it was just straight financials. I didn’t ask, because I said ‘I’m having no part of it – I’m not here to limp into the election, it’s not the right thing to do by postmasters.’“The word ‘limp’ gives you a snapshot of where they were.”The government has denied Mr Staunton’s claims but Labour said it would seek “answers” in the row in parliament this week.A government spokesperson said: “We utterly refute these allegations.” They said ministers had sped up compensation payments and encouraged other postmasters to come forward with claims. “To suggest any actions or conversations happened to the contrary is incorrect. In fact, upon appointment, Mr Staunton was set concrete objectives, in writing, to focus on reaching settlements with claimants – clear evidence of the government’s intent.”The drama, Mr Bates vs The Post Office, highlighted the long legal fight for justice by subpostmasters. Many, including leading campaigner Alan Bates, have since complained about unnecessary delays to victims in receiving compensation.More than 700 branch managers were prosecuted by the Post Office between 1999 and 2015 after the accounting software made it look as though money was missing from their shops.Shadow business secretary Jonathan Reynolds said: “These are incredibly serious allegations. Under no circumstances should compensation to victims be delayed and to do so for party political purposes would be a further insult to subpostmasters.” Illegal migration minister Michael Tomlinson said the allegations were “not something that I accept or recognise”. He told Times Radio: “It’s right to say the whole government has been encouraging subpostmasters to come forward to claim the compensation that they deserve, after what was the biggest travesty of justice that we’ve seen. And we’re encouraging postmasters to come forward and claim the compensation that they deserve.”Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey said: “These allegations are deeply disturbing and ministers must come to parliament and explain exactly what has happened at the earliest opportunity.“The victims of this horrific miscarriage of justice need swift and fair compensation. It is the least they deserve.” More

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    Keir Starmer’s chief of staff Sue Gray denies she was a spy

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailKeir Starmer’s new chief of staff Sue Gray has taken the extraordinary step of denying she was ever a spy. Ms Gray shot to fame when she compiled the Partygate report into events at Downing Street during lockdown. Her damning findings were widely seen as hastening Boris Johnson’s departure from No 10. Once so powerful in the Cabinet Office that she was described by a minister as the person who really “runs Britain”, news of Ms Gray being hired by Labour while still a civil servant was greeted with fury by the former prime minister. Rumours that she was a spy centre on a period in her life when, during a career break in the 1980s, she briefly ran a pub in Northern Ireland – the Cove Bar in Mayobridge, Co Down, a short drive from the border with the Republic of Ireland. Asked in a new biography of the Labour leader if she had been working for British intelligence at the time, Ms Gray laughed and said: “I’m definitely not a spy and no, I never have been.”The book also reveals that Sir Keir had always wanted a civil servant for the post, to help him prepare for transition into government. On Ms Gray, he said: “When all this nonsense blew up and some people were asking if I should still go ahead, I was willing to wait for her because of Sue’s obvious integrity, rather than her lack of it.”Keir Starmer: The Biography, serialised in The Times, also reveals Sir Keir considered resigning after a crushing defeat in the Hartlepool by-election in 2021. Labour had held the seat since it was created in 1974.Biographer Tom Baldwin was told the party leader told close aides in the immediate wake of the vote that he was going to quit, before being persuaded otherwise.According to the book, Sir Keir’s wife Vic was among those who urged him not to act hastily.Sue Gray: ‘I’m definitely not a spy and no, I never have been’Another key figure who helped keep Sir Keir in his post was Morgan McSweeney, who remains Labour’s highly influential director of campaigns.Since then, Labour has seen a dramatic turnaround in the polls, suggesting it is on course to win the keys to No 10 later this year. More