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

Labour MP ditched Birmingham bin strikes for Japan

From our UK edition

Dear oh dear. As the Birmingham bin strikes rumble on and rubbish continues to pile high on the city's streets, some of the area's residents can't get out of there quick enough – including the, um, MP for Birmingham Hodge Hill and Solihull North, Liam Byrne. The senior Labour politician has found himself in the spotlight after he was accused of abandoning his constituents by taking an extravagant trip to Japan during the crisis. Alright for some! As revealed by the Mail, Byrne flew to Asia with seven other politicians on the business committee at the end of March.

Watch: Badenoch blasts Beeb over Adolescence questions

From our UK edition

The progressive class's obsession with Adolescence continues – and Tory leader Kemi Badenoch is having none of it. When Badenoch appeared on BBC Breakfast this morning to discuss her party's local election campaigns, presenters were quick to quiz the parliamentarian on her thoughts on the Netflix series, which has been lauded by Labour MPs – including the Prime Minister himself – for highlighting the perils of toxic masculinity.

Lib Dems double down on Gail’s strategy

From our UK edition

To Sir Ed Davey's Liberal Democrats. The fun-loving party made headlines during the general election campaign after its party leader was pictured on paddleboards, waterslides and even a bungee jump during the lead-up to the July poll. But while the party's strategy appeared all fun and games from afar, the Lib Dems were working far more tactically behind the scenes. Embarking on a mission to mercilessly target Tory areas, the Liberal Democrats used a rather, er, original rule of thumb to identify voters looking to jump ship: 'Does their constituency have a Gail's?' Going after consistencies that housed the luxury bakery chain appeared to work in Davey's favour – with the party emerging from the election with a whopping 72 MPs, up from 11.

Watch: Nandy changes her tune on Trump trade deal

From our UK edition

Hypocrisy is in the air this morning! As the tariff war between China and the US rages on, Sir Keir Starmer is hoping to avoid taking retaliatory action over Donald Trump's Liberation Day tariffs – and instead negotiate a transatlantic trade deal with his American counterparts. But while Starmer's army now insists coming to an agreement is their preferred option, it's worth remembering that Labour politicians haven't always looked upon negotiations with Trump quite so favourably – as Good Morning Britain's Ed Balls was quick to point out in today's interview with Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy.

Musk blasts Trump’s ‘moron’ trade adviser

From our UK edition

Elon Musk strikes again! The tech billionaire and co-leader of Donald Trump's Department of Government Efficiency has lashed out for a second time at the President's top trade adviser Peter Navarro as tensions over tariffs ramp up in the White House. Now Musk has blasted Navarro as 'dumber than a sack of bricks' and 'truly a moron' in his latest pop at the government adviser. The gloves are coming off… The Twitter CEO has been sparring with Navarro since Trump's Liberation Day tariffs were announced last Wednesday. Musk's latest attacks come after Navarro suggested in an interview that the billionaire businessman's support of free trade was due to his car company Tesla requiring a number of foreign-made parts. Hitting back, Musk responded that: 'Tesla has the most American-made cars.

Starmer takes a pop at OBR over welfare forecast

From our UK edition

To the Commons, where Prime Minister Keir Starmer is speaking to the Liaison Committee before the House rises for Easter recess. The PM has spent much of this afternoon fending off questions on growth, healthcare and British industry – but it was on his government's recently proposed welfare cuts that the Labour leader went on the attack, hitting out for the first time at the Office for Budget Responsibility. Defending Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall's benefits reforms announced last month, Sir Keir took at pop at the OBR over the way it scores the impact of the Labour lot's welfare cuts. Speaking to the committee, Starmer insisted: It is significant to my mind that the ability of any policy to change behaviour is not priced in.

Prince Harry: I was ‘singled out’ in security row

From our UK edition

The monarch of Montecito is, er, back in the UK. Prince Harry has returned to Britain for a two-day hearing at the Royal Courts of Justice in a last-ditch attempt to win automatic state-funded security for his family whenever they return to Britain. He may have stepped down as a working prince five years ago, but it seems the royal renegade is missing the perks… The Duke of Sussex embarked on the 10,000-mile return trip from California in a bid to win back taxpayer-funded security arrangement for him and his wife, Meghan, and their children.

Tories lose major donor prompting HQ closure fears

From our UK edition

Just as the House of Commons is about to rise for Easter recess, Her Majesty's Official Opposition has been hit with some rather unfortunate news. As revealed by the Guardian, the Tories have lost one of their biggest donors – in a move that could, insiders believe, lead to the closure of the party's headquarters in the north of England. Good heavens… The paper heard from two Conservative sources that HomeServe founder Richard Harpin – who has donated £3.8 million to the party since 2008 and was ranked by the Electoral Commission as the Tories' 10th biggest donor in 2023 – has now put a pause on his funding.

Trump hits back at China’s retaliatory tariffs

From our UK edition

Stock markets around the world continue to plummet but Donald Trump has his mind on other matters: his tariff war with China. The American president has this afternoon hit back at Beijing's announcement on Friday that it would impose retaliatory tariffs of 34 per cent on US goods following Trump's 'Liberation Day' levies last week. Unleashing a fiery tirade on Truth Social today, Trump has fumed that if Xi Jinping does not withdraw his tax increase, the US will impose 'additional tariffs on China of 50 per cent' and terminate all scheduled talks with foreign power. Talk about pulling no punches, eh?

Has Musk broken ranks with Trump over tariffs?

From our UK edition

Uh oh. There's trouble in Trumpland. Leader of the President's Department of Government Efficiency Elon Musk has taken to his social media site today to post a video by Milton Friedman lauding the virtues of free markets and multi-stage supply chains – showing the US economist praising the 'magic' of the 'essential' free market and international trade. Less than a week after Trump imposed controversial new tariffs on around 90 countries across the world, the post has been viewed by some as a dig at the new President's policy. Talk about trouble in paradise… It's not the first intervention Musk has made about Trump's Liberation Day decision-making.

Lammy and Badenoch in row over Israel’s MP ban

From our UK edition

Foreign Secretary David Lammy and Conservative party leader Kemi Badenoch are not known to be especially chummy at the best of times – and relations have worsened after two Labour MPs were denied entry to Israel over the weekend. Lammy was quick to accuse the Tory leader of 'cheerleading another country for detaining and deporting two British MPs' after Badenoch defended Israel's decision on Sunday, telling the Beeb's Laura Kuenssberg that 'it's shocking that we have Labour MPs who other countries will not allow through'. Oo er. Outrage quickly spread through the Labour party after it emerged that Yuan Yang and Abtisam Mohamed were not allowed entry to Israel on Saturday.

Labour MP arrested on suspicion of rape

From our UK edition

A former Labour minister was arrested on Friday on suspicion of rape and child sex offences. The Sun on Sunday tonight reports that Dan Norris, 65, MP for North East Somerset and Hanham, was arrested on Friday over claims of historic sexual offences against a girl and a rape allegation from the 2020s. Avon and Somerset Police confirmed he had also been held on suspicion of misconduct in public office. Labour has now confirmed that Norris has been suspended from the party and lost the whip in parliament. A party spokesman told the Sun that: ‘Dan Norris MP was immediately suspended by the Labour party upon being informed of his arrest. We cannot comment further while the police investigation is ongoing’.

Ex-Tory MSP joins the Lib Dems

From our UK edition

The Scottish Liberal Democrats aren't best known for their ability to grab headlines – but today the spotlight is on them. At the group's spring conference in Inverness, leader Alex Cole-Hamilton this afternoon unveiled the latest addition to the party: the ex-Tory MSP who dramatically quit the Conservatives on Thursday after blasting their 'Trump-esque' style. Talk about a quick turnaround, eh? Emerging from the shadows, Jamie Greene MSP joked with the Lib Dem membership: 'I'm not sure who's more surprised to see me here – me or you!' Going on, the former Conservative politician and onetime leadership hopeful told his crowd that he had gone from being 'politically homeless in the last 24 hours to a new home'.

Starmer’s skills adviser founded failing school

From our UK edition

There’s a new man about Whitehall. Prime Minister Keir Starmer has appointed Oli de Botton – ex-adviser to David Miliband and the husband of former No. 10 communications chief Amber de Botton – as his Expert Adviser on Education and Skills. The role of the new skills guru will be to advise ministers on the government’s education vision but Mr S is more than a little sceptical of de Botton’s track record in the field.

Labour council tells staff to take ‘privilege’ test

From our UK edition

If you thought progressive politics couldn’t get any worse, think again. It transpires that the Labour-led Westminster city council is advising its staff to undergo, er, ‘privilege’ testing and inclusive recruitment training in a bid to hire more people from non-white ‘global majority’ backgrounds. Time well spent… The rather baffling virtual privilege test helps council staff realise their social advantages, with scores impacted by factors including whether your parents read to you as a child or whether you drive a new car or have a designer handbag. As the Telegraph reports, insiders say they would gain privilege points if English is their first language, if they reckon someone could bail them out financially and if they shop at Waitrose.

Labour’s Luton expansion plans get the green light

From our UK edition

The economy may not be expanding, but Labour is determined Britain's airports will. Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander has today approved proposals to expand Luton Airport – with plans for a new terminal given a green light. So keen is the Labour minister to push the project, Alexander has overruled the Planning Inspectorate's advice that she reject the Development Consent Order over environmental concerns. How interesting… The move will pave the way for the cap on passenger numbers to be raised from 18 million to a whopping 32 million. The existing Terminal 1 is to be expanded while a new Terminal 2 will be constructed alongside taxiways and car parks. More than that, a new direct air-to-rail transport link – the Luton DART – will be built as part of the £2.4 billion project.

Watchdog probes Prince Harry’s charity

From our UK edition

To the monarch of Montecito, who is once again making headlines for all the wrong reasons. It turns out the Charity Commission is probing 'concerns raised' at Prince Harry's African charity, Sentebale – as a battle over bullying rages in the boardroom. Oh dear… The royal renegade's organisation has come under fire over its governance, as allegations of bullying, racism and mismanagement have also been flung around. The Commission announced today it had opened an inquiry in a statement and has already been in touch with those who flagged concerns about the company – including both the Duke of Sussex himself and chair Sophie Chandauka.

Scottish Tory MSP storms out ‘Trump-esque’ party

From our UK edition

All is not well in the Scottish Tory party. Onetime leadership hopeful Jamie Greene MSP has dramatically quit the party today, announcing his exit in a scathing letter to current leader Russell Findlay. Raging that the group has become ‘Trump-esque in both style and substance’, Greene fumed that the Scottish Conservatives were at risk of being once again labelled the ‘Nasty Party’ by ‘chasing the votes’ of Reform voters. Ouch. The Scottish politician – who believes he was sacked from the party’s frontbench in 2023 over his support for Nicola Sturgeon’s gender reforms – blasted his party for a rightwards shift as Reform UK continues to gain momentum north of the border.

Arron Banks battles Bristol Council for ‘Banksy’ slogan

From our UK edition

It's all kicking off in Bristol. On Friday, Reform UK announced that the multimillionaire Arron Banks was going to be their candidate for the mayoralty of the West of England. But the self-proclaimed 'bad boy of Brexit' faces opposition from overzealous apparatchiks on Bristol City Council. Officials from the Green-run authority have told Banks that he is not permitted to use his favoured slogan of 'Banksy for Bristol' on party literature – despite it, er, literally being a linguistic play on his name. Now, Reform UK has written to the council to demand that this be overturned. In a letter, seen by The Spectator, the party complains that: Any such restriction would be legally misconceived, unjustified, and liable to immediate challenge.

Patrick Harvie’s top five lowlights

From our UK edition

Patrick Harvie has today announced – and not a moment too soon – that he will step down as co-leader of the Scottish Greens this summer. It will end his tenure as Holyrood's longest-serving party chief after he clung onto the top job for almost 17 years. To mark the occasion, Mr S has compiled a list of Harvie's worst moments to date… Harvie's net-zero hypocrisy The Scottish Green co-leader has always been quick to take a pop at the Tories – even when he risked looking rather hypocritical himself.