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A good deal struck for the NHS | Brief letters

about 17 hours ago
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You report (7 November) that Barts Health trust’s takeover of a fully equipped, state-of-the-art private hospital is “thought to be the first time the NHS has inherited ready-to-use health facilities in this way”.However, in 2002, for £37.5m, the Scottish executive bought a large private hospital in Clydebank, built in 1994 at a cost of £180m by a US healthcare firm, for the NHS.Now the Golden Jubilee University National hospital, it delivers 57,500 procedures a year.Not a bad bargain, I’d say.

Adam RennieEdinburgh Polly Toynbee provides an excellent background to recent events in one of Britain’s foremost national treasures (If you care about the BBC, stand up and defend it: this could be the beginning of the end, 10 November).The coincidence of the huge success of The Celebrity Traitors happening almost simultaneously with the real-life situation being played out in the BBC boardroom is nothing short of tragic.Gerry DevineIckenham, London David Edwards Hulme (Letters, 7 November) wants us to spare a thought for the residents of Epstein Road in Thamesmead, London, but they can always think of Brian Epstein, who gave us the Beatles.Sue LeylandHunmanby, North Yorkshire At the risk of sounding “smug” (Letters, 9 November), my first letter to the Guardian was published over 47 years ago, on 2 August 1978 (Letters, 10 November).Harvey Sanders London Most Guardian letter writers – cool or smug – go unpublished.

Carol WalkerSheffield Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section,
politicsSee all
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Briefing war spotlights relationships between three of Labour’s most senior figures

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

about 16 hours ago
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Keir Starmer expresses ‘sincere regret’ over appointment of Labour donor to football watchdog

Keir Starmer has said he made a mistake in rubber-stamping the appointment of the first head of the new football regulator given both his own connections to football and the fact the successful candidate had donated money to him in the past.Starmer expressed “sincere regret” to Laurie Magnus, his independent adviser on ministerial standards, regarding the appointment of David Kogan. It followed an apology to the prime minister by Lisa Nandy, the culture secretary, who had also received a donation from Kogan.In a letter to Magnus published by Downing Street on Wednesday, Starmer said the decision to appoint Kogan – a media executive whose career has included negotiating TV rights deals for the Premier League and the English Football League – as chair of the independent football regulator was, under law, a decision for Nandy.Given his interest in football, and the hospitality he has received from football clubs and the Football Association, Starmer wrote, he agreed with Magnus in autumn last year to recuse himself from decisions relating to the new regulator, saying he had abided by this

about 16 hours ago
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Will Nigel Farage embrace Europe, following Giorgia Meloni’s lead? | Letter

I am sure Nigel Farage will be delighted at the comparison with Giorgia Meloni, who moved from far-right Mussolini-heritage politics to becoming prime minister of Italy (Can Nigel Farage emulate success enjoyed by Italy’s far-right Giorgia Meloni? 9 November).The way she did this was to snuggle up to Mario Draghi, Italy’s and the European Union’s No 1 banker, who coached her in lines to take. So she ditched her hostility to the EU and support for dropping the euro to return to the lira. She found fault with Vladimir Putin. She sought collaborative solutions with other European leaders to the arrivals of boat people

about 17 hours ago
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No 10 says Starmer has confidence in Morgan McSweeney after PM condemns attacks on cabinet members – as it happened

At the post-PMQs lobby briefing the PM’s press secretary said that Keir Starmer does have confidence in Morgan McSweeney, his chief of staff.The press secretary also said that Starmer was not contemplating standing down. She said:He has always been very clear that he will continue to serve as prime minister at the next election, that this is a project which is about a decade of national renewal, because that’s what it takes to turn the country around after 14 years of failure from the Tories.She also said Starmer valued the views of Labour MPs.Our Labour MPs are fantastic champions of the work that the government is doing to deliver for the British people

about 18 hours ago
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British Medical Association ‘threat to future of NHS’, says Streeting ahead of doctors’ strike

The British Medical Association is acting like a cartel and its “antics” are endangering the NHS’s future, the health secretary has said before the latest doctors’ strike begins on Friday.Wes Streeting launched his most strongly worded attack yet on the doctors’ union, coming close to accusing resident doctors in England of being greedy in their pay demands.He told the BMA to “get real”, made clear that ministers would not be “held to ransom” and claimed the association wanted other workers to pay higher taxes to give doctors higher salaries but lobbied against medics being taxed more themselves.His pointed comments received loud applause from an audience of NHS leaders, who are bracing themselves for the five-day strike by resident – formerly junior – doctors. It will be their 13th since they began a campaign for “full pay restoration” in March 2023

about 18 hours ago
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Keir Starmer and his team mount a leadership challenge … to himself | John Crace

Sometimes what you see is what you get. Usually in Westminster things happen for a reason. The logic may not be obvious but if you use your imagination you can come up with some logic for someone doing something that appears to be batshit crazy. But just occasionally, you reach a singularity on the space-time continuum where the laws of physics break down and nothing makes sense. A state of Platonic batshitness

about 19 hours ago
foodSee all
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Jelly’s back! Here are three worth making – and three that should wobble off to the bin

1 day 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