Trade Union Boss Accuses Keir Starmer Of Leading UK Towards ‘Austerity Mark 2’

A leading trade union boss has accused Keir Starmer of leading the UK towards “austerity mark 2” as she launched a bitter attack on the prime minister.

Sharon Graham, general secretary of Unite – which has donated more than £500,000 to Labour MPs this year – urged the prime minister to ditch the “cruel” policy of scrapping winter fuel payments for 10 million pensioners.

She made her comments on Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips on Sky News as Labour’s annual conference kicks off in Liverpool.

Asked what she wanted to hear in Starmer’s keynote speech on Tuesday, Graham said: “I think the priority that I’d like to hear from him is that
he’s going to reverse the decision on the winter fuel allowance. It’s a cruel policy. He needs to reverse it. And I’d like him to say that he’s made a misstep and to reverse that
policy.

“I’d also like him to say that we’re not going to take this country down austerity mark 2. People voted for change. They need to see change. And he needs to reverse the winter fuel allowance [decision] and let people have that £300 they can put their heating on this winter.”

She later added: “I’ve got a million workers in my union and pensioners.

“But the reality is the mood music here is that they are taking away from the poorest in our society now. And actually the conversation they’re having is walking us into austerity mark 2.

“Nobody wants to see that. Workers don’t want to see it, communities don’t want to see it. And I can tell you, the pensioners don’t want to see it either.”

Graham said the government should introduce a 1% wealth tax on the richest people in the country, which she claimed would raise £25 billion.

“That would take away the so-called black hole, job done, and
we’d have £3 billion left over.”

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Major U-Turn As Keir Starmer Says He Will No Longer Accept Clothes From Donors

Keir Starmer will no longer accept clothes from Labour donors, party sources have confirmed.

The decision is a major U-turn by the prime minister, who had defended accepting thousands of pounds worth of suits and glasses from Lord Alli.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves and deputy prime minister Angela Rayner will also no longer accept clothes as gifts, senior Labour figures confirmed.

Starmer has come in for fierce criticism after it emerged Lord Alli, a Labour peer and millionaire, had given him £16,435 of work clothing and glasses worth £2,400 before the election, as well as £5,000-worth of clothes for the PM’s wife, Victoria.

Asked about it earlier this week, the prime minister insisted that the donations had been within the rules and properly declared – but dodged questions on why he had not paid for his own clothes.

He said: “It’s very important to me that the rules are followed. I’ve always said that. I said that before the election, I’ve reinforced it after the election.

“And that’s why, shortly after the election, my team reached out for advice on what declaration should be made so it’s in accordance with the rules. They then sought out for further advice more recently, as a result of which they made the relevant declarations.”

It was also revealed on Friday that Rayner had received clothing worth £3,500 from Lord Alli, while Reeves has accepted donations of £7,500 from another Labour supporter, Juliet Rosenfeld, to pay for clothing.

HuffPost UK understands that Starmer, Rayner and Reeves have all now agreed to pay for their own clothes in future.

The move is an attempt by Labour to finally draw a line under the controversy as the party gathers in Liverpool for its annual conference.

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Is The Party Over Already? Keir Starmer Aims To Get Back On The Front Foot After Worst Week Yet

This year’s Labour conference should, all things considered, be one gigantic celebration.

For the first time since 2009, the party is gathering in Liverpool this weekend with its leader in 10 Downing Street.

But less than three months after securing a landslide general election victory, Keir Starmer is already a man under pressure due to a series of missteps which have even led some to question whether he is really up to the job.

The controversial decision to cut winter fuel payments from 10 million pensioners was taken shortly after Labour took office and continues to dog the prime minister.

A simmering briefing war against Starmer’s chief of staff, Sue Gray, burst into the open this week when it was revealed she earns more than the PM – angering government aides who accuse her of blocking their calls for a pay rise.

Meanwhile, Starmer’s liking for freebies – more than £100,000-worth of hospitality, concert tickets, clothes and glasses in the last five years – has seen him dubbed “Free Gear Keir” by his gleeful opponents.

Even his wife, Victoria, was dragged into the row when it emerged Labour donor Lord Alli had also paid for £5,000-worth of clothes for her.

After several days of Starmer defending the arrangement, Labour sources finally confirmed on Friday night that he would no longer accept clothes from donors.

“Because Keir only became an MP in 2015, he lacks political experience,” one Labour veteran told HuffPost UK. “And there’s no one around about him giving him the right advice.”

Another senior party figure said: “The extent to which he takes freebies is disgraceful really. It smacks of arrogance.”

A former frontbencher added: “They are so shit it is really hard to believe.”

Even party loyalists like Baroness Harman have been critical of the PM, in particular his decision to accept corporate hospitality so he can continue watching his team, Arsenal.

Starmer, who has had a season ticket at the Emirates for many years, says the cost to the taxpayer of providing him with security at matches would be too high, so he is saving the public purse by choosing to sit in the posh seats.

But speaking on the Electoral Dysfunction podcast, Harman said: “It’s not a hanging offence, but I think doubling down and trying to justify it is making things worse.

“You can just say it was probably a misstep, if I had my time again I wouldn’t do it and therefore I’m going to auction [it] for charity or something. I think at the moment he’s just got to get rid of every distraction he possibly can.”

Both Keir Starmer and his wife Victoria have been criticised for having clothes bought for them by a Labour donor.
Both Keir Starmer and his wife Victoria have been criticised for having clothes bought for them by a Labour donor.

via Associated Press

Any hope Labour have that the public will see “frockgate” as a Westminster bubble issue are forlorn, according to Luke Tryl of the More in Common think-tank.

“In the focus groups which we regularly hold with a variety of voters from all over the country, we hear consistent anger about these kinds of issues,” he said.

“With the Tories, we kept hearing it was ‘one rule for them and one rule for everyone else’ but the overarching feeling is that all politicians are in it for themselves. That’s the real point here. These stories may well be dismissed as Westminster tittle-tattle, but they eat away at the most fundamental quality required for democracies to work effectively and that is trust.”

A senior government figure admitted that things are “a bit shaky” at the moment, but insisted the party conference is the perfect opportunity for Starmer and Labour to rebound.

“We have to use the conference to get beyond all of this,” he said. “We need to talk about the inheritance we were left by the Tories. The winter fuel decision and having to release people from prison are a hangover from what we were left.

“It’s not like people are being let out of jail because we want to let them out.

“And it’s a bit rich of the Tories to attack us when they just fought an election promising £12 million in welfare cuts.

“There’s no doubt it’s tough at the moment, but the important thing about conference is to stand up there, talk about why we won and what we’ll do to improve the country. We need to get back on the front foot.”

One cabinet minister took aim at the anonymous special advisers (SpAds) who went to the BBC to voice their unhappiness about Sue Gray’s wage packet.

“There’s obviously some leaks coming from No.10 and people saying things that shouldn’t be in the public domain,” they said. “It’s ill-discipline. Some of them probably are unhappy about their pay offers, but there’s a way to negotiate that and they shouldn’t be using journalists as therapists.

“Sue was brought in to do a job. She’s the chief of staff, so she can go to any meeting she wants. The criticism of her is unfair.”

Sue Gray, Starmer's chief of staff, has been criticised over her £170,000 salary.
Sue Gray, Starmer’s chief of staff, has been criticised over her £170,000 salary.

Charles McQuillan via Getty Images

The Labour conference slogan is “Change Begins”, which aims to move beyond the gloomy messages which have been emanating from Downing Street since the election.

Standing in the No.10 garden last month, the prime minister told the country that “things will get worse before we get better” and that the Budget on October 30 will be “painful”.

He will strike a more upbeat tone in his keynote speech on Tuesday afternoon, which he will deliver before jetting off to a meeting of the UN General Assembly in New York.

A close ally of the PM said: “He’ll talk about the good things we’ve already done, while reminding people again about what we were left by the Tories.

“But this is the first conference in 15 years in which we are the party of government – we shouldn’t forget what a change that is.

“It’s really important to remember that we won big, we’ve got a right to govern and we shouldn’t be blown off course by people who think that Labour have no right to be ever be in power.”

Starmer’s first 77 days in power have not always gone as he would have hoped when he stood on the steps of 10 Downing Street on July 5 promising to change the country.

He will hope, to coin a famous phrase, that things can only get better from now on.

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Keir Starmer Forced To Declare He Is ‘In Control’ Despite Sue Gray And Freebies Rows

Keir Starmer has been forced to insist he remains “in control” of the government less than three months after taking office.

The prime minister has endured his toughest week since winning the general election amid a No.10 briefing war over the salary of his chief of staff, Sue Gray, and criticism of the £100,000 of hospitality he has accepted since 2019.

The rows have threatened to overshadow Labour’s annual conference in Liverpool, which kicks off at the weekend.

It emerged yesterday that Gray saw her salary go up to £170,000 – more than the PM’s – after the election, angering government special advisers who accuse her of blocking higher wages for them.

In an interview with BBC South East political editor Charlotte Wright, Starmer was asked whether he has “got a grip” of his administration.

He said: “I’m completely in control. I’m focused and every day the message from me to the team is exactly the same, which is we have to deliver.

“We were elected on a big mandate to deliver change, I am determined that we are going to do that.”

Starmer was also forced to defend his decision to accept seats in a corporate box at the Emirates Stadium, home of his favourite football team, Arsenal.

The revelation followed the row over Starmer and his wife, Victoria, accepting thousands of pounds worth of clothes from the Labour peer and multi-millionaire party donor, Lord Alli.

The PM told BBC Yorkshire’s political editor, James Vincent: “Since I’ve been prime minister the security advice is don’t go in the stands, not least because it’ll cost a fortune to the taxpayer in security police officers if you choose to go in the stands.

“I’ve taken that advice, I’ve been offered a ticket somewhere else. Frankly I’d rather be in the stands but I’m not going to ask the taxpayer to indulge me to be in the stands when I could go and sit somewhere else where the club and the security say it’s safer for me to be. That is for me a common sense situation.”

He added: “I’m a life-long Arsenal fan. I’ve been going for years and years and years and it’s a real passion of mine and I can go with my boy.”

Starmer also defended the government’s controversial decision to axe winter fuel payments for 10 million pensioners, repeating his claim that Labour had to fill a £22 billion “black hole” left by the last government.

He was asked by BBC East Yorkshire and Lincolnshire political editor Tim Iredale: “How long can you carry on blaming the last lot? It gets cold up north, could you survive on £220 a week?”

The PM replied: “We can’t pretend the £22 billion black hole doesn’t exist. I could pretend I had a magic wand, but I don’t want to give people false hope things can be fixed by Christmas.”

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Downing Street Row Erupts After It Emerges Keir Starmer’s Chief Of Staff Earns More Than Him

A furious war of words has erupted inside 10 Downing Street after it emerged that Keir Starmer’s chief of staff earns more than he does.

The BBC reported that Sue Gray’s salary was increased to £170,000 after the general election. The prime minister receives around £167,000.

Several unnamed government special advisers – who are known in Westminster as SpAds – were quoted attacking Gray, who has been accused of turning down their pleas for higher wages.

One said: “It’s bizarre. I’m working harder than ever in a more important job and they want to pay me less than the Labour Party was paying me when it was broke.”

Another described Gray’s pay package as “the highest ever special adviser salary in the history of special advisers”.

The attacks on Gray sparked an angry backlash from her allies in Downing Street.

One government source told HuffPost UK: “Any questions people have should be directed at the process and not an individual.”

Another source insisted it was “categorically untrue” that Gray was warned that her pay rise would put her on a higher salary than the PM but went ahead with it anyway.

The source said: “Sue Gray had no involvement in any decision on her pay. She was informed of her salary after this had been set.”

A Cabinet Office spokesman told the BBC: “It is false to suggest that political appointees have made any decisions on their own pay bands or determining their own pay.

“Any decision on special adviser pay is made by officials not political appointees. As set out publicly, special advisers cannot authorise expenditure of public funds or have responsibility for budgets.”

However, HuffPost UK has also learned that Gray sits on the “Special Adviser People Board”, which decides SpAd pay, alongside senior civil servants Darren Tierney, Fiona Ryland and Simon Madden.

The latest briefings against Gray come amid well-documented tensions between her and Morgan McSweeney, No.10′s head of political strategy.

She first rose to national prominence while she was still a senior civil servants and conducted the government investigation into the partygate scandal.

Her damning report into lockdown-breaking parties inside 10 Downing Street was one of the contributory factors which ultimately led to Boris Johnson’s resignation as prime minister in 2022.

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What Is The Immigration Deal Italy Has Struck With Albania That Keir Starmer Might Copy?

Keir Starmer today declared that he was bringing back “British pragmatism”.

But does that stretch to copying the approach of Italy’s hard-right prime minister when it comes to tackling illegal immigration?

Starmer laughed and joked with Giorgia Meloni when the pair met in Rome.

The PM praised the “remarkable progress” the Italian government has made in reducing the number of migrants entering the country illegally.

In the past year, there has been a 60% drop in boat crossings from north Africa to Italy – a record that Starmer, and his predecessor Rishi Sunak, could only dream about as large numbers of asylum seekers continue to come across the Channel from France.

So how has Italy done it? And what are the chances of the UK government following suit?

Money Talks

Italy has struck financial agreements with countries like Tunisia and Libya to stop the boats setting off in the first place.

The cash is designed to boost economic growth in Africa, as well as limiting the number of migrants trying to reach Italy via the Mediterranean Sea.

Sunak agreed a similar arrangement with France, but it seems to have had little impact so far in stemming the flow of boats reaching British shores.

Figures released by the Home Office showed that more than 1,000 migrants arrived on 20 boats over the weekend.

Meloni’s Albania Agreement

The Italian PM wants to go even further by processing asylum applications in a third country, namely Albania.

Under a deal struck with the government in Tirana, anyone making it to Italy would be sent to Albania to have their claims for asylum dealt with.

Any successful applications would return to Italy, but those who fail will be returned to their own country.

At her press conference with Starmer in Rome today, Meloni said she hoped the scheme would be up and running in weeks.

What’s more, she said the PM was “very interested” in how it worked during their discussions.

Asked earlier in the day whether he would consider seeking a similar agreement to deal with asylum seekers in Britain, Starmer said: “Let’s see. It’s early days, I’m interested in how that works, I think everybody else is. It’s very, very early days.”

Isn’t That A Bit Like Rwanda?

The idea of deporting asylum seekers to a third country is very similar to the Rwanda scheme drawn up by the last Tory government and dumped by Labour as soon as they took office in July.

There is one major difference, though. Under the Rwanda deal, the asylum seekers would not have been able to come back to the UK, regardless of whether their asylum claim was granted or not.

Heaping praise on Meloni’s approach, Starmer told her: “You’ve made remarkable progress working with countries along migration routes as equals to address the drivers of migration, of source and to tackle the [smuggling] gangs.”

And in a strong hint that he may well follow her example of how to deal with the issue of illegal migration, the PM said: “We are pragmatists, first and foremost. When we see a challenge, we discuss with our friends and allies the different approaches that are being taken, look at what works, and that’s the approach that we’ve taken today. And it’s been a very productive day.”

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Keir Starmer Hit By Labour Commons Rebellion Over Plan To Axe Winter Fuel Payments

Keir Starmer has suffered his biggest Commons rebellion since becoming prime minister as Labour MPs made clear their anger at the decision to means test winter fuel payments to pensioners.

A total of 52 Labour backbenchers failed to vote in favour of the controversial policy, while one – Jon Trickett – voted against it.

In addition, five former Labour MPs who were suspended by the party in July for not backing its policy on the two-child benefit cap, also voted against the government.

However, the Tories’ attempt to cancel the policy was still comfortably defeated by 348 votes to 228, even though Labour’s 167-seat majority was slashed.

Rachel Reeves announced shortly after becoming chancellor that the winter fuel payment – which is worth up to £300 – would only be paid to those receiving pension credit.

That means that around 10 million old people who used to receive it will no longer do so.

Labour has said the move is necessary to help fill the £22 billion “black hole” in the government’s finances it says the Tories left behind.

But critics have said the move will plunge many old people into poverty and could even lead to some of them dying from the cold.

Labour sources insisted that only 12 of the 52 MPs who failed to vote with the government had not had their absence authorised.

Explaining his decision to rebel, Jon Trickett said: “I fear that removing the payment from pensioners will mean that many more will fall into poverty this winter.

“We know that the consequences of pensioner poverty are devastating. It can even be a matter of life and death.

“I could not in good conscience vote to make my constituents poorer. I will sleep well tonight knowing that I voted to defend my constituents.”

Tory chairman Richard Fuller said: “The country should not forget that Labour made a political choice to make this callous decision that will hurt pensioners just as their energy bills are set to increase this winter.”

Lib Dem work and pensions spokesperson Wendy Chamberlain said: “Millions of pensioners will be left deeply worried about how they will get by this winter with this cut to the winter fuel payment.

“So many pensioners are already facing another winter of a cost of living crisis and this will make things worse.

“The damage left by the Conservatives to our economy is unforgivable but cutting payments to vulnerable pensioners is no way to bring about the change the country deserves.

“We’ll keep fighting this cut tooth and nail anyway we can, we’ll continue to be a constructive opposition to the new Government and we’re fighting for the real change people want to see.”

SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn said: “Voters in Scotland were promised ‘change’ but instead the Labour Party is wielding the austerity axe and cutting billions of pounds from public services and household incomes.”

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Wes Streeting Claims NHS Will Effectively ‘Go Bust’ If Labour Does Not Act

The health secretary Wes Streeting has claimed the NHS will effectively “go bust” unless the government takes action, and soon.

The cabinet minister’s remarks come ahead of a landmark report into the health service from Lord Darzi, a leading surgeon, commissioned by the government in July.

Darzi’s report is expected to say the NHS reduced its “routine healthcare activity by a far greater percentage than other health systems” in many key areas during the Covid pandemic – and that the service is still suffering as a result.

The crossbench peer, who was a minister in the last Labour government but who has since left the party, has also warned the NHS was “seriously weakened” by disastrous government policies over the last decade.

Speaking to LBC’s Sunday with Lewis Goodall, Streeting said: “If we do not act now to make the right long-term decisions, we will end up with the NHS effectively going bust.”

He added that Darzi’s report will show the NHS was “so badly prepared and resourced before the pandemic, we ended up cancelling more operations and appointments and procedures than any other major country”.

While he suggested that investment and reform were needed to “deliver results” within the health service, Streeting added that the NHS was “broken by the botched reforms of the previous government”.

PM Keir Starmer also told the BBC in his first major interview since getting into No.10 that the NHS had been “broken” by past governments.

“Everybody watching this who has used the NHS, or whose relatives have, knows that it’s broken. That is unforgivable, the state of our NHS,” he said.

Starmer added: “Our job now, through Lord Darzi, is properly to understand how that came about and bring about the reforms, starting with the first steps, the 40,000 extra appointments.”

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“[It is] unforgivable, the state of our NHS”

In his first major interview in Number 10 Prime Minister Keir Starmer tells the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg that the Conservatives “broke\" the NHS ahead of a government review of the servicehttps://t.co/cLzMdI7zUv pic.twitter.com/L7JzRIQgD4

— BBC Politics (@BBCPolitics) September 7, 2024

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“[It is] unforgivable, the state of our NHS”

In his first major interview in Number 10 Prime Minister Keir Starmer tells the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg that the Conservatives “broke” the NHS ahead of a government review of the servicehttps://t.co/cLzMdI7zUv pic.twitter.com/L7JzRIQgD4

— BBC Politics (@BBCPolitics) September 7, 2024

Meanwhile, shadow health secretary Victoria Atkins has denied the Tories had broken the service, instead pointing to Darzi’s findings that more than 100,000 infants were left waiting for more than six hours in A&E departments in 2023.

She told broadcasters: “Labour’s instinct is to politicise children’s health rather than provide solutions and reform our NHS.”

A Tory Party spokesman also defended their record in government, telling the Guardian: “The NHS has more doctors, more nurses, more funding in real terms and is looking after more people than ever before.”

They added that the NHS looked after millions during the pandemic, and rolled out vaccines “faster than anyone else in the world” – and set up the Public Inquiry.

They added: “It is odd that this former Labour minister and peer feels he is in a better position to opine on Covid than the Public Inquiry.”

The health spokesperson for the Liberal Democrats, Daisy Cooper, said that “years and years of Conservative failure have brought the NHS to its knees” and called for “an emergency health budget from this new government.”

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