Badenoch suggests Tories would oppose plans to extend sugar tax, saying she was opposed when her party first introduced it
This morning the Times has splashed on the news that ministers are planning to extend the suger tax. In their story, Max Kendix and Chris Smyth say:
Milkshakes and lattes are set to be hit by a sugar tax for the first time as Labour moves to extend the levy to hundreds more soft drinks including Pepsi and Ribena.
Pre-packaged milkshakes and coffees will be covered by the levy, ministers signalled on Monday, ending an exemption they described as an anomaly. The present laws have mainly affected fizzy drinks.
In a move that goes further than expected, ministers said it was time to be more ambitious on unhealthy drinks, announcing that they will also lower the sugar content threshold at which the tax applies, catching some of Britain’s best-known brands and supermarket products which had changed recipes to avoid the previous levy.
Tax rates on sugary drinks will also rise 27 per cent over the parliament to make up for a freeze since 2018, ministers confirmed.
Asked about this in her interview on BBC Breakfast, Kemi Badenoch said that she was not keen on the sugar tax anyway, even the original version introduced by her party. She said:
I wasn’t a fan of it when this law was brought in. It actually first came in under the Conservatives. I thought it was a bit too much nanny state.
But we have a sugar tax already. My worry is that the government doesn’t have any plans, didn’t have any strategy, and so they’re just looking for what else they can tax.
Taxing is not the way to get the economy growing. Just simply going back for more and more taxes at a time when businesses are closing down, they’re not hiring – Labour has been making the wrong choices on the economy across the border.
I don’t think that this is going to make much of an additional difference. I think the law of diminishing returns tends to apply when you keep just doing the same thing again and again and expecting outsized returns.
Readout from Starmer’s meeting with Palestinian authority PM Mohammad Mustafa
On the subject of Gaza, I was asked yesterday if I could post the Downing Street readout of Keir Starmer’s talks yesterday afternoon with Mohammad Mustafa, prime minister of the Palestinian authority. Here it is. A No 10 spokesperson said:
The prime minister began by expressing his sincere condolences for the appalling loss of life in Gaza. He said that the UK does not support the resumption in hostilities, which are in nobody’s interests. He added that the UK will continue to press for a return to the ceasefire as a first step to a lasting peace, and reiterated that the return of humanitarian aid into Gaza is critical.
He also said that we must not lose sight of the situation in the West Bank, where unlawful settlement and violence is of deep concern.
Discussing the Arab Plan for Gaza, the prime minister shared the UK’s support for the Palestinian authority’s reform programme, which he said is critical. The leaders agreed that a strategic political framework will be necessary as part of the implementation of a two-state solution, and that Hamas must have no role in Gaza’s governance.
They both agreed that the UK would continue to work closely with the Palestinian authority and regional partners to find a constructive way forward, and deliver lasting peace and security for Israelis and Palestinians alike.
Kneecap apologise to families of murdered MPs over ‘dead Tory’ comments
Kneecap, the Irish language rap group from Belfast, have apologised to the families of murdered MPs David Amess and Jo Cox after footage emerged in which the Irish-language rappers purportedly call for politicians to be killed, Jamie Grierson reports.
Here is an extract from the Kneecap statement, which has been posted on Bluesky.
Let us be unequivocal: we do not, and have never, supported Hamas or Hezbollah. We condemn all attacks on civilians, always. It is never okay. We know this more than anyone, given our nation’s history.
We also reject any suggestion that we would seek to incite violence against any MP or individual. Ever. An extract of footage, deliberately taken out of all context, is now being exploited and weaponised, as if it were a call to action.
This distortion is not only absurd – it is a transparent effort to derail the real conversation.
All two million Palestinian people in Gaza are currently being starved to death by Israel.
At least 20,000 children in Gaza have been killed. The British government continues to supply arms to Israel, even after scores of NHS doctors warned Keir Starmer in August that children were being systematically executed with sniper shots to the head.
Yvette Cooper says UK focused on ‘resilience’, in response to questions about massive power cut in Spain and Portugal
Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, was doing a media round this morning to discuss the foreign sex offenders announcement. Asked about the power cuts in Spain and Portugal, and whether the UK could be affected in the same way, she told Sky News the UK has a “continued approach” to “resilience” and “security issues”. She said:
We’ve been looking, as part of wider security reviews across the country, how we deal with both resilience and also different kinds of challenges and threats.
Some of which can be the traditional security challenges, some of which can be the kinds of resilience – things that we’re talking about in Spain and Portugal – and we obviously support them and the governments there in the work that they’re doing.
Labour says Tories are ‘gifting’ Runcorn byelection to Reform as Badenoch says bad result in elections won’t be down to her
Good morning. There are two days left until the local elections in England and, conveniently perhaps for Labour campaigners, the government’s main announcement is about a plan to stop sex offenders claiming asylum in the UK. Rajeev Syal has the details here.
The government is announcing this now because it will change the law via an amendment to the border security, asylum and immigration bill, which has already finished its committee stage in the Commons and will soon get its report stage (the last chance for an amendment before the bill goes to the Lords). Immigration policy is not a matter for local authorities, but Labour will still be hoping that today’s headlines might be at least marginally helpful as people think about how to vote.
With the Conservatives expected to lose around 500 council seats, according to one forecast, these should be difficult elections for Kemi Badenoch. But she won’t be taking it personally, she told BBC Breakfast this morning in an interview. Asked if a bad result would be a vote on her own “personal popularity as leader”, Badenoch replied:
No, I don’t. We had a historic defeat last year, and it’s going to take some time for us to get back on track. I am working to rebuild public trust, letting the country know that the Conservative party is under new leadership. But as we saw with previous oppositions, it took 14 years, 13 years and 18 years to come back. I’ve only been leader for six months. It’s going to take a while to fix the problems which we had from last year.
There is also a byelection on Thursday, in Runcorn and Helsby, where Labour had a majority of almost 15,000 at the last election. The constituency is counting overnight, which means that on Friday morning, when a lot of the local election results won’t yet be in (many councils count on the Friday, not overnight, because it is easier), the election night narrative will be determined largely by the Runcorn result. Reform UK hope they can win, and that would be a formidable show of strength (even though parties that pull off amazing byelection victories don’t normally perform so well at general elections). Given what has happened to the Westminster expectations thermometer, even a narrow Labour win would be a good result for Keir Starmer.
And the Conservatives? According to Labour, they have given up totally in the seat. This is what Ellie Reeves, Labour’s chair, told HuffPost UK.
The Tories aren’t doing anything. [Tory MP] Esther McVey basically said the Tories should sit it out and let Reform win, and we’re seeing that on the ground.
They’re not doing any work on the ground at all, it looks like they’re just gifting it to Reform.
Reeves, of course, has got an incentive to maximise the ‘Keep Reform out’ vote in Runcorn. But that does not mean she’s wrong, and it would be surprising if she is. The Tories wrote off their chances in this seat some time ago, and it would make sense for them to deploy campaign resources elsewhere.
Here is the agenda for the day.
9.30am: Keir Starmer chairs cabinet.
Morning: Ed Davey, the Lib Dem leader, is campaigning in East Anglia.
10am: Comedy industry figures, including the podcaster Matt Forde, give evidence to the Commons culture committee about the state of live comedy.
2.20pm: Jack Thorne, creater of the Netflix show Adolescence, and Emily Feller, its co-executive producer, give evidence to the Commons women and equalities committee on misogyny among young men and boys.
2.30pm: Andy Burnham, Greater Manchester mayor, and Kim McGuinness, North East mayor, give evidence to the Commons business committee about industrial strategy.
Afternoon: Kemi Badenoch is campaigning in the south-west of England.
Afternoon: Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, is campaigning in Scunthorpe with Andrea Jenkyns, the party’s candidate for Greater Lincolnshire mayor.
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