Politics
Reform UK’s Danny Kruger On Preparing For Government And Making ‘A Mess Of It’

Danny Kruger (Photography by Tom Pilston for The House)
13 min read
Ex-Tory MP Danny Kruger reveals to Sienna Rodgers his plans as Reform UK’s head of preparing for government, from election readiness to pronatalist ambition – and why he fears for Britain if his party makes ‘a mess of it’
A mop of grey hair can be seen bobbing over boxes piled high in a room with walls stripped bare, leaving only hooks missing their pictures. As a pair of podcast hosts stumble out, we shuffle in. Danny Kruger is being kicked out of his parliamentary office.
The Reform MP for East Wiltshire is likely destined for a pokier alternative, somewhere harder to find on the estate. This is his belated punishment, handed down by the whips, for defecting from the Conservatives in September to Nigel Farage’s insurgent party. He was the first sitting MP to make the big leap.
Now tasked with heading up Reform UK’s preparations for government, Kruger says he has “the most exciting job it’s possible to be doing in politics”. So, if there were a general election tomorrow, would his party be ready to govern?
“We’ll be ready when we have to be. There’s not going to be a general election tomorrow,” he replies. “We are getting ready at pace. I would like more time, because I think we will benefit from having our ideas kicked around by more people with expertise.”
With characteristic impishness, he summarises: “The answer to your question is, we’ll be ready when we have to be, but we’ll be readier the later it is.”
His own attention is geared towards the Civil Service, which will see a major headcount reduction under Reform plans. Kruger sets out a private sector-style vision: more people brought in from the outside; ‘high-flyers’ better-paid, with a performance-related element; some recruited for short periods, say six months, to work on a specific task.
Reform will prioritise “people with actual domain expertise” over “these posh generalists who float about from department to department making policy at the moment”, says the Eton-educated MP some would describe as a posh generalist himself.
“A lot of change is coming. Yes, more political appointees, whether they’re spads or civil servants, and a culture which prioritises delivery and genuine subject matter expertise.”
Would his party work with the new cabinet secretary, Antonia Romeo, dubbed “queen of woke” by some conservatives?
“I’m not going to get into individuals, although it’s true to say we are looking at individuals to see who in the current system we expect to work successfully with,” Kruger says. “To get to the top of the Civil Service, it’s quite a bad sign, really. You would have had to really conform to a very, very strict orthodoxy of belief and practice.”
Asked whether a clear-out will therefore be required, he says he is consulting with current and former civil servants to spot talent – or lack thereof – among permanent secretaries (perm secs) and director-generals (DGs).
“Sometimes name me names – ‘Who do you think is good and bad?’ – but mostly, ‘What proportion of the senior civil service, the top 200 perm secs, DGs, do you rate?’” Their answers are “depressing”, he reports.
So, what proportion of the current crop do they categorise as “good”? Kruger spots a journalist’s trap and refuses to give a percentage. “But it’s bad,” he adds.
This all sounds very Dominic Cummings, the former chief of staff to Boris Johnson, and an old friend of Kruger. The prospect of him joining the project is dismissed, however.
“I don’t think there’s any chance of Dominic coming on board. Neither does he want to, nor would Nigel have him. I think he’s put himself out of consideration for direct work in government,” Kruger says.
“I don’t talk to him much because he’s not in the Reform camp, but I read his stuff, and I’ve always thought he was wise and prescient.”
Cummings has warned that Britain is sliding towards civil war, claiming that we are “only random viral posts away from riots and prairie fires getting out of control”. Does Kruger agree?
“Yeah,” he replies. The left portrays Reform as “rabble-rousers” who incite division, which could become violence. “The total opposite is the case. The only chance of unity for our country is Reform,” the MP continues. “If we don’t win, or if we win and then make a mess of it, I do fear for our country.”
Life as a small-c conservative has been a pain of late, including under recent Tory administrations. “We fight the long defeat, as Tolkien said. We’re always losing,” as Kruger puts it.
Yet he fully believes that the winds are changing now. The mood of the country has shifted, and those in power, still embracing “the cult of the independent individual” without “any obligations beyond self-gratification”, are lagging behind.
“We’re all realising how empty that philosophy is and how destructive it is of society,” he says. “The Reform slogan is family, community, country. We’re talking about the associations that give us meaning and identity and security and a sense of belonging. I think that’s where the country is now going – away from a doctrine of total liberal individualism.”
“I’ve been hoping for a return to IDS all these years, but I found that in Nigel – he is my IDS”
Kruger, 51, made his start in politics at the Centre for Policy Studies think tank and then as an adviser in the Conservative Party’s policy unit, initially under Iain Duncan Smith. After a stint as the Telegraph’s chief leader writer, he started writing David Cameron’s speeches – including, most memorably, the “hug-a-hoodie” one. He insists his politics have not budged over the years, however.
“I remain quite proud of that speech,” he says, explaining that it was actually very conservative, advocating proper punishment of criminals as well as love for young people at risk of crime. (His embrace of words like “love” is not unusual for politicians driven by their faith – Kruger became a Christian in his 20s, after meeting his wife, Emma – and should not be mistaken for softness of politics.) He left Cameron in 2008 to work full-time on the youth crime prevention charity he co-founded.
“I’ve always been a social conservative. The bits of Cameronism that I approved of, like the Big Society, I still approve of. I was always a Brexiteer.”
He is “probably less of a neocon”, though: “I supported the Iraq War – I regret that.” He regrets, too, supporting parts of the Covid response before later becoming a strong lockdown critic.
“I was the token right-winger in the Cameron team. I was probably most at home, in all of these Tory leaders I worked for, with IDS, in the 2003 era. So, I’ve been hoping for a return to IDS all these years, but I found that in Nigel – he is my IDS.”
Kruger has been prominent over the last year not only because of his defection but also his opposition to assisted dying.
“My expectation is that they’re going to run out of time,” he says of Kim Leadbeater’s bill currently before Parliament. “While I oppose the bill, and I will oppose any assisted dying bill because I don’t think it’s possible to craft a safe one, you could craft a much safer one than this.” He does not accept that peers have been filibustering to kill the bill.
Kruger’s mother, Bake Off star Prue Leith, has been one of the celebrities at the fore of the pro-assisted dying campaign. They made a documentary together about the subject, through which they came to better understand each other’s views.
“It’s been a bit difficult sometimes, because it matters a lot to both of us, and we haven’t been prepared to stop. She’s committed to the campaign; I’m committed to resisting it. But, no, overwhelmingly, I salute my mum for not minding that I am leading, or one of the leaders of, the campaign to stop her getting her way,” he says. “Neither of us is budging. That’s OK.”
The other big social reform put before MPs recently was the decriminalisation of abortion at any point during pregnancy, via an amendment by Labour MP Tonia Antoniazzi. Unlike the assisted dying legislation, it passed the Commons easily.
“I thought it was a real shame that we did that – as a country, as a Parliament. Again, totally understand the argument for it, but it has sent a very, very strong signal that it is acceptable to abort a viable baby at nine months,” Kruger says. He also argues it has put vulnerable women at further risk of coercion by abusive partners. (Advocates of decriminalisation naturally disagree on both points.)
“The fact it happened the same week as the assisted dying bill just struck me as a very, very dark episode in our national life.”
In Kruger’s 2023 book Covenant, which outlines his conservative communitarian philosophy, he describes sex as being a private act done almost in public, when it should really be a public act done in private. What role does he believe a political party can have in undoing the sexual revolution, or resetting our sexual culture?
“A limited but important one,” he replies. He is clear that every government policy is “critically important to the way families form” and confirms that Reform UK is looking at switching our tax system to be based on households rather than individuals.
“Marriage traditionally was the means by which sexual relations between men and women were regulated, and I think we are suffering from having a totally unregulated sexual economy,” he says.
“I’m not interested in your love life, or anything about your personal life – that is your business. But I am interested in the framework in which you make your decisions, and I’d like the framework to be more pro-social. If you want – most people do want – to settle down with one person to have children, we should make that easier.”
While he is against the 2022 introduction of no-fault divorce, because the landmark change “basically means that your vows don’t matter”, he does not commit to overturning it. “I don’t know whether we’d be able to reverse it,” he says. “I don’t think that would be party policy, to change that.”
It may not include this one, but – with Reform UK figures concerned about our low birth rate – the party is developing a suite of fertility-boosting policies, he confirms: “Yes, we have a pronatalist ambition. We want people to have more children, and we think the government should get behind that wish.”
Expect more from Reform on childcare, for example: “Clearly, the system is totally dysfunctional. There’s a massive disincentive for parents to be able to organise their finances around their actual lives. It’s broken.”
Kruger must be serious about getting into power: he appears to position himself as less right-wing now that he has joined Reform than he did as a Tory.
Asked about his past interest in dismantling the welfare state in favour of the ‘Big Society’, he maintains that the latter was “the best aspect of the Cameron government – except the referendum, of course” and criticises welfare dependence, before pointing out that “we don’t want to dismantle the public services that people rely on”.
Is he remembering his call for “a period of creative destruction in the public services”, which forced him to stand down as a 2005 Tory candidate? “Yes, yes, I don’t want to walk into that one,” he smiles.
“Let’s not pretend otherwise: there is a clear affinity of worldview between the Maga movement and Reform”
As we discuss the British shibboleths that Reform cannot afford to be seen as having any wish to meddle with, Kruger rejects any notion of switching away from the current NHS funding model. Instead, he expands on his view that the real problem is that this country is very sick. He talks of “the principle that there’s often better alternatives than a pharmaceutical prescription or a medical treatment” – so, is he against obesity jabs?
“I’m no expert. I don’t want to wade into a debate where I don’t have the expertise – that doesn’t stop me always, but on this occasion…” Another smile. “Instinctively, I’m suspicious of a solution that seems so easy.” He is “not a caveman” and is “very pro-tech”, yet “shortcuts feel to me to be dangerous. But who am I to object?”
On the subject of Reform’s electoral vulnerabilities, The House probes Nigel Farage’s closeness with President Trump. Is that a challenge for the domestic audience?
“Clearly, Donald Trump is not wildly popular in the UK, and the fact that we have and Nigel has a personal friendship with him, might not be advantageous,” he says.
“On the other hand, I think it reflects well on Nigel that he’s stood by Donald Trump, including when Trump was down, and that relationship is very, very useful, potentially, to the United Kingdom and to a Reform government. And let’s not pretend otherwise: there is a clear affinity of worldview between the Maga movement and Reform.”
Kruger clarifies: “The US is a very different place. We don’t want to mirror their politics. We don’t want to follow everything that the current administration is doing in the UK, far from it. But the US and the Republicans are the best friends this country could have.”
The Reform MP seems genuinely comfortable in his new home. He claims not to know whether more Conservative MPs will follow suit, saying it is “a very personal decision” and “not for me to decide who Nigel would want to have anyway”.
He delivers the pitch anyway: “If you’re an authentic conservative, your patriotic duty is to join Reform – unless you’ve got some massive personal problem with some policy we’ve got, or people. But you shouldn’t.”
So, if Farage’s party forms the official opposition or government, which jobs does he have his eye on? The Department for Work and Pensions, perhaps?
“I would like to start putting in my bids for jobs now, but I won’t. Who knows what Nigel will want from each of us?” Kruger replies, acknowledging that “yeah, social policy is where I feel most expert”.
Could he be in the Cabinet Office – Reform’s Pat McFadden? “The Oliver Letwin of the operation! Again, we don’t know what the structures of government are going to be, what roles will exist, what departments we’ll have. I think there needs to be some machinery of government changes.”
The cabinet, he says, “will look smaller” and Farage has confirmed that the jobs will not all go to MPs, “so there might not be room for me”.
That would seem rather harsh, considering what a significant step he took in defecting. “I might have screwed up by then. My normal trajectory is to do something catastrophic and blow myself up. So, let’s see what I do next.”
Politics
11 Symptoms Of Meningitis Parents Should Never Ignore
This article features advice from Dr Tom Nutt, of Meningitis Now, the NHS and the UK government.
After an outbreak of meningitis claimed the lives of two students in Canterbury, experts are urging people to be aware of the symptoms and seek urgent help if they experience them.
A further 11 people are hospitalised by the illness, the BBC reported, with most aged between 18 and 21 years old.
Dr Tom Nutt, chief executive of the charity Meningitis Now, said they are “deeply saddened” to hear of the deaths.
“Our heartfelt thoughts are with their families, friends and the entire university community at this incredibly difficult time,” he added.
What is meningitis?
Meningitis is an infection of the protective membranes that surround the brain and spinal cord. It’s usually caused by a bacterial or viral infection (the former is less common, but more serious).
The infection most commonly occurs in babies, young children, teens and young adults.
Following the latest outbreak; parents, students and university staff are being urged to “remain vigilant” for the signs of meningitis, which can include:
- High fever
- Severe headache
- Vomiting
- Sensitivity to light
- Confusion
- Cold hands and feet
- Limb pain
- Stiff neck
- Drowsiness/unresponsiveness
- Seizures
- A rash that doesn’t fade under pressure
(Source: Dr Nutt and the NHS)
“Symptoms can appear suddenly and can easily be mistaken for flu, a heavy cold or even the after-effects of a night out, so it is vital that anyone who is concerned seeks urgent medical help immediately,” said Dr Nutt.
What’s behind the outbreak?
Cases of meningitis dropped sharply during the Covid-19 pandemic but have since increased – in 2024-25, cases were higher than they were the year previous, according to the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA)
Alongside this, infant and teenage vaccination rates have declined, leaving more people vulnerable.
Three vaccines protect against the main causes of meningitis. The MenB vaccine is offered to infants at eight weeks, 16 weeks and one year of age, as part of routine NHS vaccinations. Babies are also given the pneumococcal vaccine at 16 weeks and one year.
The MenACWY vaccine protects teenagers against four types of bacteria linked to meningitis and is usually given in school during Year 9 (when kids are aged 13-14).
If you haven’t had it and are in higher education, speak to your GP about getting one (you remain eligible for the MenACWY jab until your 25th birthday).
University students and young adults are among the groups at increased risk because meningitis bacteria “can spread more easily in settings where people live, study and socialise closely together”, Dr Nutt noted.
Infections that cause meningitis can be spread through sneezing, coughing and kissing.
How is meningitis treated?
While viral meningitis typically improves on its own within seven to 10 days, the NHS notes bacterial meningitis usually needs to be treated in hospital with antibiotics (and possible fluids/oxygen) for at least a week.
The UK Health Security Agency is currently identifying close contacts of those impacted by the outbreak and offering precautionary antibiotics where needed.
Dr Nutt concluded: “If anyone is worried about symptoms, trust your instincts and seek urgent medical help. Acting quickly can save lives.”
The government advises that anyone affected with meningococcal disease “will usually become seriously ill within a few hours”.
You should contact your GP or NHS 111 for advice if you have any concerns about your own or someone else’s health.
If symptoms are getting worse, seek medical help urgently at the closest emergency department or by dialling 999.
Politics
Trump Stuns With Bombshell Admission About His Iran War
Donald Trump left critics in disbelief on Sunday with a remark about his Iran war during a press huddle on board Air Force One.
The president was discussing his call for other countries to send ships to help secure the Strait of Hormuz, the vital — and currently effectively shut — waterway off Iran through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil passes.
Asked how quickly those deployments would happen, Trump said it would “start immediately,” with different countries offering different forms of assistance, including minesweeper boats.
He later said: “So, we need, I, I would really, I’m demanding that these countries come in and protect their own territory because it is their territory, it’s the place from which they get their energy and they should come and they should help us protect it.”
Then came the line that quickly sparked reaction online:
“You could make the case that maybe we shouldn’t even be there at all because we don’t need it.”
“We have a lot of oil,” said Trump. “We were the number one producer anywhere in the world times two by double at least double. Now I think it’s much higher than that. But we do it. It’s almost like we do it for habit, but we also do it for some very good allies that we have in the Middle East.”
Politics
Politics Home | Britain’s economy cannot afford a false choice between creativity and innovation

Britain’s debate over AI and text and data mining has been framed as a choice between protecting creativity and enabling innovation. In reality, the UK’s economic future depends on building a framework that allows both to thrive, argues Neil Ross from Public First
Britain has a bad habit of turning policy debates into battles – one side pitched against the other. The discussion around text and data mining (TDM), the process by which AI uses data, has become the latest example, creating a false choice between innovation and creativity.
That framing is wrong. Britain’s creative industries are one of the country’s great success stories. So too is British tech and innovation – an area where we shine on the world stage. Policymakers should not force a choice between them, but create the conditions for both to grow together.
This matters because TDM is no longer a niche technical issue, nor is it confined to major technology firms. It is now widely used across the economy and sits at the heart of how modern businesses use AI, analyse information, develop new products and raise productivity – from Britain’s car industry to new medicines for the NHS.
Public First research shows that one in five UK businesses already use TDM tools. In sectors central to the UK’s industrial strategy – life sciences and financial services – that figure rises to a third. If we want the UK to lead in AI adoption, scientific discovery, advanced services and digital innovation, we cannot ignore that access to AI tools will determine whether British firms can compete.
More than half of British businesses want to move from basic to advanced integration of AI and cloud technologies within two to three years. Yet many told us that legal risk is holding them back. Seventy‑four per cent of businesses performing TDM said access to external data is essential to their operations.
That should concern ministers. Britain’s growth outlook is far from rosy. Productivity remains weak, fiscal headroom is tight, and every serious economic strategy relies on far faster diffusion of AI and digital technologies. In these circumstances, we cannot afford to close off potential growth by making it harder for UK businesses to compete in a global economy that is only becoming more cut‑throat.
The decisions the government takes now have major consequences. If Britain creates an environment where companies have clear permission to embrace new technology, our modelling suggests AI‑powered businesses could contribute as much as £510 billion to UK GDP by 2035. But under a highly restrictive path, that falls to £290 billion – a £220 billion gap, roughly equivalent to Scotland’s GDP (including oil and gas).
None of this is to dismiss the legitimate concerns of rights holders. Creators should be confident their work is respected and rewarded. But we should not respond by building a regime so restrictive that businesses from biotech to education hesitate to use AI.
Licensing is one obvious part of the solution. Voluntary commercial agreements are beginning to emerge and can offer value for rights holders while giving technology firms access to high‑quality, curated data. Both tech companies and rights holders are already investing in licensing tools. Developing workable models is far preferable to a prolonged policy battle.
Yet licensing alone will not be enough. If companies lack confidence that they can use AI for commercial advantage, the framework becomes too cumbersome and too uncertain. That would throw grit into the gears of UK innovation at exactly the moment growth is needed most – leaving the country poorer, less productive and less competitive.
Creative industries would feel those consequences too. Many of the UK’s most dynamic creative sectors – from video games to visual effects – have themselves argued for commercial TDM exemptions. Britain does not need to choose. It can build a framework that gives both sectors the confidence to invest, experiment and work together.
Other countries have already made that choice, from the EU to Singapore and Japan. Yet a polarised domestic debate risks leaving Britain behind. The Government should aim for a settlement that supports both creativity and innovation – and look at how widely this kind of AI innovation is already being used across the economy to give them the confidence to act.
Neil Ross is Director at Public First and leads its Technology, Media and Telecoms practice.
Politics
The House Article | Restoring the home of Parliament is an act of responsibility

4 min read
Restoring the home of Parliament is about safeguarding the heart of our democracy for future generations.
The proposals now before Parliament are the result of years of detailed analysis, technical studies, and independent expert assurance. It is right that work of this scale has prompted wide debate, particularly given the very significant costs involved.
There is, however, a broad consensus on one central point: the Victorian building requires major work to address fundamental issues such as fire safety, ageing infrastructure, asbestos, and deteriorating stonework. Without decisive action, these challenges will continue to grow.
Most of the proposed investment—around 85 per cent of construction costs for the Palace of Westminster—is focused on priority works. This includes replacing mechanical, power, water, sewage and heating systems; improving fire safety; managing asbestos safely; and repairing extensive stone damage. These are not optional enhancements but core requirements to keep a complex, heavily occupied historic building functioning safely and effectively.
One of the biggest costs is linked to the extensive network of increasingly outdated services embedded throughout the Palace. The steam heating system for example was installed in the 1950s and has become increasingly unreliable. Recent years have seen up to 80 leaks annually and just a few weeks ago it took several days to fix a major failure.
Ensuring that heating, power and water systems can operate dependably across a 150-year-old building with more than 1,100 rooms is a basic necessity. Improved energy efficiency would be a welcome and sensible byproduct of modernising these systems.
Fire safety is another critical area. Proper fire zoning in a building used daily by thousands of people is essential. In fact, these measures will build on the original fire safety principles in Sir Charles Barry’s design, which have been compromised over time by successive alterations. Restoring that integrity and improving fire protection is both achievable and vital.
Alongside these priority works, the proposals also deliver important benefits for everyone who uses the building. Improving step-free access to around 60 per cent would make Parliament more usable for those who work here and for visitors. In many cases, accessibility improvements are a welcome benefit of safety upgrades—for example, the installation of fire evacuation lifts gives an in-built accessibility improvement.
The plans also include a permanent education centre for the tens of thousands of children on school visits every year as well as an improved visitor entrance and visitor routes. These changes are designed to enhance security and safety for visitors and those who work in Parliament. Basement visitor routes and education centre would make use of existing, underused spaces that would be repurposed with sympathetic restoration that respects the Palace’s historic fabric.
Importantly, these education and visitor improvements represent a modest proportion of the budget— between 0.8 and 2.7 per cent of Palace construction costs—yet they deliver significant benefits for security, safety, and public access.
No one underestimates the scale or cost of a programme of this complexity and duration. That is why extensive parliamentary scrutiny has already been applied and will continue throughout the project. Robust accountability for public spending is essential.
What is equally clear is that delaying decisions comes at a price. Putting off a decision will add many hundreds of millions to the costs of doing the work due to the impact of inflation. As the report warns, continuing with this approach will lead to managed decline of one of the most recognised buildings in the world as it becomes increasingly unfit for the country it serves. It will mean higher maintenance costs, and increasing safety and operational risks for those who visit and work in the building.
After more than a decade of studies, committees and analysis, it is evident that there is no perfect or low cost option. The recommended way forward is a pragmatic one: approval for seven years of work to begin now, with costs capped at £3 billion, averaging £429 million a year (both figures exclude inflation). This approach allows work to proceed while continuing to bear down on costs while testing and assuring designs with MPs and Peers before decisions on the longer term work need to be taken.
Investment in the Palace will also support thousands of jobs and apprenticeships from modern construction and engineering to traditional crafts. The restoration will need the skills of businesses and people in nations and regions across the UK in this national endeavour to preserve one of the world’s most recognised and cherished buildings.
As custodians of this national symbol, we have a responsibility to act. Continuing to defer decisions only increases risk and cost. The sensible way forward is to begin the work now, safeguard the future of the Palace of Westminster, and ensure it remains a safe, functioning home for UK democracy. It is time to get on with the job.
Politics
How To Improve Physically And Cognitively After 65
Many associate ageing with different kinds of decline. There’s sarcopenia, or the loss of muscle, frailty, cognitive decline, and bone loss, to name a few.
Often, that link can feel inevitable and linear. But new research published in the journal Geriatrics has suggested that’s not always true.
Speaking to Yale, the study’s lead author, Dr Becca R. Levy, said: “Many people equate ageing with an inevitable and continuous loss of physical and cognitive abilities.
“What we found is that improvement in later life is not rare, it’s common, and it should be included in our understanding of the ageing process.”
What did the paper find?
The researchers followed over 11,000 participants aged 65 and over, involved in the Health & Retirement Study, for 12 years.
They used two metrics to track their physical and mental wellness over time. These were a walking speed test – often used as an indicator of people’s overall physical ageing – and a global cognitive test.
In the 12 years of follow-up, researchers found that 45% of people improved in at least one of the two factors.
Roughly 32% improved cognitively, and 28% improved physically. And when you add people whose cognitive ability stayed the same, “more than half defied the stereotype of inevitable deterioration in cognition,” Yale said.
Positive views about ageing seemed to be linked to these results
OK, if so many of these participants seemed to get better, rather than the expected worse, over time, what did they do differently?
Well, the researchers thought it might have something to do with their attitude towards ageing. And after looking at the data provided, they found that in general, people who had internalised more positive beliefs about ageing were more likely to show improvement in both physical and cognitive capacities after 65.
“Our findings suggest there is often a reserve capacity for improvement in later life,” Dr Levy said.
“And because age beliefs are modifiable, this opens the door to interventions at both the individual and societal level.”
Politics
‘We’re going to have a problem’: Republicans want Trump to move on from 2020
President Donald Trump is bringing back 2020. Many Republicans wish he wouldn’t.
Conversations with nearly a dozen GOP state and county chairs and strategists reveal a party largely eager to move on from relitigating Trump’s election grievances, which they’re worried may detract from an economic message that actually motivates voters. But the president won’t let it go, subpoenaing 2020 election records and putting pressure on lawmakers to pass legislation to overhaul voter registration laws.
As Republicans stare down a treacherous midterm landscape, there’s a growing view inside the party that focusing on “stolen election” claims and voter fraud will kneecap them in the general election: That messaging might play well with the MAGA base in the primary, but it could alienate moderates tired of rehashing an election from nearly six years ago.
“I’m always one to believe you should look forward, not backward,” said Charlie Gerow, a Pennsylvania-based GOP strategist and Trump convention delegate who hosted a meeting of fake electors in 2020 at his Harrisburg-based public affairs firm. “It would be better if the midterms focused on the recovery of the economy and all the good things the Republican administration and Congress are doing to move the economy forward.”
In recent weeks, Trump has turned his sights on Maricopa County — Arizona’s largest county — subpoenaing records just weeks after the FBI raided an elections office outside Atlanta. He has revisited grievances that the 2020 election was “rigged,” suggested Republicans should nationalize elections and is demanding that lawmakers make passing the SAVE America Act, which would put in place stricter voting requirements, their “No. 1 priority.”
“Part of me understands it, and part of me just wants to move forward,” said Todd Gillman, chair of the Monroe County Republican Party in Michigan.
“Focus on the things that matter to everybody throughout the whole country,” he said, “or we’re going to have a problem in a few months.”
Trump does have backing from a number of Republicans, including some battleground-state GOP chairs who are not only embracing the president’s election probe, but openly encouraging his administration to audit their states’ records as they continue to push allegations of fraud from 2020.
Bruce Parks, the chair of the Washoe County, Nevada, GOP, said he would “absolutely” welcome a probe into his county and Clark County, the two largest in the state. And Jim Runestad, the chair of the Michigan Republican Party, suggested a review of records in Detroit, long a focal point of Trump’s 2020 election conspiracies.
“There’s no problem at taking a look at this and making sure everybody’s comfortable,” Runestad said.
Still, others say the risk is that voters simply don’t care — or have moved on. Republicans, including Trump’s own advisers, increasingly want him to focus on the economy ahead of the midterms.
That comes as polling repeatedly shows that economic issues — not election issues — top voters’ list of concerns. In a February POLITICO Poll, more than half of all Americans — 52 percent — said the cost of living was a top issue facing the U.S. By comparison, less than a quarter — 23 percent — said a top issue was the U.S.’ democracy being under threat, a view held predominately by Democrats.
Those cost of living worries are now being exacerbated by Trump’s war in Iran, which is driving up gas prices and wreaking global economic havoc as it enters its third week.
The White House said Trump’s efforts are aimed at restoring confidence in elections and reiterated the importance of passing the SAVE Act.
“[Trump] is committed to ensuring that Americans have full confidence in the administration of elections, and that includes totally accurate and up-to-date voter rolls free of errors and unlawfully registered non-citizen voters,” spokesperson Abigail Jackson said in a statement.
Buzz Brockway, a GOP strategist and former state representative in Georgia, called election issues a “huge distraction,” adding: “Nobody outside of a small dedicated group are talking about this, they’re talking about the economy, they’re talking about, now, the price of oil.”
In Georgia, long an epicenter of Trump’s repeated efforts to litigate the 2020 election, some Republicans say voters are now largely “immune” to the issue that’s been rehashed endlessly for the past five years.
Some state-level GOP officials are hoping Congress passes the SAVE Act — despite the reluctance of many Republican lawmakers — so it will give them enough cover with MAGA voters but allow them to avoid talking about election issues themselves.
While Trump’s “stolen election” claims may still be a driving force for some primary voters, the general electorate is focused elsewhere. And if Republicans make those grievances central to their midterm message, they risk falling into a similar trap Democrats confronted during the 2024 presidential election — when former Vice President Kamala Harris’ warnings about democracy won over already loyal Democrats but failed to sway enough of the swing voters she needed to clinch the presidency.
“You’ve got to at least touch that base,” said one Georgia-based GOP strategist, granted anonymity to speak candidly. But “once you’ve got the nomination, then I think it really collapses down into economic issues.”
That dynamic can create a political conundrum for Republican candidates.
“A savvy Democrat will put a candidate on the spot and say, ‘You agree with [Trump], don’t you?’ and make a mess,” Brockway said. Republicans have “got to figure out a way to deflect that question somehow, in a plausible way that doesn’t alienate this loud minority.”
Politics
Oscars 2026: 12 moments you might've missed
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Politics
Donald Trump Warns Starmer Over Iran War Snub
Donald Trump has delivered a chilling warning to Keir Starmer over the prime minister’s initial refusal to let America use British air bases to bomb Iran.
The US president told the PM “we will remember” that decision as the war he launched alongside Israel continues.
Starmer turned down Trump’s request to use UK bases before the conflict began more than two weeks ago.
The prime minister relented 24 hours into the conflict after Iran launched retaliatory strikes on neighbouring countries in the Gulf.
However, US jets are only allowed to fly “defensive” operations from RAF sites as part of the agreement.
Speaking on board Air Force One on Sunday, Trump told reporters: “I don’t want them after we win the war, I want them before we start the war.
“I can say this, and I said it to them: we will remember.”
Nevertheless, Trump has asked the UK and other countries to send warships to protect the Strait of Hormuz, where oil tankers are being attacked by the Iranians.
However, it is understood that the PM is reluctant to do so.
Trump and Starmer spoke on the phone on Sunday night.
A Downing Street spokesman said: “The leaders discussed the ongoing situation in the Middle East and the importance of reopening the Strait of Hormuz to end the disruption to global shipping, which is driving up costs worldwide.
“The prime minister also expressed his condolences for the American service personnel who have lost their lives during the conflict. They agreed to keep in touch.”
Politics
The House Article | Labour MPs Push For Tighter Controls On Holiday Lets

Illustration by Tracy Worrall
9 min read
Short-term holiday lets are a major part of Britain’s tourism industry – but many Labour MPs want tighter controls on their number. Will the government listen? Noah Vickers reports
Across the world, politicians are getting tough on short-term holiday lets. Barcelona plans to ban all self-catering rentals from 2028, while in New York it is already illegal to list your property online unless you are staying with your guest throughout their visit.
Concerns about holiday lets have grown as their popularity – and importance to tourism economies – has soared. Platforms like Airbnb, Vrbo and Booking.com have been variously blamed for hoovering up housing supply, hollowing out communities and driving up prices among the few homes that remain. Neighbours, meanwhile, complain about holiday lets being used as party houses, pop-up brothels or drug dens.
While still in opposition, Labour promised to establish a “licensing system” for holiday lets, though details of how it would work were never fleshed out.
In a 2022 speech, then-shadow housing secretary Lisa Nandy said this system would “protect the spirit” of rural and coastal areas, ensuring people were not “priced out of their own neighbourhoods just for homes to stand empty for months”, and ending “the scourge of communities becoming ghost towns when holidays end”.
Yet Labour’s election manifesto did not mention holiday lets once. After taking office, the party confirmed it would proceed with plans started by the Tories for a national mandatory register of holiday lets across England. References to a “licensing system” have been dropped by ministers, however, and they refuse to provide any firm detail as to whether councils will be empowered to control or cap holiday let numbers.
While the register is due to launch this year, several Labour MPs tell The House they are sceptical about whether it will make any substantial difference, particularly as it is set to be a “light-touch” scheme, with holiday let owners not required to upload any documentation proving the safety of their properties.
Under the registration scheme, it is thought that, after paying a small fee, each holiday let will be given a unique ID number, with the owner identified and the data made available to local authorities.
It is hoped that for the first time this will provide a comprehensive picture of just how many holiday lets there are in different parts of the country, and will help councils understand how their housing stock is being used.
But in some of England’s coastal towns, national parks and cathedral cities that attract high numbers of tourists, Labour MPs are starting to call more loudly for tougher action.
Lizzi Collinge, who represents Morecambe and Lunesdale, says hotels and B&Bs in her constituency have complained that they must jump through many more regulatory hoops than their self-catering competitors.
“They don’t have the same safety regulations, they don’t have the same taxation levels, and they don’t always have the same protections for consumers as well,” she says.
“Registration’s a really good start, and it will help us gather data on what the problem is. What it doesn’t necessarily do is give us all the solutions.”
Markus Campbell-Savours, the Penrith and Solway MP who has just had the Labour whip returned to him after it was suspended for rebelling over inheritance tax for farmers, puts it more starkly.
“The scheme does nothing in areas like mine in the Lake District, other than allow us to count how many [holiday lets] there are, and we already have proxies for doing that through things like the business rates system, where we can see how many have registered for self-catering accommodation.
“For me, unless it’s beefed up and turned into a licensing scheme, it’s of little value.”
Nor has the government apparently succeeded in keeping the holiday let industry entirely on side.
Andy Fenner, CEO of the Short Term Accommodation Association (STAA), says holiday lets are “an easy football” for politicians searching for things to blame for the housing crisis.
If you kill the holiday let sector… you kill the tourism industry
STAA, a trade body that counts Airbnb and Vrbo among its members, has been calling for a registration scheme for almost a decade. They believe it will contribute to the sector’s professionalisation and help deter “bad actors”. It will also mean councils are not overestimating the number of holiday lets in their areas, as any given property will often be listed on multiple websites.
“We know that in most cases the problem is massively overblown,” says Fenner. While he acknowledges that an excess of holiday lets can cause issues in some places, he is concerned that the government is failing to properly recognise tourism’s economic contribution to communities across the country.
“It employs people in our towns, rural communities, in beach resorts, where no other business is ever going to be,” he says.
“We need the government to support that, and when it puts legislation through like this registration scheme, work with us to ensure that the word ‘balance’ is the most important one – that, yes, we’re looking at what tourism does to housing, but we’re also looking at what tourism does to jobs, to local economies.
“If you kill the holiday let sector, which is the demand sector of tourism, you kill the tourism industry. We can’t afford to do that.”
STAA has been in weekly talks with officials at the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) about the register’s development. But Fenner is frustrated by the fact that he and his association have not been able to secure a single meeting with tourism minister Stephanie Peacock.
“We’ve asked on numerous occasions to meet her and talk to her. We feel this is one of the biggest issues in tourism at the moment, but we’ve never met her.”
Peacock’s predecessor, Chris Bryant, said last year that the registration scheme would go live in April 2026. Yet despite the scheme having undergone testing for several months, Fenner’s understanding is that the launch has been delayed and could be as late as October 2026. Peacock says the register will launch “later in 2026”, without naming a month or season.
It also appears the scheme will not require holiday lets to upload any documentation – such as gas, fire or electrical safety certificates – as a condition of registration.
“What we’ve campaigned for, and to be fair this government has agreed with us on, is for no document uploads – and we can’t complain about that,” says Fenner. “They’ve told us that isn’t going to be part of the scheme.”
He adds that while holiday lets should “of course” have that documentation, the problem with requiring them to upload it is that it would place a responsibility on whichever body is running the scheme to validate it as genuine.
Instead, Fenner understands the scheme will simply ask those registering to confirm that they have those documents, in the knowledge that they could be asked to produce them if any issues arose in future.
The lack of any document upload requirement would tally with Peacock’s own description of the scheme in answer to a December written question, when she said the register would take a “light-touch” approach.
For MPs most concerned about holiday lets squeezing the supply of homes and displacing local populations, this does not inspire confidence.
“It’s pretty meaningless then, isn’t it? It’s a toothless tiger,” says Neil Duncan-Jordan, Labour MP for Poole.
“Let’s be clear about this. When the government’s been trying to get tough on disabled people on benefits, on pensioners with their winter fuel allowance, on farmers and their inheritance tax and employers when it comes to national insurance rates and so forth – and yet we’re not being tough on this sector?
“Why is that? Why are we being so light-touch on this, but so heavy-handed on all the other things?”
Without a “more robust approach” to control holiday let numbers, Duncan-Jordan fears the registration scheme may simply be “window dressing”.
The government really needs to engage with all of those MPs who have long been calling for a proper licensing scheme
Rachael Maskell, Labour (Co-op) MP for York Central, is similarly unimpressed, saying that registration alone is “just not going to cut the mustard”.
“The government really needs to engage with all of those MPs who have long been calling for a proper licensing scheme to get this right,” she says.
“If you live among short-term holiday lets, or have a prevalence in your constituency, you really understand the impact it has… There hasn’t been a reach-out from government to MPs, and it’s about time they did.”
Nor should the government allow holiday lets to operate without uploading proof of their safety credentials, she argues.
“We cannot have a two-tier system where hotels, guesthouses, B&Bs are held to a higher standard than short-term holiday lets. We need to ensure that level playing field.”
Will the register pave the way for tougher action in years to come? Scotland has already instituted a licensing system, with councils able to establish short-term let control zones in their areas. Wales, meanwhile, has more than doubled the number of nights that holiday lets must be rented out for before they can qualify for business rates rather than having to pay council tax.
In England, Keir Starmer told the BBC last year that his government is “going stage-by-stage, so this [registration scheme] is basically stage one. We’ll then carefully review what stage two should look like.”
While in opposition, the now-housing minister Matthew Pennycook made clear his support for changes to the planning and licensing systems.
He told a Westminster Hall debate in 2023 that Rishi Sunak’s government should “legislate for the introduction of a new planning use class for short-term lets without delay”, and give “serious consideration to other measures, whether on taxation or licensing, that will almost certainly still be required”. That, he added, “is what a Labour government would do”.
Pennycook is said to have privately indicated over recent days that he remains personally supportive of giving councils more control over holiday lets, and he would like to dedicate time to the issue in the next parliamentary session.
Approached for comment, Pennycook’s Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) did not deny this.
A MHCLG spokesperson said: “We know that too many second homes and holiday lets can be harmful for communities, so we’ve given councils powers to introduce a council tax premium for second homes, abolished the furnished holiday lets tax regime and removed incentives for landlords to prioritise short-term holiday lets.
“We recognise that further action may be necessary and are actively considering what additional powers could be granted to local authorities.”
DCMS refused to confirm whether the registration scheme has been delayed or will require holiday let owners to upload any documents.
The department referred The House to a recent Commons statement from Peacock, in which she said: “The new national short-term lets registration scheme entered user testing at the end of October to ensure that it is robust and easy to use and meets the needs of the scheme ahead of its planned launch later in 2026.
“Secondary legislation will be required to enact the scheme and we intend to bring that forward when parliamentary time allows.”
Politics
British Army Chief Criticises Trump’s NATO Warning
The former head of the British Army has hit back at Donald Trump after he warned the future of Nato is at risk unless other countries help America in Iran.
The US president has called for international support to help keep the Strait of Hormuz open so oil tankers can pass through it unharmed.
Around one-fifth of the world oil passes through the narrow waterway, but ships have come under attack from Iran in retaliation for the US-Israeli bombardment of the country.
In an interview with the Financial Times, Trump said: “It’s only appropriate that people who are the beneficiaries of the Strait will help to make sure that nothing bad happens there.
“We have a thing called Nato. We’ve been very sweet. We didn’t have to help them with Ukraine … but we helped them. Now we’ll see if they help us because I’ve long said that we’ll be there for them but they won’t be there for us. I’m not sure that they’d be there.
“If there’s no response or if it’s a negative response, I think it will be very bad for the future of Nato.”
But speaking to Radio 4′s Today programme, General Sir Nick Carter said that was a complete misunderstanding of Nato’s role.
The former Chief of the Defence Staff said: “Nato was created as a defensive alliance and all of its articles are essentially oriented towards defence.
“It was not an alliance that was designed for one of the allies to go on a war of choice and then oblige everyone else to follow. It was not designed for that at all. I’m not sure that’s the sort of Nato that any of us wanted to belong to.”
He was backed by work and pensions secretary Pat McFadden, who told the same programme: “It’s not a Nato war, this. It’s a US-Israeli action, and Nick Carter’s right.
“The articles of association of Nato are a defensive alliance, which is that we come to one another’s aid when those articles have been breached.”
He added: “We’re deeply committed to Nato, but I think Nick Carter is right that it doesn’t operate in the kind of situation that we’re seeing in the Middle East right now.”
Meanwhile, Sir Nick also dismissed Trump’s repeated claim that Iran’s navy has been destroyed.
He said: “The [Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps] navy is still very much alive and well and they’re got multiple options for creating mischief in the Strait of Hormuz, everything from shore-based missiles and drones to armed speed boats, to unmanned surface vessels and drones, and of course mines.”
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