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Police are investigating claims that Angela Rayner may have broken electoral law over information she gave about her living situation a decade ago.

It comes after Tory MP James Daly made Greater Manchester Police (GMP) aware of neighbours contradicting the deputy Labour leader’s statement that her property, separate from her husband’s, was her main residence.

GMP previously said it would not be investigating the allegations.

But the force has now reassessed information and launched a probe following a complaint from Mr Daly, an MP in the region and the deputy chairman of the Conservative party.

Labour said it remains confident Ms Rayner has complied with the rules, and the Ashton-under-Lyne MP “welcomes the chance to set out the facts with the police”.

A spokesperson for GMP said: “We’re investigating whether any offences have been committed.

“This follows a reassessment of the information provided to us by Mr Daly.”

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Ms Rayner has faced scrutiny about whether she paid the right amount of tax on the 2015 sale of her council house in Stockport, because of confusion over whether it was her principal residence.

Richard Parker, Labour's West Midlands mayoral candidate and deputy party leader Angela Rayner during a visit to Perry Barr bus depot in Birmingham.
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Ms Rayner has denied allegations of wrongdoing.Pic: PA

The Labour frontbencher has rejected the allegation and denied any wrongdoing.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has previously said the Conservatives are “chasing a smear” in raising questions about the deputy leader.

Mr Rayner bought a council house in Vicarage Road, Stockport, under right-to-buy for £79,000 in 2007 and sold it in March 2015, shortly before she became an MP, for £127,500.

In 2010, she married Mark Rayner and they had two children.

If she moved into his home, a mile away in Lowndes Lane, then Vicarage Road was no longer her main residence and she should have paid tax on her £48,500 gain.

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Starmer: Rayner tax story is ‘smear’

She insists she was not liable for it and has taken tax advice which backs that up. Sir Keir on Monday morning said his team – but not him – had seen that advice, which has not been made public.

Tax experts have said that, while Ms Rayner may not owe anything, if she did the amount she was liable for is not in the big leagues – and could be in the region of £1,500.

Ms Rayner has said she lived in her own home the whole time, and that she had an older child from a previous relationship.

“Every family is different, but it worked for us”, she said.

She called the claims, which surfaced in a biography of her by former Tory donor Lord Ashcroft called The Red Queen, “a stream of smears from the usual suspects”.

Senior Labour figures leaped to Ms Rayner’s defence following the police statement.

Read More:
Who is Angela Rayner? The story behind the country’s possible next deputy PM

London Mayor Sadiq Khan said he is fully confident that his “best friend” will be cleared.

Shadow climate minister Ed Milliband said Ms Rayner, who left school at 16 while pregnant with no qualifications, is “inspiring” and “exactly the kind of person we need in politics”.

“We are absolutely 100% behind Angela”, he said.

However Defence Secretary Grant Shapps accused her of “double standards”, saying she has “spent her political career calling people out for exactly the thing that she seems to be doing now”.

“It’s important that it’s looked into properly and I welcome the idea that the police are doing that,” he said.

A Labour spokesperson said: “Angela welcomes the chance to set out the facts with the police.

“We remain completely confident that Angela has complied.”

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Paria Veisi: Police investigating disappearance of woman in South Wales find her body – as man charged with murder

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Paria Veisi: Police investigating disappearance of woman in South Wales find her body - as man charged with murder

Police investigating the disappearance of a woman who was last seen leaving work have found her body – as a man has been charged with murder.

Paria Veisi, 37, was reported missing after leaving work in Cardiff at around 3pm on 12 April.

Her disappearance was described by police as “totally out of character” and prompted a widespread search.

Her Mercedes GLC 200 was later found on Dorchester Avenue in the Penylan area of Cardiff on the evening of Tuesday 15 April.

Her body was discovered at an address in Penylan on Saturday, South Wales Police said.

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A 41-year-old man from Penylan has been charged with murder, preventing lawful and decent burial of a dead body and assaulting a person occasioning them actual bodily harm.

A 48-year-old woman from London has been charged with preventing a lawful and decent burial of a dead body and conspiring to pervert the course of justice.

They both appeared at Cardiff Magistrates’ Court on Saturday.

“This brings our search for Paria to a sad and tragic end,” said Detective Chief Inspector Matt Powell.

“Paria’s family, all those who knew her, and those in her local community, will be deeply saddened and shocked by these latest developments.

“Family liaison officers are continuing to support Paria’s family.”

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Thousands of trans rights activists gather in London after Supreme Court ruling on definition of a woman

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Thousands of trans rights activists gather in London after Supreme Court ruling on definition of a woman

Thousands of trans rights activists have been demonstrating in central London days after the Supreme Court ruled the legal definition of a woman is based on biological sex.

Trans rights groups, trade unions and community organisations came together for what was billed as an “emergency demonstration” in Parliament Square in Westminster.

Activists demanded “trans liberation” and “trans rights now”, with some waving flags and holding banners.

Campaigners in Westminster. Pic: PA
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Campaigners in Westminster. Pic: PA

Graffiti was seen on the statues of suffragist leader Millicent Fawcett and South African statesman Jan Christian Smuts in Parliament Square.

The Metropolitan Police said it had launched an investigation after several statues were vandalised and it was investigating the incidents as criminal damage.

Chief Superintendent Stuart Bell said it was “very disappointing to see damage to seven statues and property in the vicinity of the protest”, adding: “We support the public’s right to protest but criminality like this is completely unacceptable.

“We are now investigating this criminal damage and urge anyone with any information to come forward.”

Meanwhile, a rally and march organised by Resisting Transphobia has been taking place in Edinburgh on Saturday afternoon.

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Graffiti was daubed on the statue by trans activists. Pic: PA

Graffiti on the statue of South African statesman Jan Christian Smuts in Parliament Square. Pic: PA
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Graffiti on the statue of South African statesman Jan Christian Smuts in Parliament Square. Pic: PA

In a long-awaited judgment delivered on Wednesday, the UK’s highest court ruled the terms “woman” and “sex” in the Equality Act 2010 “refer to a biological woman and biological sex”.

It essentially means trans women who hold gender recognition certificates are not women in the eyes of the law.

This means transgender women with one of the certificates can be excluded from single-sex spaces if “proportionate”.

Protesters demonstrate in Westminster in support of the transgender community
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Demonstrators in Westminster

Baroness Kishwer Falkner, chair of the UK’s Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), said on Thursday that the ruling means trans women can no longer take part in women’s sport, while single-sex places, such as changing rooms, “must be based on biological sex”.

The UK government said the unanimous decision by five judges brought “clarity and confidence” for women and service providers.

A Labour Party source said Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer had brought the party to a “common sense position” on the subject from an “activist” stance.

Among the groups supporting the London protest were Trans Kids Deserve Better, Pride In Labour, Front For The Liberation Of Intersex Non-binary And Transgender people (Flint) and TransActual.

Pic: PA
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Pic: PA

Keyne Walker, strategy director at TransActual, told Sky News the government needed to put equality laws back on a “sound footing”.

Speaking from Parliament Square, they said: “The mood is jubilant and also angry and also people are anxious… Right now trans people are coming together to demonstrate to the country, and to everybody else, that we’re not going anywhere because we don’t have anywhere to go…

“Queer people have been through worse than this before, and… we’ll suffer through whatever is to come in the next few years.”

Read more:
How Supreme Court decision has immediate real-world consequences

The activist continued: “The government needs to immediately clarify how they are going to protect trans people and what this ruling actually means for spaces.

“It does not bring clarity… businesses and venues at the moment don’t know what they can and can’t do… the government needs to step in and put equalities law back on a sound footing.”

Protesters demonstrate in Westminster in support of the transgender community. Credit: Daniel Bregman
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Protesters in Westminster in support of the transgender community. Pic: Daniel Bregman

It comes as Bridgerton actress Nicola Coughlan announced she has helped raise more than £100,000 for a trans rights charity following the Supreme Court decision.

Following the ruling, the Irish star said she was “completely horrified” and “disgusted” by the ruling and added she would match donations up to £10,000 to transgender charity Not A Phase.

The fundraiser has since raised £103,018, with a revised target of £110,000.

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Gender ruling – How it happened

Why was the case heard in court?

The Supreme Court ruling followed a long-running legal challenge which centred around how sex-based rights are applied through the UK-wide Equality Act 2010.

The appeal case was brought against the Scottish government by campaign group For Women Scotland (FWS) following unsuccessful challenges at the Court of Session in Edinburgh.

FWS called on the court to find sex an “immutable biological state”, arguing sex-based protections should only apply to people born female.

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Campaigners react to gender ruling

The Scottish government argued the protections should also include transgender people with a gender recognition certificate (GRC).

The Supreme Court judges were asked to rule on what the Equality Act 2010 means by “sex” – whether biological sex or “certificated” sex as legally defined by the 2004 Gender Recognition Act.

Delivering the ruling at the London court on Wednesday, Lord Hodge said: “We counsel against reading this judgment as a triumph of one or more groups in our society at the expense of another. It is not.

“The Equality Act 2010 gives transgender people protection, not only against discrimination through the protected characteristic of gender reassignment, but also against direct discrimination, indirect discrimination and harassment in substance in their acquired gender.”

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Upskirted teacher says women being ‘targeted’ by misogynistic attitudes in classroom

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Upskirted teacher says women being 'targeted' by misogynistic attitudes in classroom

A teacher who was upskirted by a pupil says women are being “specifically targeted” by misogynistic attitudes being expressed in classrooms.

Sally Rees, now the president of teachers’ union NASUWT in Northern Ireland, was visited by police officers in 2016 and told they had found a USB stick containing images filmed up her skirt by a pupil.

“You just feel so violated,” she told North of England correspondent Shingi Mararike.

“As a teacher, you give so much of yourself in the classroom, you want the best for your pupils and then to know that somebody has done that to you, it just completely shatters your sense of trust.”

Ms Rees was filmed multiple times over 14 months and after a “long drawn-out legal process”, the pupil was found guilty of five counts of outraging public decency.

Ms Rees spoke to Sky News as a new survey by NASWUT suggested nearly three in five (59%) teachers believe social media use has contributed to a deterioration in pupils’ behaviour.

At the union’s annual conference this weekend, members will debate calls on the union’s executive to work with teachers “to assess the risk that far-right and populist movements pose to young people”.

“We’ve seen the impact that Andrew Tate and other figures are having on… young boys’ reactions in the classroom,” Ms Rees said.

“One of the things we have to remember is that the majority of our workforce is female and so they are being very specifically targeted by these attitudes, specifically things around; ‘You can’t tell me what to do’, that a man has a right to dominate a woman and has a right to a woman’s body.”

Andrew Tate.
File pic: AP
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Andrew Tate.
File pic: AP

The drama teacher said schools were now expected to deal with behaviour like this without enough support.

“We need to bring parents and carers into this because it starts in the home and then trickles into our schools,” she added.

“We end up with a blame culture that education is at fault, teachers aren’t dealing with it and yet teachers are the ones that actually end up being the victims of this type of behaviour.”

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When asked about the NASWUT survey, a spokesperson for the Department for Education (DfE) said: “Education can be the antidote to hate, and the classroom should be a safe environment for sensitive topics to be discussed and where critical thinking is encouraged.

“That’s why we provide a range of resources to support teachers to navigate these challenging issues, and why our curriculum review will look at the skills children need to thrive in a fast-changing online world.”

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