Starmer buys some time – but he could be running out of political capital

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Keir Starmer deployed the entire Labour machine – cabinet ministers, whips, even Gordon Brown – to shore up his support ahead of what was set to be a critical day for his premiership on Tuesday,And it worked,Labour MPs trooped dutifully through the voting lobbies to block Conservative attempts to refer him to the privileges committee – a process that would have dragged out the Peter Mandelson row and been a painful reminder of Starmer’s original sin of appointing the former Labour spin doctor and minister as his man in Washington,It is not the first time the prime minister’s senior team has come to his rescue,In February, his cabinet rallied round to see off an immediate challenge to his position from Anas Sarwar, Labour’s leader in Scotland.

But despite public displays of support, several warned then he was not out of danger, with one minister adding that his leadership was “in the endgame”,It did, however, win him some breathing space as mutinous MPs stepped back from the brink,The danger may not abate for long,The scandal has come in waves – and each time the story has crashed back into the headlines, Starmer’s authority has been eroded,The Guardian’s revelation more than 10 days ago that Mandelson failed his security vetting is just the latest example.

Morgan McSweeney, the prime minister’s former chief of staff, and Philip Barton, the former permanent secretary of the Foreign Office, prompted yet more questions about Starmer’s decision during four hours of testimony before MPs on Tuesday.While Starmer may have seen off the opposition’s attempt to refer him to the committee that severely weakened Boris Johnson’s premiership, the whole saga – and particularly the government’s decision to whip Labour MPs to vote against – has inflicted even more damage on the prime minister.“It has played into the terrible narrative that there is something to hide and good decent colleagues will be accused of being complicit in a cover-up,” said one.Fifteen Labour MPs rebelled against the government and dozens more did not vote.Labour MPs now appear united on two issues: the view that sending Mandelson to Washington in the first place was a catastrophic misjudgment; and a deep frustration that the scandal has sucked up all the oxygen at Westminster just before crucial elections next week.

Some questioned whether the government’s heavy-handed approach was necessary for a vote they probably would have won anyway.Few MPs had the appetite to hand the Tories a victory or unintentionally precipitate a leadership contest before they were ready.Even some loyalist MPs who are willing Starmer to survive admit that he has expended a worrying amount of political capital.“Keir only has so much credit in the bank with the backbenches now, so he needs to spend it wisely,” said one minister.Others were more defensive.

“He was damned if he did whip MPs to vote against the referral and damned if he didn’t,” a cabinet minister said.“Why take the risk when you don’t have to?”, a cabinet source added.After parliament prorogues this week, MPs will return to their constituencies to help campaign in what most expect will be a devastating set of elections for Labour right across the country.Starmer’s allies know his immediate response when the results start to roll in after 7 May is perhaps the biggest moment of jeopardy yet for his leadership.They say he will be humble and frank, echoing the former US president Barack Obama who talked of a “shellacking” when the Democrats took a heavy beating in the 2010 midterms.

Downing Street also wants to “inject some hope” into the government’s narrative, with senior figures pointing to the king’s speech the following week as an opportunity to do so, although they admit this won’t be easy, given the economic fallout from the Middle East crisis,So Starmer will rely for the third time in as many months on the Labour machine rallying round,But every time he does, his power is further diminished, and his political capital eaten up,“It’ll be his last chance to do so,” said one usually loyal MP,The question remains: will it even work?
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UK faces £35bn hit and risk of recession this year over impact of Iran war, thinktank warns

Britain is facing a £35bn economic hit and the risk of a recession this year as the fallout from the Iran war adds to the pressure on Keir Starmer’s government, a leading thinktank has warned.The National Institute of Economic and Social Research (Niesr) said that even under a best-case scenario the UK economy would grow at a much slower pace this year and next because of the Middle East conflict.With households facing a rise in energy costs linked to the Iran war, the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, has said that “nothing is off the table” as the government considers options to provide a targeted and temporary support package.However, Britain’s oldest independent economic research institute said the government faced a multibillion-pound hole in the public finances amid a worsening inflation shock that would make it harder for Reeves to respond.David Aikman, the Niesr director, said: “This is a serious blow to the government’s mission to get the UK economy growing again

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How the UAE’s decision to leave Opec could recast the Middle East

The United Arab Emirates’ decision to walk out of Opec is a political as much as business decision, and will reignite the simmering rows between the UAE and Saudi Arabia – which had been covered up by their shared anger with Iran over its attacks on the Gulf states since the start of the US-Israel war on Tehran.In the short term, leaving the oil producing cartel it joined in 1967 gives the UAE the freedom to respond quickly to a long-term prospect of constrained supplies, and to maximise profit. But it is a decision the UAE has considered before, as UAE and Saudi tensions over production quotas have been longstanding.But the timing and unilateral nature of the UAE decision shows how other intra-Gulf disputes over how to respond to the Iran war could recast the Middle East.The defection is, of course, a blow to Saudi Arabia’s prestige, since it positions the UAE as the Gulf state closest to Donald Trump, a long-term critic of Opec, and weakens the Saudis’ ability to manage the price of oil

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Another shadow banking hit – but otherwise, Barclays looks fine

The Barclays boss CS Venkatakrishnan, having seen the bank hit in the space of six months by two high-profile blow-ups in the world of shadow banking, is pledging to take more care. “We are constraining lending to certain structured finance counterparties who operate more vulnerable business models and cannot convince us of the quality and independence of their financial controls,” he said.There’s an obvious response to that vow of greater vigilance: what were you doing previously? Wouldn’t it have been a good idea in the first place not to lend to high-risk outfits with unconvincing financial controls – for example, those with large mortgage exposures but small audit firms? There was, in other words, a sense in the chief executive’s comments of stable doors being shut rather too late.But here’s the other point about Barclays’ twin embarrassments: they are significant but not enormous in the grand scheme. The impairment charge in Tuesday’s first-quarter numbers for Market Financial Solutions (MFS), which collapsed in February amid allegations of fraud, was £228m

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US gas prices surge to highest level in four years, averaging $4.18 a gallon

US gas prices rose to their highest level in four years on Thursday, reaching an average $4.18 a gallon at the pump as US-Israeli peace talks with Iran remain at a standstill.The last time average US gas prices breached $4.15 a gallon was in April 2022, when oil prices soared shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine. Average gas prices are now $1 higher than just a year ago, when they were closer to $3

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UAE quits Opec in win for Trump as oil cartel weakened

The United Arab Emirates has quit the Opec oil cartel after 60 years of membership, in a heavy blow to the group and its de facto leader, Saudi Arabia, as global energy markets contend with the biggest supply crisis in history.The shock loss of the UAE, Opec’s third-largest oil producer, is expected to weaken the group, which for decades has worked together to use its collective oil production to influence global oil market prices.The UAE’s exit from Opec represents a win for Donald Trump, who has previously accused the organisation of “ripping off the rest of the world” by artificially inflating oil prices by holding back production.Last week Trump confirmed that the US had discussed extending a financial lifeline to the UAE under which the two countries’ central banks could agree to exchange equivalent amounts of each other’s currency should the Middle East crisis deepen.The UAE on Tuesday set out a plan to sever its ties to the cartel within days as the market enters the ninth week of the US-Israeli war on Iran – which has blocked a fifth of the world’s seaborne oil from flowing from Gulf producers through the strait of Hormuz, causing record oil market volatility

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Singing activists disrupt NatWest meeting over ‘climate backtracking’

The chair of NatWest was forced to defend the bank against accusations of “climate backtracking” at a chaotic annual shareholder meeting, which was temporarily suspended owing to singing protesters.Not long after the meeting began in Edinburgh, it was adjourned for about half an hour after a protester interrupted Rick Haythornthwaite’s opening speech.Protesters in the audience, wearing black T-shirts emblazoned with “No more big oil” and “No bombs”, then sang a song to the tune of Frère Jacques, with a chorus of “No more bombs, no more oil”. They appear to represent the campaign group Extinction Rebellion’s XR Money Rebellion, which has targeted NatWest and other banks for financing fossil fuel projects.When the meeting resumed, it was dominated by questions from shareholders about NatWest’s climate policies, as well as staff wages compared with bumper executive pay packets