Steerpike

Steerpike

Steerpike is The Spectator's gossip columnist, serving up the latest tittle tattle from Westminster and beyond. Email tips to steerpike@spectator.co.uk or message @MrSteerpike

Watch: JK Rowling’s favourite BBC presenter

From our UK edition

To the Beeb, which is once again making the news rather than breaking it. BBC presenter Martine Croxall caught the attention of viewers on Sunday as she read out a news report about a heart health study from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Reading the autocue, the presenter hesitated as she got to a sentence about protecting vulnerable people from extreme weather. It transpires that her script had described those at risk as those with pre-existing health conditions, the elderly and, er, 'pregnant people'. Rolling her eyes, Croxall corrected the description on air – 'women' – before continuing on. Good to see some accuracy on BBC News, eh?

Defence minister refuses to answer Iran question three times

From our UK edition

It seems the Labour lot has got themselves in quite a tizzy over events in the Middle East – and this morning saw an excruciating interview in which the defence minister couldn't answer the most straightforward question about Iran. Luke Pollard gave a car crash interview earlier today on Sky News, where the Labour minister appeared stumped over a simple question about Britain's stance on Donald Trump's decision to bomb Iran. If he can't answer on this, what does he know? Pollard squirmed as Sky's Wilfred Frost quizzed him three times about whether the Uk government is 'disappointed' in President Trump's move to strike Iran. Asked whether No. 10 is 'disappointed ultimately that the US felt it necessary to attack Iran over the weekend', Pollard decided to, er, obfuscate.

RAF Brize Norton chief’s views on patriotism revealed

From our UK edition

On Thursday night, a group of Palestine Action protestors managed to enter RAF Brize Norton, spraying paint into a pair of Voyager jet engines and leaving the military base without being caught. The Prime Minister has since called it 'vandalism' and there has been talk of proscribing Palestine Action.  But Mr S wants to know how they managed to get onto the base in the first place. The protesters videoed themselves on scooters, zooming about the runway, seemingly without a single soldier noticing them. It's a major embarrassment, not just for the military but for the country – especially at a time of heightened global tensions. If some keffiyeh-wearing hippies can scoot into our military bases undetected, what of trained foreign operatives hoping to do real damage?

Poll: majority of Brits think small boats unstoppable

From our UK edition

Summer is here! And you know what gorgeous weather means: more small boats crossing the Channel. Get ready for the great Starmada in the coming weeks, as thousands more migrants prepare to sail the 21 miles from Calais to Dover. The current crisis has been going on since 2018, when Sajid Javid – the-then Home Secretary – felt the need to cut short his holiday after 100 migrants crossed in a 24-hour period. Those were the days... Now Mr S has got some polling and it seems that the public are accepting these crossings as inevitable. A survey done by Merlin Strategy of 2,000 UK adults between 17 and 18 June shows that 51 per cent of Brits think that the government will never be able to stop the boats – including 7 in 10 Reform 2024 voters.

Will Emily Maitlis now apologise to Rupert Lowe?

From our UK edition

The News Agents podcasters appear increasingly less focused on facts and more on taking a pop at people who hold different views to them. Ex-Reform man Rupert Lowe was a recent casualty. He was invited onto the podcast to speak to Maitlis – who wasted no time in tearing into him, going so far as to suggest the independent parliamentarian was 'racist' after he spoke about Pakistani grooming gangs. But after the publication of Baroness Casey's review this week, it would appear Maitlis is due a rather large slice of humble pie… On the episode, Maitlis asked Lowe quizzically: 'Why do you only talk about Pakistani grooming gangs? There are ten times as many white grooming gang suspects.' She then added: 'You are focusing on Pakistani grooming gangs because, probably, you're racist.

Poll: public want care home opt out for assisted dying

From our UK edition

It's a big day in parliament tomorrow. Both sides of the assisted dying debate are gearing up for a crunch Commons clash when Kim Leadbeater's Bill returns for its Third Reading. One key flashpoint in its recently-completed Report Stage was when Rebecca Paul's amendment to allow hospices to opt out of providing assisted dying was voted down by Leadbeater and 278 other MPs. Now, Mr S has got his hands on some polling which shows that Paul's position is backed by nearly two-thirds of the British public (quelle surprise).

Watch: SNP housing secretary slips up on social housing

From our UK edition

SNP MSP Mairi McAllan appears to be rated rather highly by First Minister John Swinney, who created an entirely new job for her on her return to Holyrood from maternity leave – but the Scottish government's new housing secretary hasn't had the smoothest start to the job. A rather awkward interview with STV this week highlighted the Cabinet minister isn't quite as on top of her brief as she should be. Oh dear… The SNP claims on its website that 'since taking office, we have delivered 96,750 affordable homes, nearly 67,000 of which were for social rent'. But on how many people are currently waiting for a social home in Scotland, it seems the Nats are a little less clear.

JK Rowling blasts the National as ‘anti-women’

From our UK edition

Scotland’s self-identifying ‘newspaper’ is at it again – and this time it has provoked the wrath of renowned writer JK Rowling. The National has chosen to dunk, yet again, on women's rights organisation Sex Matters, dubbing it an 'anti-trans campaign group' which is 'threatening' legal action after it raised concerns about how the Scottish government is – or, more to the point, is not – implementing the recent Supreme Court judgment that backed the biological definition of a woman. But feminist-in-chief Rowling has had enough – and was quick to slam the Nat-obsessed tabloid as 'anti-woman'. Ouch.

NSPCC refuses to apologise to Braverman over grooming gangs letter

From our UK edition

Baroness Casey’s landmark review into Britain’s grooming gangs contained some truly horrific revelations. The damning audit found that disproportionate numbers of Asian men were responsible for child sexual exploitation gangs. Shockingly, it revealed that the authorities failed to crack down on these men for fear of being racist. It has prompted outrage from those who had been vilified for suggesting particular groups of people were more likely to be perpetrators than others – and Mr S is curious about whether the organisations who were quick to cry racism will now retract their criticism.

Revealed: Birmingham’s pest control costs soar as bin strikes continue

From our UK edition

Today marks the 100th day of the Birmingham bin strikes. The City of a Thousand Trades has been subjected to more than three months of refuse piling high on its streets while reports of ‘cat-sized rats’ feeding on the neglected rubbish have struck fear into Brum’s residents. Now Mr S can reveal what is known so far of the detrimental financial and social costs of the bin worker's strike… It was on 11 March 2025 that all-out industrial action kicked off after pay talks between bin workers and the city council broke down. Unite the Union bosses have claimed that changes to how rubbish is collected will mean that 170 workers will face an annual pay cut of £8,000 – figures that Birmingham City Council disputes.

Foreign nationals convicted of a quarter of sex assaults on women

From our UK edition

Britain's grooming gangs scandal has dominated the news this week, after the publication of Baroness Casey's review on Monday. Now data from the Ministry of Justice has emerged showing that over a quarter of sex assaults on women – that have been successfully prosecuted in the UK – were committed by foreign nationals. It's quite the stat… The data, which came to light through Freedom of Information requests, revealed that of the 1,453 sex assault convictions on women in 2024, 26 per cent were foreign nationals. There are suggestions that the real total could be higher, given that those 8 per cent recorded as having perpetrators of 'unknown' nationalities could also include foreign nationals.

Ex-Tory MP pleads guilty to harassment

From our UK edition

To Cardiff, where a former Conservative politician has pleaded guilty to harassing their ex-wife. Katie Wallis, formerly Jamie Wallis who represented Bridgend from 2019-2024, today admitted to sending unwanted messages both over the phone and via voice note and will be sentenced next month. Wallis had been in a relationship with ex-wife Rebecca Lovell for over 15 years, before divorcing in 2024. The 41-year-old former politician – who became the UK's first transgender MP in 2022 – had lawyer Narita Bahra KC agree an eleventh-hour deal with the prosecution for a guilty plea, after first applying for an adjournment for a psychiatric report to show Wallis had experienced a 'psychotic breakdown' during the police interview.

Poll: just 3 per cent of women back Stella Creasy’s abortion amendment

From our UK edition

It is a big week for big Commons moments. On Monday, we had the long-awaited announcement of an inquiry into grooming gangs; today it is the battle of the abortion amendments. This afternoon Lindsay Hoyle will choose whether to call Tonia Antoniazzi or Stella Creasy's amendments to the Crime and Policing Bill. Antoniazzi’s measure would allow abortion for any reason up to birth while maintaining criminal sanctions for doctors performing late-term or sex-selective procedures. Creasy, however, has adopted the more hard-line position of full decriminalisation in all circumstances. Now, Mr S has got his hands on some polling – and it is bad news for Stella. More than 2,100 adults were polled by Whitestone Insight between 2nd and 3rd June.

Casey hits out at ‘politicisation’ of grooming gang report

From our UK edition

As Westminster continues to dissect the truly troubling findings laid out by Baroness Casey's report into Britain's grooming gang scandal, the crossbench peer has now given her thoughts on the political reaction to the review. Speaking to the BBC's Newsnight programme on Monday, Casey hit out at parliamentarians for how they'd responded to the project, saying she was 'disappointed' with the way it had been used for political point-scoring. Ouch. When quizzed on the 'politicisation' of her review, Baroness Casey remarked: I’m disappointed by it, to put it mildly. I really hoped – and hope still – that the report is so clear, it’s so straightforward. We need to change some laws. We need to do a national criminal investigation.

Is this the worst Labour MP in parliament?

From our UK edition

The publication of Louise Casey's report into rape gangs was a sobering affair. But not, apparently, for Shaun Davies, Labour MP for Telford since July 2024. He previously served as the Shropshire town's council leader from 2016 to 2024. More than 1,000 children in Telford were sexually exploited over decades, according to the Independent Inquiry for Child Sexual Abuse in 2022. Davies decided that yesterday was the perfect time to stand up in the House of Commons and criticise the Conservative government for not themselves investigating grooming gangs. He told the House that: 'We did a local-based review because the then Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, and the then local government Minister, Rishi Sunak, refused to provide a statutory inquiry into Telford.' https://twitter.

Listen: Thought for the Day bishop’s bizarre grooming gang claim

From our UK edition

Well, well, well. As Baroness Casey prepares to publish her review into Britain's grooming gang scandal, a rather curious speaker was invited on to Radio 4's 'Thought for the Day' this morning. Step forward, the Bishop of Manchester, Reverend David Walker, who told us that... This is not a pattern of offending confined to any particular ethnic cultural or religious group. I hope that the forthcoming inquiry will help us find ways to keep young girls safe from the groups of predatory older men, whatever their origin. But it is a natural human tendency to want to think that such horrendous crimes are only carried out by people who are not like us.

Lefties abandon Stella Creasy’s abortion amendment

From our UK edition

A real cheery week in the Commons is looming for our lucky legislators. There's assisted dying, grooming gangs and a welfare row to enjoy. But tomorrow attention will switch to abortion, with Labour MPs now pushing to 'decriminalise' the practice in England and Wales. Unfortunately, a bit of a row has broken out between Tonia Antoniazzi and Stella Creasy, both of whom have tabled competing amendments to the Criminal Justice Bill. Antoniazzi's measure would allow abortion for any reason up to birth while maintaining criminal sanctions for doctors performing late-term or sex-selective procedures. Creasy, however, has adopted the more hard-line position of full decriminalisation in all circumstances. The pair sparred earlier this month on the floor of the House of Commons.

Will the assisted dying vote be delayed?

From our UK edition

All is not well with the Labour lot. It has emerged that more than 50 lefty MPs submitted a letter to the Leader of the Commons, Lucy Powell, at the weekend – demanding she intervene to delay this Friday's final third reading vote on Kim Leadbeater's controversial assisted dying bill. The letter blasts the limited opportunities afforded to parliamentarians to speak on the bill and fumes that 'several movers of amendments haven't been able to speak to the changes they have laid'. Oo er. The concerned crowd includes, as reported by the Independent, a group of 2024ers alongside some longer-serving MPs. Former journalists Paul Waugh and Torcuil Crichton have added their signatures to the letter, alongside politicians Florence Eshalomi and Dawn Butler.

Watch: Treasury minister’s car crash interview

From our UK edition

Dear oh dear. It's never a good look to go onto the airwaves to boast about your department's new infrastructure fund to then, er, promptly forget the details of the project you're funding. The unlucky minister who found herself in this position today was the Treasury's Emma Reynolds, who appeared to forget both exactly where the new Lower Thames Crossing road is and how much the total bill will come to. Talk about a car crash, eh? Speaking to LBC's Nick Ferrari this morning, Reynolds was first quizzed on where exactly the new road from Essex to Kent would start and end. 'Just remind us where the new crossing is, where it takes off and where it lands,' the veteran presenter quizzed his interviewee.

Phillipson visits zero private schools in 11 months

From our UK edition

It’s been quite the year for Bridget Phillipson. The under fire Education Secretary is now regularly tipped as one of the ministers most likely to be moved at the next reshuffle. Her Schools Bill has been lambasted for its impact on academies while her private school tax raid is hitting the state school sector too.  Yet despite dire warnings about the impact of putting VAT on independent school fees, Phillipson seems indifferent to their fate.  For a Freedom of Information request by Steerpike has confirmed that she is yet to visit a single one in nearly a year in office. According to the Department for Education: Minister Morgan and Minister McKinnell have visited a private school in their ministerial capacities since 5 July 2024.