Politics

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

Steerpike

Eddie Izzard loses (again)

Oh dear. It seems that the curse of Izzard has struck again. The stand-up comedian and staunch Labour member has something of an unenviable track record when it comes to personal endorsements, having backed the euro, Ken Livingstone in 2008, Gordon Brown in 2010, ‘Yes2AV’ in 2011, Ed Miliband and then Andy Burnham in 2015, before subsequently advocating Remain in 2016 and then suffering personal defeat in that year’s Labour NEC elections. Undaunted by this litany of failure, Izzard opted in October to stand as the party’s candidate for the safe seat of Sheffield Central. Much hand-wringing followed, with Sir Keir Starmer refusing to say if Izzard, who identifies as

Letting pharmacists prescribe would ease the strain on the NHS

The NHS is facing its own winter of discontent: A&E waiting times are surging, GP availability is plunging and a strike is brewing. The Communication Workers’ Union (CWU), says Britain is facing a ‘de facto general strike’: from nurses to ambulance drivers to doctors – even in emergency departments and cancer centres – as they ask for pay rises.  Today the Sunday Telegraph reports that (privately-run) pharmacies may be called in to help and given power to prescribe for simple conditions to help ease pressures in A&E departments. I argue in the current edition of The Spectator how they could easily help plug plug the gap that exists between GPs

Why the Rosetta Stone shouldn’t be returned to Egypt

The Rosetta Stone is said to be the most visited object in the British Museum. By and large the most popular, most beautiful or most impressive objects are found at the top of the shopping list of those who want to send objects back to their place of origin. Yet here is a piece of debris that, if installed in the Grand Egyptian Museum in Giza, would look as out of place as a dirty pair of trainers in the Athenaeum. This, after all is (or rather will be, after endless delays in its opening) the final resting place of Tutankhamun, a museum rich in gold and lapis lazuli lying

Sunday shows round-up: Zahawi’s plea to striking unions

Nadhim Zahawi: We may deploy the military to ‘minimise disruption’ over Christmas Conservative party chairman Nadhim Zahawi was in the hot seat this morning. He spoke to Sophy Ridge about strike action over the coming weeks, urging unions not to disrupt people’s Christmases. With industrial action not just limited to the railway network, but spreading to the NHS, teachers, the fire service, immigration officials, postal workers and many more, Zahawi stressed that the government was looking at all the options to try and keep the country’s public services operating over a December of discontent: Zahawi: ‘I’m very proud’ of the Online Safety bill The Online Safety bill returns to Parliament

Is Xi losing control of China’s zero Covid protests?

Tony Blair recently described the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)’s zero-Covid policy as ‘completely irrational’. He is completely wrong. Within the context of the CCP’s interests, it makes sense. ‘Completely political’ would have been nearer the mark, but not a bull’s eye. When Covid first appeared, the CCP got it right. Lockdowns and restrictions meant the China largely escaped deaths and serious illness. Later the mistakes – or rather the inevitabilities of the system – kicked in. China’s home-produced vaccines were insufficiently effective, but the CCP refused to use foreign vaccines, even though they had been licensed for use within China. Partly, this was misplaced nationalistic pride. But ever wary of

The paradox at the heart of Russia’s missile strategy

Russia has launched five waves of missile strikes against Ukraine’s civilian infrastructures since 10 October. These strikes have damaged or destroyed almost half of Ukraine’s electricity infrastructure and made blackouts a way of life across Ukraine and neighboring Moldova. Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has aptly accused Russia of ‘weaponising winter’ against Ukraine and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has warned that Russia will not ‘calm down’ as long as it has missiles. Russia’s deployment of a warship capable of carrying Kalibr missiles to the Black Sea suggests that the worst may be yet to come for Ukraine’s war-ravaged cities. Russian propagandists have framed these strikes as retribution for the ‘Donbas

Freddy Gray

How Twitter suppressed the Hunter Biden laptop story

For weeks now, Twitter’s new chief Elon Musk has been promising to reveal what really happened behind the scenes at the social media platform in the run up to the 2020 presidential election.  Well, yesterday, Musk did — through the journalist Matt Taibbi. It’s a big story, one that free speech supporters everywhere should take seriously, especially in the United Kingdom where we are on the verge of passing the Online Safety Bill. What happened at Twitter in 2020 shows how easily concern about ‘safety’ can, under political pressure, morph into corruption and censorship.  Taibbi, apparently directed by Musk, has released a long Twitter ‘thread’ citing company emails which show

Cindy Yu

Is Rishi Sunak going soft on China?

14 min listen

Katy Balls speaks to Cindy Yu, James Forsyth and Fraser Nelson about the Prime Minister’s attitudes towards China and how to deal with the challenges it presents for the UK and the world. 

Why the Met struggles to sack rogue police officers

This week, the charity CrimeStoppers, which receives anonymous tip offs from the public, launched a new hotline – for people to report corruption and abuse by police officers. It’s part of a drive by the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, Sir Mark Rowley, to ‘expose those who have undermined the Met’s integrity’ following a series of scandals which have shattered confidence in the force and left it in ‘special measures’.  Sir Mark says he employs 3,000 officers who can’t do their job properly because of health, performance or misconduct concerns, including 500 who are suspended or on restricted duties. About 100 are allowed to work only in backroom roles. ‘It’s completely mad

Mark Galeotti

Putin’s peace talks bluff has been called out

It is almost as if Vladimir Putin doesn’t mean it when he claims to be open to peace talks with Ukraine. Having originally said they have ‘no preconditions’ on peace talks with Ukraine, the Russians are now throwing obstacles in their way, as their bluff is called. As one US official told me, ‘we are not at all backing away from our support for Ukraine, but it is time to start at least thinking about endgames’ After US President Joe Biden, in a joint press conference on Thursday with French President Emmanuel Macron, made very vague suggestions of being ‘happy to sit down with Putin to see what he wants,

Steerpike

Schools minister’s unfortunate mix-up

Tory politicians are dropping like flies at the moment – with former cabinet minister Sajid Javid the latest in a growing line of MPs to announce that he won’t be standing for office at the next general election. So perhaps it’s not surprising that Tory ministers are currently looking for silver linings wherever they can find them. Mr S wonders if that’s why schools minister Nick Gibb was so happy to see Labour Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves at the National Teaching Awards last Saturday. According to Mr S’s mole at the event, Gibb wandered over to Reeves, who was chatting with a group of head teachers, and began to boast

The EU’s bid to control Hungary may backfire

To anyone looking in from the outside, the ongoing argument between Budapest and Brussels over EU subsidies, which flared up again this week, looks both drearily legalistic and eye-glazingly boring. However, as often happens with the EU and its member states in eastern Europe, there is a good deal more to all this than meets the eye. At issue is a tad over €13 billion: €7.5 billion in ‘cohesion funds’ (i.e. regular subsidies to help out poorer states) and €5.8 billion in Covid recovery funds. Both would normally have gone to Hungary without serious question. However, these are not normal times. Brussels has arguments with Hungary about what it refers to

Kate Andrews

Sunak and Hunt’s energy windfall tax is put to the test

And so it begins. French energy company TotalEnergies SE has become the first out of the gate to announce a change of plans for investment directly linked to the energy profits levy brought in by Rishi Sunak this spring, and expanded by Jeremy Hunt. The company says it will cut back its investment plan by 25 per cent next year, which will see roughly £100 million directed elsewhere. While this is one of the first companies to officially announce investment changes in the North Sea due to the windfall tax, it may not be the last. Shell is making similar noises; the company, so far, has used a loophole which

Katy Balls

Sajid Javid to stand down at next election

Sajid Javid has become the latest Conservative MP to signal that they will be standing down at the next election. Announcing the news in a letter to his party chairman posted on social media, the former chancellor said the current boundary review deadline – which has seen MPs asked to signal by 5 December whether they want to stand again – had ‘accelerated’ his decision, which he’d come to ‘after much reflection’. Javid says it is a decision he has ‘wrestled with for some time’. But the timing of it – with 11 other Tory MPs set to step down at the next election – means that it will inevitably be seen

Patrick O'Flynn

Why do so many people now hate the Tories?

When Labour lost Hartlepool to the Tories in a parliamentary by-election 18 months ago, Keir Starmer was reported to have asked aides: ‘Why does everybody hate us?’ After the heavy Tory defeat in last night’s City of Chester by-election, Rishi Sunak would do well to pose the same question to his own lieutenants. Because the result confirms him as the second Conservative prime minister in a row not to receive any kind of electoral honeymoon. That Labour held Chester will in itself raise few eyebrows. After all, opposition parties are supposed to find defending their own seats at by-elections pretty straightforward. But the heavy extent of the Conservative defeat in a

Katy Balls

The Kezia Dugdale Edition

Kezia Dugdale was the leader of the Scottish Labour party from 2015 to 2017, taking on the job at a tough time following a near-wipeout defeat at Westminster. She served as an MSP for the Lothian region until 2019, and now runs the John Smith Centre for Public Service at the University of Glasgow.  On the podcast, Kezia talks about her rapid rise through the ranks, the impact of the independence referendum on Scottish Labour; her own stint on ‘I’m a Celebrity…’; whether she is ‘SNP curious’ and what can be done to stop young people leaving politics.

Nick Tyrone

The Chester by-election marks the end of Sunak’s honeymoon

The biggest question in British politics at the moment is whether the massive poll leads Labour has over the Conservative party will hold. With Labour polling as high as 51 per cent and the Tories as low as 21 per cent in the past month, the next election could see a 1997 style result – or even worse, from a Conservative perspective. The prospect of existential oblivion can’t be totally discounted. That’s what makes yesterday’s City of Chester by-election so interesting. It was Sunak’s first electoral contest as prime minister. A chance to see if he could beat the bad news expressed in every national survey of voting intent. A