Sir Keir Starmer has defended his decision to accept corporate hospitality from Arsenal football club, saying it would cost the taxpayer “a fortune” in extra security for him to watch games from the stands.
Two seats have been made available to Sir Keir by the Premier League club in the corporate area of Emirates Stadium, which he said was a “perfectly sensible arrangement”.
It comes amid scrutiny of gifts received by both the prime minister and his wife Victoria, which include a donation towards clothes from Labour donor Lord Waheed Alli.
Meanwhile, Nigel Farage has denied fuelling the Southport riots as his Reform UK party gears up for its annual conference in Birmingham.
In a video repeating claims that the suspect in the deadly knife attack on a Taylor Swift-themed dance class may have been known to security services, the newly-elected Clacton MP claimed “I just wonder whether the truth is being withheld from us”, just hours before rioters incensed by false online claims attacked a mosque.
Speaking during an LBC phone-in, the Reform leader claimed his position had been “vindicated” by subsequent suggestions by the government’s terror tsar Jonathan Hall KC and Lib Dem peer Lord Carlile that authorities could have publicised information about the suspect more quickly to quell misinformation.
Starmer insists he is ‘completely in control’ amid Sue Gray salary row
Sir Keir Starmer has insisted he is “completely in control” following a row within Government over his top adviser’s pay.
Disclosures that Sue Gray, the Prime Minister’s chief of staff, received a pay rise after the election which means she earns more than Sir Keir have sparked a row within Government and prompted opposition critics to demand answers about how the decision was made.
But Sir Keir would not be drawn into the row as he spoke to broadcasters before Labour’s party conference this weekend, only insisting his team was focused on his Government’s “big mandate to deliver change”.
The BBC said a number of Whitehall sources had briefed the organisation on Ms Gray’s salary increase, meaning she earns about £3,000 more than Sir Keir, who is paid about £167,000.
Sir Keir signed off a rebanding of the salaries for special advisers shortly after taking office in July, according to the BBC.
Holly Evans19 September 2024 22:19
Starmer avoids speculating on October budget as he declines ruling out further cuts
Speculating on next month’s Budget will “put the fear of God” into people, the Prime Minister has said as he declined to rule out further cuts.
In a series of broadcast interviews, Sir Keir Starmer repeatedly said he did not want to “get ahead of the Budget”, due to be revealed on October 30, as he was asked to rule out measures such as scrapping the single person council tax discount and cutting the farming budget.
Asked about the single person council tax discount, which gives people living alone 25% off their council tax bill, he told BBC West: “I am really concerned about this and obviously I’m not going to pre-empt the Budget, but I don’t want to risk putting the fear of God into people.”
Sir Keir added: “I don’t want to get into this, you know, ‘Will you rule out? Will you rule out? Will you rule out?’ because it just puts fear into people and I don’t want to do that.
“What I will say is that I’m very conscious of how hard it’s been for people and we intend to make sure that we have those people who have faced the greatest hardship in our minds’ eyes when we take our decisions.”
Holly Evans19 September 2024 21:15
UK leader Starmer is facing flak for taking freebies. He says he’s done nothing wrong
Less than three months after he was elected on a promise to restore trust in politics, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer is trying to shake off criticism over donations from a wealthy businessman and the hefty salary of his most senior aide.
The Labour Party leader, who won power in a landslide victory on July 4, denies impropriety over thousands of pounds (dollars) worth of clothes and eyeglasses paid for by Waheed Alli, a media entrepreneur and longtime Labour donor.
Starmer is also facing grumbling among his own employees over the salary of chief of staff Sue Gray. The BBC disclosed that she is paid 170,000 pounds ($225,000) a year — about 3,000 pounds more than the prime minister’s salary.
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Holly Evans19 September 2024 20:30
James O’Brien praised for ‘brutal’ Nigel Farage comments moments after LBC interview
Radio listeners have applauded James O’Brien for his ‘savage’ takedown of Nigel Farage.
The LBC presenter, 52, who hosts a much-lauded show on the political live debate channel every weekday, unleashed a scathing appraisal of the Reform UK leader, 60, who had been interviewed by his colleague Nick Ferrari moments earlier.
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Holly Evans19 September 2024 19:40
Farage defends Trump’s claim that God helped him survive assassination attempt
Farage defends Trump’s claim that God helped him survive assassination attempt
Nigel Farage clashed with Richard Madeley over his loyalty to Donald Trump after the former president peddled a conspiracy theory that Haitian immigrants are eating cats and dogs in Springfield, Ohio, and God “spared his life” from two failed assassination attempts. “Whenever Donald Trump makes a comment that is ridiculed, it always turns out to be true,” the Reform UK MP said on Good Morning Britain on Thursday, 19 September. Farage told Madeley: “Your line of attacking those who believe that there are sometimes divine interventions that actually, there are people out there that believe in God, and believe that sometimes they get spared… I find that line of yours very cynical.”
Holly Evans19 September 2024 18:40
Starmer insists he is ‘completely in control’ amid Sue Gray salary row
Sir Keir Starmer has insisted he is “completely in control” following a row within Government over his top adviser’s pay.
Disclosures that Sue Gray, the Prime Minister’s chief of staff, received a pay rise after the election which means she earns more than Sir Keir have sparked a row within Government and prompted opposition critics to demand answers about how the decision was made.
But Sir Keir would not be drawn into the row as he spoke to broadcasters before Labour’s party conference this weekend, only insisting his team was focused on his Government’s “big mandate to deliver change”.
Read the full article here:
Holly Evans19 September 2024 18:36
Starmer says attending games in the stands would cost the taxpayer
Speaking to BBC regional political editors, Sir Keir Starmer said that attending Arsenal games in the stand would cost money to the taxpayer as it would involve a “lot of policing”.
Asked if it was a good look for him to attend football games from a corporate area amid cost-of-living pressures, the Prime Minister replied: “I think most people will recognise that for a PM to insist that he goes in the stands where he’s got a season ticket, if that then means a lot of policing has to go in in order for me to be in the stands which in the end the taxpayer has to pay for… or I take a gift from Arsenal to say we’ll seat you elsewhere and that will sort out that problem, most people will say don’t make me pay because you want to go in the stands if Arsenal are offering you a ticket elsewhere and you can watch the match.”
Sir Keir would not be drawn into revealing if he would instead be watching from a box, as it would “reinvent the same problem we’re trying to avoid”, adding: “But yes I’m not going to be in the stands anymore.”
Holly Evans19 September 2024 18:02
Sir Keir Starmer defends watching Arsenal games from corporate box
Sir Keir Starmer has said he is not giving up his Arsenal season ticket now he is Prime Minister, but would not be drawn into questions around his security while attending football matches.
Asked by BBC Yorkshire if he was still a season ticket holder for his football club, Sir Keir said: “Yeah of course, I’ve had a season ticket for many, many years in the stands at Arsenal.
“I’m a regular attender but now, for security reasons, I can’t go in the stands and therefore the club have made arrangements for me to watch from elsewhere, it’s as simple as that.
“I’d love in a way to be in the stands, it’s where I’ve watched I don’t know how many matches, but as you will appreciate once the security advice is you can’t do it or that it costs the taxpayer an absolute fortune to put I don’t know how many police officers in, then we had to make different arrangements and we have.”
Holly Evans19 September 2024 17:48
House of Commons say they ‘do not comment’ on individuals’ security
Sir Lindsay Hoyle said he would advise MPs to take advice from Parliament’s security team and “do so safely” if they asked him for advice on holding surgeries.
Following Nigel Farage’s claim that he had been advised not to hold in-person surgeries by the Speaker’s Office, the Commons Speaker said: “As a constituency MP in Chorley, I hold regular surgeries myself with constituents – and whenever a Member asks for my advice on this matter, I always say that if you are going to hold constituency surgeries make sure you take advice from the Parliamentary Security Department – and do so safely.”
A House of Commons spokesperson said: “The ability for MPs to perform their parliamentary duties safely, both on and off the estate, is fundamental to our democracy.
“The Parliamentary Security Department (PSD), working closely with the police, offer all MPs a range of security measures for those with offices or surgeries in their constituencies – helping to ensure a safe working environment.
“We do not comment on individual MPs’ security arrangements or advice because we would not wish to compromise the safety of MPs, parliamentary staff or members of the public, but these are kept under continuous review.”
Holly Evans19 September 2024 17:45
Speaker’s office has no recollection of telling Farage to avoid in-person surgeries
The Speaker’s Office and Parliament’s security team have no recollection of telling Nigel Farage that he should not hold in-person surgeries in his constituency, the PA news agency understands.
Sources said neither would have advised any MP not to hold a surgery because this would interfere with their democratic duties, but would instead have offered security advice on how measures could be taken to ensure their safety.
There is no record of such advice ever having been given to Mr Farage, it is understood, in contrast to his claim earlier on Thursday that he had been told by the Speaker’s Office not to hold physical surgeries.
Holly Evans19 September 2024 17:10