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Rishi Sunak is heading to Aberdeenshire today as the Tories kick off a week of campaigning on energy security.

Number 10 said the prime minister would use the trip to “highlight the central role” Scotland will play in “defending the UK against disrupted global energy supplies” and reaching net zero targets.

Reports suggest Mr Sunak will announce millions of pounds for the Acorn carbon capture project, a joint venture between Shell and other firms, as well as new licences for North Sea oil and gas exploration – putting down a marker against Labour plans to stop new drilling.

Mr Sunak and his ministers have stressed the need to use North Sea fossil fuel resources, especially since the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Such moves have prompted alarm from climate campaigners, with the government already facing opposition to any development of Rosebank, 80 miles northwest of Shetland.

Mr Sunak is expected to confirm how “Scotland will continue to be at the forefront of UK government plans to strengthen the UK’s long-term energy security”.

Downing Street said he would “highlight the crucial role that the region will play in enhancing and delivering on the UK government’s commitment to reaching net zero in 2050 and enhancing long-term energy security for generations to come”.

But the move comes as both main parties continue to argue over their commitment to key net zero policies and environmental promises.

The Conservatives’ narrow victory in the Uxbridge and South Ruislip by-election opened a can of worms within Labour over London Mayor Sadiq Khan’s plan to expand the Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) to outer boroughs – something Sir Keir Starmer blamed for the loss.

Rishi Sunak will meet leaders from the energy industry during Monday's trip. Pic: No 10
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Mr Sunak will meet energy industry leaders during Monday’s trip. Pic: No 10

The Labour leader and Mr Khan are continuing to hold discussions over the extension, with Sir Keir calling on his colleague to “reflect” on the impact on voters.

But Mr Khan has stood by the decision on the basis it will improve air quality for five million people in London.

Meanwhile, MPs on the right of the Conservative Party are appealing to the PM to rethink the government’s net zero commitments in light of the win, with calls for delays to a number of targets – including putting back the ban on the sale of petrol and diesel cars from 2030 to 2035.

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Sadiq Khan: ULEZ decision ‘good news for London’

Mr Sunak insisted on Sunday the 2030 deadline would remain, but did announce plans to for a review of low traffic neighbourhoods (LTNs), saying he was on the side of drivers.

Downing Street has confirmed ministers are scrutinising existing pledges “in light of some of the cost of living challenges”, as the prime minister promised a “proportionate and pragmatic” approach to net zero.

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Mr Sunak is also set to meet industry leaders and workers while in Scotland.

And the government pledged that along with energy authorities, it would “go further than before in announcing continued decisive action to boost the capability of the North Sea industry to transition towards net zero, strengthen the foundations of the UK’s future energy mix and create the next generation of highly skilled green jobs”.

SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn said any investment would be welcome, but he warned against any more “broken promises or delays”.

Read more:
Is carbon capture a fossil fuel industry fig leaf or vital for net zero?

What are the Tories’ green policies – and what could be scrapped?

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Government needs to pursue net zero targets – Lord Deben

’13 years of failed Tory energy policy’

Meanwhile, Labour’s shadow climate change secretary, Ed Miliband, attacked the government for “13 years of failed Tory energy policy”.

“Every family and business is paying the price, in higher energy bills,” he said.

“It is absurd that having left this country so exposed, the Conservative Party is asking the public to believe they can fix it,” added Mr Miliband.

“And it’s telling that while Labour focuses on lower bills and good jobs, Rishi Sunak lurches desperately towards a culture war on climate to appease his split party, losing track of what he believes from day to day, depending on which faction he’s met with.

“It’s no way to govern and it’s costing working people.”

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Prisoner let out under early release system describes chaos amid chronic overcrowding

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Prisoner let out under early release system describes chaos amid chronic overcrowding

Chris* had spent more than two years in prison, serving a sentence for grievous bodily harm (GBH.)

To his surprise, he was released just weeks ago – a month early – under a controversial scheme to ease overcrowding in prisons across England and Wales. But he paints a picture of chaos.

Describing it as a “rollercoaster”, he says there was a “mix-up” and “the staff didn’t really know what was going on”.

It started when he was on the phone to his family from inside prison. “They said, ‘we’re going to see you today, you’re getting released’.

“And I said: ‘No I’m not’.”

His family had been given the wrong date. His release wouldn’t happen for another week. And yet the chaos, according to Chris, only continued.

He was selected for early release and told he was a “low risk” to the public, but the early release prisoner scheme comes under continued scrutiny.

The Prison Governors Association today warned the scheme would not have sufficient impact to ease overcrowding, and suggested the prison service could find itself unable to accept prisoners from courts “within weeks” because jails are so full.

Meanwhile, leading domestic abuse charities have shared with Sky News a letter, sent to justice secretary Alex Chalk, raising serious concerns about the scheme.

The end of the custody supervised licence scheme (ECSL) means eligible prisoners can now be released up to 70 days before the end of their sentences.

It allows offenders serving sentences of less than four years to leave prison ahead of time.

The government first launched the measure in October 2023, initially allowing prisoners to be released 18 days early.

Anyone convicted of a sexual, terrorist or serious violent offence is excluded.

But probation staff have consistently raised fears about the extent and pace at which the measure is being expanded, saying the release of prisoners is being sped up without the time for sufficient checks.

A probation worker told Sky News: “Just because they’re not doing a long sentence, that doesn’t mean people are not deemed to be a high risk in the public domain. And we wouldn’t have time to put in place safeguards, or do any checks.”

‘I was very angry and upset’

On the morning Chris was freed, he says there was a knock on his cell door and he was told to head down to reception. Once there, he says he saw other prisoners being released, their discharge grants being handed out.

But when it was his turn, he says he was told his name wasn’t on the list.

“At that point, I was very angry and upset,” he said.

“A week before, they’d told me I was getting released and now they were doing the same thing again.”

Frustrated, he sat in the prison reception for hours, while his family waited outside.

After about three hours, he says a prison worker appeared and apologetically explained that since it was an early release, there was a “mix-up with the systems”.

His case hadn’t been transferred from one computer system to the other.

This is just one man’s story, but it shows the issues with an emergency measure that has been regularly extended with little notice for those handling and processing offenders – finding them accommodation, or providing the necessary support on leaving prison.

The letter sent to the justice secretary from leading women’s charities, including Refuge and Women’s Aid, calls for perpetrators of domestic abuse and stalking to be exempt from the scheme.

“There is a significant disconnect between government rhetoric on VAWG [Violence Against Women And Girls] and announcements such as the expansion of the early release scheme, that will place survivors, and women and girls more broadly, at risk from dangerous offenders of VAWG,” it reads.

“We are prioritising solving a problem about prison overcrowding over the safety of victims,” the domestic abuse commissioner for England and Wales, Nicole Jacobs, told Sky News.

Domestic Abuse Commissioner for England and Wales, Nicole Jacobs, says she has 'genuine fear for victims'
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Nicole Jacobs, the domestic abuse commissioner for England and Wales, says she has ‘genuine fear for victims’

“I have genuine fears for victims,” she said.

These calls follow the publication of a report into HMP Lewes by the Chief Inspector of Prisons.

An inspection found “safe risk management” being undermined by the early release scheme. It cited one example of a prisoner who had their release date brought forward despite deeming him a “risk to children”, with a “history of stalking, domestic abuse, and being subject to a restraining order”.

Chief inspector of prisons Charlie Taylor said the eligibility net for this scheme was “cast fairly wide”.

The chief inspector of prisons Charlie Taylor says the eligibility net for the scheme is 'cast fairly wide'
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Chief inspector of prisons Charlie Taylor

“Inevitably, if you have an early release scheme and the parameters are simply that if you serve less than four years, you’re not a sex offender, a terrorist or a life sentence prisoner… there are some people within that net who will be designated as high risk of harm.”

The overcrowding crisis in prisons extends beyond the early release scheme.

In recent weeks, a number of measures have been triggered by the government to help ease capacity.

Operation Early Dawn, invoked earlier this month, will see defendants in police custody remain there, rather than being transferred to magistrates’ courts for bail hearings, in case there is no space in jail cells to accommodate them.

Police are also being told to consider pausing “non-priority” arrests until there is enough capacity in prisons across England and Wales.

Figures published on Friday showed 87,089 people are currently behind bars in England and Wales.

The number of people that can be held in “safe and decent accommodation” in prison, known as the “certified normal accommodation” or “uncrowded capacity”, is considered by the Ministry of Justice to be 79,615.

Read more
Emergency measure triggered to deal with prison overcrowding in England
Prisoners could be freed more than two months early to ease overcrowding

That means the current overall system is at 109% capacity, or overcrowded.

Chris’s story is symptomatic of a prison system that is overpopulated and under pressure.

He believes it is right that offenders are let out early to relieve capacity, but says he appreciates concerns the public might have.

‘Everyone deserves a second chance’

“I learned a lot,” he said.

“At the end of the day, people learn and obviously people change. Everyone deserves a second chance.”

The government has previously said that the ECSL scheme is about protecting the public, designed to ensure there is enough space to keep putting the most ‘serious’ offenders behind bars.

It maintains there are ‘strict eligibility criteria’ for releasing people, and says the Prison Service retains discretion to prevent the release of any offender where early release presents a higher risk than if they were released at their automatic release date.

Ministers have previously said that any released offender remains subject to probation supervision and stringent licence conditions.

*Chris is a pseudonym we are using to protect his identity.

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Labour extends lead over Tories in exclusive poll for Sky News

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Labour extends lead over Tories in exclusive poll for Sky News

The Labour Party has extended its lead over the Conservatives, according to the first exclusive YouGov poll of the campaign for Sky News.

One week into the race for Number 10, Labour is 27 points ahead of the Tories – erasing a small drop in the lead recorded at the end of last week.

The Great Britain poll – conducted on Monday and Tuesday this week – puts Labour on 47%, the Tories on 20%, Reform on 12%, the Liberal Democrats on 9% and Greens on 7%.

*EMBARGOED UNTIL 5AM ON WED 28th MAY*

This suggests that the Tories have not yet had a bounce from Rishi Sunak’s surprise decision to go to the country on 4 July, rather than waiting until the autumn.

The party is also still struggling to bring back together the voter coalition Boris Johnson won round in 2019.

Read more about the Sky News poll tracker here

Of the Tory voters from that year, only 36% say they would vote Tory now, 19% would vote Reform UK, 19% don’t know and 14% would switch to Labour.

This is the key group identified by Conservative headquarters, and the national service announcement on Sunday was aimed at bringing this group back to the fold.

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Meanwhile, Labour leads the Tories in all parts of Great Britain and among men and women.

The only groups that have the Tories ahead are the over 65s – albeit by a far smaller margin than in 2019 – and among people who voted to leave the EU.

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A Monster energy drink and bowling: On the general election campaign trail with Rishi Sunak

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A Monster energy drink and bowling: On the general election campaign trail with Rishi Sunak

After a bumpy start to the Tory election campaign, day six has been somewhat smoother for Rishi Sunak.

That’s not to say the Conservative election machine isn’t on the lookout for potential missteps though.

During a TV interview in the changing room of a bowls club in Leicestershire, a hat was strategically placed to cover a name tag adorned with the blush-worthy surname “Glasscock”.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak plays a game of bowls during a visit to Market Bosworth Bowling Club on Tuesday.
Pic: PA
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Rishi Sunak plays a game of bowls during a visit to Market Bosworth in Leicestershire. Pic: PA

Rishi Sunak visits a ceramic manufacturing plant. Pic: Reuters
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Mr Sunak visits a homeware plant in Staffordshire. Pic: Reuters

While at a homeware factory in Staffordshire, a Tory aide spotted and swiftly removed a can of Monster energy drink from a worktop where the prime minister was about to inspect some ceramics.

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Amid a slanging match over leaders taking ‘duvet days’ early in the campaign, a photo of the Tory leader next to a giant caffeine-stuffed beverage is probably not the message the party wants to send out.

A Q&A session with staff at the factory caused little controversy.

More on General Election 2024

Mr Sunak’s plan for a revamped national service came in for praise with one woman saying her two older sons would benefit from it, before adding in a brutally frank fashion “but they are more brawn than brains”.

A man who proclaimed himself the “number one forklift truck driver” asked if there could be an extra Bank Holiday for St George’s Day.

A question deftly dodged by the visiting politician.

After being drenched while announcing the election, the rain even cleared just in time for the prime minister to play a game of bowls with some pensioners in Market Bosworth.

Read more:
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What was Labour’s deputy leader accused of?

Pic: PA
Image:
Pic: PA

With a backdrop of bunting and portraits of the late Queen, this should be safe Tory territory – especially for a leader promising tax cuts for retirees.

And to be fair, he was met with a cheer when he entered the clubhouse.

But speaking to members after – a familiar sense of inevitability started to emerge.

Rishi Sunak at a bowls club. Pic: Reuters
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Pic: Reuters

One man said Mr Sunak seemed a decent enough man before adding “but the country wants change… the Labour Party have got things together just as the Tories have fallen apart”.

Back on the bowling green, things started looking up for the prime minister.

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After a couple of ropey throws of his specially selected blue bowls, Mr Sunak eventually turned things around and ended up clinching victory.

Insert your political parallels here.

But it’s worth saying that only happened after the local Tory MP knocked club president Brenda’s bowl out of play.

A backbencher coming to the prime minister’s rescue. There’s something you don’t see much of nowadays.

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