Home secretary rejects Zarah Sultana’s claim Labour failing to improve lives – UK politics live | Politics


‘I strongly disagree’: Home secretary refutes Zarah Sultana claim that Labour is failing to improve lives

Zarah Sultana has “always taken a very different view” from the government, the home secretary has said.

Responding to the former Labour MP’s announcement that she was co-founding a new party with Jeremy Corbyn, Yvette Cooper told Sky News:

I think she has always taken a very different view to most people in the government on a lot of different things, and that’s for her to do so.

Cooper also rejected the Coventry South MP’s accusation that Labour was failing to improve people’s lives, saying:

I just strongly disagree with her.

The home secretary pointed to falling waiting times in the NHS, the announcement of additional neighbourhood police officers, extending free school meals and strengthening renters’ rights as areas where the government was acting. She said:

These are real changes [that] have a real impact on people’s lives.

As well as Cooper, co-chair of the Conservative party Nigel Huddleston is also on the media rounds this morning.

Zarah Sultana with Jeremy Corbyn in May. He said earlier he wants to offer an alternative to Labour.
Zarah Sultana with Jeremy Corbyn in May. He said earlier he wants to offer an alternative to Labour. Photograph: Mark Kerrison/In Pictures/Getty Images

There’s sure to be more reaction today to the news that Sultana has resigned from the Labour party to join Corbyn’s Independent Alliance. But there’s more coming up today:

  • A bid to temporarily block the banning of Palestine Action as a terrorist organisation is set to be heard at the high court on Friday, ahead of a potential legal challenge against the move.

  • Councils will have to agree targets to improve the number of children ready for school, under new plans to be announced by the education secretary.

In other recently reported developments:

  • Critics of the UK’s role in the Gaza war are considering setting up an independent tribunal if, as expected, Labour blocks a bill tabled by Jeremy Corbyn backing an official inquiry. Government whips are expected to object to the former Labour party leader’s bill in the Commons on Friday, leaving him with few practical options for his legislation to pass.

  • Wes Streeting has staked the future of the NHS on a digital overhaul in which a beefed-up NHS app and new hospital league tables are intended to give patients unprecedented control over their care.

  • Some farms in England could be taken entirely out of food production under plans to make more space for nature, the environment secretary has said. Speaking at the Groundswell farming festival in Hertfordshire, Steve Reed said a revamp of post-Brexit farming subsidies and a new land use plan would be aimed at increasing food production in the most productive areas and decreasing or completely removing it in the least productive.

  • Ministers are closely watching a court case in which Vodafone is alleged to have “unjustly enriched” itself at the expense of franchise operators, and have raised the prospect of a regulatory crackdown on the sector. The small business minister, Gareth Thomas, has said he will “track very carefully” a £120m legal claim brought against Vodafone last year by a group of 62 of about 150 franchise operators.

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Critics of UK role in Gaza war consider setting up independent tribunal

Patrick Wintour

Patrick Wintour

Critics of the UK’s role in the Gaza war are considering setting up an independent tribunal if, as expected, Labour blocks a bill tabled by Jeremy Corbyn backing an official inquiry.

Government whips are expected to object to the former Labour party leader’s bill in the Commons on Friday, leaving him with few practical options for his legislation to pass.

The Middle East minister, Hamish Falconer, said the government saw no need for an inquiry, but 22 NGOs working on issues in the region are supporting Corbyn’s call.

The Islington North MP is arguing that a host of issues regarding the UK’s involvement in what he regards as a genocide by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have not been properly aired in Westminster, except through brief replies by ministers in written or oral questions.

The NGOs led by Action Aid said:

In light of reports of atrocities committed by the Israeli government in Gaza and reports of the UK’s collaboration with Israeli military operations, it is increasingly urgent to confirm whether the UK has contributed to any violations of international humanitarian law through economic or political cooperation with the Israeli government since October 2023, including the sale, supply or use of weapons, surveillance aircraft and Royal Air Force bases.

They said establishing an independent public inquiry would provide an evidence-based determination of whether the UK’s actions upheld international law. The possible inquiry comes in the week that the UK courts threw out a 20-month legal battle to force the government to end indirect sales of F-35 parts to Israel for use in Gaza.


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