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Sir Keir Starmer has branded Rishi Sunak “inaction man” over problems facing the UK’s schools and prisons.

The prime minister has been greeted with an array of problems since MPs returned to Westminster after the summer recess, including a crisis involving concrete in public buildings, the escape of a terror suspect from prison and allegations a researcher in Westminster spied for China.

The Labour leader attacked Mr Sunak’s record on his handling of the issues during a testy session of prime minister’s questions, telling the Commons: “Probation, prison, schools, China – yet again, inaction man fails to heed the warnings and then blames everyone else.”

He added: “He is failing to stop terrorists strolling out of prison, failing to guard Britain against hostile actors, he is completely failing to stop the boats. How can anyone trust him to protect the country?”

Mr Sunak’s problems began when the Department for Education (DfE) announced that more than 100 schools have been ordered to close or partially close due to the presence reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC), a type of concrete that is prone to collapse after a period of time.

The saga landed his education secretary, Gillian Keegan, in hot water after she was caught on camera complaining about not being thanked for doing a “f****** good job” over the crisis – comments for which she later apologised.

Tory candidates ‘dropped on MI5 advice’ – politics latest

More on Keir Starmer

The sense of chaos prompted by the school closures at the start of the autumn term was compounded by the escape of Daniel Khalife from Wandsworth prison, which prompted a four-day manhunt that culminated in in his arrest and capture in Northolt, west London.

And earlier this week, it was revealed that a parliamentary researcher with close links to senior Tory MPs was arrested on suspicion for spying for China – a charge he has strenuously denied.

Sir Keir called for a “full audit of UK-China relations” and highlighted findings from parliament’s intelligence and security committee that said the government had “no clear strategy when it comes to China”.

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A parliamentary researcher who has been arrested on suspicion of spying for China has said he is

“This has been raised time and time again. But, yet again, the prime minister fails to heed the warnings and he’s now desperately playing catch up,” he said.

The prime minister replied: “As always, the leader of the Opposition is just playing catch up and hasn’t caught up with the reality of what’s actually happening.”

Labour has sought to use the incidents to highlight the Conservatives’ record in government, particularly with regard to spending and management.

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Another issue the Opposition has sought to highlight is the small boats crisis in the Channel, after the recent good weather saw more people make the perilous journey.

Speaking in the Commons, Sir Keir said Suella Braverman’s first anniversary as home secretary had coincided with 40,000 people making the journey, adding with a joke: “That is if you overlook the six days she missed when she was deemed a national security risk.”

Mr Sunak hit back by pointing to the government’s Levelling Up Bill, which he said would result in more house-building.

The Tories have accused Labour of “blocking” housebuilding by opposing its plans to relax environmental rules to boost housebuilding.

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Current EU-era rules mean that when developers build new homes in protected areas they are required to provide mitigations to ensure no new additional nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus make it into rivers and lakes.

Labour opposes the change on the grounds it will increase river pollution but ministers believe removing the requirements will “unblock” 100,000 new homes by 2030.

Mr Sunak told MPs: “He talks about trust, he tried in this House to talk the talk on housebuilding, but at the first sign of a cheap political hit, what did he do? He has caved in.

“Rather than make the right long-term decisions for the country he has taken the easy way out,” he said.

“It is typical of the principles-free, conviction-free type of leadership that he offers.

“Flip-flopping from being a builder to a blocker. The British people can’t trust a word he says.”

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Gensler separates Bitcoin from pack, calls most crypto ‘highly speculative’

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Gensler separates Bitcoin from pack, calls most crypto ‘highly speculative’

Former US Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler renewed his warning to investors about the risks of cryptocurrencies, calling most of the market “highly speculative” in a new Bloomberg interview on Tuesday.

He carved out Bitcoin (BTC) as comparatively closer to a commodity while stressing that most tokens don’t offer “a dividend” or “usual returns.”

Gensler framed the current market backdrop as a reckoning consistent with warnings he made while in office that the global public’s fascination with cryptocurrencies doesn’t equate to fundamentals.

“All the thousands of other tokens, not the stablecoins that are backed by US dollars, but all the thousands of other tokens, you have to ask yourself, what are the fundamentals? What’s underlying it… The investing public just needs to be aware of those risks,” he said.

Gensler’s record and industry backlash

Gensler led the SEC from April 17, 2021, to Jan. 20, 2025, overseeing an aggressive enforcement agenda that included lawsuits against major crypto intermediaries and the view that many tokens are unregistered securities.

Related: House Republicans to probe Gary Gensler’s deleted texts

The industry winced at high‑profile actions against exchanges and staking programs, as well as the posture that most token issuers fell afoul of registration rules.

Gary Gensler labels crypto as “highly speculative.” Source: Bloomberg

Under Gensler’s tenure, Coinbase was sued by the SEC for operating as an unregistered exchange, broker and clearing agency, and for offering an unregistered staking-as-a-service program. Kraken was also forced to shut its US staking program and pay a $30 million penalty.

The politicization of crypto

Pushed on the politicization of crypto, including references to the Trump family’s crypto involvement by the Bloomberg interviewer, the former chair rejected the framing.

“No, I don’t think so,” he said, arguing it’s more about capital markets fairness and “commonsense rules of the road,” than a “Democrat versus Republican thing.”

He added: “When you buy and sell a stock or a bond, you want to get various information,” and “the same treatment as the big investors.” That’s the fairness underpinning US capital markets.

Related: Coinbase files FOIA to see how much the SEC’s ‘war on crypto’ cost

ETFs and the drift to centralization

On ETFs, Gensler said finance “ever since antiquity… goes toward centralization,” so it’s unsurprising that an ecosystem born decentralized has become “more integrated and more centralized.”

He noted that investors can already express themselves in gold and silver through exchange‑traded funds, and that during his tenure, the first US Bitcoin futures ETFs were approved, tying parts of crypto’s plumbing more closely to traditional markets.

Gensler’s latest comments draw a familiar line: Bitcoin sits in a different bucket, while most other tokens remain, in his view, speculative and light on fundamentals.

Even out of office, his framing will echo through courts, compliance desks and allocation committees weighing BTC’s status against persistent regulatory caution of altcoins.

Magazine: Solana vs Ethereum ETFs, Facebook’s influence on Bitwise — Hunter Horsley