Starmer dismisses Tory attack on Rayner as ‘billionaire PM smearing working-class woman’ – UK politics live | Politics

Starmer dismisses Tory attack on Rayner as ‘billionaire PM smearing working-class woman’

Starmer says the Tories have been smearing a working-class woman.

He says Truss blames everyone, including the “poor old lettuce”, who she claims was part of the deep state.

It is not clear if Starmer is quoting the book, or the Daily Star splash.

Sunak says people would pay more tax under Labour.

UPDATE: Starmer said:

You’ve got a billionaire prime minister … whose family has used schemes to avoid millions of pounds’ worth of tax, smearing a working-class woman.

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Updated at 

Key events

The second Lords amendment would ensure that Rwanda cannot be treated as a safe country until the independent monitoring committee has confirmed that it is safe.

Tomlinson said the bill would only take effect when the UK-Rwanda treaty (requiring Rwanda to make changes to its asylum system to address concerns raised by the UK supreme court) has come into force, and that treaty would only come into force when the changes have been implemented.

He also said that the monitoring committee would be monitoring how Rwanda was complying with asylum rules daily, for the first three months.

Sir Bob Neill (Con), chair of the Commons justice committee, suggesting the Lords amendment on this point was reasonable. But Tomlinson argued that it was unnecessary.

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Tomlinson said the amendment passed by the Lords making it explict that the bill has to be implemented in accordance with international law was unnecessary.

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Michael Tomlinson, the illegal migration minister, is opening the debate for the government. He is explaining why the government is rejecting the four amendments passed by the House of Lords yesterday.

He said all four amendments were either “unnecessary or wrecking”.

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No 10 says is it not considering concessions as MPs begin debating Lords amendments to Rwanda bill

In the Commons MPs are now debating the latest Lords amendments to the safety of Rwanda (asylum and immigration) bill.

As Rajeev Syal reports, there were suggestions this mornin that the government might offer concessions intended to allow Afghans who served with British troops in Afghanistan to be exempt from deportation to Rwanda. This is one of two issues on which peers are most reluctant to back down. (See 9.55am.)

But, at the post-PMQs No 10 lobby briefing, Downing Street said it would not be offering concessions. A spokesperson said:

We’re not considering concessions. We believe that the bill as it stands is the right way forward.

On the issue of Afghans who served with British forces, the spokesperson said:

We’ve already offered a number of safe and legal routes to the UK for individuals in that category. The UK government offer under Arap (Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy) is one of the most generous of any country, and we’re proud to have relocated over 16,000 people to safety in the UK in the scheme so far.

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James Daly, the deputy chair of the Conservative party, wrote to Greater Manchester police asking them to investigate Angela Rayner and, when the force initially declined to look into it, he successfully persuaded them to think again.

But in interviews Daly has refused to say what he thinks Rayner did wrong. He did this yesterday on Politics Live, and again today on Sky News.

In another interview on Radio 4’s the World at One, Daly defended his refusal to say what he was alleging. He said, now that the police have decided to investigate, he thought it was preferable to allow them to get on with their job.

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Wes Streeting, the shadow health secretary, told Radio 4’s the World at One that he thought the Conservatives were using the Angela Rayner allegations as a deliberate distraction strategy. He said:

This is a familiar Conservative party playbook now. We saw this couple of years ago in relation to Durham [the “beergate” allegations] where we saw the same tactics used. I think it’s a very deliberate attempt to distract from just talking about the fact they’ve got £46bn of unfunded commitments.

Streeting said Rayner had repeated answered questions about this affair (she insists she has done nothing wrong) and he said she would be talking to Greater Manchester police. Predicting that Rayner would “draw a line under all of this and come out stronger”, he went on:

If people are in any doubt whatsoever about Angela Rayner’s integrity or confidence, look at the fact that she said if the police find she has broken the law, she will resign as deputy leader of the Labour party. That’s a stark contrast, by the way, to the prime minister who was fined for breaking the Covid rules he asked everyone else to follow.

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Labour says it’s ‘deeply concerning’ Sunak won’t rule out cutting NHS or pensions to fund £46bn national insurance plan

Labour has said it is “deeply concerning” that Rishi Sunak refused to rule out cutting the NHS or pensions, or putting up taxes, to fund his £46bn long-term plan to abolish national insurance. In a statement after PMQs, Pat McFadden, the party’s national campaign coordinator, said:

The prime minister was given three chances today to rule out cuts to the NHS, cuts to the state pension or income tax increases to pay for his completely unfunded £46bn plan to scrap national insurance. It will be deeply concerning for the whole country that he pointedly refused to do so.

In the week when Liz Truss has been busy reminding everyone of the consequences of unfunded Tory promises, the British public deserve answers. It’s time for Rishi Sunak to come clean and stop avoiding the question on everyone’s lips: how is he going to pay for it?

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I have beefed up the earlier post about Keir Starmer’s response to Rishi Sunak’s comment about Angela Rayner (see 12.06pm) with the best version we have of Starmer’s quote. He said:

You’ve got a billionaire prime minister … whose family has used schemes to avoid millions of pounds’ worth of tax, smearing a working-class woman.

You may have to refresh the page to get the update to appear.

As explained earlier (see 1.22pm), it was impossible to hear the full quote because Tory MPs were barracking so loudly.

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PMQs – snap verdict

Political aficionados tend to love general elections, but in some respect there’s a good reason to dread them too. At the moment when the policy debate should be at its most enlightening, it degenerates. Steve Bannon, Donald Trump’s former political strategist, once said that his policy for winning was to “flood the zone with shit”. That is a bit extreme as a description of today’s PMQs, but not by much.

Keir Starmer started with Liz Truss, and then for most of PMQs sought to resume the attack over Sunak’s long-term £46bn plan to abolish national insurance, which Labour (quite reasonably) argues would require either massive spending cuts or tax increases. But, in his very first response, Sunak threw the Angela Rayner story on the table and from then on he just blasted back with a hail of smear and negativity. Of course, this is not unprecendented. PMQs is like this much of the time. But today it felt excessive, and linked to the imminent arrival of the local elections next month, and the general election soon.

Starmer must have been expecting Sunak to attack him over Rayner. He had a response (see 12.06pm) where he said something about how a “billionaire prime minister” was “smearing a working-class woman” – but I don’t have the full quote because Tory MPs were shouting so loudly it was impossible to hear what he was saying. His strongest rebuttal line on this story was drowned out.

In the rest of his response, Sunak deployed the full gamut of CCHQ attack lines against Labour: Wales, Corbyn, Birmingham, taxes etc. But it was quite suprising to hear him claim: “A few weeks ago [Starmer] finally admitted it to The Sun, what did he say he would do? I quote, he said ‘we would put up taxes’.” The Tories have also been running this seven-second clip on social media, but it is a textbook example of selective quotation dishonesty. What Starmer actually said was: “We are going to put up taxes, we’ve already said that, in relation to the VAT on private schools, the non-dom tax status, some of the loopholes that we’ve identified … we do not want to see an increase on tax for working people.”

To be fair to Sunak, within the context of PMQs (judging it according to its own “rules”, and by how it is perceived by MPs) all this worked for him very well, and he saw off Starmer quite easily. His first response was an effective pivot to the Rayner story.

All I would say is [Starmer] ought to spend a bit less time reading that book and a bit more time reading the deputy leader’s [Angela Rayner] tax advice.

This was not Oscar Wilde, but in Commons terms it counts as high wit. His later jibe about Hizb ut-Tahrir (see 12.19pm) was crude and unfair, but punchy and memorable too.

There must be a better way of holding prime ministers to account. But, if Starmer wins the next election, he does not seem inclined to try to find one. In his new biography, Tom Baldwin quotes Starmer as saying of PMQs: “It is what it is and I don’t see any prospect of it changing any time soon.”

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Preet Kaur Gill (Lab) says Andy Street in the West Midlands has only built 46 social homes.

Sunak says, unlike Labout in London, Street has hit all his housing targets. He says the Tories will protect people from what happened in Birmingham under Labour.

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Catherine McKinnell (Lab) says crime levels in “Tory-run Teesside” are some of the highest in the country. She says Sunak has lost control of crime.

Sunak says: “What a joke.” He says people with a Tory police and crime commissioner are less likely to be victims of burglary or robbbery.

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George Galloway (Workers Party of Britain) says on Monday Rishi Sunak told MPs he was going to call Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli PM. How did it go, and will Sunak do if Netanyahu ignores is call not to escalate the situation.

Sunak says he told Netanyahu that “significant escalation is not in anyone’s interest, and it’s a time for calm heads to prevail”.

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Nickie Aiken (Con) criticises Sadiq Khan’s record on policing.

Sunak says Khan is failing London on crime. He goes on:

Burglary is down across England. It’s up in London. Violent crime is down across England but up in London. And the Labour mayor is the only one of 43 police and crime commissioners to have missed his police recruitment target.

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Alison Thewliss (SNP) says a Ukrainian MP is in the gallery. How does the PM response to president Zelenskiy’s claim that his country would not be suffering if it had proper air defence.

Sunak says air defence is an important part of the UK aid being supplied to Ukraine.

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Daniel Zeichner (Lab) says Sunak dodged the questions about Liz Truss earlier. What does he think was her greatest acheivement?

Sunak says, while Labour wanted to take the UK back into the EU, Truss was signing trade deals. As a result the UK is now the fourth largest exporter in the world, he says.

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Sarah Olney (Lib Dem) asks about a constituent raped by a boyfriend. She was told that reading the transcript of her trial would help her come to terms with what happened. But she was told it would cost £7,000 to get one. In another case someone was told they would have to pay £22,000 to get a transcript. She says the constituent is in the gallery. Will the government help?

Sunak says homicide victims can already get these court transcripts. He says the government wants to reduce transcript costs for other crime victims.

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