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Labour conference live: Starmer to deliver speech after Cooper says riots an insult to Southport families

Yvette Cooper says Tories and Reform are right-wing wreckers during keynote speech

Protester grabbed by neck and thrown out of Labour party conference in Reeves’ speech

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Eric Garcia

Washington Bureau Chief

Yvette Cooper has condemned the Southport far-right riots during the summer, describing the violence an “insult to a grieving community”.

The Home secretary blamed the “racism, thuggery and crime” that took place during the disorder on “cracks in the system” caused by 14 years of Tory rule as she addressed day three of the Labour party annual conference in Liverpool.

Ms Cooper also outlined new measures to halve knife crime and domestic violence in her speech.

Sir Keir Starmer will also make his first party conference speech as prime minister later on Tuesday, in which he is expected to warn he is making tough decisions towards a “new Britain” and cannot offer “false hope” about the challenges ahead, but will insist there is “light at the end of this tunnel”.

Sir Keir is also expected to announce plans for new legislation in his keynote, including a “Hillsborough Law” which will introduce a legal duty of candour on public bodies and a new Fraud, Error and Debt Bill which will see welfare fraudsters dealt with faster.

The Labour government has recently faced heavy criticism over its winter fuel allowance cut and gifts accepted by ministers.

The Independent’s political team will be reporting live throughout the Labour Party conference in Liverpool.

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Minister insists Labour will not scrap single person council tax discount

The government will not scrap the single person council tax discount, Pat McFadden has indicated.

The move has been rumoured in the run up to next month’s budget as the government looks to save more money to fill the reported £22 billion black hole in the public finances.

Speaking to Good Morning Britain, the chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster said: “If that’s been briefed by the Treasury, that will be the case. They write the budget, the Labour chancellor writes the budget, and the chancellor will put all this together over the next few weeks.

“If that’s what the Treasury has said, of course I can confirm it. I don’t see every briefing that goes out. I don’t think there’s any plans to do that, that’s for the Treasury. If that’s what they’ve said, that’ll be right.”

Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 09:27
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Burnham defends Reeves after McDonnell’s attack

Former Labour MP and Jeremy Corbyn ally John McDonnell hit out at Labour claiming that listening to their narrative was like “George Osborne speaking again in 2010”.

Labour Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham has now responded to the criticism.

He told the BBC’s Radio 4 Today programme that he “understands the nature of the government’s inheritance” and that “difficult things” had to be done to fill the black hole in public finances.

Mr Burnham added: “But I was really encouraged to hear Rachel Reeves say clearly yesterday, in her speech, no return to austerity, and that’s what we wanted to hear.”

Mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham attends the third day of the annual Labour Party conference in Liverpool
Mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham attends the third day of the annual Labour Party conference in Liverpool (AFP via Getty Images)
Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 09:17
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Cleverly slams Starmer’s ‘nanny state' plan to change pub licensing rules

Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 09:06
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John Curtice spots ‘two weaknesses’ in Starmer’s speech

Polling guru Sir John Curtice has been speaking to Radio 4’s Today programme to offer his opinion about Sir Keir Starmer’s speech this afternoon.

The expert said the prime minister has “never been a popular leader” and has “two weaknesses”.

He said: “He’s never been very successful at doing what George Bush called the vision thing.

“What is the Labour Party for, what his government trying to achieve, what kind of Britain does he want. That lack of narrative is being exposed.”

Mr Curtice also said the PM has “not always had a strong political antenna, and that’s been exposed in the last week or two”.

Despite the criticism, he said it is still too early to call off a second Labour term at the next general election. But insisted “what we’ve seen in the last few weeks is perhaps not surprising”.

(Getty Images)
Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 08:55
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Exclusive: Labour accused of censoring pro-Palestinian activists at conference

Labour has been accused of censoring pro-Palestinian activists at its party conference after ordering a group to remove the words “genocide” and “apartheid” from the listing for an event about Israel’s war in Gaza.

The party was condemned by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) for refusing to promote its fringe event titled “Justice for Palestine: Confronting genocide and ending apartheid”.

The event has been listed in the brochure as simply “Justice for Palestine”.

Our political correspondent Archie Mitchell reports:

Labour accused of censoring pro-Palestinian activists by banning genocide references

Exclusive: The party has been criticised by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) for refusing to promote its fringe event, titled ‘Justice for Palestine: Confronting genocide and ending apartheid’

Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 08:43
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Atkins: Labour lost control of public sector pay process

Shadow health secretary Victoria Atkins has been speaking to Kay Burley on Sky News as part of the media round this morning.

Unsurprisingly, the Tory MP has criticised Labour after nurses in England rejected the government’s 5.5 per cent pay offer.

She said: “The Labour government has lost control of the independent public sector pay process.”

Ms Atkins insisted she was warned about an “impact across the workforce” of awarding “inflation-busting pay rises” to one part of the health sector.

She added: “Is it any wonder that having given this inflation-busting pay rise with no reform, no productivity improvements, for junior doctors in the summer, that nurses and other health care professionals are now asking why they are not valued in the same way.”

(Sky News)
Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 08:43
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McFadden says people in the Middle East should live in peace after Israeli attack on Lebanon

Pat McFadden has said that everybody in the Middle East needs to be able to live in peace, after the death toll from Israeli strikes on Lebanon has risen to nearly 500 people.

The chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster told LBC: “What needs to happen in the long run is that everybody in this region can live in security. We tend to focus on the immediate hostilities, the immediate outbreak, and I understand in a news sense why we do that.

“But if you’re asking me about the longer term, we want everybody in that particular part where all this shelling is going on at the moment to be able to return home in peace.

“There’s 60,000 Israelis who have not been able to live in their homes for the best part of a year now because of this back and forth shelling from Hezbollah and southern Lebanon, but also the people in southern Lebanon to be able to live in peace without this threat of constant war back and forth over the border.”

He later added: “Right now it is the most dangerous situation that I can remember in the Middle East for a long, long time.”

(EPA)
Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 08:26
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PM: Labour’s plan for change will be ‘tough in the short-term’

Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 08:24
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McFadden denies plans to change pub licensing rules to force them to shut early

Pat McFadden has denied that there are plans to change pub licensing rules to force them to shut early.

Speaking to Nick Ferrari on LBC’s Breakfast programme, he denied a report in the Telegraph that venues could be targeted under measures to cut down on harmful drinking.

Andrew Gwynne, the public health minister, had told a Labour Party fringe event that the government was considering “tightening up the hours of operation” of bars and pubs.

Mr McFadden, the chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, said: “I don’t think there’s any plan to shut the pubs early. The pub is a great part of British life. I don’t have a drink during conference, partly so I can look forward to having a nice one when the conference is over and I hope that the pub will be open when I go in.”

He told Mr Ferrari that his drink of choice after the conference ends on Wednesday would be a pint of Guinness.

It comes as public health minister Andrew Gwynne said the government is considering “tightening up the hours of operation” of bars and pubs as part of an attempt to improve health and combat anti-social behaviour.

Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 08:21
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Pubs could be forced to close early as Labour considers crackdown on opening hours

Pubs could be forced to call last orders early under new measures to target harmful drinking.

Public health minister Andrew Gwynne said the government is considering “tightening up the hours of operation” of bars and pubs as part of an attempt to improve health and combat anti-social behaviour.

But Mr Gwynne insisted Labour is “not the fun police” nor “supernanny”, instead saying the measures would be driven by both moral and economic arguments.

Our political correspondent Millie Cooke has the full story:

Pubs could be forced to close early as Labour considers crackdown on opening hours

Sir Chris Whitty warned that 60 per cent of the NHS budget will eventually be spent on preventable diseases if current trends continue

Salma Ouaguira24 September 2024 08:15

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