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Badenoch warns Tory MPs about people trying to ‘undermine party from within’

1 day ago
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Robert Jenrick’s defection does not mean the Conservatives are moving towards the centre ground, Kemi Badenoch has told her MPs in a letter that warned about people seeking to “undermine the party from within”.In a lengthy message to the MPs, seen by the Guardian, Badenoch said the party must avoid “psychodrama”, “intrigue” and damaging splits, saying a small number of Tory staffers were briefing against the party while claiming to be Conservative sources.“I ask everyone to satisfy themselves that their staff are acting in line with our strategy and values,” she wrote.“Undermining the party from within, whether by MPs or by staff, is unacceptable.”Badenoch was due to meet groups of MPs on Monday and speak to the entire parliamentary party on Wednesday, in the wake of three defections in a week, two involving sitting MPs.

After Nadhim Zahawi, the former MP and cabinet minister, defected to Reform a week ago, on Thursday Jenrick, who was shadow justice secretary, also joined Reform when Badenoch sacked him for having secret talks with Nigel Farage.On Sunday, another sitting MP, Andrew Rosindell, quit for Reform, citing worries about the deal to hand sovereignty of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius as his main reason.Calling the defections a “minor setback, not a defining moment”, Badenoch insisted they did not mean a shift towards more centrist Tory policies.“Some of our former colleagues opining on social media seem to have taken these defections as a signal that the party is shifting (or should) ideologically away from the right.This is a serious misreading of the situation,” she said.

“These defections are not about policy differences or ideology; they are about character.We are THE party of the right and must remain so.”Badenoch was again scathing about Jenrick’s decision to stay as a Tory MP and shadow minister for months while he was secretly in talks with Farage.“Robert had resolved to leave some time ago, though he continued to attend meetings, sit around the table, and present himself as part of a collective effort,” she wrote.“Trust and teamwork are not optional in a serious political party that is looking to get into government.

While I am sad at the outcome and though it was necessary to have spent the last few days dealing with the immediate aftermath, it is now time to move on.”Rosindell’s stated reasons for leaving – that Badenoch’s Tories had not sufficiently opposed the Chagos plan – “do not stand up to scrutiny”, she said, adding: “We all know he had his difficulties.”The acquisition of such MPs, she predicted, would bring trouble for Farage.“Reform now has more internal contradiction and ideological incoherence.They are not a centre-right party.

They are a populist party with one or two rightwing ideas overshadowed by a desire for big state solutions we simply cannot afford.“Taking on more defectors with similarly incoherent outlooks will create problems for them soon enough.We cannot be distracted by this.”While polling for the Conservatives remains largely abysmal, with national ratings struggling to reach even 20%, Badenoch is seen in the party as having rallied in recent months, and colleagues praised her decisiveness in sacking Jenrick and stripping him of the party whip.Plotting would not be tolerated, she told her MPs: “Differences of opinion are part of a healthy party.

But there is a clear line between disagreement and trying to damage the party from within.“Those who cannot be part of a Conservative party that is changing in this way are free to make other choices.Those who want to undermine or destroy the party will be dealt with firmly and fairly.”
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From 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple to A$AP Rocky: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

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Jimmy Kimmel on the midterms: ‘We can’t have an election soon enough’

Late-night hosts covered alarming new comments by Donald Trump as well as his outburst at a heckler in Michigan.On Jimmy Kimmel Live! the host said that in the first two weeks of 2026, “all hell has broken loose” and “if this was Jenga, there’d be blocks of wood all over the house.”He spoke about Trump threatening to invoke the Insurrection Act as a result of his ICE officers causing chaos in Minneapolis. Kimmel joked that “he hasn’t been able to get an insurrection for years”.The host said that instead of trying to de-escalate the situation, he is doing the opposite and that “he turns the temperature up on everything but his wife

4 days ago
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Civilised but casual, often hilarious, Adelaide writers’ week is everything a festival should be – except this year | Tory Shepherd

The sun almost always shines on Adelaide writers’ week, held on Kaurna land each year at the tail end of summer.For those who start looking forward to it as soon as soon as the Christmas tree is packed away (or earlier, frankly) there’s a sense of loss, of betrayal, at the omnishambles that has led to its cancellation this year.We’re bereft, and angry – not least because some of the most vocal critics seem to have no idea what writers’ week actually is.During Adelaide’s Mad March, the city’s parklands are home to the festival fringe’s sprawling performance spaces, bars and restaurants. On a Sunday you might leave behind the carnival chaos of the Garden of Unearthly Delights

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The Chilean film-maker’s psychedelic work earned him the title ‘king of the midnight movie’, and a fan in John Lennon. Now the 96-year-old is ready for the end – but first there is more living to doThe Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.There is an apocryphal story of an ageing Orson Welles introducing himself to the guests at a half-empty town hall

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Call this social cohesion? The war of words that laid waste to the 2026 Adelaide writers’ festival

How a boardroom flare-up sparked an international boycott – and a looming defamation battleIt began as a quiet programming dispute in the genteel city of churches.But by Wednesday morning, a frantic, six-day war of words had culminated in the end of the 2026 Adelaide writers’ week and total institutional collapse.What started with the discreet exit of a business titan and arts board veteran spiralled into boardroom carnage last weekend, with mass resignations, lawyers’ letters of demands and allegations of racism and hypocrisy flung by all sides.By the time the writers’ week director, Louise Adler, walked, the boycott of writers, commentators and academics had gone global and the state’s premier cultural event had become a hollowed-out shell.The cancellation of AWW may only be the opening act

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Seth Meyers on ICE: ‘An army of out-of-shape uncles’

Late-night hosts talked cratering public opinion on the Trump administration’s deployment of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in US communities and the president’s apparent preference for whole milk.Seth Meyers opened Wednesday’s Late Night with a reminder to viewers about how Trump “sold his mass deportation program to voters during the campaign”.That would be by declaring some version of “We are going to start with violent criminals” again and again.“If you say you’re going to get violent criminals off the streets, of course people are going to be into that. But that was a lie,” Meyers noted

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