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Briefing war spotlights relationships between three of Labour’s most senior figures

about 15 hours ago
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One way to flush out a leadership challenger, according to Gordon Brown’s one-time enforcer, is to push them over the edge.In his chronicle of his time at the centre of power, Damian McBride wrote that the New Labour darling David Miliband had a “tendency to treat rebellion like a reluctant bather inching his way into the sea at Skegness”.“It made sense to push him right in at the outset, on the grounds that he’d run straight back to his towel, and not try again for at least six months,” McBride wrote.Some insiders believe this was the strategy behind an extraordinary decision by Keir Starmer’s closest allies to accuse Wes Streeting of leading an advanced plot to replace him as prime minister.The flaw in that plan – obvious to all who have had even fleeting contact with Streeting – is that far from reluctantly dipping his toe in, the health secretary embraces any chance to position himself for the leadership with the confidence and fervour of an Olympic diver.

The extraordinary briefing war at the top of government has thrown the spotlight on the personal relationships between three of its most senior figures: Starmer, his chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, and Streeting, the man who many in Labour believe will be their next prime minister.The conventional wisdom in Westminster has long been that Starmer was a vehicle for McSweeney’s political project to wrest control of the Labour party away from the hard left – making the leader a Neil Kinnock-type figure who would eventually hand the keys to the castle to Streeting.Others argue even if this were once true – and not everyone agrees it was – Starmer and McSweeney are now inseparable and their success or failure mutually assured.At every critical juncture, the prime minister has stuck resolutely by his closest adviser at the expense of other senior aides and ministers.But developments in the last few months have driven a rift between Starmer and McSweeney, to the extent that many are now questioning how long the No 10 chief of staff can last.

Fairly or not, he has become something of a bogeyman for a number of ministers and MPs who blame him for bad decisions and question his judgment and ability to run the government.The decision to launch a full-frontal attack on Streeting hours before he was due to embark on a morning broadcast round is the latest case in point.The health secretary gave an assured performance in which he said those briefing against him had spent too much time watching Celebrity Traitors – and should switch over to Countryfile.Labour MPs and aides are united in thinking Streeting has emerged in a stronger position than before.As one government aide put it: “From a ‘strategic big brain’ point of view – how did you think this was going to go? That Wes Streeting, of all people, would crumble on the morning round and make meek pledges of loyalty and be seen as a duplicitous snake by the PLP [parliamentary Labour party]? They’ve just given him the best positioning he could hope for [by saying:] ‘Let’s take the battle with Wes where he is weakest, on breakfast television.

’”A former government aide added: “It’s like an elephant picking a fight with a shark and choosing to do it in the middle of the ocean.”There are competing theories about when Starmer’s strategists decided to go over the edge and denounce plots against him, with some pointing to the early November leaving drinks of a senior aide, Matt Faulding, as a “fever pitch” moment for leadership speculation.Allies of the prime minister have been on high alert for a number of weeks, voicing concerns that any challenge would worsen an already perilous economic situation and that any successor to Starmer would inevitably tack to the left and damage relations with Donald Trump and the EU.Labour MPs have scoffed at many of these arguments.What is clear is that mounting fears of an imminent challenge were shared with the prime minister over the weekend, and that there was a coordinated decision to smoke out any challenge.

Sign up to Headlines UKGet the day’s headlines and highlights emailed direct to you every morningafter newsletter promotionNow several senior strategists argue that the intention was never to put the entire onus on Streeting, but to make it clear that Starmer had plenty of fight in him.From the outside, however, it looked like a paranoid overreaction.Some have even speculated that the move was designed by McSweeney to benefit Streeting – but this theory is given short shrift by insiders.One well-placed senior official who has worked alongside McSweeney said: “I never ever heard Morgan have a good word to say about Wes.He thought he was all mouth (promises about the NHS) and no trousers (zero delivery ability).

”Other key figures who have worked with both McSweeney and Streeting say they are not cut from the same cloth,“I always felt Morgan politically wasn’t with Wes, although he was with Peter Mandelson – and Mandelson wanted Wes,” said a senior Labour aide,“Wes has always been more classically Blairite than Morgan has,” a frontbencher said,The same frontbencher speculated that when push comes to shove, “Morgan will be more loyal to Keir than Keir will be to Morgan”,In recent months Starmer has made some interventions to defend his chief of staff, including at cabinet – but there are signs the relationship between them is no longer what it was.

A No 10 source said relations had faltered since Starmer’s “island of strangers” speech, which he has since publicly resiled from,The prime minister is said to have been shaken by criticism from close friends outside politics about the language he used, which MPs said echoed Enoch Powell,This was the point, it is said, when Starmer became convinced he had been badly advised – and McSweeney’s team were the ones who had pushed for tougher language on immigration,Starmer has since expressed frustration internally at what he sees as an inability by his aides to protect him from scandals, such as over Jeffrey Epstein’s close relationship with Mandelson – whose appointment as US ambassador was championed by McSweeney,“Many people have tried to drive a wedge between Keir and Morgan and it has always failed,” one No 10 source said.

“But this feels different.”
sportSee all
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Off with a bang: Women’s 100m final moved up to LA28 opening day

The women’s 100m final will headline the first day of competition at the Los Angeles 2028 Olympics as part of organisers’ plans to “open with a bang”.The surprise decision, which will lead to all three rounds of the 100m taking place on the same day, was welcomed by the US sprint star Sha’Carri Richardson, who said it showed that “track and field is having its moment”.Britain’s Dina Asher-Smith also backed the switch for the Games, which will take place from 15-30 July. “It’s such an exciting opportunity – celebrating the enduring legacy, strength and global power of women’s sprinting, exactly 100 years on from the first time women competed in Olympic track and field,” she said.Sprinters usually run a maximum of twice a day, but World Athletics said it had consulted widely with athletes to ensure they were on board with the decision

about 17 hours ago
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Haskell warns club rugby is heading off a cliff ‘like Thelma and Louise’ as £34m losses revealed

The former England flanker James Haskell has likened English rugby to “Thelma and Louise heading off a cliff” after an independent report found Prem clubs made a combined loss of £34m last season.The report by Leonard Curtis, a leading UK corporate recovery and insolvency firm, suggests the game should consider adopting a franchise model, which it says would help Prem clubs to save up to £1.9m a year.Its recommendation comes after its financial audit of the English game found that six of the 10 Prem clubs were balance-sheet insolvent – albeit one fewer than a year ago – and had net debts of £342.5m, up from £329

about 20 hours ago
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The Spin | Why the first ball of the Ashes is both an end and a beginning

You always remember the first. Senses heightened, clammy palms, not quite knowing where to look or what to focus on. It is OK to be nervous … but is it normal to be this nervous? Castanet heart and goosebumped skin as the moment gets nearer. Just get this one out of the way, don’t put too much pressure on it. Calm down

about 23 hours ago
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British & Irish Lions plan ban on R360 players to stop Red Roses jumping ship

The British & Irish Lions are planning to follow the example of the biggest unions by banning players who join R360 in a move designed primarily to prevent an exodus of England’s Red Roses stars to the rebel league.Eight of the 12 tier-one unions, led by England and New Zealand, announced last month that they would not select R360 players, and the Guardian has learned that the Lions will follow suit. Ireland, Scotland, France, Italy, New Zealand, Australia and South Africa also came out in support of a ban, but Wales and Argentina did not due to smaller player pools and weaker domestic leagues.A number of England’s World Cup winners are leading targets for R360, with the full-back Ellie Kildunne saying last month that she is “open to anything”. With the next tournament four years away, there are concerns at the Rugby Football Union in particular that salaries of up to £270,000 in the franchise competition will be too good to turn down, despite the prospect of an international ban

1 day ago
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Susie Wolff: ‘I can be very punchy and pragmatic. If I have to fight for something, I’ll fight’

Head of F1 Academy explains how close she came to a grand prix debut, her quest to produce female drivers, and a frightening knock on her hotel room door by a powerful man in the sport“There was a deep loneliness to karting, and then definitely in single‑seaters, because no one else was going through the same thing as me,” says Susie Wolff as she remembers her long struggle in motor sport, from racing as a teenager against Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg to her determined, but unfulfilled, quest to become a Formula One driver.“After the whole #MeToo movement, we forget what it was like before. But the way I heard boys talking about girls in the paddock made me think: ‘I never want to be spoken about in that way.’ I realised I’d have to be whiter than white to get through it unscathed.”The 42-year-old says: “I couldn’t open up to anyone until I met [her husband] Toto

1 day ago
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Ben Stokes hits back at England ‘has-beens’ over criticism of Ashes preparations

Ben Stokes has warned England’s players to be wary of an Australian media desperate to pounce on any indiscretion or hint of scandal, saying the Ashes tourists have already been the subject of some “unbelievable journalism” and that such treatment is “part of being in Australia … it’s not just stuff out on the field that can get you, it’s also the off-field stuff”.The England captain’s disgruntlement with his side’s treatment in the press extends to recent criticism of their preparations, with Stokes hitting out at the “has-beens” who have been leading the chorus of complaint and insisting “leave no stone unturned” and “have prepared incredibly well”.Stokes’s arrival in Perth last week prompted the West Australian newspaper to launch an attack on “England’s cocky captain complainer” over a front‑page photograph of the 34‑year‑old pushing his bags through the airport, while Joe Root was subjected to similar treatment on Monday.“I was a bit gutted when they turned their attention to Rooty because I was waiting to see what the next headline about me was,” Stokes said. “But it’s expected

1 day ago
foodSee all
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Jelly’s back! Here are three worth making – and three that should wobble off to the bin

about 24 hours ago
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Australian supermarket wheat crackers taste test: ‘All the reviewers knew which one was the real deal’

2 days ago
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Same sheet, different dish: how to use up excess lasagne sheets

2 days ago
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Rukmini Iyer’s quick and easy recipe for chilli crisp topped noodles with tofu and cabbage | Quick and easy

3 days ago
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The nut secret: 14 easy, delicious ways to eat more of these life-changing superfoods

4 days ago
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How to make the perfect beer cheese soup – recipe | Felicity Cloake's How to make the perfect …

4 days ago