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Instances of abuse reported to the police by politicians are not always followed up by forces, an MP has told Sky News, as he recalled having his car vandalised and office subject to an arson attack.

Andrew Rosindell, Conservative MP for Romford, said there are “a lot more nasty people around than ever before”.

Killing of MP described as ‘attack on our democracy’ – follow live updates

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Priti Patel: ‘We need to close any security gaps’

Southend West MP Sir David Amess was killed in an attack on Friday which saw him stabbed multiple times as he carried out a constituency surgery in Leigh-on-Sea.

Sky News understands that the terror suspect arrested following the killing of Sir David is the son of a former senior Somali government official – and that he made an appointment to see the MP via his constituency office.

Mr Rosindell, whose constituency is close to Southend West, described the attack as “pure evil”.

Speaking in Leigh-on-Sea alongside Labour MP Wes Streeting, whose Ilford North constituency borders his, he said there would probably have to be some changes to MPs’ security arrangements, but added: “We cannot allow that to undermine the democratic traditions of this country.”

More on Sir David Amess

Speaking about his own experiences during 20 years as an MP, Mr Rosindell told Trevor Phillips on Sunday: “They are willing to say and do things in a way that I would never have thought possible in this country. And we all have to be really aware and keep our wits about us.

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Should more be done to protect MPs?

“The abuse we get on social media, by emails, I mean we get it all the time. But we brush it off because we’ve got a job to do. And we tell the police, the police have got other things to do, it’s not always followed up.

“And I think probably this has all got to change, we have got to take this a bit more seriously in future.

“My office was arsoned, my car was smashed up, someone tried to get into my house and injure me – managed to stop them.

“All these things have happened over the years, but you take it in your stride because our priority is to get on with our job, and we do tend to not think much about our own security, I’m afraid. But I’m thinking now maybe we should do a bit more.”

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‘He fought for us’ : Locals mourns loss of MP

Asked about potential further security measures, Mr Rosindell said: “Certainly our constituency surgeries, there’s going to have to be some new arrangements for those.

“But we can’t let evil destroy democracy. This was pure evil what happened here. We cannot allow that to undermine the democratic traditions of this country.

“So whatever happens, Wes, myself and all Members of Parliament, we’re going to be out there serving our constituents, we’re not going to let this defeat us, we will still be there and doing the job we were elected to do.”

Mr Rosindell described Sir David as a “wonderful person, a really genuine friend”.

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Sir David Amess: A life in politics

“We’re going to miss him. He was a fantastic MP and a great friend and to lose him in such tragic circumstances is very difficult for us to accept and understand,” he said.

“It’s a very sad moment for all of us.”

This was echoed by Mr Streeting, who said he was “one of those great characters in Parliament”.

“Everyone knew him because you couldn’t not know him,” he told Sky News.

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Leaders unite to pay tribute to Sir David

“He was renowned for the causes he took up, a terrific sense of humour and also being the most outstanding champion for his constituency.”

Mr Streeting added: “He was loved right across the political spectrum and you’ve heard that in recent days from some of my Labour colleagues, who absolutely loved David.”

He said he did not want to “rush to snap judgements” but acknowledged that “something has got to change”.

The pair both called for greater respect in political discourse, emphasising that politicians from different parties can disagree on issues but still treat each other with civility.

“We all have a responsibility to show respect for each other, to show kindness, despite our political differences,” Mr Rosindell said.

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Leaders unite to pay tribute to Sir David

“Wes and I are probably examples of that, we’re neighbouring seats, we’ve never had a bad word to say about each other, in fact quite the opposite.

“But we have different views on issues, we always will, because we’re different parties, but it doesn’t stop us being friends and colleagues, it doesn’t stop us working together on issues.”

Mr Streeting said the “argy bargy of debate” is part of politics, but it should not take the killing of an MP to remind people of the fact that politicians have more in common than what divides them.

“When I look across the Commons chamber to Conservative MPs, I don’t see a bunch of people who are evil, I see people who, like me, are motivated by a commitment to public service and wanting to make our country a better place, we just differ on how to do that,” he said.

“That’s what politics is all about and I think we can make that point more often, without losing robust debate.”

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Sir Keir Starmer to launch plan for two million more NHS appointments

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Sir Keir Starmer to launch plan for two million more NHS appointments

Sir Keir Starmer will launch his plan to deliver millions more appointments across the NHS and to reduce waiting times to 18 weeks over the next five years.

The prime minister will lay out how greater access to community diagnostic centres (CDCs) will help deliver up to half a million more appointments, alongside 14 new surgical hubs and three expanded existing hubs.

Up to a million appointments could be freed up by giving patients the choice to forego follow-up appointments currently booked by default, the government says.

Overall, the plan will involve a drive to deliver two million extra appointments by the end of next year.

The aim of the reforms is that by the end of March 2026, an extra 450,000 patients will be treated within 18 weeks.

Figures published by NHS England last month showed an estimated 7.54 million treatments were waiting to be carried out at the end of October – the lowest figure since March 2024.

According to the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS), the last time the NHS met the target of 92% of patients receiving treatment within 18 weeks was in 2015.

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The reforms for England will also see an overhaul of the NHS app to give patients greater choice over where they choose to have their appointment and will also provide greater detail to the patient including their results and waiting times.

The first step in the digital overhaul will be completed by March 2025, when patients at over 85% of acute trusts will be able to view their appointment details via the NHS app, the government said.

They’ll also be able to contact their provider and receive updates, including how long they are likely to wait for treatment.

In the effort to free-up one million appointments, patients will be given more choice over non-essential follow up appointments, while GPs will also be given funding to receive specialist advice from doctors before they make any referrals.

Sir Keir is expected to say: “This government promised change and that is what I am fighting every day to deliver.

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Streeting: ‘We’re going as far and as fast as we can’

“NHS backlogs have ballooned in recent years, leaving millions of patients languishing on waiting lists, often in pain or fear. Lives on hold. Potential unfulfilled.

“This elective reform plan will deliver on our promise to end the backlogs. Millions more appointments. Greater choice and convenience for patients. Staff once again able to give the standard of care they desperately want to.”

The CDCs will be open 12 hours a day and seven days a week wherever possible. Patients will be able to access a broader range of appointments in locations that are more convenient for them and which may speed up the pace of treatment.

The government believes its plan will help it to deliver the equivalent to 40,000 extra appointments a week in its first year – which was one of Sir Keir’s six key pledges.

Chancellor Rachel Reeve pledged £22bn over the next two years to cut NHS waiting times in her October budget, but some in the sector fear a workforce shortage means the prime minister’s ambitions will be hard to achieve.

Read more:
‘Radical’ NHS reforms will be hard for a struggling workforce to achieve

Single women having IVF triples in a decade

There have been some concerns that giving patients choice of the location of their treatment may see some hospitals in greater demand than others – but Health Secretary Wes Streeting said this was a “matter of principle”.

“When I was diagnosed with kidney cancer, I was inundated with colleagues in parliament who were asking who my surgeon was, whether I was going to the best place for treatment, whether I was exercising my right to choose in the NHS,” he said.

“Now, it turned out I had one of the best kidney cancer surgeons in the country assigned to me by the NHS, so I was lucky.

“But frankly, someone like my mum as a cleaner should have as much choice and power in the NHS as her son, the health secretary.”

NHS chief executive Amanda Pritchard said the government’s plan was an “ambitious blueprint”.

“The radical reforms in this plan will not only allow us to deliver millions more tests, appointments and operations, but do things differently too – boosting convenience and putting more power in the hands of patients, especially through the NHS app.”

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As he falls out with Farage, how should politicians handle Elon Musk?

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As he falls out with Farage, how should politicians handle Elon Musk?

For British politicians, the question of the moment is how do you handle Elon Musk?

The billionaire owner of X and Tesla, soon to take up a role as efficiency tsar in the Trump administration, has been throwing grenades almost every hour about British politics on his social media platform and dominating the headlines.

Much of it is inflammatory claims about Keir Starmer and his government – despite their efforts to build good relations with Donald Trump.

And until today, enthusiastic backing for Nigel Farage, who only in mid-December met Musk in the glitzy surroundings of Mar-a-Lago to talk money, amid reports he was considering a $100m donation to Reform.

Then bam! – after Farage repeatedly hailed Musk as a “hero” who made Reform “look cool” and was looking forward to a chat at Trump’s inauguration – the tables have turned rather dramatically.

Musk tweeted that Farage “doesn’t have what it takes” to lead the party and that Reform needs a new leader.

His change of heart comes after Musk has spent days intensively tweeting about grooming gangs in the UK, and his support for jailed far right activist Tommy Robinson, who has seized on this issue.

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Farage, who has tried to distance himself from Robinson for most of his career, thinks this is the reason for the fall out, responding that he was surprised but added: “My view remains that Tommy Robinson is not right for Reform and I never sell out my principles.”

Last week, Musk posted a series of tweets calling for Robinson – real name Stephen Yaxley-Lennon – to be released from prison, where he is serving an 18-month sentence for contempt of court for repeating false allegations against a Syrian refugee.

Read more:
Reform deputy praises ‘popular’ Musk – as Labour criticises grooming gangs intervention

Elon Musk must be a busy man – so why is he so interested in UK politics?
Badenoch ‘unlikely to apologise over fake Reform membership claim’

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Grooming victim’s father, Marlon West, speaks to Sky News.

What does this spat mean for Reform?

In the short-term, Reform would hardly have wanted an unexpected falling out just as they are trumpeting rising membership figures and Farage is poised to meet him in Washington.

But Farage sees Robinson as toxic for his brand, and a distraction from his mission of building a campaign machine to fight the next UK general election – even if he loses powerful friends.

The prospect of a donation from Musk – who has donated huge sums to Donald Trump’s campaign, would have been an enticing one, but there were already significant legal questions around it, under UK election rules.

Farage’s friendship with Trump, going back to his first term as president, also does not seem to have been affected, so a hotline to the White House is still possible.

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Reform UK leader Nigel Farage has told Sky News that Tommy Robinson is not welcome in his party.

What does it mean for Starmer and Labour?

It’s unclear what Trump thinks about Musk’s recent obsession with British politics altogether – as he rails against Keir Starmer and other US allies hour by hour, and whether this online trolling will be tolerated after he takes up his job in the White House.

This is a question that Labour officials are eagerly awaiting the answer to, although there may be some relief that the criticism is now being turned on Farage.

Musk has – in the last day or two alone – made a series of incendiary and unfounded accusations against Starmer, claiming he was “complicit in the rape of Britain”, that he is “guilty of terrible crimes” and questioning whether he, as director of public prosecutions, “allowed rape gangs to exploit young girls without facing justice?”

Wes Streeting, the health secretary, doing interviews today, said Musk’s criticism was “completely ill-judged and ill-founded” and that Starmer had done a huge amount to support victims and achieve prosecutions in grooming cases. But largely, the government are trying to ignore the noise.

Kemi Badenoch was accused of dancing to Musk’s tune by calling for a national inquiry into grooming gangs – the Conservatives having rejected one when in government just two years ago.

An unelected US-based billionaire is now setting a cat among the pigeons for all parties in Britain – and throwing issues into the limelight which none will find easy to ignore.

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‘75% of Ripple’s open roles are now US-based’ — CEO Brad Garlinghouse

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<div>'75% of Ripple’s open roles are now US-based' — CEO Brad Garlinghouse</div>

“This is even more personal after Gensler’s SEC effectively froze our business opportunities here at home for years,” the CEO wrote.

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