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Starmer calls on Reform to sack Simon Dudley after ‘everyone dies’ Grenfell comments

about 11 hours ago
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Keir Starmer has called on Nigel Farage to sack Reform’s new housing spokesperson after he described the Grenfell Tower fire as a “tragedy” but added that “everyone dies in the end”,Simon Dudley, a former head of Homes England, announced in February that he was joining Reform, as Nigel Farage said he was planning to bring more “experts” onboard to advise the party,However, the new Reform housing spokesperson was embroiled in controversy overnight after he gave an interview to Inside Housing magazine in which he described building safety regulations introduced after the 2017 Grenfell tragedy as “regulation which is not working”,“That was a tragedy,It was a failure,” Dudley was quoted as saying, when asked if the fire was a warning.

“Sadly, you know, everyone dies in the end,It’s just how you go, right?” he added,“Extracting Grenfell from the statistics, actually people dying in house fires is rare,Many, many more people die on the roads driving cars – but we’re not making cars illegal, so why are we stopping houses being built?”The prime minister joined in condemnation of Dudley, describing his comments as shameful, as Grenfell families also criticised them,“Nigel Farage should do the decent thing and sack him,” Starmer said on X.

Grenfell United, ​a bereaved families and survivors group, described Dudley’s comments as insensitive and deeply dehumanising.“Our loved ones did not simply ‘die’.They were failed.They were trapped in their homes, in a building that should have been safe, in a fire that should never have happened.Reducing their deaths to an inevitability strips away the truth: this was preventable,” the group said in a statement.

“To speak about Grenfell in this way is to erase responsibility,It suggests this was just fate, just “how it goes”, rather than the result of years of ignored warnings, poor decisions, and a failure to value the lives of residents, and is deeply offensive and ill informed,Grenfell Next of Kin, another group, said: “The death of our parents, partners, children, siblings, grandparents and grandchildren in the most horrific circumstances was gross negligent manslaughter, NOT fate,”Dudley responded to the outcry on Thursday morning, using a post on X to say: “Grenfell was an utter tragedy and quite rightly prompted a wholesale review and tightening of fire regulations,”“I said it was a tragedy in my interview with Inside Housing and in no shape or form am I belittling that disaster or the huge loss of life.

It must never happen again.I reiterate that, and am sorry if it was not sufficiently clear.”Dudley went on to refer to an announcement by Berkley Group, London’s biggest housebuilder, that it will stop buying up land for development because of what it described as “unprecedented” increases in costs and regulation.“My concern is the introduction of numerous measures that do nothing to protect life and are throttling housebuilding,” he added.His remarks were also criticised by the Fire Brigades Union, whose general secretary, Steve Wright, described them as disgusting and shocking.

“Yet again, Reform has shown just how unfit it is for power with this insult to the families of those who lost their lives at Grenfell,” he said,A Reform UK spokesperson said: “Simon’s comments on Grenfell reflected his broader point that the regulatory pendulum has swung too far in response to the tragedy,As he explained, there is a fine balance between overregulation – which can slow the delivery of new homes – and ensuring that more homes are built safely without too much red tape,”Dudley, a former Conservative supporter who has experience in international banking and held roles at HSBC and other companies, was chair of the Ebbsfleet Development Corporation until July last year, tasked with overseeing the creation of a new town,He had been brought into the Tory party’s treasurers department as recently as October by the party chair, Kevin Hollinrake.

After joining Reform, he said: “For too long, the two main parties have failed to deliver housing for Brits.They’ve pursued a disastrous combination of extreme levels of immigration with a severe lack of new good quality homes.”
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‘After one gig, someone stole my car with my dole money in it’: Morcheeba on how they made The Sea

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Jayson Gillham announces tour with Palestinian-Jordanian musician ahead of MSO court case

When Jayson Gillham took a stand at Melbourne’s Iwaki Auditorium in August 2024, he was told by his supporters he was “ahead of his time”.“Actually, I think I was 10 months late,” the Australian-British pianist says, a year and a half after the furore first hit.It was processing the media reports of genocide in Gaza that shifted something fundamental in Gillham, the realisation that his role as a performer could no longer remain siloed from the world outside the concert hall.“I felt I had to say and do something – respond in a musical way to what I was seeing,” he says. “That was really the moment where I thought, well, something has to change about my career

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Fill that Glasto-shaped hole! The 40 best UK festivals you can still book

Who needs Worthy Farm? From woodland raves and psych freakouts to fell walks and barbecue hoedowns, there’s a festival for everyone this summer. And some of them don’t even require a tentDownload10 to 14 June, Donington, Leicestershire If you needed another reminder of the cultural capital currently wielded by the sounds and styles of the early 2000s, witness nu-metal veterans Limp Bizkit and Linkin Park headlining the UK’s biggest rock festival alongside Guns N’ Roses, who continue to fly the flag for Donington’s Monsters of Rock heritage. Further down the poster you’ll find the really adrenalised stuff: Blood Incantation’s cosmic death metal; Drain’s febrile hardcore; and Die Spitz’s peerlessly cool doom-punk hybrid. Huw BainesIsle of Wight18 to 21 June, Newport Headliner-wise, Isle of Wight offers the perfect arc for a festival weekend. Friday is all about hugging your mates while enjoying emotive, singalong bops with Lewis Capaldi; then on Saturday, with energy levels still high, Calvin Harris brings frenetic, star-studded bangers; while Sunday’s possibly dark-hued comedown is perfectly soundtracked by enduring goth titans the Cure

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Your latest novel, De’Ath Takes a Holiday, is a vampire comedy, a satire of gothic fiction and a revision of Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Why?Well, I love that period of writing, and one of my favourite books is Samuel Butler’s Erewhon, which is a satire of Victorian values. I took a leaf out of his book in wanting to do a satire of how the world got to be the way it was. I’m basically blaming this proto-Dracula figure – the Comte De’Ath – for introducing the rather bloodless, exploitative way the world works. So [in my book] he meets a whole bunch of people throughout history, including Sigmund Freud and Henry Ford, and influences them

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The Guide #236: Is celebrity casting a cynical marketing stunt or does it help to democratise theatre?

Timothée Chalamet might have smirked his way out of an Oscar. Sabrina Carpenter might have been roundly snubbed at the Grammys. But there’s one place both would be welcomed with open arms: the UK theatre scene.It seems we can’t get enough of celebs on stage (acting chops preferable but not mandatory). This week alone, London’s West End features Stranger Things star Sadie Sink, singer Self Esteem and Strictly cutie pie Johannes Radebe

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I thought I’d been coping with my sister’s death – a Taylor Swift song showed me I hadn’t

As I sat in a park during the pandemic, listening to the Evermore album on my headphones, one song finally released the grief that I’d pent up for five yearsWhen the pandemic hit in 2020, it had been five years since my sister, Emily, had died. She had lived with cystic fibrosis her whole life, yet we were a close, tactile family. We laughed, hugged and sang often. When Emily died, relatively suddenly, aged 30 (I was 27), I coped with it as well as anyone could. In fact, I prided myself on how outwardly resilient I seemed: I spoke to a therapist, started a new job

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