Labour defends Rochdale candidate Azhar Ali in latest antisemitism row – live
Controversy comes as Rishi Sunak faces difficult afternoon with Rwanda Bill under scrutiny in Lords
Keir Starmer calls on Israel to abide by international law
Labour is facing mounting pressure for their continued support of Rochdale’s by-election candidate after he claimed Israel deliberately relaxed security to allow Hamas to carry out their 7 October attack, to provide grounds to invade Gaza.
Azhar Ali has apologised for his “deeply offensive” remarks, with shadow cabinet minister Nick Thomas-Symonds saying he believed that Mr Ali had fallen for “an online conspiracy theory”.
Yet it has prompted questions about Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer’s claim that the party has changed since the antisemitism crisis that engulfed Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership.
The Tories have called for the aspiring MPs Labour Party membership to be removed, with cabinet minister Michael Gove stressing: “Sir Keir Starmer cannot continue to support this candidacy.”
In a recording obtained by the Mail on Sunday, Mr Ali was heard telling a meeting: “They deliberately took the security off, they allowed … that massacre that gives them the green light to do whatever they bloody want.”
The controversy comes as Rishi Sunak faces one of the most challenging weeks of his premiership, with two tricky by-elections, opposition to his Rwanda plan, and official figures showing whether the UK has slipped into a recession.
Legislating Rwanda is safe ‘doesn’t make it so’, says Lord Alton
Human rights campaigner Lord Alton of Liverpool said legislating that Rwanda is safe “doesn’t make it so”.
He said: “Just saying that an apple is a pear doesn’t make it such. Saying a dog is a cat doesn’t make it such. It may be your opinion but it isn’t true.”
Green Party peer Baroness Jones of Moulsecoomb said: “I am arguing that this is an absurd Bill. It is nasty, it is inhumane and I don’t want any part of it.”
President of MigrationWatch UK, Lord Green of Deddington, said: “The reality is that the Government has lost control of our borders.”
The independent crossbencher and former ambassador added: “And there is deep public anger I regret to say but there is. It seems to me, therefore, it’s for the Government to take action to bring all this under control and for us to give some advice as to how that could best be done.”
But former ambassador and crossbench peer Lord Kerr of Kinlochard said: “In think we are dealing with a Bill which it is very hard to make acceptable.”
Human rights campaigner Lord Alton of Liverpool said legislating that Rwanda is safe ‘doesn’t make it so’
Former Bank of England chief economist tells Hunt: ‘Invest more, don’t cut taxes’
The former chief economist at the Bank of England has said Jeremy Hunt should invest more, rather than cutting taxes in next month’s Budget.
Andy Haldane said boosting spending is “what the UK needs right now” rather than tax cuts for households.
He told Sky News: “Tax cuts tend to support… spending by households rather than investment and what the UK needs right now is investment.
“So if it were me spending my pound, it would be not on tax cuts, but rather on investment of various types, whether investment in technology or innovation or investment in people, in their training. We are falling short on both fronts.”
Minister admits fresh Navy embarrassment ‘unacceptable’ as warship fails to set sail
Security minister Tom Tugendhat has admitted it is unacceptable that both of Britain’s multi-billion pound aircraft carriers have failed to leave port this month for vital military exercises.
HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Queen Elizabeth were due to take part in the largest Nato exercise since the Cold War, called Operation Steadfast Defender, which has been organised in the wake of Russia’s heightened threat to European security.
HMS Prince of Wales was supposed to set off for Norway on Sunday for the exercises later this month but the departure was cancelled at the last moment.
Read the full article from Tom Watling here:
HMS Prince of Wales finally sets sail for historic Nato drills after week of setbacks
Both the Royal Navy’s aircraft carriers had failed to depart from Portsmouth harbour for Nato military exercises in the past 10 days
Tory and Labour peers warn of belief Bill could set dangerous precedents for Government
Both Tory and Labour peers warned of their belief that the Bill could set dangerous precedents for the Government.
Tory peer Lord Tugendhat said: “I have been a member of Parliament for a very long time on and off, and I have been a member of the Conservative party for some 66 years when I counted it up, and I do have to say that I find it quite extraordinary that the party of Margaret Thatcher should be introducing a Bill of this kind.”
The Conservative grandee, whose nephew is security minister Tom Tugendhat, claimed the Bill could have an impact on the UK’s perception as a “marvellous place to do business because of our great respect for the rule of law”.
Lord Tugendhat added: “What we are being asked to do really represents the sort of behaviour that the world associates with despots and autocracies, not with an established democracy, not with the Mother of Parliaments. It is a Bill we should not even be asked to confront, let alone pass.”
Labour former justice secretary Lord Falconer of Thoroton meanwhile told peers: “Suppose the prime minister has a friend or a crony on the House of Commons who is convicted in a court of corruption of some sort, and then the prime minister presents a bill to Parliament saying it it the judgment of Parliament that ‘Snooks MP’ actually wasn’t able to present this new evidence to the criminal court that convicted him, so it is the judgment of Parliament that Snooks MP is innocent.
“That is the route that this particular Bill takes Parliament down.”
Former Tory leader: ‘Appropriate for parliament to substitution its own opinion for Supreme Court’s’
Former Tory leader Michael Howard said the Supreme Court’s finding that Rwanda is not a safe place to send asylum seekers was not one of fact, but one of opinion, reports political correspondent Archie Mitchell.
Lord Howard said that it is then entirely appropriate “for parliament to substitute its own opinion… that is what this bill does, and that is why I support it”.
The Tory grandee, who led the party in Opposition during the early 2000s, also said: "The plain fact is that we are a parliamentary democracy. That means that Parliament is sovereign, and the reason why so many of us cherish that overarching principle is that we attach high importance to something called accountability.”
Former Tory leader Michael Howard said the Supreme Court’s finding that Rwanda is not a safe place to send asylum seekers was not one of fact, but one of opinion
Lord Tugendhat: ‘Extraordinary that the party of Margaret Thatcher should be introducing a bill of this kind’
A Conservative peer has said it is “extraordinary that the party of Margaret Thatcher should be introducing a bill of this kind”.
Opposing the Rwanda bill, Lord Tugendhat said: “We in this country boast frequently that Britain is such a marvellous place to do business, because of our great respect for the rule of law.”
And he added that it would be “very difficult to sustain that argument” if the Safety of Rwanda Bill became law.
“It does seem to me that we are going against a fundamental interest, not just in terms of this issue, but in terms of our wider reputation,” Lord Tugendhat said.
Baroness Chakrabarti: Rwanda bill ‘threatens rule of law and international rules-based order’
Labour peer Baroness Chakrabarti said the Rwanda bill “threatens both the domestic rule of law, especially the separation of powers, and the international rules-based order”.
The barrister and human rights activist led calls for the Government to heed advice from the UN about whether Rwanda is safe before beginning deportations, adding: “I will assume that the Government does not want to put the executive of the United Kingdom on a collision course with our Supreme Court or our international legal obligations.
“So amendments in this group seek to offer a way through the stalemate for people of good will from all sides of your Lordships House.”
Labour peer Baroness Chakrabarti criticised the plan the send asylum seekers to Rwanda
Lady Chakrabarti said the proposals would mean no one was removed to Rwanda under the Government’s plans “unless two conditions are met”.
She added: “The first condition is that there is advice from the UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner For Refugees) that Rwanda is now safe, for example as a result of the successful implementation of promised reforms and safeguards to the asylum system there.
“The second condition is that this advice has been laid before both Houses of Parliament.”
Tory peer: Parliament claiming it believes Rwanda is safe is ‘manifestly untrue’
Claiming Parliament believes Rwanda is a safe country to send asylum seekers to is “manifestly untrue”, Tory peer Viscount Hailsham said.
Lord Hailsham, who previously served in the Commons as Douglas Hogg, criticised a line in the Bill which says “this Act gives effect to the judgement of Parliament that the Republic of Rwanda is a safe country”.
“It is simply untrue to state that it is the judgement of Parliament that Rwanda is a safe country. That may be the opinion of the House of Commons”, the peer said, noting that MPs can come under pressure from party whips, and adding “but what is absolutely certain is that it is not the opinion of this House.”
David Cameron urges Israel to ‘think seriously’ before taking further action in Rafah
Israel should “stop and think seriously” before taking further action in Rafah in the south of Gaza, the foreign secretary has said.
The town was targeted by airstrikes overnight, with the Israeli president Benjamin Netanyahu signalling his intention to carry out a ground offensive in the area.
Lord David Cameron warned that many of the people in Rafah had already fled from other areas and said it is “impossible to see how you can fight a war amongst these people, there is nowhere for them to go”.
Read the full article here:
David Cameron urges Israel to ‘think seriously’ before taking further action in Rafah
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said sending troops into Rafah is necessary to eliminate Hamas
Former Tory leader opposes amendments to consider UN advice
Plans to ensure ministers heed the opinion of the United Nations about whether Rwanda is safe for refugees are an “abdication of the responsibilities of Government”, a former Conservative party leader has warned.
Lord Howard of Lympne opposed amendments to the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill aimed at ensuring Parliament considers advice from the UN about Rwanda’s safety, as peers began line by line scrutiny of the proposals.
The Tory grandee, who led the party in Opposition during the early 2000s, said: “The plain fact is that we are a parliamentary democracy. That means that Parliament is sovereign, and the reason why so many of us cherish that overarching principle is that we attach high importance to something called accountability.
Rishi Sunak’s Rwanda Bill is under scrutiny at the House of Lords (Jordan Pettitt/PA)
To contrast Parliament with the United Nations High Commissioner For Refugees, he asked: “To whom is the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees accountable? Perhaps they might say to the general assembly of the United Nations. To whom is that body accountable?”
Lord Howard added: “The acceptance of these amendments would constitute nothing less than an abdication of the responsibilities of Government.”
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