Politics

Read about the latest UK political news, views and analysis.

James Heale

Which party has the crypto factor?

He helped ‘break’ the Bank of England – but now Scott Bessent is helping to shape its future. As a young hedge-fund manager, he served in George Soros’s firm when it made $1 billion on Black Wednesday. But as Donald Trump’s Treasury Secretary, he has overseen an explosion in cryptocurrencies this year which has left many in London looking on enviously. While the use of cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin has trebled in Britain since 2021, this country’s governing framework has struggled to keep up. A shortage of political bandwidth has meant the UK lacks a national equivalent to Europe’s MiCA rules or America’s Genius Act, passed in July. Our policy

Steerpike

Spectator Parliamentarian of the Year 2025, in pictures

In 2025, Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour government has had a tough time. From U-turns to freebie fiascos to by-election losses the party of government has been having a pretty rough ride. New Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood, however, won the audience with a pithy speech that was almost just rivalled by Ed Miliband. You can’t say they don’t try, eh?  It was a cross-party affair, with Liberal Democrats, Reform MPs and even the Greens seeing awards coming their way. Guest of honour James Cleverly gave a fantastic performance and insisted that it was not him but, er, Robert Jenrick, that is angling for a leadership challenge. There’s always room for both,

Steerpike

Lammy loses Chevening residence

Sir Keir Starmer’s September reshuffle proved a blessing for some people and a curse for others. Take Shabana Mahmood, for example, whose promotion from Lord Chancellor to Home Secretary has seen her profile grow almost exponentially. Then there are others, like the beleaguered David Lammy, who lost the Foreign Secretary title in his move to justice. Lammy was also made Deputy Prime Minister after Angela Rayner was forced to resign over her tax affairs, but the largely ineffective role isn’t much of a silver lining. And there’s more bad news for the new Justice Secretary – it transpires he will be losing his Chevening resident too. A written question submitted

Stephen Daisley

Why doesn’t Kate Forbes want the SNP to talk about currency?

What’s the Gaelic for ‘Streisand effect’? I would guess buaidh Streisand but someone should ask Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch MSP Kate Forbes, who is experiencing first-hand what the ‘The Way We Were’ singer learnt the hard way two decades ago: attempts at censorship only bring attention to the material you wish to keep secret. The deputy first minister, it is claimed, told a meeting of her local SNP branch two months ago: ‘We must avoid publicly talking about currency. The priority is an element of stability, and then move to a Scottish currency.’ And so, naturally, the purported quote has been leaked to the Times, with the SNP declining to

What is the point of kicking Andrew out of Royal Lodge?

When the Chancellor declares that it is important Prince Andrew ‘pays his way’, in reference to his living arrangements at Royal Lodge, it is difficult not to wince. For the saving at stake is, by any serious reckoning, paltry – about £367,000 a year in additional income to the Exchequer, by my calculations. Not nothing, certainly, but a rounding error in the nation’s accounts, and a curious fixation for a Minister of the Crown who has managed to turn a £20 billion fiscal gap into one nearer £50bn within a single season of ministerial arithmetic – a hole in the nation’s finances that grows every time she opens her mouth.

Labour’s attack on Brexit won’t work

In life, as in film, you need a baddie. Whether it’s Dr No, Nurse Ratched or Voldemort, without someone to root against you have no story. In government, the bad guy (domestically at least) tends to be your predecessors. The Conservatives spent the best part of 14 years blaming the Labour party, with a pitstop in between to dump on their erstwhile coalition partners, the Liberal Democrats. Labour certainly didn’t help themselves by leaving that infamous note, meant in jest, declaring ‘there is no money left’; the Tories in turn left the mini-Budget for Keir Starmer. Soon, however, we will have a new (old) villain. Labour has apparently briefed that

Steerpike

Migrant sex offender paid £500 to leave UK quietly

The case of Hadush Kebatu has plagued the Labour government for months. In summer, it emerged the Ethiopian asylum seeker was facing charges of sexual assaulting a 14-year-old girl. This sparked the Epping protests outside Essex’s Bell Hotel which amplified nationwide outrage about asylum seeker hotels. Kebatu was found guilty – but last week it transpired the sex offender had been accidentally freed from prison. He was found some days later and has now been deported £500 richer. Alright for some! The Prime Minister’s spokesperson explained that Kebatu was ‘forcibly deported’ to Ethiopia after being put on a flight on Tuesday evening. But it transpires that the asylum seeker didn’t

Have you heard Keir Starmer’s grating new catchphrase?

‘That’s the difference a Labour government makes!’ The Prime Minister has taken to ending the self-congratulatory rants he deploys in lieu of answers in the House of Commons with this irritating catchphrase. As if the colony of gremlins currently running the country are to be advertised to us like 1950s household goods. One can imagine Sir Keir, strapped into a pinny, removing a burned cake from the oven, turning to the camera and saying, ‘that’s the difference a Labour government makes!’ He wheeled out this supremely annoying verbal tic a number of times at Prime Minister’s Questions. The problem with it, of course, is that most of the differences a

Isabel Hardman

Why Starmer is back to attacking the Tories at PMQs

Once again, the key takeaway from today’s Prime Minister’s Questions is what Keir Starmer didn’t say, rather than what he did. Kemi Badenoch wanted to use the session to tee up the Budget, or more specifically to tee up the tax rises that Labour is going to have to announce in that fiscal event. And Starmer wanted to use his answers to avoid the questions, while also trumpeting what he saw as Labour’s achievements on the economy. For once in a good long while, the Tories were getting their share of attacks from the Prime Minister too Badenoch was ready for Starmer dodging the question of whether he still stands

Steerpike

Watch: Starmer blasts Reform as ‘Putin-friendly’

It was a punchy Prime Minister’s Questions session today, with Tory leader Kemi Badenoch landing some punches on the PM over the economy. Sir Keir Starmer refused to say whether Chancellor Rachel Reeves would break Labour’s manifesto commitment to not raise income tax, national insurance contributions or VAT, and would not be drawn on whether she would freeze thresholds in next month’s Budget. How interesting… Sir Ed Davey took a different tack, with the Lib Dem leader probing Starmer on Russia. Davey brought up the ex-Reform Welsh leader Nathan Gill who was found guilty of accepting bribes from Russia during his time in the European parliament. The Lib Dem man

Who will ‘take back control’ of the economy?

14 min listen

Kemi Badenoch continues to look more confident at PMQs – although there are always going to be some easy goals when you lead on the economy. Today she pressed the Prime Minister on Labour’s manifesto pledge not to raise income tax, VAT or national insurance – which he dodged – as well as repeating her offer to work with Labour towards a cross-party solution to the welfare problem. What do we know about the Budget at the end of next month? And are we any closer to understanding what a ‘working person’ actually is?  Lucy Dunn speaks to Tim Shipman and Michael Simmons. Produced by Oscar Edmondson.

Police Scotland have treated Susan Smith terribly

Susan Smith is a contemporary feminist heroine, a staunch defender of women’s rights against the increasingly unhinged demands of trans activists. As a founding member of the campaign group For Women Scotland (FWS), Smith was at the forefront of the fight against SNP plans to introduce self-ID. And, boy, was she effective. Along with her FWS colleagues Marion Calder and Trina Budge, Smith brought a case against the Scottish government which saw the supreme court rule in April that, when it comes to the law, sex is a matter of biology rather than feelings. That ruling, applicable across the UK, killed off the fantastical notion that trans-identifying men are women.

Brendan O’Neill

The Uxbridge killing is the final straw

His name was Wayne Broadhurst. He was 49 years old. He reportedly worked as a refuse collector. He was by all accounts well liked in his local town. And yesterday his life was ended in the most savage manner imaginable. He was stabbed to death as he walked his dog on a brisk, bright Tuesday afternoon. The suspect is a 22-year-old Afghan national, who came to Britain on the back of a lorry in 2020 and was subsequently granted asylum. Which politicians will say Wayne Broadhurst’s name today? Which of them will say his life mattered? The attack took place in chill, suburban Uxbridge, a part of outer London I

Major and Heseltine’s attacks on Reform are hard to take seriously

That strange sound coming from their primeval swamp is the noise of two Tory dinosaurs trumpeting their disdain and disapproval of Nigel Farage’s Reform UK. As if in coordinated stereo, former prime minister John Major, 82, and his erstwhile rival for the party leadership, Michael Heseltine, 92, have both sounded off with dire warnings to their old party against any idea forming a pact with Reform. ‘I want to expose Reform for what they are,’ Michael Heseltine said Major, whose lacklustre premiership ended in 1997 with his landslide defeat by Tony Blair’s New Labour, said that a pact with the rising populist party which is leading both Labour and the Tories in the

Education officials are clueless about education

To understand why education reform – and school improvement – is so hard it helps to get inside the mind of the officials who are supposed to be driving higher standards. This week Jonathan Slater, a former Department for Education permanent secretary, published a report for UCL Policy Lab that perfectly illustrates many senior officials’ poor understanding of schools and of accountability in particular.  Slater is, admirably, determined to improve educational outcomes for poorer children. But in my view he is also appallingly ignorant about how to actually achieve improvement. He repeats the call – from those anxious to cover up under-performance – to replace Ofsted inspections (other than for

Steerpike

Hermer takes aim at Kemi over China spy case

Back to the collapsed China spy case. Attorney General Lord Hermer is this morning giving evidence to the joint committee on the national security strategy about the matter. He has been quizzed on the context of the case, how it could have been handled differently and the legislation involved. But while Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour government has come under scrutiny about its involvement, now Lord Hermer has pointed the finger at the Tories and, er, Kemi Badenoch. Hermer told the committee that the former Conservative government was not ambivalent about whether China was an enemy or not. The problem, he said, was that ‘the government’s position was that it was

Jake Wallis Simons

What is Hamas doing at a five-star hotel in Cairo?

Imagine the horror of discovering that you have been rubbing shoulders with terrorists. No, I’m not talking about those gullible souls who join the Gaza marches in London, but about the British airline crew who had an unfortunate brush with Hamas at a five-star Marriott hotel in Cairo. Full marks to the Daily Mail, whose veteran photographer Mark Large snapped several of the 154 jihadis freed by Israel as they lived it up at the inexplicably named Renaissance Cairo Mirage City. What’s a terrorist to do? You recruit suicide bombers, oversee a bus bombing or murder a police officer, get banged up, luck out with early release as part of an

Ross Clark

No wonder Labour has failed to build more houses

Should anyone really be surprised at the House Builders’ Federation’s (HBF) warning that the government has little chance of hitting its target of building 1.5 million new homes over the course of this Parliament? The target of 300,000 new homes a year has become something of a holy grail for previous governments, too. If Boris Johnson and, before him, Gordon Brown failed in their housebuilding ambitions, why did the present government think it would do any better? The mistake of former housing minister Angela Rayner and others in the government was to imagine that the main problem with low rates of house-building was Tory-voting nimbys in the shires who were