The Labour Party has suspended 11 of its councillors over their membership of a WhatsApp group that led to a minister being sacked from the frontbench.
It is understood most of the councillors are part of Tameside Council while two are members of Stockport Council.
The move comes after the party sacked health minister Andrew Gwynne – whose wife Alison is now understood to have also been suspended – over messages he reportedly posted in the group.
On the suspension of the 11 councillors, a party spokesperson said: “As part of our WhatsApp group investigation, a group of councillors have been administratively suspended from the Labour Party.
“As soon as this group was brought to our attention, a thorough investigation was launched in line with the Labour Party’s rules and procedures and this process is ongoing.
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“Swift action will always be taken where individuals are found to have breached the high standards expected of them as Labour Party members.”
Sky News understands the following councillors have now been suspended:
Councillor Claire Reid
Councillor Jack Naylor
Councillor George Newton
Councillor Vincent Ricci
Councillor Charlotte Martin
Councillor Allison Gwynne
Councillor George Jones
Councillor Brenda Warrington
Councillor Denise Ward
Councillor David Sedgwick (Stockport Council)
Councillor Holly McCormack (Stockport Council)
The suspension of the Tameside councillors comes after three Labour members of the same local authority “stepped away” from their duties on Tameside Council.
Councillors Jack Naylor, Claire Reid, and George Newton – who were members of the WhatsApp group – are also being investigated by the Labour Party.
A spokesperson for Tameside Labour told Sky News on Monday afternoon: “Following reports over the weekend of messages shared in a historic WhatsApp group, Councillors Reid, Naylor and Newton have decided to step away from their executive duties at Tameside Council whilst an investigation by the Labour Party is underway.”
On Monday the Labour Party also confirmed that newly elected Mr Ryan had had the whip removed, meaning he will now sit as an independent MP in the Commons.
Image: Oliver Ryan. Pic: Parliament
The 29-year-old Burnley MP apologised on Sunday and said he “deeply regrets” the comments he made, which a government source said were “unacceptable and deeply disappointing”.
According to the Daily Mail, Mr Ryan joked about a fellow Labour MP being gay.
In a statement on X over the weekend and before his suspension, Mr Ryan apologised for remarks he made which he “would not make today”, and said he would “cooperate fully” with the investigation.
He said that between 2019 and early 2022, he was a member of a WhatsApp group “created by my MP and former employer, Andrew Gwynne”.
Mr Ryan said: “Some of the comments made in that group were completely unacceptable, and I fully condemn them.”
The MP also said he regretted “not speaking out at the time”, and he recognised that “failing to do so was wrong”.
He was the second Labour MP to be suspended by the party for comments made in the same WhatsApp group, which was created by Mr Ryan’s former employer Mr Gwynne.
Mr Gywnne, who has served various frontbench posts in opposition, was sacked as health minister and suspended from the party for alleged racist and sexist remarks posted in a WhatsApp chat which contained Labour councillors, party officials and at least one other MP.
According to the Mail On Sunday, Mr Gwynne made racist comments about Labour MP Diane Abbott and sexist remarks about Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner.
He is also reported to have said he hoped a pensioner would soon die after she asked a councillor about bin collections – and to have joked about a constituent being “mown down” by a truck.
Mr Gwynne said he deeply regretted his “badly misjudged comments” and apologised for any offence caused.
Angela Rayner has insisted the government can meet its target to build 1.5m homes over the next five years as ministers pledged an extra £350m for housebuilding.
An extra £300m has been injected to the affordable homes programme, a move ministers believe will allow 2,800 additional homes to be built.
More than half of these extra homes will be for social rent, the government has said, while more than 250 council homes are expected to be made available through a £50m boost to the local authority housing fund.
The scale of the challenge is stark, with more than 123,000 households in temporary accommodation – including nearly 160,000 children – while almost 6,000 families with children are in bed and breakfast accommodation.
Asked whether she was worried about whether the government could meet the 1.5m homes target, Ms Rayner said she was “determined” to meet the challenge.
“We will meet that target because we can’t afford not to,” she told broadcasters.
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“We have 1.3 million people waiting on housing waiting lists, there isn’t a person listening to this show that will not know somebody who is desperate to get on the housing ladder.
“So, therefore, we’re determined to turn that tide.”
And pressed on whether the expected 250 increase of council homes was a big enough increase to meet the need, Ms Rayner said: “We think the measures we’re taking will unlock thousands more council and social homes as part of that programme. We want to help councils who want to build those homes.
“We see 160,000 children in temporary accommodation, and the cost of that on local authorities is significant, as well as the impact on children’s life chances,” she said.
“So we need to build the homes, and we’re doing everything we can to turn the tide of decline and build the houses that people desperately need.”
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What are Labour’s housing plans?
The extra £350m promised comes on top of £500m that was earmarked for affordable housing in October’s budget.
According to housing charity Shelter, at least 90,000 social rent homes would need to be built each year for the next 10 years to clear most social housing waiting lists in England and to house every homeless household.
MPs on the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) said there was a “dire need” for housing reform, with the lack of affordable homes forcing cash-strapped local authorities to haemorrhage their funds on temporary accommodation.
A recent Sky News investigationfound that children in some parts of England were spending as long as five-and-a-half years on average in temporary accommodation.
The length of stay has increased significantly in many areas since 2021, with particularly long stays in London and the South East.
Elsewhere, ministers are expected to set out plans to crack down on exploitative behaviour by rogue landlords who they say are costing the taxpayer by claiming uncapped housing benefit in return for providing homes that are unsuitable.
The legislation is named after two-year-old Awaab Ishak, who died in December 2020from a respiratory condition caused by prolonged exposure to mould in the social home his family rented in Rochdale, Greater Manchester.
The government’s top candidate to become the chief of the borders and immigration watchdog has told MPs he lives in Finland and commutes to the UK when he needs to.
John Tuckett, who has worked as the immigration services commissioner for six years, was questioned by the Home Affairs Select Committee on Tuesday ahead of the appointment of the next independent chief inspector of borders and immigration (ICIBI).
Asked if he lives in commuting distance from the London office, he replied: “No I don’t, I have a family home in Finland and I come across to this country whenever I need to.”
When MPs put it to him that he would expect to inspect the UK’s borders without being a resident here, he added: “I work in UK and I would be in the UK, I’m resident in Finland.”
Mr Tuckett told the committee he pays for travel and accommodation himself and “always have done”.
He also said he would be fine to work five days in the office if needed, adding: “I have done this kind of work before, and when I was asked this question at my interview, I said, I think that my judgment is you need time when you’re available for ministers, visits, all the things where you need to do face to face.
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“You also need time where you can think, sit back, write, because you don’t write a report, you know, in 10 spare minutes in between two major appointments. So I think there’s a 60-40, split between for the chief inspector this is.!
Mr Tuckett was announced as the preferred applicant for the chief inspector position by the Home Office in January, with previous experience as the chief executive of the Marine Management Organisation and working for the Archbishop of York.
Announcing the recommendation of Mr Tuckett for the role, migration minister Seema Malhotra said: “His track record of delivering complex change programmes across government, combined with his current role as immigration services commissioner, makes him ideally suited to take on this crucial independent oversight role at an important time for our border security.”
If Mr Tuckett is confirmed as the next inspector, he will replace interim watchdog boss David Bolt – who has served since June last year.
Mr Bolt’s appointment came after the previous borders watchdog David Neal was sacked in February last year amid claims he breached the terms of his appointment.
He later voiced his frustrations of the time taken for his reports to be published, and said there were “very few” ways of speaking out about his concerns on security.
Franklin Templeton has registered a “Franklin Solana Trust” in Delaware, indicating it may soon file for a spot Solana ETF alongside a host of other bidding issuers.