Politics

Read about the latest political news, views and analysis

Can the Tories actually make their free extra childcare plan work?

Is the government’s expansion of free childcare actually going to work? The early years sector says not. They have warned that parents of two year olds won’t get the 15 funded hours they have been promised without eye-watering fee hikes overall – and that some nurseries may even be forced to close because they simply can’t balance the books. No wonder, then, that this policy was once again the focus of Labour’s attack at Education Questions in the Commons this afternoon. Ministers really do think the complaints about the scheme now simply amount to teething problems A number of opposition MPs, including Stella Creasy and shadow education secretary Bridget Phillipson,

Lee Anderson’s by-election hypocrisy

Lee Anderson is back in the spotlight. The former Tory MP today jumped ship to Richard Tice’s Reform UK party, following weeks of speculation after he was suspended from the Conservatives. Telling reporters this morning that he had deliberately thrown them ‘off the scent’ when he formally denied he would defect to Reform, Anderson’s remarks suggested his mind had been made up for a while. But it appears this was not a decision the ex-Tory had ever thought he would make when he first became an MP. In fact, the Ashfield rep voted in favour of a bill that would have made defecting considerably trickier… In 2020, Anderson voted for

Macron has spied an easy win with his assisted dying Bill

Emmanuel Macron was predictably theatrical when he introduced his Bill on the end of life yesterday. In the proposed legislation, medical staff would be authorised to help their patients to die – which Macron described as a law of ‘fraternity’. He pronounced: ‘With this text, we look death in the face.’ A guaranteed headline in the Catholic daily La Croix. The President has often favoured dark suits and I have previously described him as having a funereal mien. But he was positively bouncy extolling the Bill, which will be debated by the National Assembly this spring. Macron is swimming with the tide of popular opinion He chose to kick off the

Why Starmer shouldn’t celebrate Lee Anderson’s Reform defection

Lee Anderson joining Reform UK is unquestionably a disaster for Rishi Sunak. It will guarantee the challenger party huge coverage and further orientate it towards the ‘Red Wall’ vote that powered the Tories to victory in 2019. Expect to see opinion polls showing a further decrease in the gap between Reform and Conservative vote shares in the coming weeks.  The outspoken Anderson hitching his wagon to Reform will create a pull factor for working class culturally and socially conservative voters to match the push factor that Sunak himself set in train when he sacked Suella Braverman and brought David Cameron into his cabinet. Reform has added about five points to

Lee Anderson’s top three spats with Reform

Well, well, well. The rumours turned out to be true. This morning the former deputy chairman of the Tory party — who lost the whip last month for refusing to apologise for ‘Islamophobic’ comments — defected to Reform UK. The red wall Rottweiler told reporters that ‘constituents like my mum and dad told me they could not vote for me’ unless he jumped ship, adding: ‘I want my country back.’ A magpie for news headlines, Anderson has generated some rather colourful examples in recent months. The MP has told asylum seekers to ‘f*** off back to France’, been dubbed ‘30p Lee’ after taking a controversial stance on food banks and

Lee Anderson’s Reform defection spells trouble for Rishi Sunak

Tory MP Lee Anderson has defected to Reform UK. Speaking at an impromptu press conference this morning, the former deputy Tory party chairman – who lost the Conservative whip last month over his comments on Islamists controlling London – said that he was switching to Richard Tice’s party as the current ‘parliament doesn’t seem to understand’ what British people want. Anderson said he wants ‘his country back’ and believes Reform is the party best placed to do this. There are plenty of Tory MPs saying Anderson was never a true conservative anyway This is not a surprising defection. Anderson has long been on ‘Reform watch’ as a Tory MP –

Lee Anderson defects to Reform

Former Tory deputy chairman Lee Anderson has this morning defected to Reform UK. Party leader Richard Tice made the announcement at a London press conference this morning, where he praised Anderson as a ‘champion of the red wall’ and told reporters: ‘We want to replace the Tories as the main alternative to Starmergeddon.’ GB News, which employs Anderson and hosts his show ‘Real World’, tipped him to defect to Reform earlier today. The move will give Tice’s party its first MP ahead of the upcoming election and may cause more Tory upset after polling on Friday put their vote share at 18 per cent — only 5 per cent ahead of

This tragic Oscars shows the Golden Age of Hollywood is over

‘The Incident’ which took place between Chris Rock and Will Smith at the 2022 Oscars was a double-edged sword. It brought a bored audience back; between 2014 and 2020, the televised Academy Awards lost almost half their viewers, while in 2023 they were up by 18 million as eager punters tuned in hoping to see a bitch-fight between Olivia Colman and Nicole Kidman. But a couple of years without a dust-up will no doubt make a re-bored audience turn its collective back once more – and judging from last night’s astonishingly enervated showing they’d be totally justified. The best bit is when the cameras pan in on the hopefuls and

The Princess of Wales’ ‘manipulated’ photo is a disastrous own goal

The photograph of Kate Middleton surrounded by her family was supposed to reassure the public. ‘Thank you for your kind wishes and continued support over the last two months. Wishing everyone a Happy Mother’s Day,’ the caption alongside the picture read. Seasoned royal watchers saw a code in the terse statement: you’ve had your fun speculating what’s going on when it comes to the Princess of Wales’s absence from public life on health grounds, but I’m here, I’m fine, and there’s nothing to worry about. This should, under normal circumstances, have put an end to the matter. But then the picture was withdrawn by four international photo agencies, including Getty

Michael Gove’s ‘hate tsar’ quits before he’s even begun

Michael Gove’s mission to tackle extremism has got off to a shaky start. Fiyaz Mughal, the man who was reportedly lined up to officially begin as the government’s anti-Muslim hatred tsar today, has quit after being bombarded with hate mail. Mughal said he received a ‘torrent of abuse’ from both Islamists and far-right extremists just hours after his name was leaked on Friday. ‘Serious stuff was coming through my inbox,’ Mughal said, who hit out at ministers for failing to protect him from the backlash: I’m angry because the government has been saying for decades, ‘where are the British Muslims speaking out?’ When we speak out, we are left to

Can the King save the Commonwealth?

When the King makes his first public address since his cancer diagnosis today, the occasion could not be more fitting. The monarch will address, via video, a full house at Westminster Abbey’s multi-faith Commonwealth service. No one knows the Commonwealth as well as Charles III. He grew up around its founding fathers. As Prince of Wales, his credentials – not least as an environmentalist – were such that the Commonwealth summit unanimously endorsed him as future head in 2018. But 2024, which marks the 75th anniversary of the Commonwealth, will be a challenging year for the organisation – and the King’s diplomatic skills will be vital if it is to

Labour comes out against Emirati bid for Telegraph

This is a big week for the future of the British press with the Department for Culture, Media and Sport and the House of Lords both due to take decisions on the RedBird bid for the Daily Telegraph and The Spectator. Lucy Frazer, the Culture Secretary, will respond to reports she has been given looking at competitive issues. There are none. The real concern is about whether this deal is funded by the government of the United Arab Emirates. It is majority-financed by International Media Investments (IMI) which RedBird says is a private entity that happens to be run by Sheikh Mansour, an Emirati royal and its Deputy Prime Minister,

Picture agencies ‘kill’ royal photo over editing fears 

Kensington Palace made headlines on Sunday night — but not in the way officials hoped. A photo that was meant to quell conspiracies about Kate Middleton’s absence from public life on health grounds has only spurred further speculation as to what is really going on with the Princess of Wales. The picture showing Kate surrounded by her three young children was released this morning, in a nod to the Cambridge’s annual Mother’s Day tradition. It appeared on William and Kate’s official Instagram page and was used by a number of outlets, including Sky News and the BBC, which excitedly published the ‘first official photo’ of the Princess of Wales since

Pope Francis’s unhelpful Ukraine comments

Pope Francis has made a statement on the Ukraine war that has sparked fury among many of Kyiv’s supporters. Asked by a Swiss television interviewer whether the Ukraine should ‘raise the white flag’ Francis replied, ‘When you see that you are defeated, that things are not going well, you have to have the courage to negotiate,’ adding that he believed that ‘the stronger one is the one who… thinks of the people, who has the courage of the white flag.’  Blessed are the peacemakers. But Pope Francis was addressing the wrong side After a storm of criticism, the Vatican press service put out a clarification. ‘Pope Francis is not asking

Leaked Sturgeon video becomes focus of SNP police probe

As yet another day passes, the good people of Scotland remain in suspense about the outcome of the police probe into the SNP. The three-year long investigation — which has seen multiple arrests, the impounding of a £110,000 campervan, a military-style raid of SNP HQ and the construction of a rather large forensic tent outside the Dear Leader’s own home  — has still not concluded.  In fact, witnesses are being interviewed for the, er, fourth time as police attempt to get to the bottom of fraud claims relating to purchases of a £95,000 electric Jaguar to gardening equipment and women’s razors.  And it now transpires that there is one very particular

Sunday shows round-up: Labour refuses to rule out cuts to public services

Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves has been clear that Labour will stick to the same fiscal rules as the Tories if elected, and also that they don’t want to raise taxes. Laura Kuenssberg asked Reeves to confirm that this might mean Labour would be forced to make cuts to some public services. Reeves said that the finances a Labour government will inherit would be ‘the worst since the second world war’, but would not confirm that Labour would make spending cuts. She promised an ‘initial injection of cash’ into public services, and said Labour would do a spending review quickly if elected. Health Secretary defends government’s new interpretation of extremism Communities

Why is Macron suddenly pro-Ukraine? Fear of Le Pen

Its an old ruse to deploy foreign policy for domestic purposes. France has a long history in that vein. General de Gaulle was adept at using popular domestic anti-Americanism on the world stage to embarrass pro-Nato political forces at home; François Mitterrand exploited the early 1980s Euromissile crisis with the Soviet Union to humiliate and isolate the French Communist party. Emmanuel Macron’s startling declaration that the West should not rule out putting troops on the ground in Ukraine is less a Damascene conversion than a strategy to stymy the Rassemblement National’s runaway 10 point poll lead for June’s EU elections. Macron has doubled down on his new-found international bellicosity by