Connect with us

Published

on

David Lammy has said the government is “young” after Sir Keir Starmer’s chief of staff Sue Gray resigned and a new poll found most people think the government is “sleazy”.

The foreign secretary said Ms Gray was a “superb public servant” after she quit on Sunday following weeks of briefings against her, including her salary being leaked.

After she stepped down less than 100 days into Labour’s premiership, Mr Lammy said: “It’s a young government and we get on with the work ahead of us.”

He thanked Ms Gray for her service and congratulated her on her new job as the PM’s envoy for the UK’s nations and regions.

Follow live politics updates

Ms Gray stepped down after her perceived power and abilities were attacked by other Number 10 staff and civil servants who accused her of not having a handle on the damaging freebies row.

There were also reports of other special advisers having their pay kept down to the same levels as when they were in opposition, but now have much larger jobs, while Ms Gray was paid £170,000 – more than the PM.

More on Sir Keir Starmer

She said she resigned because it was “clear to me that intense commentary around my position risked becoming a distraction”.

Sir Keir Starmer and Sue Gray. Pic: Rex/Tayfun Salci/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock
Image:
Sir Keir Starmer and Sue Gray. Pic: Rex/Tayfun Salci/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock

Following weeks of the row over freebies taken by Sir Keir and his top team, a new poll found six in 10 Britons (59%) now describe the Labour government as “sleazy”.

The YouGov poll, published on Monday, also found half (53%) of Britons expected Labour to behave well over standards.

Three in 10 Labour voters (30%) describe the government as sleazy, although six in 10 (59%) Conservative voters say the same of the 2019-2024 Conservative government.

Read more:
Analysis: PM and his team have a serious stabilisation job to do now

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Will there be another cabinet reshuffle?

Disappointment is fairly uniform across parties, with 45% of Conservatives saying they expected Labour to behave better, 42% of Labour voters and 45% of Lib Dem voters.

Just a third of Labour voters (34%) say the new government has behaved as well as they thought it would.

When comparing Sir Keir Starmer with his predecessor, Rishi Sunak, the Labour leader comes off worse, with 35% saying Sir Keir is sleazier than Mr Sunak.

A total of 28% think Mr Sunak was sleazier than Sir Keir, and 23% view them as equally as sleazy as each other.

👉 Tap here to follow Politics at Jack and Sam’s wherever you get your podcasts 👈

Two thirds of Britons (66%) think it is unacceptable for politicians to receive complimentary concert or sports tickets, as Sir Keir and several of his cabinet have done.

But more than eight in 10 Britons (84%) feel it is wrong for party donors to be awarded peerages, as Boris Johnson attempted to do to Tory donor Stuart Marks.

Last week, Sir Keir repaid £6,000 worth of tickets he had taken since becoming prime minister.

YouGov surveyed 2,084 adults across Great Britain from 3-4 October.

Continue Reading

Politics

US Bitcoin reserve odds skyrocket on betting markets

Published

on

By

US Bitcoin reserve odds skyrocket on betting markets

Kalshi bettors put the odds of Trump creating a Bitcoin reserve in 2026 at roughly 70%.

Continue Reading

Politics

Sir Keir Starmer says Auschwitz visit ‘utterly harrowing’ as he vows to fight ‘poison of antisemitism’

Published

on

By

Sir Keir Starmer says Auschwitz visit 'utterly harrowing' as he vows to fight 'poison of antisemitism'

Sir Keir Starmer has called his visit to Auschwitz “utterly harrowing” and said he was determined to fight the “poison of antisemitism”.

The prime minister visited the former Nazi concentration camp where he laid a wreath ahead of the 80th anniversary of its liberation, during a trip to Poland to meet its political leaders.

After he and his wife Victoria, who is Jewish, visited the site, Sir Keir said: “Nothing could prepare me for the sheer horror of what I have seen in this place. It is utterly harrowing. The mounds of hair, the shoes, the suitcases, the names and details, everything that was so meticulously kept, except for human life.

“As I stood by the train tracks at Birkenau, looking across that cold, vast expanse, I felt a sickness, an air of desolation, as I tried to comprehend the enormity of this barbarous, planned, industrialised murder: a million people killed here for one reason, simply because they were Jewish.”

Politics latest: PM talks on new pact to ‘protect national security’

Historians estimate about 1.1 million people, mostly Jews, perished in Auschwitz over less than five years as part of the Nazi’s extermination plan. The camp was liberated by the Soviet army on 27 January 1945.

Sir Keir, who was on his first trip there, said it was Lady Starmer’s second visit but it was “no less harrowing than the first time she stepped through that gate and witnessed the depravity of what happened here”.

More on Poland

He added that their visit truly showed him how “this was not the evil deeds of a few bad individuals, it took a collective endeavour by thousands of ordinary people… in the hatred of difference”.

“The lessons of this darkest of crimes are the ultimate warning to humanity of where prejudice can lead,” he said.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his wife Victoria Starmer visit the Memorial And Museum Auschwitz-Birkenau, a former German Nazi concentration and extermination camp, in Oswiecim, Poland January 17, 2025. REUTERS/Aleksandra Szmigiel
Image:
Sir Keir and Lady Starmer laid a wreath at the concentration camp. Pic: Reuters

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his wife Victoria Starmer visit the Memorial And Museum Auschwitz-Birkenau, a former German Nazi concentration and extermination camp, in Oswiecim, Poland January 17, 2025. REUTERS/Aleksandra Szmigiel
Image:
Pic: Reuters

The prime minister warned of the rising threat of antisemitism in recent years, including in the UK.

“The truth that I have seen here today will stay with me for the rest of my life,” he said.

“So too, will my determination to defend that truth, to fight the poison of antisemitism and hatred in all its forms, and to do everything I can to make ‘never again’ mean what it says, and what it must truly mean: never again.”

Read more:
Starmer is warned British Army too small to deploy troops for Ukraine peacekeeping
No phones, a drone threat and strict rules: What it’s like to join the PM in Ukraine

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his wife Victoria Starmer visit the Memorial And Museum Auschwitz-Birkenau, a former German Nazi concentration and extermination camp, in Oswiecim, Poland January 17, 2025. REUTERS/Aleksandra Szmigiel
Image:
Pic: Reuters

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his wife Victoria Starmer visit the Memorial And Museum Auschwitz-Birkenau, a former German Nazi concentration and extermination camp, in Oswiecim, Poland January 17, 2025. REUTERS/Aleksandra Szmigiel
Image:
Pic: Reuters

Sir Keir travelled to Poland from Kyiv after meeting President Volodymyr Zelenskyy there in his first trip to Ukraine since becoming prime minister.

He told Sky News’ political editor Beth Rigby, in Kyiv, the UK will play its “full part” in peacekeeping in Ukraine, including sending troops.

However, former senior military leaders have warned this may not be possible due to the army being at its smallest size for 200 years.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Starmer and Zelenskyy lay flowers at memorial

In Poland, he is expected to discuss the new UK-Poland treaty with his counterpart Donald Tusk, which will support both countries working together to protect Europe from Russian aggression and work together to tackle people smuggling gangs.

Karen Pollock, chief executive of the Holocaust Educational Trust, said the charity was “grateful to Sir Keir for leading the way in ensuring that the horrors of the past are always remembered”.

Continue Reading

Politics

No phones, a drone threat and strict rules: Beth Rigby on what it’s like to join the prime minister in Ukraine

Published

on

By

No phones, a drone threat and strict rules: Beth Rigby on what it's like to join the prime minister in Ukraine

No phones or other devices, strict reporting rules, bombed-out buildings, and a drone threat – Beth Rigby shares what it’s like to join the prime minister Sir Keir Starmer in Ukraine.

Sky News’s political editor said “the whole experience was absolutely fascinating” on the Electoral Dysfunction podcast, but added the nature of Sir Keir‘s visit to the war-ravaged country meant the government “had to keep it very tight”.

“If it became known more widely than a very, very tight group of people that he was going to make the trip, the trip gets pulled for security reasons.”

Reporting from Ukraine, Sky News joined the prime minister as he signed a 100-year “friendship” deal to guarantee Britain’s support for Kyiv.

👉 Click here to listen to Electoral Dysfunction on your podcast app 👈

Sky cameras filmed Sir Keir laying a wreath with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, after a Russian drone was shot down over the presidential palace while they held meetings.

In an interview, the prime minister told Ms Rigby that the UK would play its “full part” in peacekeeping in Ukraine and that the drone threat was “a reminder of what Ukraine is facing every day”.

More on Ukraine

The prime minister’s first stop while in Ukraine was at a hospital, where he and reporters saw a major burns unit up close.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Watch Beth Rigby’s full interview with the PM here

Ms Rigby said: “There was an ICU you could go in… There were two gentlemen, two guys, and they were having physio treatment, and they were very happy to be filmed, and they… talked to the prime minister about their experiences and… their skin was just covered in burns, scars.

“After, I did the pool clip with him [Sir Keir], and I was like, ‘how was it?’ He just said, ‘it’s really hard to see this.’

“It really hammers home what it is, and I think he kept referring to the hospital throughout every visit of the day.”

Sir Keir Starmer meets with a Ukrainian man who suffered burns

Speaking to Labour peer Harriet Harman and former Scottish Conservatives leader Baroness Davidson on the podcast, Ms Rigby said that in order to make the trip, “we had to give in all our devices” as “for security reasons, you can’t take your devices into Ukraine”.

While riding trains across the country, she said “you get some basic food, and you get a little bunk”. Strict reporting rules also apply, so Sky could not report on Sir Keir’s whereabouts “until after he’s left”.

“We went to a hospital, and I can’t tell you what hospital it was, but we weren’t allowed to report that until the prime minister left the location,” she said.

“So, it just gives you a sense of the amount of security around these visits.”

Beth Rigby interviewing Sir Keir Starmer in Kyiv

During a visit to a drone manufacturer, Ms Rigby added that Ukrainians “brought the drones from where they’re actually manufactured” but did not allow cameras into the site.

“They placed them in a hall, which they made to look like an underground car park, right? You weren’t allowed to film outside. You couldn’t film the steps,” she said.

“You couldn’t film anything that might allow anyone to understand where the location might have been… This is the extent to which they try and disguise the movement and what they’re doing.”

Read more:
Flights divert to avoid SpaceX rocket explosion debris
Ex-Pakistan PM Imran Khan sentenced to 14 years in jail

Ms Rigby then said she and others were taken on “a little tour where 100 yards or so down from where Zelenskyy’s offices in the centre of Ukraine is a bombed-out car and a building that has been bombed, and the top floor is destroyed”.

“That happened on 1 January,” she said. “And the reason that they are showing him that is to reiterate to all of us that… Russia is not completely destroying the centre of Kyiv, but the threat is ever-present.”

The prime minister is now in Poland, where he will kickstart talks on a new security pact to protect the UK’s national security.

During his visit, Sir Keir will also meet Polish businesses, including the firm InPost which has announced it will invest a further £600m into the UK in the next five years to grow its operations.

Continue Reading

Trending