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Sir Keir Starmer mocked Rishi Sunak over the Conservatives’ two by-election defeats last week, as he pressed him on the cost of living crisis at Prime Minister’s Questions.

Labour took both Tamworth and Mid Befordshire from the Conservatives after Thursday’s vote, overturning huge majorities in a double blow for the government.

In the Commons today, the Labour leader demanded a general election, saying Mr Sunak was “oblivious” to the struggles being felt by working people.

But the prime minister insisted it was his party “making the right long-term decisions to change this country for the better”.

Politics live: Starmer has cross words for laughing Tories

Sir Keir welcomed his two new MPs to the green benches before pointing to a social media post by the defeated Tory candidate in Tamworth.

Published in 2020, the Facebook post by Andrew Cooper told parents who struggled to feed children while still paying for TV and phone services to “f*** off”.

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Keir Starmer introduces the new MPS during PMQS
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Keir Starmer introduced his new MPs during PMQs

Rishi Sunak and Keir Starmer
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Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer faced off in this week’s Prime Minister’s Questions

The Labour leader said the candidate must have thought he was “following government lines” by “throwing expletives at struggling families”, as he told stories of both renters and homeowners being hit hard by rising costs and being “abandoned” by the government – especially since Liz Truss’ disastrous mini-budget last autumn.

“In every cafe, pub and supermarket in Britain, people are having the same conversation,” he said. “‘We can’t afford that, put it back on the shelf, it’s too expensive’.

“[Mr Sunak] is completely oblivious, just patting himself on the back.”

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Exceptional by-election swings analysed

The prime minister insisted the government was “providing significant help” for people, from increasing pensions and benefits, along with a rise in the national living wage.

“Politicians like him always take the easy way out,” added Mr Sunak. “Whereas we’re getting on, making the right long-term decisions to change this country for the better – on net zero, on HS2, on a smoke-free generation, on education and energy security.

“Contrast that to his leadership – too cautious to say anything and hoping that nobody notices.”

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But the Labour leader dismissed the remarks, instead calling for a general election.

“The truth is, his candidate in Tamworth summed up perfectly just how he and his Tories are treating the British public,” Sir Keir said.

“So will he just call a general election and give the British Public a chance to respond?

“As they did in Selby, Mid Beds, and Tamworth – they’ve heard the government telling them to f off and they want the chance to return the compliment.”

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Bank of Canada just says no to retail CBDC in reshuffling of priorities

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Bank of Canada just says no to retail CBDC in reshuffling of priorities

Regulating and speeding up payments without a CBDC are more important to the Canadian central bank.

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SEC approves options for BlackRock’s spot Bitcoin ETF

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<div>SEC approves options for BlackRock's spot Bitcoin ETF</div>

The SEC notice seemed to be an industry first after the commission approved the listing and trading of spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds on US exchanges in January.

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Farage: It’s possible I could become PM

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Farage: It's possible I could become PM

Nigel Farage has spoken about his aspirations as Reform UK party leader and insists he could become prime minister.

He told Sky’s political correspondent Darren McCaffrey the prospect of taking over at Number 10 at some point “may not be probable, but it’s certainly possible”.

In an interview on the sidelines of the Reform UK annual conference in Birmingham, he also described his intention to change the party and make it more democratic.

“I don’t want it to be a one man party. Look, this is not a presidential system. If it was, I might think differently about it. But no, it’s not. We have to be far more broadly based,” he said.

He also accepted there were issues with how the party was perceived by some during the general election.

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Highlights of Farage’s conference speech

“We had a problem,” he admitted. “Those that wished us harm use the racist word. And we had candidates who genuinely were.”

Earlier the party leader and Clacton MP gave his keynote speech at the conference, explaining how they intend to win even more seats at the next general election.

He also called out the prime minister for accepting free gifts and mocked the candidates in the Tory leadership race.

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Farage jokes about PM accepting gifts

But he turned to more serious points, too – promising that Reform UK will “be vetting candidates rigorously at all levels” in future.

Addressing crowds in Birmingham, Mr Farage said the party has not got “time” or “room” for “a few extremists to wreck the work of a party that now has 80,000 members”.

Farage says Reform UK needs to ‘grow up’

By Darren McCaffrey, political correspondent in Birmingham

Reform and Nigel Farage can hardly believe their success.

Perhaps unsurprising, given they received over four million votes and now have five MPs.

But today this is a party that claims it has bigger ambitions – that it’s fighting for power.

Having taken millions of votes from the Conservatives, the party thinks it can do so with Labour voters too.

Reform finished second in 98 constituencies, 89 of them are Labour seats.

But it is a big ask, not least of all because it is a party still dominated by its controversial leader and primarily by one majority issue – migration.

Nigel Farage says the party needs to grow up and professionalise if it has a chance of further success.

This is undoubtedly true but if Reform is going to carry on celebrating, they know it also has to broaden its policy appeal beyond the overwhelming concern of its members.

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“The infant that Reform UK was has been growing up,” he said in his speech and pointed towards the success of the Liberal Democrats at the general election.

He told delegates his party has to “model ourselves on the Liberal Democrats” which secured 72 seats on a smaller popular vote share than Reform UK.

He said: “The Liberal Democrats put literature and leaflets through doors repeatedly in their target areas, and despite the fact they haven’t got any policies at all. In fact, the whole thing’s really rather vacuous, isn’t it? But they manage with a vote much lower than ours to win 72 seats in parliament.”

Reform won more than four million votes in July, and 14% of the vote share – more than the Lib Dems.

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