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
I was in Washington for the inauguration. What I saw shattered Khan’s veiled attack on Trump
On January 20th, London Mayor Sadiq Khan plastered his social media with a series of conciliatory if not vague messages.
“We’re living in increasingly uncertain times, and I know many Londoners are concerned by what’s taking place around the world,” wrote Sadiq.
Sadiq shared a photo of himself smiling benevolently beneath a Piccadilly Circus LED screen. A screen which beams the assuring “London is and will always be a place for everyone”.
Now cynics will say he has deliberately timed these with Donald Trump’s second inauguration as President of the United States. Kahn’s critics will say this is just more vacuous virtue signalling from Mr Kahn.
They’ll bemoan his pronouncements as typical progressive platitudes. They will seethe that our “DEI” Mayor is making allusions to geopolitics when violent crime, knife crime and rape and sexual offences have all risen under his mayorship.
But not I! Unlike those critics, I will give our great leader the benefit of the doubt. But what could he possibly be alluding to?
In Washington D.C. recently, still buzzing and high from Donald Trump’s victory rally at the Capitol One Arena on Sunday, I racked my brains.
Sadiq would’ve loved it. The Village People, chaps, tashes and leather. They tore the roof off. It was old-school diversity. Turbo-diversity. When DEI and S&M went cock in hand. Sadiq “Diversity is our greatest strength” Kahn would’ve been shaking his little booty with joy.
Donald Trump won the election in a landslide victory
Reuters
He can’t have been referring to Trump’s America.
What could it be? When I lay back in my hotel room, the sound of cacophonous patriotism bouncing up from the streets below, I tried to find answers on the tele.
Israel ceasefire and hostage deal agreed upon, including a British hostage. Soon-to-be-Sir Sadiq must have been overjoyed.
This is what Sadiq’s has been tweeting about for the last year and a half. A deal forced through by Trump, according to Benjamin Netanyahu anyway.
Sadiq is no doubt thrilled by the immediate impact by America’s returning Commander-in-chief.
He couldn’t have been referring to Trump’s America.
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After all, thanks to exposure by Elon Musk, Britain’s Pakistani rape gangs scandal – where our country’s most vulnerable children who have been abused, tortured and in some cases brutally murdered – has been given global attention at last.
Thanks to Trump’s team, the American media and X, we in Britain are being nudged towards justice for the girls. No doubt Sadiq will be thrilled.
He can’t have been referring to Trump’s inauguration. After all, a majority of American-Muslims voted for Trump in opposition to the Democrat’s disregard for traditional family values and chaotic foreign policy which has left the middle east, and Eastern Ukraine in rubbles.
When I watched the swearing in ceremony beneath the Capitol building Rotunda, I laughed to myself. Those silly critics probably think Khan was referring to this. Silly them.
Prayers from both a Rabbi and Pastor Lorenzo Sewell from Detroit. A glorious display of America’s founding mantra “E Pluribus Unum” – of the many one.
A mantra that celebrates diversity but recognises unity as more important. I know Sadiq loves Diversity, but are you to tell me the idea of unity would offend him? Surely not.
Now I can’t tell you exactly what he was referring to. But I for one have no reason to believe those posts have anything to do with the return of Donald J. Trump to The White House.
A celebration of diversity, unity, democracy, and patriotism. A rejection of Biden’s disastrous foreign policy and, one hopes, a return to Trump’s first term of relative global peace.
I tell you what. I’ll come back to you.
Politics
Nigel Farage says he’s ready to be next PM and vows to save ‘miserable’ Britain as Reform UK snatch lead in shock poll: ‘You bet your life!’
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage says he is ready to become the next Prime Minister of Great Britain after a new poll put his party ahead of Labour and the Conservatives.
Speaking on GB News, Nigel said the country is engulfed by a ‘miserable’ atmosphere, a stark contrast to what we are seeing across the pond.
This is a breaking story, more to follow.
Farage says the British public has lost faith in the ‘uniparty’
GB NEWS / PA
Politics
MPs Push for More Time to Debate Voting Reform
3 min read
The Lib Dems have urged the Government to provide them with more time to debate Parliamentary reform as momentum builds to change the UK’s voting system.
The Elections (Proportional Representation) Bill won a vote in the House of Commons during its first reading in December by 138 votes to 136. It narrowly passed with the support of 59 Labour MPs.
It was the first time MPs had endorsed replacing the current First-Past-The-Post (FPTP) for Proportional Representation (PR).
A minority of private members’ bills become law, because they are put forward by backbenchers and not the Government. They face competition from other MPs’ private members bills and may never receive a second reading.
Sarah Olney, Lib Dem MP for Richmond Park, said the Labour Government should “finally listen to the public” and give the Bill the time it needs to be scrutinised and debated in the chamber.
“Winning a vote in Parliament on proportional representation was a victory for democracy and for members of the public everywhere. They deserve their rightful say and for their vote to count,” she said.
“It’s long been clear that First Past the Post is not fit for purpose. The 2024 election was the most disproportionate in history, with a government winning two-thirds of the seats on one-third of the vote.
“The Labour Government needs to finally listen to the public, and give my Bill the time and support it needs to progress through Parliament and into law. Anything less would be an insult to everyone whose vote was effectively wasted at the last General Election.”
Keir Starmer is open to electoral reform having promised to give 16-year-olds the vote at the next election in his party’s manifesto in 2024.
The Prime Minister came under renewed pressure from his own party in November when Labour MPs joined a parliamentary group calling for the UK to move to a proportional voting system.
Many Labour MPs and activists are sympathetic to electoral reform, after a motion to commit the party to proportional representation passed at its 2022 conference.
However, the Prime Minister’s team have ruled out any action or commitment for the first term of a Labour government.
The UK held a referendum in 2011 on whether Westminster elections should use Alternative Voting (AV), where voters rank candidates in order of preference.
The ‘No’ to AV campaign won more than two-thirds of the vote with a turnout of 42 per cent.
Research from YouGov has found voters 48 per cent of respondents are in favour of adopting proportional representation, compared to 24 per cent who oppose it and 29 per cent who are unsure.
At the last election Labour won the second largest majority in political history after it secured 412 seats with 33.8 per cent of the vote.
If the voting system was based on PR, instead of FPTP, Labour would have only won 228 seats.
The Conservatives would have gained 139 seats while Reform would have won 100, the Lib Dems 73 and the Greens 71.
The Government was approached for comment.
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Politics
Reform UK pulls ahead of both Labour and Tories as Nigel Farage dominates in new poll
Reform UK has pulled ahead of both Labour and the Conservatives to top a national poll alone for the first time ever.
Fresh data from pollsters at Find Out Now has placed Nigel Farage’s party three points clear of the Tories – while Labour has slipped to a distant third.
Some 26 per cent of Britons would now vote for Reform if a General Election were called tomorrow, the data says – with 23 per cent opting for Kemi Badenoch’s Conservatives, and 22 for Labour.
In a defiant statement quashing calls for a pact between Reform UK and the Tories, the former’s chairman Zia Yusuf said on social media: “No pacts, no deals. Reform is headed for Government.”
Some 26 per cent of Britons would now vote for Reform if a General Election were called tomorrow
PA
While leader Nigel Farage said: “Reform LEADS for the first time in a national opinion poll. This is just the beginning.”
And Reform’s Great Yarmouth MP Rupert Lowe added: “Reform now in the clear, leading a national opinion poll.
“I am more confident than ever that we will outright win the next general election – it is going to happen. It cannot come soon enough.”
But the Tories have poured cold water on the figures – a spokesman for Kemi Badenoch told GB News: “Polls go up and down and change every week.
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Kemi Badenoch’s Tories have poured cold water on the figures
PA
“We’re focused on what matters – the damage Labour is doing to the economy, our schools and our international standing.”
And Labour has accused the two right-wing parties of “fighting among themselves”.
A Labour source said: “The Labour Government is getting on with delivering the Plan for Change. We’ve been clear from the outset that means taking the tough decisions needed to undo 14 years of Tory chaos and decline.
“While the opposition fight among themselves, the Labour Government is putting in the hard yards to deliver much-needed growth, create more jobs, make people better off by putting more money in people’s pockets, rebuild Britain and get our NHS back on its feet.”
It comes just weeks after Find Out Now placed Reform UK neck-and-neck with Labour – the first time Nigel Farage’s party had topped a national poll.
Before the new polling emerged, Tory peer Lord Frost had warned that his party would have to come to some sort of arrangement with Reform
GB NEWS
Back then, Refom and Labour jointly led with a 25 per cent vote share each, with the Conservatives left with 20 per cent.
But after a fortnight of gloomy headlines for the Labour Government, voters appear to be turning away.
Reform UK has gained one percentage point, the Tories three, and the Liberal Democrats one – all while Labour has sunk by three per cent.
Before the new polling emerged, Tory peer Lord Frost had warned that his party would have to come to some sort of arrangement with Reform if neither can come out on top.
And he looks to be vindicated by the data – running the Find Out Now results through an Electoral Calculus projection would see Reform take 170 seats, the Tories 165 and Labour 179, raising the prospect of a Reform-Tory coalition Government.
Politics
Is Donald Trump about to invite King Charles to the White House?
GB News’ Royal Correspondent Cameron Walker has provided his exclusive insight into engagements undertaken by Prince William, King Charles and the Princess of Wales this week.
Sign up to the GB News Royal Newsletter to get the latest analysis straight to your inbox.
IS TRUMP ABOUT TO INVITE THE KING TO THE WHITE HOUSE?
On Monday, President Donald Trump was sworn in as the 47th President of the United States of America.
The relationship between Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour Government and the new Republican President, however, is (at best) rocky.
But Britain has a ‘Trump’ card – The Royal Family – and The President is known for his pro-monarchist tendencies.
Good trade (without eyewatering tariffs) and diplomatic relations between the United Kingdom and the United States could prove essential in an increasingly volatile world.
Is it any wonder, therefore, that a Downing Street source told The Times this week that the government is planning for a senior royal to visit the United States to renew the “special relationship”?
Buckingham Palace confirmed on Monday that The King sent a personal message to President Trump on his inauguration, reflecting on the enduring special relationship between the UK and USA.
Members of the Royal Family have soft power to strengthen relationships between two countries in a way which politicians will never be able to do; royals have to remain politically neutral.
I understand the option of a State Visit to the U.S. remains firmly on the table, as does the possibility of The King inviting President Trump to London.
A source insists that there are no dates in the diary yet, and any visit would be subject to advice from the Foreign Office.
The Times reports 2026 is the most likely option for an outward State Visit to Washington.
If I was a betting man, I would perhaps place a bet on The Prince and Princess of Wales – if Catherine is well enough.
This is because Prince William met President Trump in Paris last year, and Trump remarked “he looks better in person” as he beamed with delight.
A royal source previously branded William a “global statesman”, and his popularity in the United States (despite his brother’s personal attacks) could be something the UK Government could capitalise on.
Buckingham Palace confirmed on Monday that The King sent a personal message to President Trump on his inauguration, reflecting on the enduring special relationship between the UK and USA.
Getty
WILLIAM BACK IN THE BOXING RING?
On Tuesday, The Prince of Wales visited Centrepoint’s Ealing service to meet young people being supported by the homeless charity.
2025 will mark 20 years of Prince William being the charity’s Patron, having made secret visits as a boy with his mother Diana, Princess of Wales.
During the engagement, he played table football and boxed with young people experiencing homelessness.
He appeared to thrive during boxing drills, saying: “It might get me back into boxing, you never know”.
I hear The Prince of Wales has, in the past, taken to the boxing ring: all be it “briefly” and “not properly”.
At Centrepoint, each young person (16 – 25) is provided with a home, employment and education opportunities, as well as counselling.
I understand The Prince really enjoyed meeting the young people – especially hearing their personal stories of why they needed support.
For example, he met 24-year-old Bethany who was in care as a child – she fell pregnant aged 17.
She “pushed through” with the help of Centrepoint, and earned a degree from the London School of Economics (LSE) and now works in local government.
In 2023, The Prince of Wales launched ‘Homewards’ – a five year plan to demonstrate homelessness can be ended in the UK, making it rare, brief and unrepeated.
On Tuesday, The Prince of Wales visited Centrepoint’s Ealing service to meet young people being supported by the homeless charity.
Getty
WHAT PRINCE HARRY’S UNCLE TELLS US ABOUT ROYAL FAMILY RELATIONS
The Duke of Sussex has settled out of court with News Group Newspapers (NGN) over alleged unlawful information gathering at both The Sun and the now-defunct News of the World.
NGN has offered Harry an “unequivocal apology” for the intrusion into the private lives of himself and his late mother, Diana, Princess of Wales.
It is the first time The Sun newspaper has ever admitted liability for their use of private investigators to carry out unlawful information gathering, but the title has always denied phone hacking.
Prince William and Harry’s uncle, Earl Spencer, has now made a rare public statement: “It takes an enormous amount of guts to take on opponents like News Group Newspapers, and a great tenacity to win. And it’s just wonderful that Harry fought for – and gained – an apology to his mother. She would have been incredibly touched at that and rightly proud.”
It is incredibly telling that Diana’s brother has gone on the record to defend, and praise, his nephew’s tenacity.
Following the late Princess’ tragic death in a Paris car crash, during a paparazzi chase, Earl Spence accused British newspaper editors of having “blood on their hands”.
It appears Prince Harry and his uncle could share the same resentment towards British tabloids, and shows their bond is still strong, despite Harry’s fallout with the Royal Family over ‘Megxit’.
I understand Prince Harry is still not on speaking terms with his brother, Prince William, and has limited contact with The King.
Kensington Palace and Buckingham Palace declined to comment on Prince Harry’s legal settlement.
The Duke of Sussex has settled out of court with News Group Newspapers (NGN) over alleged unlawful information gathering at both The Sun and the now-defunct News of the World.
Getty
KING’S SECRET DINNERS WITH THE GRENADIER GUARDS
Yesterday, I attended the Grenadier Guards’ inspection at their barracks near Aldershot.
On Monday, they take up Ceremonial Public Duties for The King at Buckingham Palace, Windsor Castle, The Tower of London and St James’s Palace.
For the last five years, these battle-hardened soldiers have been deployed on operational combat duties.
With a few minor tweaks, ordered by the Brigade Major of the Household Division Lieutenant Colonel Charles Foinette, they will achieve ‘ceremonial perfection’ by Monday’s ceremonies.
He tells me: “The things we tend to be commenting on are things like fit of uniforms, where perhaps some tailoring adjustment is required, or, in 1 or 2 cases, where [bearskin caps] are perhaps a little bit beyond their design life and are going a funny colour, or could fit better. So it’s really about providing the appropriate support to make sure that the soldiers and indeed the battalion, get the support they require to perform to the highest standard.
The Grenadier Guards have a particularly close bond with King Charles, who I understand often has private dinners with them. His Majesty is the Company Commander of the King’s Company Grenadier Guards – one of the oldest regiments in the British Army They have been on duty inside Westminster Abbey at every coronation since King Charles II was crowned, following the restoration of the monarchy in 1660 They were originally formed from loyal bodies of men who remained close to, and trusted by, The King throughout his exile in Bruges – his father, Charles I, was executed in 1649.
Politics
Majority of Britons support ‘cutting or abolishing’ levy ahead of Labour’s IHT hike
A majority of Britons support cutting or abolishing inheritance tax (IHT), known as “the most unpopular tax in Britain”, according to new polling conducted for the TaxPayers’ Alliance.
The research, carried out by Public First, found that 55 per cent of those surveyed want to either reduce or completely eliminate the tax. These findings show widespread support across all demographics, including both genders, all age groups, social grades, regions, education levels and political affiliations.
The polling comes as the TaxPayers’ Alliance launches a campaign calling for the complete abolition of inheritance tax, which they describe as “unworkable, unfair and immoral”.
Recent data has shown inheritance tax receipts increased by £600million in the nine months to December compared to the previous year. The poll revealed that 27 per cent of respondents wanted inheritance tax to be cut, while 28 per cent supported its complete abolition.
In contrast, 21 per cent believed the tax should remain at current levels, and just 10 per cent favoured an increase. The remaining respondents were unsure about their position on the issue.
Do you have a money story you’d like to share? Get in touch by emailing money@gbnews.uk.
A landmark poll of Britons suggest the country wants to see the end of inheritance tax
GETTY / FLICKR/ TREASURY
A majority across all age groups, both genders and all social grades expressed support for either cutting or abolishing the tax. When asked about the fairness of nine different taxes, inheritance tax emerged as the most unpopular, with 46 per cent listing it as the most unfair.
Income tax followed at 27 per cent, with stamp duty at 26 per cent and VAT at 24 per cent. National insurance, capital gains tax, insurance premium tax, vehicle excise tax and air passenger duty were viewed as less unfair by respondents.
The survey found that inheritance tax was considered the most unfair by a plurality across nearly all demographic groups. Only those with a PhD differed from this pattern, though the specific preference of this group was not detailed in the findings.
Furthermore, polling revealed strong support for abolishing inheritance tax specifically for family farms and businesses. A significant 63 per cent of respondents backed removing the tax for those passing down farms to family members.
Inheritance tax is one of HMRC’s most unpopular levies
PA
Similarly, 59 per cent supported abolishing the tax for family businesses. The findings showed particularly strong backing for farm inheritance, with a majority of every demographic group supporting tax abolition in these cases.
This comes as a notable challenge to Labour Government reforms to agricultural and business property relief. John O’Connell, chief executive of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said the findings demonstrated clear public sentiment against the tax.
“The British public clearly recognise that inheritance tax is an almost uniquely bad tax, given their unanimous support for cutting or abolishing it altogether,” he said.
He suggested that while some reforms could provide temporary relief, a complete overhaul was necessary.
“While there are certain reforms – such as lifting thresholds – that could ease some of the pain, it’s becoming increasingly clear that the only acceptable solution in the long term is complete abolition,” he added.
O’Connell called on politicians to take decisive action based on public opinion. “Our political leaders now need to listen to the electorate that put them in office and scrap inheritance tax once and for all.”
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James Frayne, Chairman of Public First, highlighted politicians’ historical misjudgment of public sentiment towards the tax.
“For twenty years, polls have shown how much voters detest inheritance tax but politicians still blunder into raising it, only to be shocked when their ratings go down,” he said.
Frayne criticised the fundamental nature of the tax and its impact on bereaved families.
“It’s a stupid tax: It raises comparatively little but sends a message that the state is prepared to tax you even when you’re grieving for lost relatives,” he added.
Politics
‘We’re taught to be ashamed!’ Ann Widdecombe urges Britain to follow in US footsteps and end ‘profusion of LGBT and BLM flags’
Reform UK spokeswoman Ann Widdecombe has called for government buildings to fly only national flags and those of visiting nations, echoing recent policy changes in the United States.
Speaking on GB News, the former Conservative minister said: “I think that the only flags that should be thrown from a government building are, first of all, the national flag from our case, Union Jack in Wales, or the Welsh flag, and the flag of any country that is making a state visit.”
She argued this approach would avoid controversy and special treatment whilst preventing any confusion from a “profusion of flags.”
Widdecombe’s comments follow President Donald Trump’s recent directive through the State Department that only the American flag should be flown at U.S. facilities worldwide.
The order, implemented this week, explicitly prohibits the display of Pride and Black Lives Matter flags at diplomatic buildings.
“The flag of the United States of America united all Americans under the universal principles of justice, liberty, and democracy,” states the order, as reported by the Washington Free Beacon.
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- Starmer left waiting by the phone as Trump opts to call China’s Xi Jinping instead
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- ‘It’s not fair!’ Charity shop forced to pay after fly-tippers dump stinking food waste outside store
The directive allows for limited exceptions, permitting only the Prisoner of War/Missing in Action flag and the Wrongful Detainees flag to be displayed alongside the Stars and Stripes.
Addressing specific concerns, Widdecombe highlighted potential contradictions in current flag policies.
“Particularly with the Black Lives Matter you have the issue that they’re in favour of defunding the police, which seems a very odd thing to fly over the Home Office,” she told GB News.
She emphasised that a national-flags-only policy would eliminate potential disputes.
“You can avoid all these controversies, you can avoid all the conscientious objections if the only thing you have is the national flag and that of any visiting country,” she said.
The stance aligns with growing debate over flag displays at government buildings on both sides of the Atlantic.
Widdecombe went on to criticise what she sees as a lack of patriotic education in Britain.
“First of all we’re taught to be ashamed of our country. Children are taught the worst possible aspects of colonialism in schools, virtually no addressing of the good aspects at all,” she said.
The Reform UK spokeswoman called for immediate changes to education policy if her party gained power.
“I’m not suggesting that you teach [children] the country is always right and has never been wrong,” she explained. “I’ve advocated teaching them how to think and to get them thinking, they need balance.”
She argued Britain needs to project a more confident image to attract international investment.
Politics
Reform and Tories ‘must form alliance’ if split on Right opens door to Starmer victory
Reform and the Conservatives will have to come to some sort of arrangement if neither can come out on top according to a top Conservative peer.
Lord Frost, the former Conservative minister who negotiated Boris Johnson’s Brexit deal, also said that Tory and Reform politicians should stop trying to “rubbish” each other in public.
The comments from Lord Frost, the former Brexit negotiator, come after former Tory Home Secretary Suella Braverman suggested that the Tories and Reform UK had to unite to defeat Labour.
Frost told today’s Chopper’s Political Podcast that the two parties had to agree on a deal to work together before the election if neither came out on top.
GB News
Lord Frost sat down with GB News’ Christopher Hope
GB News
He said: “No, I don’t think it is inevitable. I think it’s possible that one or other party could come out on top and get a decisive lead, and then politics has to accommodate that.
“If it doesn’t happen, then there’s got to be some sort of arrangement or whatever, because we can’t allow Labour to win again on a third of the vote.”
Frost urged Reform and Tory MPs to stop publicly attacking each other.
He said: “I personally don’t think it’s right for Conservatives to rubbish Reform figures, or even more so, people who voted for Reform.
“And I don’t think it’s particularly wise for Reform to do that either. We need to be building agreement and understanding between each other, not, you know, digging the trench even deeper.”
Listen or watch Chopper’s Political Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or GB News’ YouTube channel
Politics
Labour opens door to Brexit betrayal after ‘helpful’ EU chief demands UK ‘shackles’ itself to Brussels
Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds has hinted that the UK could join the EU’s custom-style Pan-Euro-Mediterranean Convention just hours after Brussels bureaucrat Maros Sefcovic touted the potential arrangement in Davos.
Reynolds, who met with Sefcovic yesterday, claimed that joining the group could be acceptable as it is “not a Customs Union”.
The Business Secretary told the BBC: “We can improve the terms of trade with the EU in a way which doesn’t revisit customs unions or single markets or the arguments of Brexit, and we can do that whilst pursuing closer trade links around the world.”
Reynolds also hinted at further Brexit betrayals, including on food and farm products.
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey, who ultimately hopes for even closer ties with the EU, said ruling out the PEM proposal would be an “act of economic negligence”.
However, Shadow Foreign Secretary Dame Priti Patel accused Labour of “bending the knee” to the EU.
She said: “These latest reports that the Government might shackle us to the European Union are deeply concerning, and once again make clear that Keir Starmer and his chums are all too happy to put their ideology ahead of our national interest, no matter the cost.”
The Prime Minister is under pressure to return Britain to the EU’s orbit after Brussels’s new trade chief Maros Sefcovic stresseed such an agreement would represent membership of the Pan-Euro-Mediterranean Convention (PEM).
PEM operates under common rules which enable parts, ingredients and materials for manufacturing supply chains to be sourced from across dozens of countries in Europe and North Africa tariff-free.
The suggestion, rejected by the previous Tory Governments, was touted during Sefcovic’s appearance at the World Economic Forum in Davos.
The Prime Minister is unequioval about his determination to “reset” cross-Channel relations but continues to insist that this will not infringe on the UK’s decision to leave the Single Market or Customs Union.
Despite No10 remaining quite coy about the UK’s potential membership of PEM yesterday, Starmer’s Government is reportedly holding consultations with business leaders over the benefits of PEM but no final decision has yet been made.
Brexiteers have long warned that being part of a Customs Union would block the UK from signing independent Free Trade Agreements, including with the United States.
During Sefcovic’s Davos appearance, the EU’s trade chief said the idea has not been “precisely formulated” by London yet and the “ball is in the UK’s court”.
Sefcovic also hinted at a full-scale veterinary agreement to reduce frictions on farming and food trade, an updating fisheries deal and mobility plan for under 30s.
Sefcovic stressed he hoped the scheme would “build bridges for the future for the European Union and the UK”.
“That was the idea,” he said. “[But] we’ve been a little bit surprised what kind of spin it got in the UK.
“It is not freedom of movement,” Sefcovic added. “We have been very clear what we’ve been proposing.”
Politics
Youngest MP Calls For ‘Voting Terminals’ Around Parliament As Backbenchers Plan Modernisation Drive
3 min read
Labour MP Sam Carling has called for the Modernisation Committee to consider reform of Parliament’s voting system to make MPs “more productive”.
Speaking to PoliticsHome, the Labour MP for North West Cambridgeshire said: “MPs have a huge amount of demands on our time. Physically walking through a room to vote several times in a row – it may be 15 minutes, but then we have to hover till the next one starts. So we could be there for over an hour straight… How much could I have done in that time? Quite a lot.”
Carling told PoliticsHome “there’s a lot of people who are looking to see reform to the voting system”.
Carling estimated that it currently costs up to £7,600 of MPs’ total time per vote, presuming that all 650 turn up.
He calculated the figure by assuming the House manages three votes an hour, with MPs working a 50 hour week. Looking at four votes per hour on a 60-hour week, the cost was £4,759 per vote.
“At the moment, I have to give myself time to trek over to the palace, which takes… 10 minutes.”
“If I could just have some buttons to press. That’s a two-minute job. So there’s a significant amount of time I think we can save there.”
MPs ‘could be a lot more productive’
“I would put terminals around the place.”
Carling said he appreciated that there are arguments against modernisation, for example the fact that being in the Chamber is a “good opportunity to lobby ministers”.
While he accepted that that argument had merit, he said: “I think a lot of that is outweighed by just the fact that we could be a lot more productive.”
If there were resistance to full-scale change, Carling said “getting rid” of the tellers – who physically count MPs’ votes – would be “a happy medium” as “the thing that slows us down is the single file queue at the end to get past the tellers”.
This way, he said, the party whips would still be confident they are able to help people who are not sure what’s going on “because I think that’s another worry as well there”.
Speaking to PoliticsHome about his proposals in his office, Carling said: “But what I prefer to have is just have pass readers around the estate. So there’s a division on, [we] could have one on the ground floor of this building [1 Parliament Square], or just one on each floor in this building, which would be significantly easier to deal with quicker for everybody.”
It comes after a group of MPs were expected to make a submission to the Modernisation Committee calling for it to look at curbing alcohol provision during working hours, diversifying paintings on display, and improving lighting within the building.
The Liberal Democrats have also submitted to the committee, calling for an improved Private Members’ Bill (PMB) process, and an independent body to decide the scheduling of the House, PoliticsHome recently learned.
Sarah Olney, the Liberal Democrat Spokesperson for the Cabinet Office, said the party has suggested a “sifting process” for PMBs, where backbenchers are supported by government officials to design a PMB that will “really work”, and so will have “improved chances of legislation getting on the statute”.
Olney said the party has also suggested introducing an independent body to “take the programming [of the House] out of the hands of the government”.
“It’s basically so that the scheduling doesn’t then become a political football,” she said. “All parties will get better notice of what’s happening when, so that you don’t suddenly get things scheduled at the last minute.”
She added: “Certainly during a lot of the Brexit debates, we were just not given enough time to properly debate really serious issues. An independent body would ensure that proper time was being given to things that needed proper scrutiny.”
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Mod turns ‘Counter-Strike’ into a ‘Tekken’ clone with fighting chickens
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Fashion8 years ago
Your comprehensive guide to this fall’s biggest trends
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