Politics

Read about the latest political news, views and analysis

Grooming gangs: Kemi accuses Labour of a 'cover up'

14 min listen

We’ve just had PMQs, which have become much more interesting now that Kemi Badenoch has got her act together. She led on the Grooming Gangs Inquiry after a fourth survivor quit the inquiry over fears that it’s being watered down. She went as far as to say that the government is in a ‘briefing war against survivors’, and accused Labour of a ‘cover-up’. Nigel Farage attempted to upstage proceedings with his own stunt – he watched from the public gallery to make the point that he isn’t given the chance to defend himself or his party. However, Badenoch’s display meant that his tantrum has gone pretty much unnoticed. Is Kemi

Will Ivory Coast’s old guard ever let go?

Next time you bite into a bar of chocolate, spare a thought for Ivory Coast. As the world’s largest supplier of cocoa, chances are the beans in your slab came from there. Elections, alas, have not been so sweet and with one due on Saturday 25 October, there are worries the protests, killings and all-out civil war that came in the wake of past votes could happen again. President Alassane Ouattara, the incumbent, is 83 and seeking a fourth term under a constitution that, like the United States, allows just two. The Constitutional Council which vets all candidates for high office has barred most of the contenders, so Ouattara should cruise to

It won’t be long before pensioners are out-earning workers

Oh, the horrid injustice of it all! By the skin of their teeth, pensioners on the state pension and with no other income, are going to avoid paying income tax next year. With September’s inflation figures now in, it can be confirmed that, thanks to the Triple Lock, the state pension will be rising to £12,547 next April, bringing it perilously close to the personal tax allowance of £12,570. You can write down in your diary now the day next year when the state pension certainly will tip over into taxable territory. There will be howls of outrage from opposition parties and pressure groups representing pensioners during this week. Prepare

Watch: Starmer backs Prince Andrew probe

To the Commons, where Prime Minister’s Questions (PMQs) has just wrapped up. The focus on Prince Andrew continues – and today Sir Keir Starmer agreed with Lib Dem leader Sir Ed Davey that the royal should be probed by MPs over the revelations about his Royal Lodge rent. Uh oh… Davey addressed the fact that Prince Andrew has not paid rent on his Windsor mansion for two decades, asking Starmer: Does the Prime Minister agree that this House needs to properly scrutinise the Crown Estate to ensure taxpayers interests are protected? The Chancellor has said that the current arrangements are wrong. So will the Prime Minister support a select committee

Farage to upstage PMQs with gallery stunt

It’s been a funny old time for Nigel Farage in parliament. Elected to the House of Commons at his eighth attempt, the Reform leader has had to adapt to the weird and world of Westminster’s traditions. But in a parliament where you’re just five of the 650 MPs overall, getting barracked on all sides isn’t always much fun. One particular irritation is Prime Ministers’ Questions (PMQs) on a Wednesday when various Labour MPs get up to attack Reform, with no right of reply for Farage. For despite his commanding lead in the polls, the Reform leader rarely gets to speak at PMQs, with his next scheduled appearance not due until

Keir Starmer can’t blame the cabinet secretary for his own failures

There have been 14 cabinet secretaries since the post was established in 1916. The first, Lieutenant Colonel Sir Maurice Hankey, served for nearly 22 years; in stark contrast, there are now reports that the 14th and current incumbent, Sir Chris Wormald, will be gone by the New Year, having served just 12 or 13 months. The problem is leadership, or rather a glaring lack of it Wormald was appointed in December 2024 after eight-and-a-half years as permanent secretary at the Department of Health and Social Care, to replace the controversial Simon Case. Boris Johnson had plucked Case from the lower ranks of the senior civil service – he was at that point

Starmer won’t stop Putin exploiting Europe’s migrant crisis

Another week, another migration scandal. On Monday, the Times reported that Russian spies have been working with international human rights groups to ‘flood Europe with illegal migrants’. The revelations come from Daniel Mitov, Bulgaria’s interior minister, who claims to have evidence that the Russians are assisting people smugglers in finding weak spots along the Bulgaria-Turkey border and instructing migrants on how to avoid detection.  Mitov – as I’m sure you’ll understand – isn’t thrilled by this. Rather than regarding waves of new arrivals pouring through his country’s borders as just the injection of diversity that Bulgaria needs, the interior minister sees it as a naked attempt by Vladimir Putin to

Non-crime hate incidents aren’t dead yet

The Met has announced that it will stop investigating non-crime hate incidents, or NCHIs. The pressure on other forces to fall into line may well now be hard to resist (we will have to see). But don’t cheer too loudly yet. The devil is in the detail, and there may be less to rejoice over than you think. An NCHI, to remind you, is any incident ‘perceived’ to be motivated – wholly or partly – by hostility or prejudice towards someone with a particular characteristic. It is noted by police, often secretly, against a person’s name; and while not a criminal record it has effects. This has all the marks

Steady inflation gives Reeves some reprieve

Prices are still rising fast. The Consumer Prices Index rose by 3.8 per cent in September – the same pace as in August but nearly double the Bank of England’s 2 per cent target. Markets, and the Bank itself, had expected inflation to reach 4 per cent, so the fact it has remained flat will come as a small relief to the Chancellor as she prepares for her November Budget. ‘Significantly,’ the ONS noted, food and drink inflation fell for the first time since March – down to 4.5 per cent from 5.1 per cent. Core inflation, which strips out volatile items, and services inflation both eased too. The Bank

France has failed its daughters

It is just over three years since a 12-year-old Parisian girl called Lola was raped and murdered in a crime that shocked France. The woman accused of the murder, 27-year-old Dahbia Benkired, is now on trial and on Monday the court heard chilling evidence from a man who encountered the defendant shortly after the death of Lola. Karim Bellazoug told the court that Benkired was carrying a large trunk and told him she had items to sell. When he glanced inside he saw what looked like a body. ‘I thought she was crazy, that she was a psychopath,’ Bellazoug declared. The motivation as well as the mental state of Benkired

Say goodbye to betting shops

Of all the industries you’d think would know how to avoid a shakedown, the gambling sector is if anything overqualified. Centuries of experience working with crooks, debt collectors and hapless punters should surely have provided all the training needed to make an offer nobody can refuse. Alas, Rachel Reeves appears to have ensnared even the bookies in her tax grab. With the Chancellor seeking unsympathetic victims for her impending Budget, the best line the gambling industry could find was that further taxes on its activities would force it to shutter some of its tastefully-decorated high street outlets. ‘We’re going to lose the whole retail business,’ Betfred’s chief executive Joanne Whittaker

Should Prince Andrew be exiled? And how multiculturalism failed in Birmingham

45 min listen

This week on Quite right!: the slow-motion disgrace of Prince Andrew. As Virginia Giuffre’s new book reignites the Epstein scandal, Michael and Maddie ask: how much longer can the monarchy carry its most toxic member? Or should the Duke of York be stripped of his titles and sent into exile? Then to Birmingham, where sectarian politics, bin strikes and football collide. After Israeli fans were barred from attending a Europa League match, Michael and Maddie debate how Britain’s second city became a byword for failed multiculturalism. Has the country finally started telling the truth about integration – or just found new ways to divide itself? Finally, the British Museum’s attempt

Tories raise £500k post Kemi speech

Tomorrow marks a fortnight since Kemi Badenoch’s conference speech. After a difficult first year when the Conservatives have sometimes struggled to make much of an impact, party spinners were left delighted by the press reaction to her surprise stamp duty announcement. Tory MPs have been publicly boasting about a membership surge – though no figures have yet been provided. Now, those in the Treasurer’s team have added reason to celebrate. Since Badenoch’s speech on 8 October, the party raised just shy of half a million in donations – north of £460k – as of the end of last week. Kerching! A senior Tory source proudly told Steerpike: ‘Kemi Badenoch demonstrated

Jess Phillips is letting down grooming gang victims again

Remember when feminists rallied behind the mantra ‘Believe All Women’? It was back in 2017, at the peak of the #MeToo movement that rightly brought down serial sex offenders such as film producer Harvey Weinstein. But then the net was cast more widely, tripping up men like comedian Aziz Ansari for boorish behaviour on a date and allowing women who had been touched on the leg to label themselves victims. Critics, like me, who urged against such blurred lines, were told that women do not lie about being victims of sexual assault. I had to shut up and believe. But the years since have shown that feminists themselves have double standards when

Full list: MPs attacking Prince Andrew

The government is facing a rather strange dilemma: what to do about Prince Andrew. Last week the royal voluntarily gave up his titles after speaking with King Charles, following increasing scrutiny on his links to US paedophile Jeffrey Epstein. Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir – published today – has brought her accusations of sexual assault against him back to the fore and piled yet more pressure on the prince, who has strongly denied the allegations. While he has stopped using the Duke of York title, Andrew will remain a prince in accordance with the law set down by George V in 1917. Only an act of parliament can legally strip him

Britain's doom loop continues

11 min listen

Rachel Reeves is hosting an investment summit in Birmingham, trying to turn the narrative away from Britain’s economic ‘doom loop’ ahead of next month’s budget. But the harbinger of bad economic news Michael Simmons – who joins James Heale and Patrick Gibbons on the podcast – points to the news today of soaring government borrowing costs, and expected higher inflation figures tomorrow. Plus, what have some politicians made of further developments in the Prince Andrew scandal? Produced by Patrick Gibbons.

It’s about time abusive fathers were stripped of their parental rights

It’s not often the Ministry of Justice gets it absolutely right. But they have today. It has been announced that the Victims and Courts Bill will be amended to stop coercive and controlling fathers from using their parental rights to control their children and former partners even from inside a prison cell. This long-overdue change in the law means that fathers convicted of rape, and parents of either sex convicted of serious sexual offences, will have their legal right to parental responsibility restricted. The current system has allowed this legal right to be abused. This long-overdue change in the law means that fathers convicted of rape, and parents of either