Farage tells donors he expects Reform to do election deal with Tories – report

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Nigel Farage has told donors he expects a deal or merger between his Reform UK party and the Conservatives before the next general election.Reform donors told the Financial Times that the leader expected his party to join with or make a deal with the Tories.One of those who spoke to the FT said Farage had described such an agreement as “inevitable” but that it would take some time because he was wary over making a pact between the two.But Farage and the Conservative party denied the claims.“Sometimes people hear what they want to,” Farage told the paper.

“After next May the Conservatives will no longer be a national party.I would never do a deal with a party that I do not trust.No deals, just a reverse takeover.”A Conservative spokesperson said: “Under Kemi Badenoch’s leadership the Conservatives will not be considering any deals or pacts.Reform want higher welfare spending and to cosy up to [Russian president Vladimir] Putin.

“Only the Conservatives have the team, the plan and the backbone to deliver.”Farage has sought to win over voters from the Conservatives, suggesting the party can no longer be trusted after 14 years in power.Former Conservatives have defected to Reform, with former minister Jonathan Gullis among the most recent to have joined the party, following Danny Kruger, Nadine Dorries, Jake Berry and Maria Caulfield.Badenoch has dismissed claims that the Tories could do a deal with Reform, saying earlier this year: “I am the custodian of an institution that has existed for nigh on 200 years … I can’t just treat it like it’s a toy and have pacts and mergers.”And despite Reform UK’s strong show in the polls, the Conservatives have maintained support from donors, bringing in £6.

3m in donations in the first half of the year, according to Electoral Commission data, three times the £2.1m raised by Reform.A Labour party spokesperson said: “Nigel Farage isn’t even hiding it any more – he’s happy for failed Tories to prop up his party, whether they choose to join Reform or not.“The Conservatives broke public services and hammered family finances.They and Reform would inflict Tory austerity on Britain all over again, meaning savage cuts to local schools and hospitals.

“This shady backroom plot will send a shiver down the spine of people up and down the country, and shows you simply can’t trust Nigel Farage.Only Labour is focused on cutting the cost of living for families, reducing NHS waiting lists and bringing down the national debt.”The best public interest journalism relies on first-hand accounts from people in the know.If you have something to share on this subject, you can contact us confidentially using the following methods.Secure Messaging in the Guardian appThe Guardian app has a tool to send tips about stories.

Messages are end to end encrypted and concealed within the routine activity that every Guardian mobile app performs,This prevents an observer from knowing that you are communicating with us at all, let alone what is being said,If you don't already have the Guardian app, download it (iOS/Android) and go to the menu,Select ‘Secure Messaging’,SecureDrop, instant messengers, email, telephone and postIf you can safely use the Tor network without being observed or monitored, you can send messages and documents to the Guardian via our SecureDrop platform.

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‘Failed former Tory MPs’ who join Reform unlikely to be selected as candidates, Zia Yusuf says – as it happened

“Failed Tory MPs” are unlikely to be chosen as parliamentary candidates for Reform Uk at the next election, Zia Yusuf, the party’s head of policy has said.He made the comment in a post on social media promoting a Daily Telegraph story saying that “washed-up” former Conservative MPs who have joined Reform will not be prioritised when parliamentary candidates are being selected. The story was attributed to unnamed party sources.This week it was announced that three more former Tory MPs have gone over to Nigel Farage’s party.Yusuf said:I’ve had many messages from Reform grassroots worried about former Tory MPs joining our party

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Keith McDowall obituary

In 1972, Keith McDowall, who has died aged 96, was contacted by the Conservative cabinet minister Willie Whitelaw. Direct rule had just been imposed on Northern Ireland, and Whitelaw, an uncertain media performer, was made the first secretary of state for the region. McDowall, an experienced journalist then serving as chief information officer at the Home Office, took up the invitation to join Whitelaw’s department. After hesitating initially and assuring Whitelaw that his Labour sympathies would not have an impact on his civil service duties, McDowall swiftly retrained the minister. Effective public relations became the trademark of Whitelaw’s time in Ireland, with the close-cropped McDowall frequently mistaken for a security man

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Who will lose out when Labour cuts red tape? | Brief letters

Keir Starmer wants to sweep away “unnecessary” regulation to promote growth, but fails to say how the government will decide what regulation is necessary (There are those on the left and right who offer only grievance: Labour is getting on with the job of economic renewal, 30 November). He is adopting the market viewpoint rather than that of the public. The cognitive linguist George Lakoff argues that regulations should be reframed as protections rather than burdens. The key question then becomes: “Who is being protected and from what?”Sally BeanWeybridge, Surrey More than 62% of the members voted against calling the new party Your Party, and yet that is its name (Your Party members vote to make name permanent at charged first conference, 30 November). It reminds me of the general election, where more than 60% of voters voted for a party other than the one that won a massive majority

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Spoilt for choice, Conspiracy Kemi grabs wrong end of every stick | John Crace

On days like this, Kemi Badenoch increasingly gives the impression of an over-excitable puppy with a low IQ. Overwhelmed by all the different smells she can pick up on her walkies. Convinced that this is going to be THE BEST DAY EVER. Spoilt for choice as she is surrounded by countless enticing sticks. Yet somehow she always manages to grab the wrong end of every one

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Mark Fisher obituary

It was a source of sorry disappointment to Mark Fisher, the former Labour arts minister, who has died aged 81, that he held this government post for only a little over a year before being dropped from office. Yet such an outcome was predictable – and probably inevitable – given that he was an uncompromising lifelong idealist who never learned to deploy the sort of silky skills needed to guarantee a long and successful frontline political career.When Tony Blair’s government took office in 1997, Mark Fisher was appointed on the day following the election. It was the job of his dreams. He had been the opposition spokesperson since 1987, appointed less than four years after becoming an MP, and he had been instrumental in helping develop a strategy for the arts as an important part of Labour’s new “Cool Britannia” agenda

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Foreign Office lost ‘opportunities to influence’ US after Harry Dunn death, review finds

Foreign Office failures led to opportunities being missed to achieve justice for the family of Harry Dunn, killed in August 2019 in a motorcycle crash outside a US airbase, an independent review commissioned by the Labour government has found.Dame Anne Owers, who led the review, said: “Ministers and senior officials were not involved early enough, and this meant that opportunities were lost to influence – rather than respond to – events.“Direct communication with the family was late and sporadic, and the Foreign Office was slow to realise that they were allies in achieving justice and securing positive change.”Dunn was killed aged 19 when he was hit by a car driven on the wrong side of the road by Anne Sacoolas, the wife of a US state department official based at RAF Croughton. Sacoolas, a US citizen, had been in the country for three weeks, and admitted responsibility