Braverman denies she will defect to Reform as IT outage forces Labour Cobra meeting – live

Braverman denies she will defect to Reform as IT outage forces Labour Cobra meeting – live

The former home secretary appeared emotional making her general election victory speech

Tory party leadership hopeful Suella Braverman has denied she will defect to Reform UK if she loses the contest.

“There’s now so much antagonism towards Suella Braverman among MPs that there is now a generally held view that she will defect,” a senior Tory source told the i newspaper.

But a spokesperson for the ex-home secretary denied this, saying: “Suella has only recently been elected as a Conservative MP and has been a Conservative Party member for three decades.”

A Reform source told the i the party expects her to defect after losing the Tory leadership race, perhaps in the autumn, around conference time.

Meanwhile, Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour government is set to resume funding to UN Palestine relief agency UNRWA for Palestinians escaping the war in Gaza.

The Conservative government stopped the money alongside the US in January following accusations from Israel that staff members were involved in the 7 October attacks.

Following the major IT outage hitting airlines, train companies and banks, government officials held a Cobra emergency meeting to address the chaos for train and GP services and television channels.

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Minister to lead review of national resilience following Covid-19 Inquiry report

The Government has vowed to improve the UK’s “national resilience” after the UK Covid-19 Inquiry found there were “significant flaws” in preparing for a pandemic.

Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Pat McFadden told MPs he would lead a review of the country’s “national resilience against the range of risks that the UK faces”.

Mr McFadden highlighted the global IT outage affecting airlines, GP surgeries, banks, media organisations and other organisations on Friday as he made the commitment in the House of Commons.

Making a statement following the Covid Inquiry’s first report into preparedness for a pandemic, Mr McFadden said it painted a “stark” picture on the condition of public services.

The inquiry, chaired by Baroness Heather Hallett, said there was a “damaging absence of focus” on the measures and infrastructure that would be needed to deal with a fast-spreading disease, even though a coronavirus outbreak at pandemic scale “was foreseeable”.

Mr McFadden said: “We can only begin to imagine the anguish and the anger that people feel, because this report confirms what many have always believed: that the country was not as prepared as it should have been. That more could and should have been done.”

Salma Ouaguira19 July 2024 23:00

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Vaughan Gething ‘much, much better person’ than portrayed, former FM says

The former First Minister of Wales has defended Vaughan Gething – who announced he would resign after just four months in the post – as “a much, much better person than he has been portrayed”.

Mark Drakeford, who served as Welsh Labour leader and First Minister between 2018 and 2024, was speaking following months of scandals and bitter infighting that led to Mr Gething’s resignation on Tuesday.

He told BBC Walescast that there was “a great deal of goodwill available” to First Minister Mr Gething when he took office in March – becoming the first black leader of a European nation.

But Mr Drakeford acknowledged the “fuse was lit” when Mr Gething accepted a £200,000 donation to his leadership campaign from a company owned by a man twice convicted of environmental offences.

Vaughan Gething announced his resignation four months into the post (Ben Birchall/PA)
Vaughan Gething announced his resignation four months into the post (Ben Birchall/PA) (PA Wire)

Last month, Mr Gething lost a vote of no confidence in the Senedd following rows over the donation, and his decision to sack Hannah Blythyn as a minister.

Speaking to Walescast, Mr Drakeford said Mr Gething had “immense sadness” that matters had not worked out “in the way he absolutely would have hoped and had a right to expect”.

Mr Drakeford said on Thursday night: “My own observation at a bit of a distance was that there was a great deal of goodwill available to him in the earliest days.

“I think people were absolutely proud to have the first black leader anywhere in Europe, here in Wales.

“I think there are many ways in which you can explain how things went wrong and how things eventually got to a point where he was unable to carry on, but I think all of that will be something that people look back on beyond this weekend.”

Salma Ouaguira19 July 2024 22:30

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UK Government ‘absolutely committed’ to two-state Palestine solution – Lammy

Britain is “absolutely committed” to a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine “when the circumstances are right”, according to the Foreign Secretary.

David Lammy said a future plan must guarantee the security of Israel before adding the Palestinian cause is a “just cause”, as he outlined a need to work with Arab partners and build up the Palestinian Authority.

The Cabinet minister also expressed frustration at Israel’s parliament overwhelmingly passing a resolution rejecting the establishment of a Palestinian state, in a largely symbolic vote ahead of Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s trip to the United States.

Speaking in the Commons, Labour MP Gregor Poynton (Livingston) asked: “Does the Secretary of State agree with me that there is no peace without a two-state solution and that those opposing a two-state solution are wrong for both Israelis and the Palestinian people?”

Mr Lammy replied: “The vote by the Knesset yesterday was hugely disappointing. We believe passionately in two states.

“And I say to those who reject two states, if you are a proponent of one state then you do have to explain how everyone enjoys equality under the law.

“And if you are a proponent of no state then you are effectively suggesting that occupation continues and that is unacceptable to, I would have thought, all members of this House.”

(BBC)

Salma Ouaguira19 July 2024 22:00

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Migrant dies in latest tragedy during English Channel crossings

A migrant has died in the English Channel as “yet another life” was lost, following five other deaths of people attempting the journey in the last week.

Five people were pulled from the water after a “heavily loaded” boat got into difficulty off the coast of Calais, France, at around 1am on Friday, the French coastguard said.

Some 86 migrants were rescued and brought on board the French ship PSP Cormoran, but one unconscious person could not be saved, it added.

All the survivors were taken to Calais.

A Number 10 spokeswoman said: “It is a tragedy that yet another life has been lost and the Prime Minister spoke to such an incident just yesterday.”

She said the incident “underlines the stark reality of the dangers of these crossings and the callousness of the criminal gangs who are driving this”.

The spokeswoman said the Prime Minister and Home Secretary are “working to address this and step-up enforcement”, including through “work we’ll be carrying out with European partners”.

Salma Ouaguira19 July 2024 21:40

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Housing crisis is holding Britain back, says Deputy Prime Minister Rayner

Britain is being held back by its “housing crisis” and the new Government has a “mountain to climb” to address it, according to Angela Rayner.

The Deputy Prime Minister said the new Labour administration has already taken the first steps in response, as she pointed to plans to reform the planning process to boost house building.

Ms Rayner, who is also Housing Secretary, added that the Government is also committed to the “biggest wave” of social and affordable housing for a generation.

In the King’s Speech, the Government said the Planning and Infrastructure Bill would reform the system to help meet the goal of building 1.5 million more homes over the course of the Parliament – deciding “how, not if” properties are built.

Opening day three of the King’s Speech debate, Ms Rayner said she pledged to “always tell it as it is” during her maiden speech in 2015 before adding in the Commons: “I think that’s one promise I have kept to.

“Now I intend to fulfil another because we promised the people of this country that we will serve their interests and not ours.

“That starts by having the honesty to say that we will not be able to put right the mess of the past 14 years immediately, but after just two weeks we have already made a difference.”

(BBC)

Salma Ouaguira19 July 2024 21:21

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Tory architect of GCSEs welcomes Labour review of ‘outmoded’ tests

A Tory former education secretary who introduced the GCSE system in the late 1980s has branded the tests “outmoded” as peers debated the King’s Speech.

Lord Baker of Dorking welcomed Labour’s curriculum and assessment review, launched on Friday, which aims to ensure a child’s background does not prevent them from receiving a high standard of education.

Lord Baker, who went on to be home secretary in the early 1990s, suggested that GCSEs should be scrapped, along with other current assessments and curriculums.

The Conservative peer told ministers in the Lords: “Could I also surprise you by saying I welcome entirely all the proposals you put today to the House? I hope it’s the beginning of a great reforming Government.

“Endorsements by me of statements from the education department for the last 14 years have been rather rare events, but I hope this is a very good start.

“In your manifesto, you said that there’s going to be an expert-led review of the curriculum and assessment. Well done, congratulations, I urged the last government to do it again and again.

“Seven committees were set up that all urged that and said you should scrap EBacc and Progress 8 and also GCSEs, which I introduced, which I think are now outmoded.”

Lord Baker of Dorking (Dave Thompson/PA)
Lord Baker of Dorking (Dave Thompson/PA) (PA Archive)

Salma Ouaguira19 July 2024 21:00

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Tory leadership hopeful Suella Braverman denies claims she will defect to Reform UK

Tory leadership hopeful Suella Braverman has rejected suggestions she will likely defect to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK later this year if she loses the contest.

“There’s now so much antagonism towards Suella Braverman among MPs that there is now a generally held view that she will defect,” a senior Tory source told the i newspaper. “If she does, it will be a clear admission that she could not win the leadership and does not have the support of any MPs in the party.”

But a spokesperson for the ex-home secretary denied the claim, telling the outlet: “Suella has only recently been elected as a Conservative MP and has been a Conservative Party member for three decades.”

However, a Reform source was quoted as saying: “We expect her to take a tilt at the Tory leadership and then come over to us, perhaps in the autumn around conference time.

“She’ll fit in well.”

Andy Gregory19 July 2024 20:41

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Paused asylum claims will be dealt with ‘as a priority’, High Court told

The legal claims of several migrants once threatened with deportation to Rwanda could be resolved within a week after the Government pledged to process “paused” asylum applications “as a priority”, the High Court has been told.

Asylum seekers who arrived in the UK between January 1, 2022 and June 29, 2023 had been threatened with removal under the Migration and Economic Development Partnership (MEDP) signed with the east African country by the former Conservative government, a judge was told.

In February, the Home Office said asylum applications of those who could be removed had previously been “paused” amid legal challenges over the Rwanda scheme.

The plan was scrapped by the Labour Government shortly after it was elected earlier this month, but some migrants had already begun legal action over the so-called “pause policy”.

A preliminary hearing in London on Friday was due to hear the progress of the claims of two asylum seekers taking legal action, with the court previously told the Home Office had acted unlawfully by delaying its decision over their applications.

Salma Ouaguira19 July 2024 20:40

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Whitehall crisis officials working on IT outage, Cabinet minister says

Whitehall crisis officials are working to end the “inconvenience” caused by the major IT outage hitting airlines, train companies and banks, Cabinet minister Pat McFadden has said.

An emergency Cobra meeting was held at official level – rather than ministers – on Friday morning to discuss the chaos, with a further gathering expected later.

Ministers are being kept updated and are in touch with their sectors to tackle the fallout from the IT failures, with Transport Secretary Louise Haigh saying she was working “at pace with industry” after trains and flights ground to a halt.

US cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike is “actively working” to fix the flaw in a software update that sparked the outage that knocked businesses and institutions around the globe offline.

In the UK, transport networks were thrown into chaos, GP surgeries were unable to book appointments or access patient records and Sky News went off air.

Mr McFadden, who as the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster is in charge of the Whitehall machine, told the BBC: “We’ve had a major global IT outage today, causing huge inconvenience around the world, particularly for people travelling, for media organisations and for some parts of the health care system.”

Pressed on what the Government can do to help people, he said the “first thing we always want to identify is the cause” and then “to make sure that a fix is put in place and that the inconvenience that is being felt comes to an end as soon as possible”.

People trying to access the NHS app have also encountered problems (PA)
People trying to access the NHS app have also encountered problems (PA) (PA Wire)

Salma Ouaguira19 July 2024 20:20

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Four in 10 Tory MPs now on front bench as Sunak makes more appointments

Four in 10 Conservative MPs are now on the party’s front bench after Rishi Sunak made further appointments to his interim opposition team.

The former prime minister announced a flurry of junior appointments on Friday following the unveiling of his temporary shadow cabinet last week.

Friday’s announcement means there are now 51 MPs on the Conservative front bench, amounting to 42% of the total parliamentary party and underlining how far Tory numbers have dwindled.

Around 10 of those appointed on Friday are also doing more than one job.

Andrew Bowie, the shadow veterans minister, is now also a shadow energy security and net zero minister.

Hampshire MP Paul Holmes has been given three jobs, shadowing the Foreign Office and the Northern Ireland Office while also acting as a Tory whip.

Other appointments made on Friday include Alicia Kearns, the former Commons Foreign Affairs Committee chairwoman, who has been made a shadow Foreign Office minister, and Danny Kruger, co-chair of the New Conservatives group, who has been made a shadow defence minister.

Salma Ouaguira19 July 2024 20:00