Labour conference live: Rayner gets choked up during speech before receiving second standing ovation
Labour conference kicks off in Liverpool with theme ‘change begins’
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An emotional Angela Rayner told attendees at the Labour party conference that she gets “choked up” at the support she has received before she was given her second standing ovation of the event.
Ms Rayner said she gets “a bit choked up and emotional” about how far she has come to be deputy prime minister.
She was speaking at a fringe event on Saturday afternoon after giving her conference speech earlier in the day, receiving a standing ovation at the end of both.
Ms Rayner told the Local Government Association: “I wouldn’t be standing today as deputy prime minister without the nurture and the support that I had, both as a child through local government services, but then as a union rep and as a person who worked within local government.”
The deputy prime minister opened the conference earlier with an optimistic speech, sketching out her plans to tackle damp and mouldy homes, build more social housing, devolve more power out of Westminster and increase workers’ rights.
Meanwhile, foreign secretary David Lammy used his speech to proclaimed “Britain is back” on the world stage after a decade of Tory government.
The Independent’s political team will be reporting throughout the week from the Labour Party conference in Liverpool.
Rachel Reeves says workers benefit from being in the office
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has said that workers benefit from coming into the office and working together.
When asked about working from home in an interview with The Times, Ms Reeves said: “I think I lead by example. The first weekend after Labour won the election, I turned up in the Treasury straight after I was appointed by Keir as chancellor and worked through the evening.
“Then we were all in the office all day Saturday, all day Sunday. We weren’t doing it on Zoom... I do think people coming together and working together collaboratively promotes ideas.”
Rachel Reeves explains clothes donation as help from a good friend during election campaign
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has explained why she accepted donations for clothes in an interview with The Sunday Times.
Ms Reeves had accepted £7,500 from a donor, Juliet Rosenfield, for clothes. She said she accepted the donation from a “good friend” who wanted to make sure that she looked professional during the election campaign.
She said: “I know for some readers that will sound a bit odd, and I totally get that. It’s not something that I plan to do now we’re in government. But it was how a friend wanted to help me in the election and I really appreciated that, as I am not massively into clothes and shopping.”
Speaking ahead of Labour conference, Ms Reeves said she wanted to “bring stability back” to the UK and “create the environment where businesses invest”.
She said businesses had nothing to fear from Labour’s push to strengthen workers’ rights. “We have been, and will continue to, consult extensively with businesses on them. We said that we’re going to be the most pro-growth government ever, but we believe being pro-business and pro-worker are two sides of the same coin.”
Education secretary Bridget Phillipson has been forced to defend using a Labour peer’s donation money to have a 40th birthday party.
Ms Phillipson said that the 40th birthday event was a work event and was not a personal occasion.
She described the event, saying: “I was turning 40, I thought it was a good opportunity to get people together in a professional context. So it was journalists, trade unionists, education people, MPs and shadow cabinet.”
Ms Phillipson faced criticism for declaring two donations from Labour peer Lord Alli, totalling £14,000, as for “a number of events, including on behalf of the shadow education team”.
Education secretary defends decision to cut winter fuel payments for pensioners
Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson said the government would offer “hope and optimism” but it had to take difficult decisions such as stripping winter fuel payments from millions of pensioners.
She told Sky News this morning: “I take absolutely no relish in the fact that we’ve had to make this decision.
“It was not a decision that we expected to make ... Look, there was that huge gap in the public finances, £22 billion.
“The Tories knew that. They called an election, they walked away, and they left it to somebody else to sort out.
“We will fix it, by the way. We will sort this. We will get our economy back on a much firmer footing and we will deliver some hope and optimism about the difference that we can make.”
Rayner denies breaking rules over New York holiday
Angela Rayner has denied breaking Commons rules over declaring a stay in a New York flat owned by Labour donor Lord Waheed Alli.
The Deputy Prime Minister told the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg: “I don’t believe I broke any rules.
“I had the use of the apartment and I disclosed that I had the use of the apartment.
“In fact, I think I was overly transparent because I think it was important despite it being a personal holiday because that person, as a friend, had already donated to me in the past for my deputy leadership.”
The Sunday Times had published a story saying that Ms Rayner had appeared to break the rules by failing to declare that a friend joined her on the holiday.
Ms Rayner stayed at the $2.5m apartment in Manhattan over the festive period last year.
Starmer comes out fighting on gifts row after lobbyist revelation and promises ‘no new austerity’
Sir Keir Starmer has defended his gift taking insisting that it is transparency that matters in two eve of conference interviews.
After taking £107,000 in gifts since 2019, more than two and a half times more than any other MP, the Labour leader was challenged on whether he was being hypocritical after criticising Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak for the same.
He responded: “Rules matter. Transparency matters.”
“My criticism was actually more about Johnson than Sunak, because I don’t think [Sunak] needs to take donations.”
He said: “I’ve reiterated that this side of the election people are entitled to see whether you’ve taken gifts, and if so, what are they for?”
He has recently accepted the donation of a box at Arsenal so he can watch matches there without security concerns and remains unrepentant.
“Now that is a gift but I think accepting that is more understandable. If I insisted on going in the stands, that would cost the taxpayer more money through extra security.”
The prime minister said “people will judge me on delivery” not gifts.
Starmer claims ‘transparency’ is key as it emerges he and Gray accepted more freebies
Keir Starmer has opened the Labour conference with a defence of his gift taking
Deputy prime minister Angela Rayner has defended Right to Buy but said that there needs to be a fairer system to make sure that housing stock isn’t depleted.
Speaking on Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg, Ms Rayner said: “We’re consulting to have a fair system that says if you have lived in a home for a long time.. you can get a discount. But it has to be balanced against depleting housing stock.”
She said she would take “blockages” out of the house building system to kick start thousands of new homes. “I want safe and secure good houses that are built but also I’m going to take away some of these blockages that exist”, she explained.
Ms Rayner also said that Labour will be delivering “the most improved workers rights for a generation”.
Ms Rayner will be delivering the opening speech at Labour conference this evening, focused on her plans for safe and decent housing standards.
Angela Rayner defends Labour against freebie allegations
Deputy prime minister Angela Rayner has said she “promised nothing” to Labour peer and donor Lord Alli and “gave him nothing” in exchange for donations.
She explained the clothing donations she had received by saying that people wanted to support her. “These are individual donations, no one’s been given millions, billions of pounds contracts,” Ms Rayner said on Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg.
Asked about Sir Keir and Sue Gray’s trip to Tottenham Hotspur and alleged infighting in No 10, Ms Rayner said: “I do not see this caricature that we are somehow all fighting over mansions or are all at loggerheads with each other. Actually we are all really focused on making sure that we deliver. That’s what people are going to ask in a few years time.”
She defended saying Ms Gray saying “she has been doing an incredible job”, and criticised a “demonisation” of her in the media.
Bridget Phillipson says 40th birthday paid for by Lord Alli was a work event
Bridget Phillipson has suggested her 40th birthday event, which was paid for by Labour donor Lord Waheed Alli, was a work event.
Asked about two events paid for by the Labour peer, the education secretary told Sky News: “The first event was my birthday – I was turning 40, I thought it was a good opportunity to get people together in a professional context.
“So it was journalists, trade unionists, education people, MPs and shadow cabinet.”
The event, which cost thousands of pounds, took place in a “work context”, Ms Phillipson added.
She said: “My own family didn’t come to that. I celebrated my actual 40th birthday with my family, we went for a pizza, I celebrated with my kids.“This was where I got together colleagues, journalists, trade unionists, education people.”
Sir Keir facing criticism over Spurs football freebie
Sir Keir Starmer and his chief of staff Sue Gray are facing a deepening row over football freebies following a story in The Mail on Sunday.
It has emerged that the prime minister and Ms Gray enjoyed a corporate box at Tottenham Hotspur last Sunday, with the tickets reportedly funded by Spurs.
Ms Gray was pictured sitting next to Katie Perrior, the founder and chair of iNHouse communications, which worked on the plan to form a football Super League.
Tory MP John Glen reacted to the revelations by telling The Mail on Sunday: “Is there no freebie that Sir Keir will not take?”, adding: “In view of Labour’s plans for a new football regulator, his presence and that of Sue Gray is a clear conflict of interest.”
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