Uk politics

EU commissioner: at least it’s not Jacob Rees-Mogg at the negotiating table

From our UK edition

Oh dear. As anxiety grows about the Theresa May's customs union stance, Jacob Rees-Mogg has this afternoon told hacks that the government's mooted customs partnership is 'completely cretinous'. The Moggster's tough talk will play out well among Brexiteers who fear May's own resolve has weakened in recent months. What will play out less well with the Brexit camp, however, is a comment made by a European commissioner appearing to make this very point.

Amber Rudd’s shopping misstep

From our UK edition

Amber Rudd is not having a good few weeks thanks to her department's shaky handling of the Windrush scandal. Now she's under fire on another front: shoes. The Financial Times reports that the Home Secretary told guests at a private business dinner this month that the post-Brexit registration scheme for EU nationals will be 'as easy to use as setting up an online account at LK Bennett'. Alas, L K Bennett does not pass the 'know the price of a pint of milk and you are in touch with the people' test – given that the pricy fashion chain sells shoes for over £200. But then again, what else would one expect from the 'aristocracy coordinator' of Four Weddings and a Funeral?

Macron-Trump bromance blossoms as the sun sets on Special Relationship

From our UK edition

Twenty-one years ago the sun finally set on the British Empire with the handover of Hong Kong. Now, the sun is setting on what is known as the special relationship between the United Kingdom and the United States. It would be easy to blame Brexit for London’s increasing irrelevance in Washington. After all, the U.S. foreign policy establishment has been rapidly pro-European Union since Henry Kissinger supposedly said that Americans needed to know who to call if they wanted to call Europe. Since then, when a president wanted something from the Old World the British prime minister was their helpmate. There is no question that France has manoeuvred to fill the void in Europe caused by Brexit. However, the Franco-American alliance is about more than Europe.

Who is making the case for leaving the customs union?

From our UK edition

Whole industries will be devastated. There will be thirty mile queues of lorries stretching back from Dover. The price of food will rocket, our farmers will be wiped out, and the IRA will be letting off bombs all over the UK as the Troubles return to Northern Ireland. With every day that passes, the scare stories about leaving the customs union are getting more and more hysterical – and the pressure is growing to stay inside. In fact, most of it is nonsense. The fifth largest economy in the world is perfectly capable of managing its own trade arrangements. But leaving needs a big sell. Why? Because there is a powerful alliance of industrial lobbyists and ultra remainers behind staying inside, and that means the case for getting out may easily be lost.

Ex-grammar school boy’s Julia Hartley-Brewer jibe

From our UK edition

Owen Jones triggered the MSM over the weekend when he took to social media to complain that too many journalists went to private school and were not representative of society at large. While Mr S directs the Guardian columnist to this article on representation at Jones's paper of choice, a number of hacks have risen to the bait. However, Steerpike is more interested in some of the curious responses. Julia Hartley-Brewer – the commentator – took to social media to say she had attended a comprehensive and got into Oxford university on merit. Surely a great achievement and one which the meritocracy-loving Left could get behind? https://twitter.com/JuliaHB1/status/987319155778088961 Apparently not.

Labour’s tragedy is Britain’s tragedy

From our UK edition

If you want a monument to the winner-takes-all conservatism developed by Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan and reduced to absurdity by George Osborne and Donald Trump, look at the pulverised public realm and browbeaten citizenry around you. The project is a wreck. And I have seen few better examinations of its ruins than The New Serfdom, published tomorrow by the Labour MP Angela Eagle and Labour researcher Imran Ahmed. Arguments have their time. The self-confidence with which Eagle and Ahmed take apart the ruling ideology ought to be a sign that Britain is ready for a reforming government that can ease the pain and remedy the injustices the Conservatives have presided over.

Could Theresa May really survive a customs union climbdown?

From our UK edition

The Sunday Times set the cat among the pigeons over the weekend with a report claiming that Theresa May ‘may surrender over customs union’ after a secret wargaming exercise concluded that Brexiteers including Michael Gove and David Davis would not resign if the UK stayed in a customs union with the EU. The paper quoted a No. 10 source as saying Downing Street 'will not be crying into our beer' if parliament forces the government’s hand. Unsurprisingly the report has managed to get Brexiteers into a spin. Staying in the customs union is seen as poison to a large chunk of Brexit-backing MPs as it means the UK would have great difficulty signing trade deals with other countries.

Sunday shows round-up: Emily Thornberry – ‘I really think Amber Rudd should quit’

From our UK edition

The Shadow Foreign Secretary has called for the Home Secretary to resign over the Windrush debacle that has been dominating the newspaper headlines over the past week. The government has u-turned and apologised after threatening to deport Caribbean migrants who could not provide proof of their decades of residence in the UK, with some of those affected having been refused jobs and access to healthcare as a result. To add insult to injury, it was revealed that the Home Office had destroyed the landing cards for immigrants who arrived aboard HMT Empire Windrush, thereby removing a vital source of documentation. The government has since said that it will provide compensation 'where appropriate'.

The sinister power of Enoch Powell’s speech

From our UK edition

The BBC’s decision to re-broadcast Enoch Powell’s so-called “Rivers of Blood” speech in its entirety this week has excited just the shouting match that was to be expected. On the one hand, there has been liberal fury at the honour supposedly paid to a speech that endorsed and encouraged racial hatred. On the other, the standard defence of Powell’s line of argument: that he was not encouraging a race war, but predicting one and seeking to head it off.  What’s striking on revisiting the speech is that, for better or for worse, Powell predicted and encompassed both those points of view in the speech.

Rudd’s enemies are losing patience with her. Trouble is, so are her friends

From our UK edition

The government ends what has been a truly dismal week with a row over whether or not Theresa May supported 'go home' vans and reports that Amber Rudd privately boasted to the prime minister that she would give immigration officials greater 'teeth' to accelerate the UK’s deportation programme. There is much frustration in No 10 over how this week has played out. Despite winning all Commons votes on Syria and the much-anticipated Commonwealth celebrations, what was supposed to fly the flag for global Britain has manifested into a row over hostile environments and anti-immigration rhetoric with the Windrush scandal.

Pilot Tammie Jo Shults sets an example for young women everywhere

From our UK edition

School girls have a new heroine this week. Tammie Jo Shults was the pilot onboard Tuesday’s ill-fated flight from New York to Dallas. She safely negotiated an emergency landing after one of the aeroplane’s engines broke up, throwing debris into the fuselage. One passenger died after being partially sucked through a broken window. This could so easily have been a much bigger tragedy. That no one else on board that plane died is thanks to the skill and bravery of Shults. The audio of her calmly informing air traffic controllers, ‘We are single engine. Descending,’ followed by: ‘There is a hole and someone went out,’ is astonishing to hear. Her name should be echoing around assembly halls and her image adorning classroom posters.

Watch: Emily Thornberry booed on Question Time over Russia

From our UK edition

This week Question Time moved to Chesterfield with a panel comprised of Liz Truss, Emily Thornberry, Vince Cable, Nesrine Malik and LBC presenter Iain Dale. However, the talk that proved the most newsworthy related to international affairs. Discussing the government's strikes on Syria over an alleged chemical attack by the Assad regime, Thornberry suggested that the delay in inspectors from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) testing the site of the suspected chemical attack was the result of the United Nations and its 'red tape' – rather the Russian and Syrian governments not permitting their presence.

Boris and Gove find a common enemy

From our UK edition

After the EU referendum, Boris Johnson and Michael Gove were such a dream team that the pair looked destined to take the top two jobs in government. However, some political back-stabbing on Gove's part soon put an end to that friendship and, as history shows, paved the way for Theresa May to become Prime Minister. This week, the Windrush row has reminded the Conservatives the hard way of the problems with her appointment. As Fraser details in his Spectator cover piece, there's growing concern among Conservative Brexiteers that the problem with having a Remainer in No. 10 is that they ‘misread’ the referendum result and see it as a 'battle of ‘open’ vs ‘closed’ — seeking to control immigration is not the same thing as being anti-immigrant.

Michael Gove on manoeuvres

From our UK edition

When Liz Truss gave the keynote speech at the launch of new Conservative think tank Freer, one attendee mused to Mr S that they 'couldn’t help but wonder whether I was actually attending Truss’s leadership launch'. But if Truss is seen to be on manoeuvres as a result, then Michael Gove must be the on steroids version. The Environment Secretary is down to launch not one but two new Conservative think tanks. After taking on a role with Freer, Gove is now scheduled to give addresses at the launch next month of both the Centre for Policy Studies' New Generation project and former No 10-er Will Tanner's Onward.

Government defeated on customs union in Lords

From our UK edition

And we're back to Brexit with a bump. After a brief pause in the negotiations and legislation, the government has this afternoon been defeated on a customs union amendment in the Lords. The defeat was by no means minor either – peers voted by 348 to 225 in favour of a plan requiring ministers to report on steps to negotiate a continued EU-UK customs union. This in itself isn't catastrophic for Theresa May. When the bill returns to the Commons it will most likely be thrown out – and besides it only binds the government to report on the steps being taken to negotiate a customs union so there is wriggle room regardless. However, the scale of the defeat points to a bigger problem with the government's strategy.

Theresa May’s Windrush woes continue at PMQs

From our UK edition

The government has got at least two colossal messes to deal with, and yet Theresa May managed to survive today’s Prime Minister’s Questions. This was all the more surprising given the topic of PMQs was on a mess created as a result of one of May’s own policies.  Jeremy Corbyn chose, rightly, to lead on the treatment of the Windrush generation, and had a decent series of questions for the Prime Minister. These ranged from a case he had previously raised of a man called Albert Thompson who had been denied NHS treatment, to highlighting Amber Rudd’s comment about the Home Office being too concerned with policy and strategy to attacking May’s own ‘hostile environment’ policy on immigration.

Watch: Chris Williamson’s spat with Nicky Morgan

From our UK edition

Jeremy Corbyn has few defenders over his handling of Labour's anti-Semitism problem. But there is one man staying loyal to the Labour leader. Step forward, Chris Williamson. The Corbynite MP has just traded blows with Nicky Morgan over the matter. During the heated Sky News row, Morgan accused Williamson of 'chuntering away' while he watched PMQs. Williamson then responded by saying the Tory MP was trying to play 'party political football' with the issue of anti-Semitism, and suggested that right-wing trolls were responsible for some of the abuse blamed on lefties online.

Watch: Corbyn’s PMQs attack backfires spectacularly

From our UK edition

Theresa May should have been on the backfoot at PMQs today as a result of the Windrush scandal. But, somehow, Jeremy Corbyn still managed to ensure the Prime Minister got the upper hand. The Labour leader started off the session by going on the attack; unfortunately, for Corbyn, it backfired spectacularly: JC: Yesterday, we learned that in 2010, the Home Office destroyed landing cards for a generation of Commonwealth citizens, and so have told people: we can't find you in our system. Did the Prime Minister – the then-home secretary – sign off that decision? TM: No, the decision to destroy the landing cards was taken in 2009, under a Labour government. Oh dear...