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 suspend MP over Holocaust Memorial Day comments

From our UK edition

Oh dear. Every time Labour looks just about electable, up pops one of Keir Starmer's MPs to help make that harder. Today it is the turn of Kate Osamor, one of the hard-of-thinking Corbynites who populate the opposition backbenches. She shot to fame back in 2018 when she threatened a Times reporter with a baseball bat after he had the temerity to ask her about her son’s conviction for drug offences. Nice, eh? This weekend, Osamor has brought her famed diplomatic talents to the sensitive subject of Holocaust Memorial Day. She used the occasion to, er, call for the Israeli military action in Gaza to be remembered as 'genocide', in a message to party members in her Edmonton constituency.

Paul Waugh loses Rochdale selection 

From our UK edition

It’s the race that has had all of Westminster gripped. No, not the Republican presidential primaries in New Hampshire; nor the mayoral contest between Susan Hall and Sadiq Khan. Instead, all eyes this week have been on Rochdale, where the local Labour Party today met to decide their candidate for the forthcoming by-election. The contest is being held following the sad death of the incumbent Labour MP Tony Lloyd, who won it in 2019 with a majority of 9,968. The three-man shortlist for the Rochdale selection attracted particular interest from the parliamentary lobby after it was revealed that longtime member Paul Waugh had thrown in the ring.

Watch: Angela Rayner heckled by Palestine activists

From our UK edition

It looks like the ructions over Labour’s Palestine position aren’t ending anytime soon. Since the horrifying Hamas massacre on October 7th last year, Labour leader Keir Starmer has refused to call for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, instead making the case for a ‘sustainable ceasefire’ – which would involve Hamas handing over the remaining Israeli hostages and stopping its rocket fire into Israel. That position has been met with predictable outrage from the left, which has accused the Labour leadership of colluding in a genocide. Now it looks like the row is spilling over into MPs’ constituencies. According to a video posted by Manchester Palestine Action, activists interrupted a Labour fundraising event in Stockport this week.

Andrew Neil: it would be absurd for the UAE to own The Spectator

From our UK edition

Last night The Spectator’s chairman, Andrew Neil, spoke for the first time about the sale of this magazine and the Telegraph newspaper to Redbird IMI, an entity run by the former head of CNN, Jeff Zucker, and backed financially by the United Arab Emirates. In November last year, the government issued a Public Interest Intervention Notice, halting the sale process until Ofcom, the media regulator, and the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) investigate. They are due to report back to the government today, which could then decide to block the sale entirely.

Sturgeon’s separatist scheme confirmed by Covid probe

From our UK edition

No wonder so many SNP politicians deleted their WhatsApp messages: they really are rather damning. In today’s Covid hearings, former Nicola Sturgeon aide Liz Lloyd is being grilled by the bulldog-like Jamie Dawson KC. If the Dear Leader’s liberal cussing wasn’t bad enough, the Inquiry has now unearthed some startling admissions… Throughout the pandemic, the-then First Minister sought to present herself as a unifying ‘national’ figure above petty party politics. But back in November 2020, Sturgeon discussed a UK government proposal with one of her closest confidants. She begrudgingly admits that ‘on this, I (reluctantly) think there’s merit in UK-wide position’. Whatever happened to fostering constructive cross-party relations...

Sturgeon’s foul-mouthed Boris-bashing revealed

From our UK edition

If there’s one thing that both Covid Inquiries have reliably provided, it’s expletives. Use of foul-mouthed language was popular among Boris Johnson’s top team, but members of the Scottish government were prone to the odd swear word or ten. And today’s Covid hearing has revealed that some obscenities came from, um, none other than the Dear Leader herself. This morning’s hearing in Edinburgh heard from former Sturgeon aide and self-confessed close confidant of the former first minister, Liz Lloyd.

Downing Street aide defects to the dark side

From our UK edition

So, who is the Conservative Britain Alliance? Westminster is virtually swamped these days with an alphabet-spaghetti-esque collection of different acronyms, ranging from the CGG and CSG to the the NRG and ERG. But the CBA is both the newest and most secretive entity of them all, with little known about the Alliance, other than its name and tendency to commission polls that are unhelpful to No. 10. But tonight a little more light has been shed on the group. First, Sir Simon Clarke did an interview with the BBC in which he admitted that even he did not know who was behind the group. And now, the Alliance has unveiled its latest recruit, straight from the heart of government himself.

Foreign Office blows £110k on KCL counter-terrorist courses

From our UK edition

It was ten days ago that Mr S brought news of the latest controversy to embroil our ancient seats of learning, after a lecturer at a leading London university allegedly suggested Douglas Murray should be 'suppressed'. Tom Tugendhat, the security minister, was subsequently forced to order a review into the Home Office’s use of external courses after it was claimed that the training sessions, put on by the security studies department of King’s College London (KCL), amounted to 'indoctrination'. But now some diligent digging in the House of Lords has revealed just how much these courses have been costing the British taxpayer.

Watch: Sunak slaps down Labour MP over Gaza

From our UK edition

A feisty session of PMQs today. As speculation swirls around the future of the Tory leadership, Sir Keir Starmer sought to go for the jugular by channelling Tony Blair in the dying days of the Major government. 'I’ve changed my party, he’s bullied by his', he told the House to cheers. But Starmer's efforts to present his party as cured from the effects of long Corbyn were somewhat hindered towards the end of the session when one of his own backbenchers rose to ask the Prime Minister a question. Labour MP Tahir Ali directed a verbal barrage at Sunak, accusing the Tory leader of having the blood of innocent people on his hands over Gaza. Sat high up in the press gallery, Mr S couldn't help but notice the looks of pure fury from some on Ali's own side over his intemperate remarks.

Keir Starmer turns his guns on Lee Anderson

From our UK edition

What is a woman? It’s a question Sir Keir Starmer has sometimes struggled with in the past. So it was perhaps no surprise then that the Labour leader chose not to pontificate on the subject when he addressed the women’s lobby drinks. Instead, Starmer opted to focus on warm words for his hosts and look ahead to the forthcoming election, full of glamours like endless vox pops, ‘24/7 Conservative strategy relaunches’ and ‘coffee – so much coffee'. But it wasn’t all politics of course. Sir Keir told the attendant hacks that he is keeping abreast of popular culture via the hit TV series The Traitors on BBC One. For those unfamiliar with the series, Starmer said: ‘It is sort of like the 1922 committee, they all sit together in a crumbling historic building.

Tory WhatsApp group rows in behind Sunak

From our UK edition

It’s a fun night on Tory WhatsApp tonight. Sir Simon Clarke – a cabinet minister under Boris Johnson and Liz Truss – has tonight issued a call in the Daily Telegraph for Rishi Sunak to resign. But over on the Tory WhatsApp group of MPs, there is little sign that the parliamentarians are bolting just yet. Jackie Doyle-Price, a stalwart supporter of Liz Truss, was first to row in, writing on the group that the ‘one thing that the public expects of a Conservative government more than anything else’ is ‘behaving like grown ups.’ Noting that ‘the best thing any of us can do about tonight’s report is not engage with it’ she continued ‘for heavens sake, we are engaged in military action.

Sturgeon: ‘Don’t worry about protocol’

From our UK edition

Oh dear. It seems the blessed Nicola has slipped up again. Away from the high sea shenanigans of the fuity Houthi rebels, up in Edinburgh the extent of Sturgeon's secret state is well and truly being exposed. Today the Scottish Covid Inquiry published text messages from the former First Minister to her onetime advisor, the sainted Devi Sridhar. They show that, at the height of the pandemic in summer 2020, Sturgeon was advising Sridhar to contact her by channels which would not fall under Scotland's freedom of information laws and therefore could not be made public. In one text from 4 June, Shridar texted to ask Sturgeon 'I've done a note for CMO [Chief Medical Officer]… on key steps to managing outbreak in Scotland looking forward.

Watch: Does this Tory minister think Art Attack is biased?

From our UK edition

Is the BBC biased? Some Tories, including transport minister Huw Merriman, think so. But while there is plenty of evidence to suggest Merriman is correct, he might want to use a different example to the one he used when quizzed on the subject of BBC bias this morning. Sky News' Kay Burley asked Merriman for proof that BBC News gave the Tories a hard time. In response, Merriman appeared to name the former Art Attack presenter Neil Buchanan: 'So when I worked at the Department of Work and Pensions doing work on Universal Credit there was an individual there who would report on it, Neil Buchanan, who I always felt gave one side of the story and not the other side, which was the government side.' Is the #BBC biased?

Watch: Culture Secretary accuses BBC of bias

From our UK edition

Poor old BBC. It’s been another torrid year for the Corporation after being embarrassed by Gary Lineker, lambasted over Richard Sharp and humiliated over various Hamas howlers. And now, even the mild-mannered Culture Secretary is having a pop at them. Lucy Frazer – never the most natural of culture warriors – was out on the airwaves this morning, discussing plans to give Ofcom more of a role in regulating the Corporation’s content. Frazer warned on Times Radio that audiences now increasingly feel that the Beeb is failing to be impartial. She said that ‘there was a perception among audiences’ of a problem, after complaints about bias jumped by more than 50 per cent last year.

Watch: Ron DeSantis drops out of White House race

From our UK edition

So. Farewell then Ron DeSantis. The Florida Governor tonight bowed to the inevitable and announced he was dropping out of the race to be the Republican nominee for the White House. In a four-and-a-half-minute long address on Twitter/X, DeSantis declared that 'it's clear to me that a majority of Republican primary voters want to give Donald Trump another chance'. 'Following our second-place finish in Iowa, we’ve prayed and deliberated on the way forward,' he said. 'If there was anything I could do to produce a favourable outcome, more campaign stops, more interviews, I would do it. But I can’t ask our supporters to volunteer their time and donate their resources. We don’t have a clear path to victory. Accordingly, I am today suspending my campaign.

Prince Harry faces £750k libel bill

From our UK edition

It seems the renegade royal has run away again. All of Fleet Street was eagerly anticipating the mother of all media showdowns this month, with Prince Harry due in court for his libel trial with the publishers of the Mail on Sunday, Associated Newspapers Limited (ANL). The MoS is the biggest selling Sunday in the land while the Prince smelled blood after his Christmas triumph against the Mirror. Harry's claim concerned a February 2022 article about his publicly funded security arrangements when visiting the UK.

The curious case of Nicola Sturgeon’s missing WhatsApps

From our UK edition

The saga of the Scottish Government's WhatsApps continues to rumble on. The SNP regime has never been slow in condemning the Tories for a lack of transparency in the ongoing UK Covid Inquiry. So it was to Steerpike’s amusement then that Humza Yousaf and his Scottish government have been facing considerable criticism in recent months for not handing their key messages over to that same probe. Talk about being hoist by your own petard… This morning, attention at the Covid Inquiry turned to the flailing First Minister's predecessor. Attendees this morning heard that Nicola Sturgeon 'retained no messages whatsoever' from the pandemic, which, er, explains her constant refusal to confirm which messages have been retained.

Starmer flip-flops on his CPS record

From our UK edition

He's at it again. Like those unscrupulous bosses he professes to despise, Sir Keir Starmer enjoys taking the credit when things go right – but is rather less keen to take the blame when things go wrong. A prime example of this was offered today in an interview today with ITV, when he was asked about Rishi Sunak's PMQs jibe about his legal record and his tenure as Director of Public Prosecutions from 2008 to 2013. Sir Keir replied that: If they want to attack me for decisions when I was Director of Public Prosecutions… we had 7,000 staff, we made nearly a million decisions a year. Will there be mistakes there? Of course, there will. But there’ll be no smoking gun, no skeletons in the closet.

Sergei Lavrov: War has had a ‘positive impact on life in Russia’

From our UK edition

Just when you thought Putin’s regime couldn’t sink any lower, it somehow manages to. Like something out of George Orwell’s 1984, the Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov declared that, actually, the Kremlin’s bloody war in Ukraine had had a ‘positive impact on life inside [Russia]’. Speaking at a foreign ministry press conference, Lavrov said this was because Putin’s ‘special military operation’ had united the country and ‘enabled it to be cleansed of all those who felt no sense of belonging to Russian history or culture’ after thousands moved abroad in opposition to the war.