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

Scottish Tory leadership race: runners and riders

From our UK edition

While contenders in the UK Tory leadership race ramp up their campaigns, north of the border the Scottish Conservative contest is just about to get started. Nominations for candidates to succeed outgoing leader Douglas Ross close on the 22 August at 12pm. Each leadership hopeful will need 100 party members to back them in order to formally stand before voting takes place next month – with the winner to be announced on 27 September. Initially six candidates declared they would run for the top job, however just before nominations closed, ex-athlete Brian Whittle announced he would, er, no longer run – and has now endorsed Murdo Fraser, alongside two other former leadership candidates Jamie Greene and Liam Kerr.

SNP membership numbers plummet further

From our UK edition

Oh dear. It's not a good time to be an SNP politician, what with the recent electoral wipeout, the party's muddled stance on the Middle East and party insiders already plotting who their next leader will be. And now it transpires that the party has lost yet more members, leaving its card-carrying supporters at a new low of just over 64,000. Crikey... After the bitter leadership contest that tarnished the reputation of the SNP, membership numbers fell from 125,000 in 2019 to around 72,000 – a staggering drop of 43 per cent. Not that the party was particularly keen to admit it, with then-spin doctor Murray Foote resigning after it emerged he had inadvertently misled the media over the exodus.

Tories demand Treasury impartiality probe

From our UK edition

Whitehall has received a lot of attention of late, what with interesting civil service appointments prompting claims of cronyism. And now Mr S can reveal that the Tories are calling for a civil service probe – and a ministerial apology – over impartiality concerns. The shadow minister to the Cabinet Office, Baroness Neville-Rolfe, has today written to Lord Livermore, the Financial Secretary to the Treasury, over fears that he may have 'inadvertedly misled the House' after he was quizzed about whether a party political document was uploaded to the official government website. Oh dear... Lord Livermore was this month questioned about the publication on the gov.uk website of the Chancellor's statement on public spending inheritance.

BBC blasted over Sir Brian’s ‘partisan’ badger doc

From our UK edition

The Beeb is developing a habit of being the news rather than making it – and the upcoming release of Sir Brian May's badger documentary this Friday is no exception. The public service broadcaster has been slammed for allowing a BBC 2 programme to air after it emerged that the Queen guitarist will this week release a tell-all about badger culling. In the show, the longtime animal rights activist will attempt to make the argument that killing badgers to stop the spread of TB is like, er, burning witches to 'protect your crops'. May has warned viewers that his findings are 'pretty shocking', adding the story 'will outrage viewers more than anything since the Post Office scandal'. Crikey...

Labour cronyism claims continue

From our UK edition

Another day, another drama. The spotlight is back on Sir Keir Starmer's Labour lot as accusations of cronyism continue to fly in. Now it transpires that yet another civil service appointee has rather strong political links to Starmer's army. Ex-Labour Together campaigner Jess Sargeant has been appointed to a top civil service job, with Politico suggesting she will play a leading part on the issue of Lords reform. Alright for some... As revealed by Guido Fawkes, Labour-sympathetic Sargeant has bagged a deputy director role with the Cabinet Office's Propriety and Constitution group only eight months after she moved to 'Starmerite central' Labour Together. Before that, Sargeant was an Institute for Government think tanker, working as an associate director at the centre-left organisation.

Now Ross brands Scottish Tory colleagues ‘calculating b**tards’

From our UK edition

As the UK Tory leadership contest rumbles on, north of the border the Scottish race is hotting up. Last week saw a rather dramatic few days in which four of six contenders called for the competition to be paused and the party's deputy leader quit her post after 'disturbing claims' about outgoing leader Douglas Ross emerged. It transpired that Ross attempted to shuffle out a prospective parliamentary candidate so that he could be selected to contest a Westminster seat in the 2024 election. The Telegraph report also claimed that the Scottish Tory leader wanted to ditch the top job over a year ago – and instead coronate current leadership candidate Russell Findlay. But despite the negative press, Ross remains pugnacious...

Left-wing media’s double standards on show at DNC

From our UK edition

To the Windy City, where the Democratic National Convention is in full swing. In the early hours of this morning, outgoing President Joe Biden bid an emotional farewell to conference delegates to pave the way for Kamala Harris's 2024 campaign, and former US leader Barack Obama is due to speak today. But besides the big names of the moment, Mr S spotted something rather interesting about just how the DNC has been received in comparison to its Republican counterpart by some of the noisiest voices in UK media... When a selection of British politicians decided to make the transatlantic voyage to Milwaukee for the Republican National Convention last month, not everyone was supportive of the international trip.

Librarians attending ‘whiteness studies’ to avoid ‘racist’ venues

From our UK edition

Just when you think the equality and diversity police can't get any madder, they do. Now it transpires that libraries across Wales have been told to become 'anti-racist' in the devolved Labour government's bid to 'eradicate' systemic racism by 2030 – with librarians urged not to hold meetings in 'racist' buildings by decolonisation training experts. It turns out that Welsh library workers are being educated – as part of a £130,000 'anti-racist library collections' project – in 'critical whiteness studies'. These aim to help staff understand the 'dominant paradigm of whiteness' besides other issues, as part of the Welsh government's 2022 Anti-Racist Wales Action Plan. Crikey...

Trump was ‘very rude’, thought Queen

From our UK edition

Good heavens. As the 2024 US presidential campaigns pick up pace, some rather damning revelations have emerged about the impression contender Donald Trump left on Queen Elizabeth II. A new biography serialised in the Mail, A Voyage Around the Queen by Craig Brown, has set out the late monarch's reflections on meeting the US businessman and former president – and it appears that she was not particularly complimentary... The pair first met in the summer of 2018, over English tea at Windsor Castle. But despite the civilised setting, the then-President is said to have rather ruffled feathers.

Watch: Snappy Starmer dismisses ‘nonsense’ Sue Gray rumours

From our UK edition

To Northern Ireland, where Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has been speaking to reporters about emergency prison measures, the violent riots that swept Britain's streets and the response of the police. But during his interrogation by journalists, the PM didn't seem to be in the mood to entertain recent rumours that his chief of staff, Sue Gray, is becoming a disruptive presence in Downing Street. Touchy subject, Keir? In a rather curious Times piece, Gray was accused of 'subverting' Sir Keir's cabinet by 'personally dominating' negotiations about the proposed venue for the 2028 Euros tournament.

Boris’s memoir to drop during Tory leadership battle

From our UK edition

Boris Johnson is back. The ex-prime minister is preparing to grace the nation with his musings as the launch date of his new memoir Unleashed looms. The former Tory leader's latest work will be unveiled at the Cheltenham Literature Festival on 10 October, with his publishers promising the ex-PM will 'explore the big decisions of his time in power' and 'shatter the mould of the modern prime ministerial memoir'. And the October release date ensures Johnson's tome will hit bookshops almost a month before the conclusion of the Conservative party's leadership race, in timing that might leave some contenders more than a little anxious about how his version of events will sway the membership... BoJo's memoirs have not come cheap.

Majority of Brits believe UK is heading in wrong direction

From our UK edition

Sir Keir Starmer hasn't exactly had the easiest start to his premiership – what with the recent riots, the country's financial woes and today's move to activate emergency measures in prisons. And now it appears that the PM's popularity with the public has taken a hit too. New Ipsos polling reveals the Prime Minister's net favourability rating has plummeted from his post-election score of +7 to 0. While Starmer is still the most-liked politician in the poll – and has a higher score than the likes of Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak two months into their premierships – it transpires that more than half of Brits believe that things in the UK are going in the wrong direction. Talk about a short honeymoon...

Will John Swinney be forced to resign over Israel meeting?

From our UK edition

When it rains for the SNP, it pours. It transpires that the Scottish government’s culture secretary, who met with Israel’s deputy ambassador to the UK, was sent to the rather controversial meeting by none other than First Minister John Swinney himself. Revelations of the encounter have infuriated pro-Palestine party members, with it being understood that hundreds have quit their membership over the matter amidst growing calls for Angus Robertson to resign.

Now Sue Gray’s son is in the firing line

From our UK edition

It seems that bad headlines run in Sue Gray’s family. After a week of newspaper reports suggesting that Keir Starmer’s chief of staff is to blame for the government’s ails, now it is the turn of her son to face the wrath of Fleet Street. Liam Conlon, who was elected last month as the MP for Beckenham and Penge, has quickly been earmarked as one to watch. Within days of his election, he was appointed as a parliamentary private secretary at the Department for Transport. Talk about a rapid rise: perhaps he knows someone at the top? Unfortunately for Conlon, his new appointment has landed him in a spot of bother with the Mail on Sunday.

Prison officer probes soar amid bonking craze

From our UK edition

Prison is supposedly a place for wrongdoers to repent and reform – but it seems that even the staff inside are no angels themselves. After a female Wandsworth prison guard was suspended in July for a viral video of her, er, engaging with an inmate, Mr S did some digging into how widespread this phenomenon this really is. And Steerpike can reveal that dozens of prison officers have faced disciplinary action for ‘inappropriate relations’ with inmates or ex-offenders – with 65 probed since 2018 alone. Talk about the screws, eh? This figure was provided by the Ministry of Justice in respond to a Freedom of Information request by The Spectator and includes prison officers, supervising officers, and custodial managers on salary bands 3-5.

Scottish Tory leadership candidates call for race to halt

From our UK edition

All is not well in the Scottish Tory party. Now four of the six candidates have released a statement calling for the leadership race to be paused until they receive assurances on the contest's 'transparency and fairness'. The letter, signed by Murdo Fraser, Jamie Greene, Liam Kerr and Brian Whittle, is addressed to the party's management board and comes in light of 'disturbing claims' about outgoing leader Douglas Ross. Oh dear... The Telegraph reported this morning that according to senior sources in the party, Ross wanted to ditch the leadership role over a year ago and coronate the current frontrunner Russell Findlay. Ross – who at the time was both an MP and MSP – previously insisted that he wanted to step down as a Member of Parliament at the 2024 general election.

SNP in civil war over Israel deputy ambassador meet

From our UK edition

It's a day that ends in 'y' so the nationalists are fighting amongst themselves again. This time it's over a controversial meeting between the Scottish government's Culture Secretary Angus Robertson and Daniela Grudsky, the deputy ambassador of Israel to the UK. As Mr S revealed this week, certain Nats were rather upset about the encounter, in which discussions about energy, culture and the Middle East took place. Aberdeen Central MSP Kevin Stewart writing that: ‘I hope Angus Robertson also demanded an immediate ceasefire’ while his colleague Elena Whitham tweeted out, um, a sad face emoji. You can always rely on the SNP for serious politics, eh?

Tom Tugendhat’s war on TikTok

From our UK edition

As the Tory leadership race heats up, all six candidates are trying to draw dividing lines to stand out to their fellow MPs – and the membership. Now Tom Tugendhat has taken to Twitter to make clear his stance on the all-important issue of, um, TikTok. The China hawk has slammed the Beijing-based social media platform, telling his Twitter followers that 'unlike other candidates, you won't have seen my videos on TikTok'. The app, Tugendhat says, is 'controlled by a foreign country' that 'doesn't share any of our values and in fact silences debate'. Don't hold back... The Conservative leadership contender continued his tirade: TikTok is owned by a company called ByteDance, which is headquartered in China.

Labour poach Mirror political editor

From our UK edition

Will the last lobby hack please turn out the lights? After Torcuil Crichton and Paul Waugh made the jump from journalism into politics by being elected last month, now another scribe has formally joined the Starmer army. After much Westminster speculation about the slowness of SpAd appointments, today Guido Fawkes revealed an interesting new hire. It transpires that the political editor of the famously partial Mirror tabloid has jumped ship – and right into the Cabinet Office. John Stevens has opted to leave the world of lobby journalism for go and spin for top Keirleader Pat McFadden. During the Tory years, Stevens relished causing headaches for Tory spads with his scoops on ‘Partygate’ and the Afghanistan withdrawal.

Former Irish PM defends Olympic boxer at centre of gender row

From our UK edition

Well, well, well. Now Ireland's former Taoiseach has swooped in to defend the Olympian at the centre of a gender row. Leo Varadkar's gushing Instagram post in support of gold medallist Imane Khelif hit users' feeds last night, accompanied by some rather odd graphics. The ex-Irish PM reposted a screenshot from the '@fitnessgayz' account, with the words 'Get em girl!!' emblazoned across the image in bright pink. The former Fine Gael leader then launched into an impassioned defence of Khelif – who has faced backlash for competing in the women's boxing after previously failing gender eligibility tests – and even suggested he would make a donation to her cyberbullying lawsuit against JK Rowling and Elon Musk. 'Fair play to Imane Khelif,' Varadkar declared on the photo-messaging app.