Politics
Chopper's Political Podcast: UK terrorism agency needs reform says Tom Tugendhat after Rudakubana failings
Sit back, pour yourself a drink and join GB News Political Editor Christopher Hope at his regular table in a Westminster pub where he will discuss the latest insider political intrigue and gossip with everyone from popstars to politicians.
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Politics
Trump Team Is “Very, Very Sceptical” Of UK Government, Says Labour Peer Invited To Inauguration
3 min read
Lord Glasman, the only UK Labour Party figure to be invited to President Trump’s inauguration, has told PoliticsHome that the team around Trump is “very, very sceptical about the Labour government”.
“They want an alliance with the UK, à la Churchill or Thatcher,” Glasman said. “They are pro-worker, so they hate globalisation. A big part of MAGA square is working-class, and people like Steve Bannon and [JD] Vance are very engaged with that.
“They are looking for the government to be their partner, but they don’t see any indication that they are.”
Labour peer Maurice Glasman is a founder of the Blue Labour movement, which combines a left-wing stance on the economy with conservative views on cultural issues.
In an exclusive interview with PoliticsHome, he said he received his invitation to the inauguration from the Republican National Committee. “It was an invitation from the Republican Party, really, in the name of transatlantic dialogue,” he said.
Asked why he had been singled out for an invitation, Glasman explained that JD Vance, now US Vice-President, had sent the peer his book Hillbilly Elegy eight years ago and said he admired Blue Labour.
“I had no idea who he was. So we had two or three email exchanges that were very polite and measured, discussing globalisation and the status of workers who would be best-placed to represent that,” Glasman said.
When he arrived in the US, Glasman said the Trump team were “extraordinarily friendly” to him. “They even presented me with a handmade pair of cowboy boots,” he added.
In attending the inauguration and Nigel Farage’s party overlooking the White House, Glasman confirmed that he met Vance, the Vice-President; Bannon, the former Trump strategist; and Marco Rubio, the Secretary of State. “They really opened the doors,” he said.
Glasman spent a significant amount of time with Farage in the US. “He is a Republican politician superstar over here. The queues were lined up, shaking his hand, offering him money, saying, ‘Any support you need, Nigel, we’re with you.’”
The peer said: “Nigel, I’ve got to say, was extremely generous in introducing me to people. I just had a chat with him and said, ‘We’re patriots, right? So, let’s just represent our country as best we can.’ He did that. He wasn’t partisan at all.“
Asked how No 10 has felt about his attendance, Glasman replied: “It’s too early to judge. I’m obviously trying to communicate with them as best I can.
“I’m not expecting them to do cartwheels when the Prime Minister wasn’t invited, the Foreign Secretary wasn’t. It’s a difficult moment for them, and I’m just doing my best to represent Labour and the government in the way that I can.”
While there have been many comments on social media about the significance of Keir Starmer not being invited to the inauguration, no UK prime minister appears to have visited the United States at the time of any presidential inauguration since records of visits began.
It was notable, however, that Glasman as a Labour figure was invited. And in a break with tradition, Trump did invite selected world leaders to join him on his inauguration day.
The peer told PoliticsHome he had spent his visit “defending the Labour Party” by telling those around Trump: “You’ve mistaken us – we’re not a liberal party, we’re the Labour Party.”
Glasman also said he is planning to start a show on GB News – “Blue Labour versus Reform” – which will see him debate with Farage on a weekly basis.
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Politics
NFU President launches fresh attack on Labour over ‘abhorrent’ inheritance tax raid on farmers: ‘Completely inhumane!’
President of the National Farmers’ Union Tom Bradshaw has launched a fresh attack on the Labour Government, claiming their inheritance tax raid on farmers is “unfair” and “abhorrent”.
Today, Bradshaw and NFU Cymru President Aled Jones handed in their petition on behalf of the union to 10 Downing Street, calling for a change in the proposed legislation.
Over 270,000 people have signed the petition in support of farmers, with Bradshaw warning on the petition’s official page that the tax will “deal a hammer blow to farming families” across Britain.
Speaking to GB News, Bradshaw told reporter Katherine Forster that the Government “are the only ones” who believe the raid is a “fair deal”.
Bradshaw launched a fresh attack on Labour, claiming the inheritance tax changes are ‘completely inhumane’
GB News / PA
Bradshaw told the People’s Channel: “Over 270,000 people have supported our petition. We’d like to thank every one of them for their support.
“It means so much to the farming industry, but food production is something that everyone in this country relies on.”
Detailing the impact on the farming industry, Bradshaw declared that confidence in the agricultural industry has been “completely broken”.
He explained: “Nobody wants to invest for the future and without that investment, there is no food security.
Bradshaw and NFU Cymru president Aled Jones handed in their petition to 10 Downing Street today
Pa
“We’ve seen the supermarkets all come out saying they’ve got serious concerns for the resilience of our food supply systems.”
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Expressing particular concern for elderly farmers, Bradshaw warned Labour that giving them “no time to plan” in how they will pass their farms on before the changes come into place is “completely inhumane”.
Bradshaw fumed: “These people that are in our community, that have given a lifetime to producing this country’s food, have no ability to plan. We’ve got 94-year-olds that still own the farm because until October 30, the very best tax advice was to keep the farm until death.
“They have no ability to plan their way through this. The abhorrent changes proposed are completely inhumane.”
He stated: “Putting those people in that position is completely unfair, and we have to get the Government to urgently look at changing the proposals so that we can take them out of the eye of this storm.”
Bradshaw told GB News that confidence in the agricultural industry is ‘completely broken’
GB News
Revealing the union’s next steps in their campaign against Labour’s changes, Bradshaw told GB News that more than “100 events” are planned for tomorrow, for farmers to “thank the public for their support” and get their message across to Government.
Delivering his verdict on the tax raid, NFU Cymru president Aled Jones claimed that there is a “sense of betrayal” felt by farmers, following the Labour Goverment’s announcement in October’s Budget.
Jones said: “We were told a while ago that family farms were integral to this country, and farming and delivering food security was an essential part of national security. And farmers really took those messages and they were proud to deliver for this country.
“But there’s a sense of betrayal. It’s this utter sense of betrayal at the moment to think that those historic contributions that farmers made to this country is now being taken away from them. The breakup of family farms will be devastating for this country.”
Politics
John Healey confirms law change to force offenders to face sentencing after ‘cowardly’ decision
Defence Secretary John Healey has confirmed the Labour Government will move to introduce legislation this year forcing criminals to attend their sentencing hearings.
Healey, who appeared on GB News this morning, made the announcement following the absence of Southport killer Axel Rudakubana during his sentencing at Liverpool Crown Court yesterday.
Speaking to the People’s Channel, Healey said it was “cowardly” and “contemptible” of Rudakubana to not attend.
Healey added: “He should have been in court to look them in the eye and face the justice that he has deserved.”
John Healey confirmed that the law ‘will change’ to ensure offenders are in court to hear their sentencing handed to them
PA / GB News
The new legislation is expected to allow courts to require attendance in extreme cases and may include measures such as extending sentences for non-compliance.
Detailing the legislation, Healey told GB News that offenders will be “forced if necessary” to attend their sentencings, and “other measures” will be considered including “extending their sentences”.
However, when pressed on whether the law will be changed to reduce the age in which offenders under the age of 18 can be handed a whole life order, Healey asserted that the current legislation is “in line with international law”.
Healey explained: “On the technicality of the whole life sentences, I think it’s important to know that the last government did reduce it to 18, in line with international law, after the Manchester Arena bombings, and that still stands.
“It is consistent with the international law that still stands, but there are a range of other aspects of law, of agencies who have failed in this case to step in. They knew about this man’s extreme violence, but they failed to take any steps that might have prevented it.”
Delivering his verdict on the Southport attack, Healey admitted that he “struggled to get his breath” as he read the impact statements of the surviving victims and their families.
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The Defence Secretary told the People’s Channel: “This is a day of horror, and for all of us reading the reports from the court yesterday and the sentencing, quite honestly, I struggled to get my breath as I read about the savagery and the horror and attack.
“It was quite clear Rudakubana would have killed all 26 of those young girls in that dance class if he could.”
Offering his “respect” to the judge Justice Goose for the sentence given, Healey added: “He’s made clear that this man is unlikely ever to be let out, and that’s something that I would like to see – I’m happy to see him in jail for the rest of his life.”
Citing the national inquiry into the Southport attack and the apparent failings of several agencies in preventing Rudakubana from committing his crime, Healey hoped that “changes will be made” to those agencies in light of the inquiry’s findings.
Healey told GB News that they will ‘use force if necessary’ to ensure offenders are in court for sentencing
GB News
Healey concluded: “There may be changes in the programs that are designed to deal with this sort of extremism, and that’s what the inquiry now will do.
“Keir Starmer has said that inquiry is open and any changes that it looks to make will be considered, because it’s a way not just of honouring the memory of the victims to ensure they get justice, but in their memory, we make and deliver the changes required.”
Rudakubana was repeatedly removed from court during his sentencing hearing for disruptive behaviour.
The 18-year-old then refused to be present for the victim impact statements and the sentencing itself, in which he was given a minimum of 52 years in prison.
Politics
Axel Rudakubana sentencing: Dame Andrea Jenkyns backs calls for capital punishment
Reform UK’s Greater Lincolnshire mayoral candidate Dame Andrea Jenkyns has called for the return of capital punishment following the sentencing of Southport child killer Axel Rudakubana.
Speaking to GB News, Jenkyns suggested a public vote on reinstating the death penalty, arguing that British taxpayers should not “give a penny to evil people”.
Rudakubana, 18, received a minimum term of 52-years for murdering three young girls at a dance class and attempting to kill 10 other people in July last year.
The teenager pleaded guilty to murdering Alice da Silva Aguiar, 9, Bebe King, 6, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, 7, during a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport.
Dame Andrea Jenkyns has backed calls for capital punishment following the sentencing of Axel Rudakubana
PA / GB News
However, due to being 17-years-old at the time of the offence, Rudakubana avoided being handed a whole life order.
Delivering her verdict on capital punishment, Jenkyns told the People’s Channel: “I do think the death penalty should be brought back, definitely. For severe cases of murders of children, multiple murders where they’ve admitted guilt, I think it’s the only way.
“Why should the British taxpayer give a penny to these evil and people? To me, I don’t want them on this earth, that’s my view.”
The Reform UK candidate claimed that Britain has been a “soft touch” for too long, and called for a change to the justice system.
Jenkyns stated: “We do need to get tougher in Britain, we’ve been soft touch Britain for too long, and that’s got to change.
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“I don’t care about the human rights of murderers, I care about the human rights of those children who have been murdered, and the rights of their parents that will never, ever see them again.”
Offering a counter-argument as to why the UK should not see a return of capital punishment, former Conservative MP Steve Baker claimed that although Rudakubana “does not deserve to live”, some criminals may result in being “unjustly killed by the state”, if they are wrongly convicted.
Baker explained: “Some cases are so serious they absolutely test our capacity for mercy, and this is one such case. And I’m very clear in my own mind that this man does not deserve to live. For what he’s done, it would be an open and shut case if we had the death penalty in the UK.
“But the reason that we don’t is because of our values, because it is a final sentence, because people are unjustly convicted and there’s no recourse if they have been killed by the state.”
Jenkyns told GB News that there should be a ‘public vote’ on whether it should be reinstated
GB News
Noting Rudakubana’s prison sentence, Baker told GB News that the Southport killer will most likely “beg for death” as the decades “roll by slowly” in prison.
Baker added: “I think we should just reflect on what it will mean for him to spend his life in jail, a minimum of 52 years before he can apply for parole. Obviously, I would prefer a whole life term along with his life sentence.
“But those decades are going to roll by slowly for that man, and I bet at times he will wish for death, and it will not come. And it’s going to be a very cruel life for him, and rightly so.”
In his sentencing remarks, Mr Justice Goose noted there was no evidence of any ideological motivation behind the attack.
Politics
NFU President Tom Bradshaw hits out at Labour’s ‘unfair’ inheritance tax raid on farmers has he hands petition to Downing Street
National Farmers’ Union President Tom Bradshaw has hit out at Labour’s “unfair” inheritance tax raid on farmers as he and the Welsh union leader hand their petitions into Downing Street.
Bradshaw told GB News: “Over 270,000 people have supported our petition. We’d like to thank every one of them for their support. It means so much to the farming industry, but food production is something that everyone in this country relies on.
“And unfortunately, the confidence of the industry has been absolutely broken.”
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Politics
Dame Andrea Jenkyns calls for ‘British public vote’ on capital punishment
Reform UK’s Greater Lincolnshire mayoral candidate Dame Andrea Jenkyns has called for the return of capital punishment following the sentencing of Southport child killer Axel Rudakubana.
Speaking to GB News, Jenkyns suggested a public vote on reinstating the death penalty, arguing that British taxpayers should not “give a penny to evil people”.
Politics
Reform UK MP Lee Anderson demands return of capital punishment after remorseless Southport killer handed ‘unduly lenient’ 52-year sentence
Reform UK MPs have ramped up calls for a debate around the death penalty after Southport’s remorseless killer Axel Rudakubana was handed an “unduly lenient” 52-year-sentence.
Ashfield MP Lee Anderson, Boston & Skegness MP Richard Tice and Great Yarmouth MP Rupert Lowe all demanded a conversation about the reintroduction of capital punishment.
Sharing an image of a hangman’s noose, Anderson said: “This is what is required.”
Tice added: “I don’t think we should be afraid of having a national debate on important big issues like this. I think that many people in the country would like at least a debate.”
Lee Anderson and Richard Tice
PA
Lowe also claimed that it was now “time for a national debate” on the use of capital punishment “in exceptional circumstances”.
The death penalty was only officially abolished in Britain in 1998.
However, Peter Anthony and Gwynne Owen Evans were the last people executed in the UK back in 1964.
Following Rudakubana’s sentencing yesterday, a petition was launched on the Houses of Parliament website demanding the abolition of whole life orders and reintroduction of the death penalty.
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The most recent opinion poll on reintroducing the death penalty, conducted by YouGov in 2022, suggests Britain is split on the return of capital punishment.
YouGov found that 40 per cent supported its return, with 60 per cent opposing.
However, in cases of multiple murder, terrorism and the murder of a child, the proportion of Britons supporting the death penalty soars past 50 per cent.
Judge Mr Justice Goose was unable to hand Rudakubana a whole life order because he was just nine days away from turning 18 at the time of the horrific attack last July.
Southport’s Labour MP Patrick Hurley said the 52-year sentence was “not severe enough” and asked Attorney General to review the sentence as “unduly lenient”.
Attorney General Lord Hermer and Solicitor General Lucy Rigby have 28 days to decide whether to refer the sentence to the Court of Appeal.
In a statement release following yesterday’s sentencing, Sir Keir Starmer described the Southport attack, which left three children dead and another eight wounded, as “one of the most harrowing moments in our country’s history.”
Directly addressing Rudakubana’s sentence, the Prime Minister added: “What happened in Southport was an atrocity and as the judge has stated, this vile offender will likely never be released.”
Politics
John Healey admits he ‘struggled to get his breath’ when reading ‘horror’ of Southport attack
Defence Secretary John Healey has confirmed the Labour Government will move to introduce legislation this year forcing criminals to attend their sentencing hearings.
Healey, who appeared on GB News this morning, made the announcement following the absence of Southport killer Axel Rudakubana during his sentencing at Liverpool Crown Court yesterday.
Politics
Labour MP says CPS made ‘right choice’ to charge Rudakubana with murder, not terrorism
Labour MP Mike Tapp has backed calls for a national review into terrorism laws following the sentencing of Southport killer Axel Rudakubana.
Speaking to GB News, the Dover MP said: “These people, without clear ideologies, who are obsessed with murder, we’ve got to get on top of it.”
Politics
Labour MP Mike Tapp backs national review into terrorism legal framework after sentencing
Labour MP Mike Tapp has backed calls for a national review into terrorism laws following the sentencing of Southport killer Axel Rudakubana.
Speaking to GB News, the Dover MP said: “These people, without clear ideologies, who are obsessed with murder, we’ve got to get on top of it.”
Rudakubana 18, was sentenced to a minimum of 52 years in prison for the murders of three young girls at a Taylor Swift-themed class in Southport in July 2024.
However, Mr Justice Goose confirmed the offences he had committed “did not reach the legal definition of terrorism”, because he did not kill to further a political, religious or ideological cause.
Tapp defended the CPS’s decision to not charge Rudakubana with terrorism
GB News / PA
Speaking to the People’s Channel, Tapp stressed that the review would examine everything “from the first referral to the last” to understand how Rudakubana “slipped through the net”.
“I think this started happening when he was a very young age. So possession of knives, obsession with murder, the vile things he’s been viewing online,” he said.
Defending the decision of the Crown Prosecution Service’s to pursue murder charges rather than terrorism offences in the case, Tapp noted that the CPS “have to charge with the offence they’re most likely to convict on”.
He explained: “If there isn’t that clear evidence of that motivation and ideology leading to those viral murders, they’ve got to go with the one that’s most likely to succeed.
Rudakubana, 18, was sentenced to a minimum term of 52 years in prison on Thursday
PA
“So that was most likely the right choice here, and that’s why we’ve seen him convicted.”
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He explained that while Rudakubana “is clearly a terrorist,” prosecutors faced challenges with proving ideological motivation.
“The complex part here is, yes, he killed people, and that was vile. He terrorised, he had an al Qaeda manual, he produced ricin,” Tapp said.
“But the CPS made a decision to charge on murder because there wasn’t that clear ideological motivation for carrying out the murders.”
The Labour MP emphasised that careful consideration of charges was essential to secure a conviction.
Tapp told GB News that there wasn’t a ‘clear enough motivation’ for the CPS to charge Rudakubana on
GB News
Tapp emphasised the importance of careful language during legal proceedings to ensure successful prosecutions. “If we say the wrong things for political reasons that jeopardise a case like that, that would be disgraceful,” he said.
The Dover MP acknowledged the dedication of counter-terrorism officers, noting that many attacks have been prevented.
“Having worked in counter terrorism, we’ve really committed counter officers, people are working tirelessly to stop attacks from happening,” he told GB News.
Tapp also stressed that while many attacks were prevented, this case represented one that “slipped through the net, which is an absolute tragedy”.
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