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Pressure grows on Starmer to sack chief of staff over briefing row

2 days ago
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Keir Starmer is coming under intense pressure from a wide range of ministers and MPs to sack his chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, after No 10 was accused of an extraordinary briefing operation against the health secretary, Wes Streeting.Starmer is understood to have told MPs he will not sack his chief of staff and would not respond to several demands to ensure there were “consequences” for the briefers.Astounded Labour MPs and ministers have blamed Starmer’s most senior aide for the fallout from an apparently orchestrated plan to fire a warning shot at putative leadership contenders including Streeting.The health secretary, however, appeared emboldened by the row – with MPs praising a vigorous media performance and at least one Labour-backing union leaning towards backing him in the event of a vacancy.Starmer has also moved to calm relations privately with Streeting, with overtures described by one source as “peace talks”.

After Starmer appeared to dodge a question on whether he had full confidence in his chief of staff at prime minister’s questions, Downing Street was forced to clarify its position.“Morgan McSweeney, my team and I are absolutely focused on delivering for this country,” he had replied.But urged directly by Labour MPs at the party’s backbench committee on Wednesday afternoon to sack the briefers, he said he would not.One MP present said the prime minister had “lost the dressing room”.In a further attempt to contain the row, Labour’s chair, Anna Turley, told ITV on Wednesday evening that there would be an investigation into who had briefed against Streeting and that Starmer would take action against the culprit – something the PM had not committed to in his earlier meetings with MPs.

One No 10 source said Starmer’s anger was still focused on Streeting, despite outwardly praising him.Another said he was frustrated by the health secretary arguing against the government’s approach to numerous issues including welfare, digital ID and Gaza.Starmer and Streeting spoke briefly on Wednesday, the first time the pair have been in contact since the briefing war broke out.Starmer is said to have apologised to the health secretary, though stopped short of making any other commitments, saying only they should speak again soon.“Keir is clear that Wes is a highly effective minister, with great communication skills and he has his full backing,” said one Downing Street source.

“There has been no direct briefing against Wes from anyone.”One strategist said the intention behind the briefings had not been to lay down a marker against Streeting in particular but to warn Labour MPs about the potentially fatal consequences of any leadership battle and to drive home the point that Starmer would fight hard for his position.Streeting mounted a furious defence of his actions on morning shows on Wednesday, saying: “Whoever has been briefing this has been watching too much Celebrity Traitors.It’s the most unjustified attack against the faithfuls since Joe Marler was banished in the final.”However, Labour MPs were left scratching their heads at the timing of Downing Street’s remarkable intervention, which the Guardian revealed on Tuesday night, with the focus switching to whether McSweeney could survive in post.

Many told the Guardian that attacks on Streeting – followed by the health secretary’s defiant appearance on breakfast TV – had strengthened any future leadership campaign.Even former allies of the prime minister’s chief of staff said they had changed their view of McSweeney, 48.“Morgan will have to go.But it won’t save Keir,” one minister said.The trade minister Chris Bryant told the BBC that aides should see politics as a “team sport”.

He said: “It’s a bit daft if you have someone in the coach’s team hobbling one of the players before the match.”One cabinet minister said: “If it was an orchestrated campaign to shore up the PM, then it’s had the opposite effect; it’s spectacularly backfired.I don’t see how Morgan can survive when Keir has ended up in a weaker position than before.”A cabinet source said: “Consensus is forming in cabinet he’ll have to go.I am devastated about it.

“I keep thinking there must be a bigger strategy that I’m not understanding.But I think it’s just that they just have to have an enemy.It’s become their achilles heel.”Another cabinet source added: “I think the scales are falling from people’s eyes [about Morgan].I don’t know if it’s worse that it’s done with Keir’s authorisation or that he is so checked out he does not know about it.

”One minister said they thought No 10’s paranoia was partly justified.“I will defend them to a degree because everyone can see that Wes is in fact running a leadership campaign and that it has been the talk of the PLP [parliamentary Labour party].We know that.We can see it.“But I don’t think they intended to personalise this about Wes, and that has been their great mistake.

They wanted to show Keir had some fight in him and it has backfired catastrophically.”Allies of Streeting were among those who said McSweeney should be sacked after a dramatic 24 hours during which the health secretary firmly denied he was planning to launch a coup against the prime minister after the budget.“Keir gave Wes his full backing at PMQs.It is categorically untrue that Wes has been preparing to challenge Keir,” one source close to the health secretary said.Government insiders said there was now pressure on the prime minister over McSweeney from “many different quarters”.

One source said: “Because Keir is so dependent on him for political advice, the guns are trained on him.”Two No 10 sources said relations had also deteriorated between McSweeney and Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the prime minister, who is understood to be frustrated at how frequently the government’s attention is pulled on to scandals or briefing and counter-briefing.MPs now believe that the home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, is McSweeney’s preferred successor to Starmer, and the two worked closely together when Mahmood was elections coordinator in Labour HQ.A source close to Mahmood said it was “nonsense” she was running any kind of leadership operation and said she was focused on major asylum changes to be announced shortly.
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UK hospitals bracing for once-in-a-decade flu surge this winter

Hospitals are bracing for a once-in-a-decade flu season, with a mutated version of the virus that is spreading widely in younger people expected to drive a wave of admissions when it reaches the elderly.The threat has prompted NHS managers to redouble efforts to vaccinate staff and communities, expand same-day emergency care and treat more patients in the community to reduce the need for hospital stays.As resident doctors in England continue a five-day strike over pay, hospitals are turning to contingency plans to bring in consultants and other staff for extra shifts and reschedule appointments where necessary.“Last flu season was particularly nasty and we’re very concerned that this year could be even worse,” said Elaine Clancy, the group chief nursing officer for St George’s, Epsom and St Helier university hospitals. “We’re preparing for a spike of flu on to our wards

about 7 hours ago
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Resident doctors begin five-day strike in latest walkout over pay

Thousands of resident doctors have begun strike action across England in a dispute over pay.The five-day action, which began at 7am on Friday, is the 13th walkout by doctors since March 2023 and health leaders have warned that the NHS may have to cut frontline staff and offer fewer appointments and operations if the strikes continue.The NHS Confederation and NHS Providers, which represent health trusts, said continued action was piling pressure on already-stretched budgets. The last industrial action in July was estimated to have cost the health service £300m.Patients would be forced to wait longer for care, and many may no longer be able to work without the treatment they needed, they said

about 14 hours ago
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New AI tool could cut wasted efforts to transplant organs by 60%

Doctors have developed an AI tool that could reduce wasted efforts to transplant organs by 60%.Thousands of patients worldwide are waiting for a potentially life-saving donor, and more candidates are stuck on waiting lists than there are available organs.Recently, in cases where people need a liver transplant, access has been expanded by using donors who die after cardiac arrest. However, in about half of these donations after circulatory death (DCD) cases, the transplant ends up being cancelled.That is because the time between the removal of life support and death must not exceed 45 minutes

about 21 hours ago
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Peers to mount fresh offensive to halt assisted dying bill

Peers will mount a new offensive to halt the assisted dying bill on Friday, tabling almost 1,000 new amendments to the legislation in an effort to run down the clock.More than half of the 942 amendments have been tabled by just seven members of the House of Lords, all of them vocal opponents of assisted dying (AD). A source close to the bill said it was possible it could in effect get filibustered if peers pushed many amendments to a vote.The bill – which began as a private member’s bill from Labour MP Kim Leadbeater – passed the House of Commons in June and is now in the House of Lords.On Thursday night, 65 peers including two cabinet secretaries, the former Labour leader Neil Kinnock and the former Tory leader Ruth Davidson warned that it would be anti-democratic for the Lords to kill the bill after it had been passed by a reasonable majority in the Commons

1 day ago
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Hospital consultants gearing up to join resident doctors in striking over pay

Hospital consultants are gearing up to join resident doctors in striking over pay in a move that could cause huge disruption for the NHS and present ministers with a major new headache.In addition, resident doctors – who will tomorrow embark on their latest strike – have decided to adopt a more militant approach in pursuit of their 26% pay claim in which they strike every month, to put pressure on the government.In a hardening of their tactics, resident – formerly junior – doctors will stage a walkout every month in 2026 if, as they expect, they get a fresh legal mandate to continue their long-running campaign of industrial action. They went on strike 11 times in 15 months between March 2023 and June 2024 but only once since, in July this year.Thousands of them will take part in what will be the 13th strike of their campaign, starting at 7am on Friday and running until 7am on Wednesday 19 November

1 day ago
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Steve Reed convenes Tower Hamlets envoys as concerns over council persist

The communities secretary, Steve Reed, has called a meeting with officials overseeing the running of Tower Hamlets council as concerns about the governance of the east London authority continue.Envoys were sent to Tower Hamlets after a team of government-commissioned inspectors published a report last November that uncovered a “toxic” and secretive culture dominated by the inner circle of the local mayor, Lutfur Rahman.It is understood Reed plans to meet the envoys to discuss their work so far, and to find out whether they think there has been sufficient change in the council and what else could be done.Rahman, a former Labour leader of the council, first became mayor in 2010 as an independent. He was removed from office in 2015 and banned for five years from standing for mayor after an election commissioner found him guilty of electoral fraud

1 day ago
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China voices ‘extreme disappointment’ with Dutch minister at centre of car chip row

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People in the US: how are your holiday shopping plans being affected by Trump’s tariffs and the cost of living?

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Personal details of Tate galleries job applicants leaked online

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AI firm claims it stopped Chinese state-sponsored cyber-attack campaign

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Alexander Zverev v Felix Auger-Aliassime: ATP Finals tennis – live

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Sean Bowen looks real McCoy at Cheltenham in emulating legend’s never-say-die ride

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