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Today, the consensus between the two main parties on Israel and Hamas came to an end. 

Until now, Labour has stuck with the Conservative approach, backing Israel and resisting calls for a ceasefire.

Politics Hub: Westminster gears up for contentious vote on Gaza

The Labour leadership decided standing with Israel, whatever the pain it meant amongst some sections of its supporters, was the right moral and political option.

At one point last year, Sir Keir Starmer even said calls for an immediate ceasefire would embolden Hamas.

But now Labour argues that circumstances have changed, and the party does back an immediate ceasefire.

I was first told Labour was considering a change to its position in the second week of December, but it never arrived.

Instead, it only turned up today, 24 hours before the SNP was due to force a vote on the issue in which Labour MPs were threatening to rebel and go through the nationalist voting lobbies.

So the revised position had two goals – to try and sooth some anger in parts of the Labour movement over Sir Keir’s decision to stand with Israel as it invaded Gaza, and to deal with the tactical challenge posed by Wednesday’s votes and stop Labour MPs siding with the Scottish opposition.

We will only know in 24 hours whether Labour have succeeded on either front. At the time of writing, both goals look hard to secure.

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‘Thousands more people will die’

Labour MPs likely to abstain on SNP motion

Labour’s new position, to call for an immediate ceasefire, provoked questions which even David Lammy, the shadow foreign secretary, struggled to fully explain.

Asked whether it was credible to ask Israel not to use force to get back hostages, he would only repeat that an immediate humanitarian ceasefire was vital.

Later, he said that hostages have only been released so far during the last ceasefire – but is Labour against all Israeli use of force to take them back in future?

Asked if it was credible to ask Hamas, a terrorist organisation, to observe a ceasefire, he said Labour wanted the hostages released.

Frontbenchers will get more of these sorts of questions in the coming days.

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SNP motion is ‘about Palestinians’

Secondly, it is unclear what will happen in tomorrow’s SNP votes. It appears that Labour has walked into a trap, preparing its own mission statement – an amendment to be voted on – only to find the Tories have done the same, and only that and the SNP option are likely to be put to a vote.

Labour MPs tomorrow will be offered the chance to either support the Tories – who reject a permanent ceasefire until all hostages are released – or the SNP position, which calls for an immediate one.

Faced with that prospect, the leadership is likely to order Labour MPs to abstain, but will some end up backing the SNP position anyway?

We will find out in 24 hours. Being ordered to sit on your hands is tricky on an issue like this, however.

Again this has been a saga of difficult decisions being delayed then facing a tricky birth – a similar story to the one we saw with the £28 billion U-turn and the eventual abandonment of Azhar Ali as Labour candidate in Rochdale.

Some Labour folk are complaining at the coverage this has generated. This is what enhanced scrutiny in election year feels like, however.

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DOJ challenges motion to dismiss Tornado Cash co-founder’s charges

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DOJ challenges motion to dismiss Tornado Cash co-founder’s charges

According to the filing, the DOJ criticized Tornado Cash’s co-founders for inadequate changes to exclude sanctioned addresses.

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Google Cloud’s Web3 portal launch sparks debate in crypto industry

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<div>Google Cloud's Web3 portal launch sparks debate in crypto industry</div>

Google Cloud recently launched a Web3 portal with testnet tools, blockchain datasets, and learning resources for developers, receiving mixed reactions from the crypto industry.

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Rishi Sunak does not rule out July general election – but insists ‘there’ll be a clear choice’ when it comes

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Rishi Sunak does not rule out July general election - but insists 'there'll be a clear choice' when it comes

Rishi Sunak has failed to rule out holding a general election in July, as speculation remains rife over the timing of the national vote.

The prime minister has repeatedly said his “working assumption” is the election would take place in the second half of this year – with the law stating January 2025 is the latest he could call it.

But while many commentators have predicted an autumn vote, Sky News’ Trevor Phillips put to Mr Sunak that it could mean as early as July.

Analysis: Sunak needs to learn voters aren’t always governed by the logic of the computer

“Well, look, when it comes to a general election, I’ve been very clear about that multiple times,” the prime minister said.

“And again, I’m not going to say anything more than I’ve already said, I’ve been very clear about that.”

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In his interview – which will air in full on Sunday at 8.30am – Trevor Phillips pushed Mr Sunak five times over whether he would rule out a July general election, but the Conservative leader refused to confirm or deny if it could take place then.

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“You’re going to try and draw whatever conclusion you want from what I say,” he said. “I’m going to always try and say the same thing. You should just listen to what I said, [the] same thing I’ve said all year.

“But the point is… there’s a choice when it comes to the general election. And look, over the past week or so… the country can have a very clear sense of what that difference is going to look like.”

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Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips

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Outlining his recent commitments to overhauling the welfare system, cutting taxes and increasing defence spending, as well as finally getting his Rwanda bill through parliament in an effort to tackle small boat crossings, Mr Sunak said: “That is the substance of what this government is about and what it’s going to do in the future.

“And when the election comes, there’ll be a clear choice, because the Labour Party has tried to frustrate our Rwanda bill, because they don’t believe in stopping the boats, their economic plan will put people’s taxes up.

“They haven’t said that they will invest more in our defence and they certainly don’t agree with reforming our welfare system to support people into work.”

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Labour has said it wants to match the hike in defence spending when the financial circumstances allow, and has promised to scrap the Rwanda bill if it gets into power.

This week, its pre-election focus has been on railways, promising to renationalise train operators and “sweep away” the current “broken” model if the party wins the next election.

Watch Rishi Sunak’s full interview on Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips at 8.30am

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