Why some in No 10 think Wes Streeting is plotting to become prime minister

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A clip from a 2018 comedy show has been circulating in Westminster – and it neatly explains why the spotlight landed on Wes Streeting when No 10 launched its preemptive strikes against potential leadership candidates,It features a number of fresh-faced politicians – from Jess Phillips to Johnny Mercer – who are asked who will be prime minister in 10 years,Several Labour MPs dutifully say the then-leader Jeremy Corbyn,Tim Loughton, a former Tory MP, predicts Kemi Badenoch,The final clip is Wes Streeting, who smiles and says: “I think it will probably be me.

”Streeting has been talked about as a future prime minister since he was leader of the National Union of Students,So in theory, it’s no surprise that the health secretary was the name who was first connected to briefings from No 10 about how fiercely Keir Starmer would fight a leadership battle,Even the morning broadcast round after a day of negative stories, Streeting looked as if he was enjoying himself, compare himself to the Celebrity Traitors’ wronged faithful Joe Marler,“I think it’s fair to say it would take a lot to make a cabinet minister turn up in that situation,” one ally said,“Wes would never duck it.

”But despite his oft-stated ambitions, the stories would still have left a lot of casual viewers thinking: where is this coming from?Why did some allies of the prime minister convince themselves that an outwardly loyal cabinet minister was not merely ambitious but plotting a coup? Streeting and MPs who would be considered his close allies say there is no such plot.But there are reasons for suspicion.Since the welfare vote, a grim consensus has been forming that Starmer cannot meet the moment, often described by MPs as the “progressive emergency” of taking the fight to Nigel Farage.Some in Westminster had alighted on Andy Burnham, the mayor of Greater Manchester.Streeting’s communication skills are often remarked upon, but it was thought he faced a substantial hurdle in winning the votes of the membership, coming, as he does, far more from the traditional Blairite wing of the party than Starmer.

He once told a shadow cabinet meeting: “Every day, we should drag a sacred cow of our party to the town market place and slaughter it”,He has been outspoken about the need for partnerships with private providers to help clear the NHS backlog,He was a fierce and outspoken critic of Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership, especially regarding allegations of antisemitism,And he infuriated many trans rights supporters in the party for his decision to ban puberty blockers for under-18s,But there are three factors in his favour.

First, his two biggest rivals are significantly hamstrung: Burnham by the practicality of not having a parliamentary seat and Angela Rayner by her recent resignation – though it has been long rumoured that the pair may try to thrash out some kind of pact,Second, the Labour membership is now very different,Labour has shed tens of thousands of voters on its left, many dissatisfied with the Starmer government,Those who remain are more moderate,On the LabourList cabinet rankings, Streeting is in the middle of the pack, not great, but not terrible.

Third – and most crucially – Streeting has been making deliberate efforts in recent months to tack to the left, especially on issues such as Palestine and on anti-racism, two issues which he feels very strongly about and can speak authentically,On Gaza he has been the government’s most outspoken voice, calling for a Palestinian state and harsher sanctions on Israel, though part of this is necessary because of his Ilford North seat, where he came within a whisker of losing to the independent leftwing candidate Leanne Mohamad,Sign up to First EditionOur morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it mattersafter newsletter promotionAllies of Streeting point specifically to his outspokenness on Gaza as a moment where relations with Starmer began to get frostier,But it is not the only area where he has been making new interventions, ones that have caught the attention of No 10, where Streeting has been routinely outflanking the prime minister,He has spoken in cabinet meetings against the government’s approach to welfare and digital ID, as well as saying publicly that Starmer’s “island of strangers” speech on immigration was a mistake, alongside the attempts to cut winter fuel allowances and welfare.

It is a signal about how a Streeting administration might look.And he has identified an aggravation within the parliamentary party that No 10 is frustratingly slow at responding to Reform UK, particularly on race.He made a pointed intervention in September, after the weekend of the mass far-right rally in London, suggesting Labour needed to radically step up its defence of minorities.Streeting abandoned a planned speech at the NHS England LGBTQ+ health conference, saying he wanted to address “the elephant in the room” and said he understood why some were questioning “whether this government is really on our side”.It was also an attack on what had been a government line-to-take – that the protests showed free speech was alive in Britain.

“Free speech, that is, unless that freedom includes the right to worship a different God, or the right to march through central London protesting atrocities in Gaza or the right just to walk down Oxford Street without being called the P-word, the N-word, or having your hijab ripped off,” he said.Friends of the health secretary say like many Labour members, Labour MPs and progressives across the country, he has been intensely frustrated with the lack of clarity of response by No 10 to this threat from the far right and Reform.This is truly what he believes, one said, and he won’t wait for lines to take.If anything now, Streeting is even more emboldened to say what he thinks.
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Keir clubs himself with the lead pipe in a Downing Street game of No Cluedo | John Crace

It’s the worst game of Cluedo in town. Four players dealt a hand of cards. Without turning them over, player one makes the first guess. “Just one question. Does the suspect wear glasses?” he asks

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Why some in No 10 think Wes Streeting is plotting to become prime minister

A clip from a 2018 comedy show has been circulating in Westminster – and it neatly explains why the spotlight landed on Wes Streeting when No 10 launched its preemptive strikes against potential leadership candidates.It features a number of fresh-faced politicians – from Jess Phillips to Johnny Mercer – who are asked who will be prime minister in 10 years. Several Labour MPs dutifully say the then-leader Jeremy Corbyn. Tim Loughton, a former Tory MP, predicts Kemi Badenoch. The final clip is Wes Streeting, who smiles and says: “I think it will probably be me

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London congestion charge to rise to £18 – and electric vehicles will have to pay

London’s congestion charge will rise by 20% in January from £15 to £18 and electric vehicle drivers will be liable to pay to enter the heart of the capital for the first time.EVs will no longer be exempt from the levy, Transport for London said, but will pay a lower rate. Electric car drivers will get a 25% discount, paying £13.50 a day, while electric vans and HGVs will pay £9 – 50% of the full charge.Motoring groups criticised the changes as a backward step

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If No 10 briefer is found Keir Starmer will sack them, Miliband says

Ed Miliband has said he is certain Keir Starmer will sack whoever briefed against Wes Streeting, after a chaotic 48 hours in which No 10 launched an operation to shore up the prime minister against an anticipated leadership challenge.The prime minister apologised to the health secretary in a phone call with him late on Wednesday. Starmer is facing mounting calls to sack his chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, over the row.The Guardian reported that in private meetings with MPs on Wednesday, the prime minister stood by McSweeney and would not directly commit to any consequences for those who had briefed the newspapers.Starmer spoke to senior Downing Street staff on Thursday morning to stress that “briefings against cabinet ministers are completely unacceptable”, his deputy spokesperson said

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Labour faces questions over Starmer aide who holds shares in lobbying firm

No 10 is facing calls for an investigation into whether Keir Starmer’s communications chief should be allowed to hold shares in a lobbying firm and discuss politics with one of its consultants.Tim Allan, who is one of Starmer’s most senior aides, has a minority stake in Strand Partners, which critics claim could give rise to a perception of a conflict of interest.Allan does not gain any financial benefit from Strand while he is in No 10 but he has not sold his shares in the firm, whose clients include the British Horseracing Authority, the energy companies Ovo Energy and Cadent Gas, and Netflix.He is also friends with Tom Baldwin, a journalist, biographer of Starmer and former Labour adviser, who is a senior consultant for Strand Partners.The relationship was first reported by Sky News, which said multiple sources had told the news organisation that Allan and Baldwin have discussed politics since the communications chief joined No 10

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Housing secretary tells Labour MPs to vote down planning bill amendment

Housing secretary Steve Reed has told Labour MPs to vote down an amendment to the new planning bill intended to protect British wildlife and its habitats from destruction.The amendment, which was passed with a large majority in the House of Lords, restricts the most controversial part of the draft bill by removing protected animals such as dormice, badgers, hedgehogs, otters and nightingales, and rare habitats such as wetlands and ancient woodlands, from new rules which allow developers to sidestep environmental laws to speed up house building.Under the draft legislation proposed by Labour, developers will be able to pay into a national “nature recovery fund” and go ahead with their project straight away, instead of having to carry out an environmental survey and to first avoid, then mitigate damage, before putting spades into the ground.Experts say this is a regression on decades-old environmental law and it has been criticised as “cash to trash” by ecologists and environmental groups.The Lords’ amendment would mean the nature recovery fund is restricted to impacts from water and air pollution, meaning developers would still have to take the usual measures to mitigate damage to wildlife and habitats