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Boris Johnson is to face questioning by MPs about parliamentary standards as the row over sleaze continues.

The prime minister will appear in front of the liaison committee, comprised of the chairs of all Commons select committees, from 3pm today.

He will face questions on government standards, violence against women and girls, the COP26 summit and the budget and spending review.

Follow live updates from the liaison committee from 3pm today

The main focus is expected to be on standards after a series of scandals over the past few weeks, including Conservative MPs being whipped to review the standards system and reject a recommendation that Tory MP Owen Paterson be suspended for breaching lobbying rules.

Mr Johnson will also face questions from senior Conservative MP Caroline Nokes who told Sky News on Monday the PM’s father, Stanley Johnson, touched her inappropriately at a party conference in 2003.

The PM last appeared before the liaison committee, the only select committee that can call on the PM, in July.

More on Boris Johnson

At that appearance, he managed to dodge several questions, including whether he had sacked former health secretary Matt Hancock after he was caught disobeying lockdown rules while having an affair with an aide.

Senior Conservative MP Bernard Jenkin, chair of the committee, said the PM’s appearance in front of the committee three times a year is “becoming an increasingly significant event”.

He told Sky News: “It’s the one time where a cross-party group of MPs can question the prime minister on detail, and on a non-partisan basis.

“The feedback shows that the public is highly engaged with this kind of scrutiny, particularly when it is forward-looking and constructive.”

He added that his role is to make sure the PM answers the questions and said: “If they’re fair questions I press him to answer them.”

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Caroline Nokes makes allegations about Stanley Johnson

This is what is expected to be discussed in the committee:

Propriety and ethics in government

This section is expected to be the main focus, with Labour MP Chris Bryant, chair of the standards committee, set to quiz Mr Johnson.

He will be joined by Conservative MP William Wragg, chair of the public administration and constitutional affairs committee, who was one of 13 Tory rebels who voted in agreement of Mr Paterson’s suspension and against reforming the standards rules.

It will be the first time MPs can ask questions of the PM on his proposal to ban MPs from having second jobs as political consultants or lobbyists, which he announced on Tuesday afternoon.

The PM should expect some direct questioning from Mr Bryant, who has been scathing about the government’s handling of the Paterson affair and attempts to change the standards rules.

His committee found Mr Paterson had breached a number of lobbying rules, in what Mr Bryant called “a very fair hearing” and recommended he be suspended for 30 days.

Mr Paterson quit as the MP for North Shropshire following the U-turn on delaying his suspension.

Mr Bryant told Sky News the furore over standards had done “terrible, terrible reputational damage” to parliament and said there had been attempts to “lobby” and “bully” standards committee members over its ruling on Mr Paterson.

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PM did what ‘Viktor Orban would do’

And after Tory MP Christopher Chope was the sole person to object to rescinding the motion to review standards on Monday, Mr Bryant warned the Commons would “fall into further disrepute” if the motion was not brought forward “as soon as possible”.

Mr Wragg, part of the 2019 intake of MPs, said he disobeyed the three-line whip to vote against suspending Mr Paterson as a matter of conscience.

He said mixing up Mr Paterson’s case with a reform of standards was “moving the goalposts”.

Violence against women and girls

This is the first opportunity the liaison committee has had to question the PM on what the government is doing to tackle violence against women and girls since a series of murders of women that have shocked the public.

Sarah Everard was raped and killed by a serving police officer in March, Sabina Messa was killed as she walked to the pub in September and a teenager was jailed for life in October for murdering sisters Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman.

Their murders have forced politicians to talk about women’s safety and police conduct and the liaison committee is set to push for real change.

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‘No recollection of Caroline Nokes’ – Stanley Johnson

Conservative MP Caroline Nokes, chair of the women and equalities committee, is one of four MPs who will be questioning the PM on violence against women and girls.

Downing Street has refused to address her allegation his father touched her inappropriately but will not be able to avoid her in the committee room.

Yvette Cooper, chair of the Home Affairs Select Committee, is also set to question the PM and it will be the first chance since her committee launched an inquiry into violence against women and girls.

As part of that inquiry, the committee is looking into how rape victims are treated by the police and courts so the PM will be expected to have answers.

COP26 summit

Less than a week after the climate change conference in Glasgow finished, Mr Johnson will be asked about the final agreement that failed to commit to limiting global warming to 1.5C.

The PM is sure to get questions over why the initial target was not agreed on after COP26 president Alok Sharma was reduced to tears when India and China made a last-minute intervention that weakened the effort to end the use of coal power.

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‘Weight of world was on my shoulders’

Budget and the spending review

Less than a month since Rishi Sunak unveiled his latest budget, the PM will come up against five MPs over the economy, including Jeremy Hunt and Tobias Ellwood, who frequently stand up in the Commons to question the PM.

Some of the budget items Mr Johnson may face questions on include the Universal Credit taper being cut by 8% and the increase in the National Living Wage by 6.6% to £9.50 an hour after more than 18 months of heavy government spending due to COVID.

The axing of the Leeds leg of HS2 could also raise its head.

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Oklahoma senator introduces Bitcoin Freedom Act for BTC payments

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Oklahoma senator introduces Bitcoin Freedom Act for BTC payments

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Elon Musk’s abuse of Jess Phillips has pushed real victims into game of political point scoring

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Elon Musk's abuse of Jess Phillips has pushed real victims into game of political point scoring

The treatment of Jess Phillips over recent days tells me all I need to know about the epidemic of misogyny, abuse and violence against women and girls that still plagues our culture.

The domestic violence campaigner-turned politician, who has spent her career fighting for victims, has found herself the subject of abuse on an industrial scale over the past week that has put her in danger.

In dark moments, it has left her wondering whether she should give up frontline politics for good and go back to the women’s hostels where her work with vulnerable women and girls began.

Outspoken and a women’s campaigner, Phillips has long been a lightning rod.

But when the world’s richest man, who owns a social media platform with 211m followers, starts trolling you as a “rape genocide apologist” – complicit in a what he claims is a cover-up of the most disgusting and sickening abuse – that’s a different order of attention, and danger.

This week, the female politician charged with trying to protect the actual victims of these unspeakable crimes became subject to an avalanche of abuse – and threats – herself.

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Abuse of me nothing compared to that of victims

It was undoubtedly horrific for Phillips, who tells me she felt physically sick and hunted as the tweets came raining down.

More on Jess Phillips

And, as everyone piled in with their outrage and indignation, where were the voices of the actual victims themselves?

It has been so vicious, noisy and fraught as the very serious matter of grooming gangs and the exploitation, rape and torture of young victims turned into a political battleground of finger pointing and point scoring.

Imagine for a moment you’re a victim of grooming, rape, or torture and you’re seeing your own trauma being bandied around. Let down once before, how might this furore feel for those victims now?

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Jess Phillips: Musk’s comments are ‘ridiculous’

The Conservatives are now calling for a national inquiry into grooming gangs.

Labour shout hypocrisy, but find themselves on the receiving end of an online movement criticising safeguarding minister Jess Phillips and Keir Starmer’s record as the country’s former chief prosecutor.

It prompted The Times’ investigative reporter Andrew Norfolk – who revealed the wide scale abuse of young white girls predominately by Asian men of Pakistani descent back in 2012 – to this week to defend Starmer, who he said had been instrumental in making more prosecutions possible.

He added that there was a “huge increase in convictions” when Starmer was Director of Public Prosecutions back in the early 2010s.

This is a scandal that has run for decades and was properly exposed by Norfolk, who’s reporting led to a string of independent inquiries, resignations, police investigations and successful prosecutions.

But it was re-ignited last week by a decision by Philips, revealed by GB News, not to hold a government-led inquiry of grooming gangs in Oldham.

This is because previous investigations, in towns including Telford, Rochdale and Rotherham, were all independent investigations led by the local authority.

That’s not to say Phillips doesn’t want a inquiry in Oldham – she’s encouraged the council leader to set one up. However, the evidence is clear that victims are more likely to come forward when it’s a local inquiry rather than a national one.

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Grooming gangs: A sky News investigation

But somehow this lit the touch paper for Elon Musk – a tech billionaire strong on tweeting, but light on knowledge of the actual situation in the UK – who launched an avalanche of claims over grooming.

He galvanised opposition politicians to call for action and created a storm that has brought movement from the government too.

This week, Labour committed to implementing some of the recommendations of the Jay Review into child sexual exploitation.

The Jay Review was published in 2022 under the Conservative government, but its suggestions were not enacted by the relevant ministers.

Read more:
Victims of grooming gangs can have inquiry if they want one, Jess Phillips says
What happened in the grooming gangs scandal?
Grooming gangs scandal timeline

Phillips is also setting up a victims’ board that will sit in the Home Office and advise and give feedback on changes that need to be made to get the truth and justice for victims.

There remain questions about whether there should be more? Reform and the Conservatives want a national inquiry into the specific question of grooming gangs – what is their prevalence, their root causes and the institutional failings that let tens of thousands of victims down?

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Sir Keir Starmer hits back at those who criticised his handling of child grooming gangs.

Andrew Norfolk, while stopping short of calling for a national public inquiry, does believe the root causes of grooming gangs have not been properly examined.

He believes they will never be fully stamped out until there’s proper research into what allowed these gangs to flourish.

In her 2022 report into child sexual exploitation, referencing her 2014 inquiry into grooming gangs in Rotherham, Professor Alexis Jay noted “the majority of perpetrators were described as ‘Asian’ by their victims, yet throughout the entire period, councillors didn’t engage directly with the Pakistani-heritage community to discussion how they could jointly address the issue”.

Norfolk, in The Times this week, puts it like this: “It is very difficult to talk about this stuff without being accused of being Islamophobic. That is not going to change.

“Why one very small sub-section of one minority ethnic community was so overwhelmingly, disproportionately responsible for these crimes – that is work that would be vital in bringing about understanding that could enable changes to take place.”

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Chief executive of The Survivors’ Trust, Fay Maxted says she wants to see action now.

Jess Phillips argues that another inquiry is not what is needed, pointing to the Jay Review, and a string of other independent investigations.

She tells me she wants to get on with getting justice for victims and stamping out sexual abuse.

“There is nothing I will not consider going forward,” she told me, be it prevention programmes, working on community relations, tackling peer-on-peer abuse. And, if the victims want it, a national inquiry.

More on this story:
Jess Phillips hits back at Elon Musk
Why is Musk so interested in UK politics?

You have probably read the headlines over recent days, and you might have felt battered by the noise.

You might be confused about what is going on as politicians trade blows in the Commons and Musk rants online.

You have perhaps read some of the court transcripts of historic cases circulating online that document crimes against young girls so disgusting and barbaric that it makes you want to weep.

That’s why on this week’s Electoral Dysfunction we try to take a step back and spend quite a bit of time talking to Jess Phillips about not just the events of the past few days, but the long shadow of grooming gangs and child abuse.

We talk about Phillips’ own feelings when those Musk tweets landed and what being in the eye of the storm meant for her safety. We talk about the criticisms levelled at her and the prime minister.

I ask her about accusations of cover-ups in order not to stoke racial tensions in local communities, why she doesn’t support a national inquiry and her frustrations at those in positions of authority – be it councillors, social workers, police officers – who failed to protect girls and still haven’t faced a reckoning.

After all the heat and noise, I hope it can offer a bit of explanation and a little light too.

You can listen to Beth’s full interview with Jess Phillips in a special episode of Electoral Dysfunction released on Thursday.

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