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Wes Streeting has paid tribute to Angela Rayner and said Labour “wants her back and needs her back”.

The health secretary heaped praise on his former cabinet colleague during a wide-ranging speech at the annual party conference, which was packed with attacks on Reform UK leader Nigel Farage.

Ms Rayner resigned as deputy party leader and housing secretary after a row about her tax affairs earlier this month.

Politics Live: Day three of annual Labour conference

Addressing members gathered in Liverpool, Mr Streeting said Labour’s new fair pay agreement for care workers could not have been achieved without her.

He said: “There’s someone else who’s made a real difference, who understands the struggle care workers face because she was one.

“She brought that experience to the cabinet table as the care worker who became our country’s deputy prime minister. Angela Rayner, this achievement is yours. Thank you.”

There was a big round of applause as Mr Streeting added: “And we want her back as well. We’ll definitely make sure she sees that. We need her back.”

Angela Rayner resigned earlier this month. File pic: AP
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Angela Rayner resigned earlier this month. File pic: AP

The message could be seen as trying to get grassroots members onside amid grim polling predictions for Labour and questions over whether Sir Keir Starmer can survive.

Ms Rayner is popular with the Labour membership – they elected her as deputy leader in 2020, but she gave up this position as well as her cabinet roles when it emerged she had underpaid stamp duty on a flat in Hove.

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In his speech, Mr Streeting also praised the Unison and GMB unions for standing up for care workers.

However, that was as far as his good will stretched – as he launched several stinging attacks on his opponents.

Farage ‘snake oil salesman’

The cabinet minister, seen as one of the government’s best communicators, accused Mr Farage of being the “snake oil salesman” of British politics and vowed to send him “packing” at the next election.

He argued that while Labour wants to modernise the NHS – with plans for an “online” hospital – the Reform leader wants an insurance system that “checks your pockets before your pulse”.

“It might be right for Mr Moneybags. We know he can afford it. But what about those who can’t?” Mr Streeting asked.

“Be in no doubt. It’s not reform he’s offering. It’s a retreat. If that’s the fight Farage wants, I say bring it.”

Mr Farage has previously spoken about being open to an insurance based model for the NHS, drawing a big dividing line with the Labour Party, which founded the National Health Service after the Second World War.

Mr Streeting said the party must win another fight too, “against the poison of post-truth politics”.

He pointed to Reform’s recent conference, where a “discredited doctor claimed that the COVID vaccine gave our Royal Family cancer“.

Nigel Farage said attacks on him were a 'desperate last throw of the dice'. Pic PA
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Nigel Farage said attacks on him were a ‘desperate last throw of the dice’. Pic PA

“This man wasn’t just some fringe figure, he’s Reform’s health adviser. These anti-vax lies have consequences, they’ve led to the return of diseases we thought we had defeated,” said Mr Streeting.

“Nigel Farage is a snake oil salesman of British politics and it’s time to stop buying what he’s selling.”

A Reform spokesperson previously said the doctor was a “guest speaker with his own opinions who has an advisory role in the US government”.

“Reform UK does not endorse what he said but does believe in free speech,” they added.

Trouble ahead

Mr Streeting’s speech reflects government efforts to ramp up its rhetoric against Reform UK, after two major polls predicted the insurgent party will win the next general election as fed-up voters abandon mainstream politics.

While that is many years away, some MPs see the devolved and local elections next May as a crunch test that could determine Sir Keir’s political survival.

Mr Streeting acknowledged this threat, saying it is not just Mr Farage Labour would “send packing”.

He said: “Whether it’s English nationalism with Reform, Scottish nationalism with the SNP or Welsh nationalism with Plaid we’ll take them all on.”

Mr Farage said attacks on him were a “desperate last throw of the dice” for a party in “deep trouble”, adding: “Never before have I seen one name that’s dominated a conference so much – yes it’s me, Nigel Farage.”

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China ‘enemy’ reference removed from key witness statement for collapsed spy trial

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China 'enemy' reference removed from key witness statement for collapsed spy trial

A reference to China being an “enemy” of the UK was removed from key evidence for a collapsed spy trial in 2023 as it “did not reflect government policy” under the Conservatives at the time, according to the national security adviser.

In the letter published by parliament’s Joint Committee on National Security Strategy earlier on Friday, National Security Adviser (NSA) Jonathan Powell said Counter Terror Police and the Crown Prosecution Service were aware of the change made by Deputy National Security Adviser (DSNA) Matt Collins.

This would mean the CPS knew the “enemy” reference had been removed before charging the two suspects, according to Mr Powell.

In another letter published on Friday, the director of public prosecutions (DPP) Stephen Parkinson told the committee that it took DSNA Mr Collins more than a year to confirm to prosecutors he would not say China posed a threat to UK national security in court.

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The DPP said a High Court judge ruled in June last year that an “enemy” under law is a state which “presently poses an active threat to the UK’s national security”, prompting the CPS to ask the DNSA whether China fulfilled that criteria.

He added prosecutors did not believe there would be “any difficulty in obtaining evidence” from Mr Collins that China was a national security threat, but added: “This was a sticking point that could not be overcome.”

More on China

Mr Parkinson added that the DNSA’s “unwillingness” to describe China as an active or current threat was “fatal to the case” because Christopher Cash and Christopher Berry’s defence teams would have been entitled to call him as a witness.

The DPP added: “This factor is compounded by the fact that drafts of the first witness statement, reviewed by us in July 2025, showed that references to China being an ‘enemy’ or ‘possible enemy’ had been deleted.

“Those drafts would probably have been disclosable to the defence.”

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What do we know about the China spy case?

A final draft of Mr Collins’ statement was sent to then-prime minister Rishi Sunak in December 2023, Mr Powell’s letter said.

“Drafts of a statement provided to DNSA included the term ‘enemy’ but he removed this term from the final draft as it did not reflect government policy,” the letter reads.

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It comes amid a political row over the collapse of the prosecution of Christopher Berry and Christopher Cash last month, who were accused of conducting espionage for China.

Both individuals vehemently deny the claims.

Because the CPS was pursuing charges under the Official Secrets Act 1911, prosecutors would have had to show the defendants were acting for an “enemy”.

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China spy row: Witness statements explained

DPP Mr Parkinson has come under pressure to provide a fuller explanation for the abandonment of the case.

He has blamed insufficient evidence being provided by the government that Beijing represented a threat to the UK at the time of the alleged offences.

The Conservatives have accused Sir Keir Starmer of letting the case collapse, but Labour has said there was nothing more it could have done.

The current government has insisted ministers did not intervene in the case or attempt to make representations to ensure the strength of evidence, for fear of interfering with the course of justice.

Sir Keir Starmer met Chinese premier Xi Jingping in November 2024. Pic: PA
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Sir Keir Starmer met Chinese premier Xi Jingping in November 2024. Pic: PA

The DNSA and DPP will face questions from the parliamentary committee on Monday afternoon.

The current attorney general, Lord Hermer, and the chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster, Darren Jones, will be questioned on Wednesday.

The PM’s spokesman reiterated the government’s position that “what is relevant in a criminal case of this nature is the government’s position at the time of the alleged offences”.

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Who is Lindsay Whittle? The man who stood unsuccessfully in Caerphilly 13 times, then won on the 14th try

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Who is Lindsay Whittle? The man who stood unsuccessfully in Caerphilly 13 times, then won on the 14th try

Lindsay Whittle stood for election in Caerphilly 13 times since 1983 – and on the 14th attempt, he finally succeeded.

In the process, the 72-year-old local boy – nicknamed “Mr Caerphilly” – humiliated the Labour Party, which had held the Senedd seat since its creation in 1999 and the Westminster constituency for over a century.

Born in the miner’s hospital, Mr Whittle lived in a council house and grew up in the town, located to the north of Cardiff, that he now represents.

A lifelong Plaid Cymru activist, his interest in politics was first piqued in the 1960s. He said he even missed an O Level (GCSE) exam in the 1970s because he was out canvassing for the party.

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Watch Lindsay Whittle’s victory speech.

Mr Whittle was first elected in 1976 to represent the Penyrheol and Trecenydd ward on Rhymney Valley district council, and he was re-elected repeatedly until the council was abolished in 1996.

He then contested the Penyrheol ward on the new Caerphilly County Borough Council, created in 1995, and was elected to represent it seven times. He served as the council’s leader for two periods between 1999 and 2004, and has also served as Plaid Cymru’s group leader on the council since 2022.

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Plaid Cymru is ‘ready to lead Wales’, party leader Rhun ap Iorwerth told Sky News.

But, despite his success at the local level, Mr Whittle was only able to secure election to the then Welsh Assembly once in six attempts since its creation in 1999, becoming an MS on the South Wales East list 2011, before losing his seat in 2016.

In those five years in Cardiff, he was appointed Plaid Cymru’s spokesperson for Social Services, Children, and Equal Opportunities, and he was able to work on his key political interests of housing and local government, as well as combating homelessness.

Lindsay Whittle in front of the Caerphilly Castle after his victory. Pic: PA
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Lindsay Whittle in front of the Caerphilly Castle after his victory. Pic: PA

Read more from Sky News:
Reform beaten by Plaid Cymru in Caerphilly by-election
Analysis: Farage nowhere to be seen as Reform loses by-election

Election by the people of his hometown of Caerphilly has always eluded him, however, having lost the 13 other elections for Westminster and the Senedd that he has stood in throughout a lifetime in Welsh politics.

But that all changed last night when he was elected with a majority of nearly 4,000 votes to take over from the late Hefin David, the beloved Labour representative to whom he paid tribute in his victory speech.

Lindsay Whittle speaking to Sky's Jon Craig at the election night count in Caerphilly. Pic: PA
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Lindsay Whittle speaking to Sky’s Jon Craig at the election night count in Caerphilly. Pic: PA

Speaking to our chief political correspondent Jon Craig as dawn broke over the town he was born in and now represents, Mr Whittle said: “I would need to be a poet to put into words how I genuinely feel about the honour that all the people of Caerphilly have bestowed upon me.

“Almost half of the people who went out to vote, just 2% short of half of the people, put their confidence in Lindsay Whittle and Plaid Cymru. I cannot tell you what an honour that is.”

He added: “Retirement is not for me. I’m not the sort of guy who relaxes on beaches. In fact, I don’t think I ever relax. It’s people. It’s people that make me carry on.”

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Crypto.com pushes for federal footing with US trust bank charter application

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Crypto.com pushes for federal footing with US trust bank charter application

Crypto.com pushes for federal footing with US trust bank charter application

If approved, the charter would allow the crypto exchange to offer federally regulated custody and trust services in the United States.

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