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Labour ‘blew the doors off’ Scottish byelection, says Keir Starmer – UK politics live

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Starmer: Labour ‘blew the doors off’ byelection

Starmer continues.

“When I left here a week ago with the team, I said you’ve go to win it. You blew the doors off!”

He congratulates Shanks.

Scottish voters “turned their back” on the Tory government but also “not so long ago saw a Labour party that drifted away from them”.

“We’ve changed and because we’ve changed we are now the party of the change here in Scotland, we’re the party of change in Britain, the party of change right across the whole country.”

Key events

SNP leader Humza Yousaf has told PA news agency:

We’re not thinking about standing on anything other than the SNP’s message.

We will reflect, we’ll reorganise, we’ll regroup as a political party.

We are the biggest key player in the independence movement, I think that’s without any shadow of a doubt from anybody.

What I would say is that those that believe in independence believe that Scotland’s better days are as an independent nation, then it is important that – yes, of course we can be distinct parties, different parties – but come together with a common interest.

We do that, of course, within the Scottish Government with a co-operation agreement with the Green Party.

Former SNP leader Alex Salmond has said Humza Yousaf has “days to save his First Ministership” following the Rutherglen and Hamilton West by-election defeat in which the SNP came a distant second to Scottish Labour, in a result Sir Keir Starmer has described as “seismic”.

Speaking to the PA news agency, Alba Party leader Salmond – who has been an open critic of the SNP since he jumped ship ahead of the 2021 election- said the result “is something that the SNP have been asking for.”
He added:

The SNP fought an incompetent campaign in an unnecessary by-election and were comprehensively dropped by Labour.

I see that Humza says it’s disappointing, well I don’t think that quite gets the enormity of what he’s facing.

In my view, Humza’s got days to save his First Ministership.

The SNP’s Katy Loudon lost with a more than 20% swing to Labour’s Michael Shanks.

Liverpool to bring buses back into public ownership

Buses are to be brought back into public ownership in Liverpool, making it the second area outside of London to regain control of its network.

Liverpool City Region Combined Authority voted on Friday to adopt a franchising model. The mayor, Steve Rotherham, said it “marks the start of a new era for public transport in our area – we’re taking back control of our buses”.

He said it will take a few years to regulate the service but the result will mean greater control over fares, tickets and routes.

Manchester launched its regained publicly owned bus network last month.

Helena Horton

Helena Horton

The government has “misrepresented” the Climate Change Committee (CCC) by wrongly claiming it said the would need a quarter of its energy to come from fossil fuels by 2050, scientists have said.

In order to justify signing off new oil and gas licences in the North Sea, ministers have said the country will still require a quarter of its energy to come from gas in 2050, the year the UK is supposed to meet net zero.

The Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) says this figure comes from the CCC, the government’s statutory advisory body, which has strongly advised against licensing new fossil fuels.

Claire Coutinho, the energy security and net zero secretary, said recently: “We will not play politics with our energy security. Even the independent CCC has said that in 2050, we will need oil and gas for a quarter of our energy.”

DESNZ confirmed to the Guardian that the figure often cited by the department came from the CCC’s sixth carbon budget.

When asked for its methodology – how it arrived at this figure from the CCC’s data – a department spokesperson did not respond.

A spokesperson for the CCC said: “The data is used from our sixth carbon budget but they used their own calculation to get to that.” It is understood the committee does not endorse the 25% figure.

Prof Michael Grubb, from University College London, said: “I cannot find any credible basis for the government’s claim – not in the CCC analysis, nor in any serious analysis of net zero scenarios.

“The government must explain where it got this claim from and – speaking as a former member of the CCC – I’d ask specifically for the government to justify its reference to CCC analysis. The fiscal fiasco last year showed the dangers of the government withholding rigorous analytic advice from its own official channels – major misrepresentation, if this is what it is, is just as bad, if not worse.”

Libby Brooks and Severin Carrell have this write-up on Labour’s latest reaction to their byelection win.

Keir Starmer has told jubilant Scottish Labour activists that they “blew the doors off” with the party’s overwhelming victory in Thursday’s Rutherglen and Hamilton West byelection.

The party leader said the result was “not just about a couple of months of turmoil but years and years of non-delivery” on the part of Holyrood’s SNP government.

Speaking at a victory rally in Rutherglen on Friday morning alongside the Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar, and the winning candidate, Michael Shanks, Starmer said to whoops and cheers: “They said that we couldn’t change the Labour party, and we did it. They said that we couldn’t win in the south of England and the north of England, and we did it. They said: ‘You’ll never beat the SNP in Scotland,’ and Rutherglen, you did it. You blew the doors off!”

Support for Scottish independence leads by four points

Support for Scottish independence still remains strong despite the drop in support for the SNP, according to new findings released by the Tony Blair Institute.

Polling carried out by the institute found that 45% of respondents would vote yes in a new independence referendum, compared with 41% who would vote no, a four-point lead for independence.

Despite this, the issue of independence is not the priority issue for voters in Scotland before the next general election. A third of SNP voters polled said that defeating the Conservatives was their priority.

The report found that Scottish voters say the top priority for the next government should be improving the NHS, followed by delivering better schools and faster economic growth. Few Scottish Conservative voters said cutting taxes was a priority.

Sunak says that Britain is ‘welcoming place’ after failing to defend Braverman’s ‘hurricane’ remarks

Aletha Adu

Aletha Adu

Rishi Sunak failed to defend Suella Braverman’s remarks that a “hurricane” of illegal migrants is coming our way.

Speaking to ITV’s This Morning, he was asked if he was embarrassed or ashamed when he heard Braverman talk. He said: “If you just take a step back, what do I think we all agree on? We all agree that Britain is an incredibly welcoming place.

“We’re all living proof of the fact that immigrants can come here, do well and that’s something I think we do better than any country in the world.”

When asked if the UK had failed in any way, Sunak replied: “No, no, I think it’s something we should be so proud of as Brits, it’s something that we do better than anyone else.

“But I think we also agree a couple of other things – when people do come here they should integrate, they should sign up to British values so we have that shared understanding amongst us.”

He added: “I think we also all agree that it should be us who decides who comes here, not criminal gangs.

“Illegal migration isn’t right, not least because people are being exploited and die when they make these crossings, but also because we’re a compassionate country who wants to welcome people here, we’re not going to be able to do that if our system is overloaded with people who have jumped the queue, and that’s why I want to be able to stop the boats.”

Polling expert John Curtice said if the results of the byelection were extrapolated across the whole of Scotland, the SNP would be left with six seats in Westminster.

Speaking to BBC News, Curtice said: “If you take the results of the byelection and extrapolate across the whole of Scotland, you’ve got about a half a dozen SNP seats still, which means the SNP would be back down to the level they had in 2010.”

In 2019, the party won 48 seats in Westminster. Labour won one Scottish seat.

Labour conference will be ‘policy rich’ says party’s campaign coordinator

Pat McFadden, Labour’s national campaign coordinator, has said the party’s upcoming conference will be “policy rich”.

Speaking to GB News, he said: “We go into our conference in a confident frame of mind, but also, we know the scale of the challenge after the last election. We’ve changed the Labour party. It’s a very different force from the one that was offered to the electorate a few years ago. Keir Starmer has driven that change. Now the project is to lay out in front of the country the kind of policies that Labour would put in place were we to win the next election.

“The next step in doing that is our conference which starts this weekend in Liverpool. So you’ll see a policy rich conference and one that will make clear that as the country wants change, the only people who can deliver that change are the Labour party.”

McFadden’s comments come after New Labour figures who powered the party to victory in 1997 warned against Keir Starmer’s cautious approach, which they said could damage his chances of winning the next election.

Libby Brooks

Libby Brooks

The superlatives are flowing at Scottish Labour’s victory rally in Rutherglen this morning.

The newly elected MP Michael Shanks describes his win as “a historic result” while Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar, describes it as “historic”: “We have changed the face of Scottish politics.”

Congratulating Shanks, UK leader, Keir Starmer, who travelled up to the constituency overnight, said: “They said we’d never beat the SNP in Scotland and we did it … you blew the doors off!”

Interesting to hear Shanks and Sarwar hammering home their message that this result proves Scotland is the route to Downing Street. Given the resources poured into this single byelection campaign they’ll be calling for more before a general election.

Starmer says this is the “first step” of an important journey for “all of us” across the UK.

He says Labour will lay out their “positive case for change” at the Labour conference in Liverpool this weekend.

“Why Labour? Because we’’ve changed, we’re hungry for power and ready to serve across Scotland and the United Kingdom.”

Starmer now sets his sights on the SNP.

“This isn’t about just a few months of turmoil in the SNP – this is about years and years of non-delivery. And that is why we are the party of change.”

Starmer turns to the Tory party conference in Manchester.

“What a circus,” he says.

Starmer criticises “nodding dog” Sunak for passing through decisions he is now claiming are failures, Tory MPs mingling with Nigel Farage and cabinet ministers jostling for the job of PM because they know Sunak “is not up to it”.

“We are the party of change,” he says.

Starmer: Labour ‘blew the doors off’ byelection

Starmer continues.

“When I left here a week ago with the team, I said you’ve go to win it. You blew the doors off!”

He congratulates Shanks.

Scottish voters “turned their back” on the Tory government but also “not so long ago saw a Labour party that drifted away from them”.

“We’ve changed and because we’ve changed we are now the party of the change here in Scotland, we’re the party of change in Britain, the party of change right across the whole country.”



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