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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
Image:
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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Europe’s new chat police: Chat Control legislation nudges forward in the EU

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Europe’s new chat police: Chat Control legislation nudges forward in the EU

Representatives of European Union member states reached an agreement on Wednesday in the Council of the EU to move forward with the controversial “Chat Control” child sexual abuse regulation, which paves the way for new rules targeting abusive child sexual abuse material (CSAM) on messaging apps and other online services.

“Every year, millions of files are shared that depict the sexual abuse of children… This is completely unacceptable. Therefore, I’m glad that the member states have finally agreed on a way forward that includes a number of obligations for providers of communication services,” commented Danish Minister for Justice, Peter Hummelgaard.

The deal, which follows years of division and deadlock among member states and privacy groups, allows the legislative file to move into final talks with the European Parliament on when and how platforms can be required to scan user content for suspected child sexual abuse and grooming.

The existing CSAM framework is set to expire on April 3, 2026, and is on track to be replaced by the new legislation, pending detailed negotiations with European Parliament lawmakers.

EU Chat Control laws: What’s in and what’s out

In its latest draft, the Council maintains the core CSAM framework but modifies how platforms are encouraged to act. Online services would still have to assess how their products can be abused and adopt mitigation measures.

Service providers would also have to cooperate with a newly-established EU Centre on Child Sexual Abuse to support the implementation of the regulation, and face oversight from national authorities if they fall short.

While the latest Council text removes the explicit obligation of mandatory scanning of all private messages, the legal basis for “voluntary” CSAM detection is extended indefinitely. There are also calls for tougher risk obligations for platforms.

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A compromise that satisfies neither side

To end the Chat Control stalemate, a team of Danish negotiators in the Council worked to remove the most contentious element: the blanket mandatory scanning requirement. Under previous provisions, end-to-end encrypted services like Signal and WhatsApp would have been required to systematically search users’ messages for illegal material.

Yet, it’s a compromise that leaves both sides feeling shortchanged. Law enforcement officials warn that abusive content will still lurk in the corners of fully encrypted services, while digital rights groups argue that the deal still paves the way for broader monitoring of private communications and potential for mass surveillance, according to a Thusday Politico report.

Lead negotiator and Chair of the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs in the European Parliament, Javier Zarzalejos, urged both the Council and Parliament to enter negotiations at once. He stressed the importance of establishing a legislative framework to prevent and combat child sexual abuse online, while respecting encryption.

Law, Government, Europe, Privacy, European Union, Policy
Source: Javier Zarzalejosj

“I am committed to work with all political groups, the Commission, and member states in the Council in the coming months in order to agree on a legally sound and balanced legislative text that contributes to effectively prevent and combating child sexual abuse online,” he stated.

The Council celebrated the latest efforts to protect children from sexual abuse online; however, former Dutch Member of Parliament Rob Roos lambasted the Council for acting similarly to the “East German era, stripping 450 million EU citizens of their right to privacy.” He warned that Brussels was acting “behind closed doors,” and that “Europe risks sliding into digital authoritarianism.”

Telegram founder and CEO Pavel Durov pointed out that EU officials were exempt from having their messages monitored. He commented in a post on X, “The EU weaponizes people’s strong emotions about child protection to push mass surveillance and censorship. Their surveillance law proposals conveniently exempted EU officials from having their own messages scanned.”

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Privacy on trial in broader global crackdown

The latest movement on Chat Control lands in the middle of a broader global crackdown on privacy tools. European regulators and law‑enforcement agencies have pushed high‑profile cases against crypto privacy projects like Tornado Cash, while US authorities have targeted developers linked to Samurai Wallet over alleged money‑laundering and sanctions violations, thrusting privacy‑preserving software into the crosshairs.

In response, Ethereum co‑founder Vitalik Buterin doubled down on the right to privacy as a core value. He donated 128 ETH each (roughly $760,000) to decentralized messaging projects Session and SimpleX Chat, arguing their importance in “preserving our digital privacy.”

Session president Alexander Linton told Cointelegraph that regulatory and technical developments are “threatening the future of private messaging,” while co-founder Chris McCabe said the challenge was now about raising global awareness.

Magazine: 2026 is the year of pragmatic privacy in crypto — Canton, Zcash and more