
KEVIN MAGUIRE: ‘Brextremists can scream all they like – we're safer close to EU'
BRITISH holidaymakers to Spain, Portugal, France, Greece, Italy and other European Union countries using e-passport gates to dodge Brexit lengthy passport queues is a deal worth having.
So too are cheaper food and drink from scrapping border red tape, better electricity links, British firms bidding for £150billion of defence contracts, student exchanges and, possibly down the line, visas for touring rock bands and other artists plus recognition of professional qualifications.
The valuable prize could tot up to a valuable £25bn, calculate financial analysts Frontier Economics, while the authoritative National Institute for Economic and Social Research warns drop the ball and falling UK exports would cost us nearly £30bn.
Keir Starmer is entitled to feel pleased with himself at the landmark UK-EU summit in London to improve relations between neighbours. The EU and this agreement are more important to our future prosperity than the over-hyped India trade pact or US compromise to ease the pain of loony tune Donald Trump's mutually damaging tariffs.
Most Britons accept Brexit was a disaster and wish we were still in the EU which is why politically Starmer has little to fear and much to gain from Kemi Badenoch and Nigel Farage screaming surrender and sell-out.
The Conservative and Reform UK leaders are old Generals fighting the last war and confirm they are stuck in the past in a country that wants to move on and build bridges with our closest economic, political and military partners.
Trump's unhinged behaviour alone demonstrates why Britain will be more prosperous and safer close to the EU and, I hope, back one day in that family of nations.
Brextremist politicians who denounce the deal are entitled to go to the back of the longest queue they can find at passport control instead of going through quicker with the rest of us.
TO just be on this year's so-called UK Rich List topped by the £35bn Hinduja family, a tycoon or clan owns 18,000 times the wealth of an average Brit.
That's three times a still massive 6,000 times gulf when guesstimates were first published in 1989, according to a Greenwich University study, because inequality soared.
We should rename it the Grotesque List when millions rely on foodbank charity to eat, parents are unable to afford new clothes for kids, homelessness is a national scandal and those with a roof over their head live in fear of bailiffs smashing the door.
Excuse me if I decline to weep for nine fewer billionaires and a drop of 21 since 2022's peak. I'll cheer when all 156 are off because Britain will be a better, fairer and happier land if we shared obscene wealth for the common good.
STARMER and Foreign Secretary David Lammy will be in the firing line if the UK fails to recognise a Palestinian state next month at an international conference convened by France and Saudi Arabia.
The ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in Gaza and charges of genocide plus settler and state violence in an occupied West Bank mean further shilly-shallying is complicity when the most Right-wing reactionary regime in Israel's history pursues its own from the river to the sea drive.
Palestine is recognised as a sovereign nation by 147 countries, about three-quarters of UN members, including most recently Spain, Norway and Ireland. So why not Britain?
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Telegraph
24 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Lord Hermer defended suspected Iraqi bomber
Sir Keir Starmer's law chief represented a suspected Iraqi bomb maker who won more than £33,000 in compensation from the Government. Court documents show that Lord Hermer, the Attorney General, represented Abd Ali Hameed Ali Al-Waheed, who was arrested by British troops after a partly assembled IED (Improvised Explosive Device) and explosives were found at his sister's home in Basra. In the case, Al-Waheed won a total of £33,500 for unlawful detention by the British forces, beating by soldiers and 'inhuman and degrading' treatment after an internal review cleared him of any involvement in the insurgency against the British. It is the latest case highlighted by shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick, who last week published a video claiming Lord Hermer was unfit to be Attorney General because he had spent his life 'defending Britain's enemies.' The Attorney General has previously defended his record by pointing to the 'cab rank' principle, which requires barristers to accept cases within their area of expertise regardless of the client. Allies also maintain that his extensive previous private practice as a barrister does not impinge upon his current role providing independent legal advice to the Government. However, Mr Jenrick said: 'Even Hermer's colleagues acknowledge he is an activist lawyer that made his career acting against the British Government. He is uniquely ill-suited to being Attorney General. 'But Sir Keir Starmer won't sack him because he's cut from the same cloth as Hermer: his loyalty is to the human rights brigade, not the British people.' List of clients The shadow justice secretary has previously criticised Lord Hermer for acting for Gerry Adams, Shamima Begum and Al-Qaeda chief Rangzieb Ahmed, Osama bin Laden's right-hand man. A professional friend of Lord Hermer last week noted how the 'cab rank' principle did not prevent barristers from picking and choosing cases. Al-Waheed was arrested after soldiers raided his sister's house looking for his brother-in-law, Ali Jaleel, who was suspected of involvement in terrorist activities. Ali Jaleel was out, but a partly assembled IED and a large quantity of explosives were found in the house. Al-Waheed claimed he was 'systematically beaten and tortured' by soldiers on his arrest and subjected to multiple forms of inhuman and degrading treatment during his detention, including sleep deprivation and denied sight and hearing by being hooded. Despite an internal review clearing him of involvement, he claims he was held for 33 days unlawfully in breach of Article 5 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). A spokesman for the Attorney General said: 'Over a 30-year career the Attorney General has represented very many people including victims of the Grenfell Tower fire, military veterans killed and injured in service, victims of rape and serious sexual abuse, victims of human trafficking and modern slavery, the Ukrainian Legal Taskforce as well as thousands of victims of environmental disasters. How barristers work 'It is a feature and cornerstone of our legal system that legal professionals operate the cab rank rule when it comes to clients, and barristers do not associate themselves with their clients' opinions. The Code of Conduct for Barristers prohibits them from refusing instructions on the basis of their views of the character, reputation, cause, conduct, guilt or innocence of the client. Some Conservatives have criticised the attacks on Lord Hermer as unfair. Dr Ben Spencer, a shadow minister, said: 'It's absolutely right to question Lord Hermer's judgement based on his decisions in role. But, even the worst of us must have legal representation.' Former attorney general Dominic Grieve said Mr Jenrick's video was a 'disgraceful' attack on the UK's 'principles of justice and freedoms', which relied on a 'level playing field' for individuals' legal representation under the cab rank rule. Lord Hermer has, however, faced a barrage of criticism in recent days after comparing calls by Tory and Reform politicians to leave the ECHR to the rise of Nazism.


Daily Mail
24 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Dawn French is criticised for her 'smug dismissal' of Israeli Hamas victims by woman who lost TWO relatives to terror gunmen
Actress Dawn French has been criticised by a woman who lost two of her relatives to Hamas terrorists after she published a video on social media in which she criticised Israel 's continued war in Gaza. The Vicar of Dibley star, 67, posted to X discussing her thoughts on the 'nuanced' situation, in which she dismissed reasons cited by some Israelis for the continued conflict with a simple 'no'. French appeared to criticise supporters of Israel's actions amid the ongoing war against Hamas in which almost 55,000 Gazans, many of them women and children, have been killed. Now Heidi Bachram, who lost two of her husband's cousin's immediate family after Hamas militants invaded their kibbutz on October 7, has accused French of appearing to 'minimise or dismiss the severity and horror inflicted that terrible day.' It comes as the Israel Defence Forces was again accused of killing people at an aid centre in Gaza on Saturday, and the Israeli government confirmed the body of a hostage taken on October 7 has been recovered. During the 40-second video posted earlier this week, French said: 'Complicated, no, but nuanced. But [the] bottom line is no.' Describing reasons some Israelis give for continuing the war against the backdrop of much of the population being at risk of starvation due to an ongoing aid blockade by the predominantly Jewish nation, the British comedian said: 'Yeah, but you know they did a bad thing to us... and we want that land... and we have history… Those people aren't really even people, are they?' While agreeing that the October 7 attacks were 'a bad thing', French followed each reason with the word 'no', implying Israel should halt its renewed offensive. While the video has received widespread support from those against Israeli actions, Ms Bachram was amongst several prominent figures to rail against her statement and accused her of a 'smug dismissal' of Israeli victims. In an emotional statement on X, Ms Bachram wrote: 'My husband's cousin Tsachi Idan was at home asleep when the terrorists invaded his kibbutz. The family hid in the safe room but there was no lock so he held it shut. 'The terrorists forced, at gunpoint, a local teenager to try to lure them out. When that did not work they fired at head height at the door. 'Tsachi's eldest daughter Ma'ayan was helping her father protect the family. The bullet hit her in the head and she died instantly. 'We know every detail of this horror because Hamas were live streaming and recording. 'They then held the family inside their home for five hours and it became their base of operations while they murdered and kidnapped dozens of civilians on the kibbutz. 'They marched Tsachi to Gaza covered in his child's blood. There he was held hostage for many months until at some point he was killed. His body was returned in February.' She added: 'To describe this so glibly adds to a deep well of pain.' Jewish Actress and playwright Tracy-Ann Oberman also said she was 'saddened' by the post. 'This mocking voice 'bad thing' of October 7 that Dawn (who I revere by the way) appears to be mocking involved the most horrific terrorist attack involving rape, sexual violence, burning alive child, mutilation and the taking of civilian hostages. 'Why would Dawn seem to deny that which has affected so many of us personally in the most painful way possible. 'I can mourn the horrors of the war in Gaza whilst also remembering the horrors of what started it. Is this how most of our industry feels now – Oct 7 was a 'little thing'? NO!' Reacting to those who accused her of diminishing the horrors of October 7, French posted on X and said: 'I do not say 'a little thing' . In NO WAY do I support the atrocities of Oct 7th. 'Of course not. Appalling. Horrific. But starving innocent children is not the answer. NO is the answer to ALL of it Tracy.' It comes as the Hamas-led health ministry said at least 95 Palestinians have been killed over the past 24 hours. Gaza's civil defence agency said Israeli forces have killed at least six people in a shooting incident near a US-backed aid distribution centre in the territory's south. Civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal said that at around 7:00 am (0400 GMT), 'six people were killed and several others wounded by the forces of the Israeli occupation near the Al-Alam roundabout' in southern Gaza's Rafah area. Gazans have massed at Al-Alam almost daily since late May to collect humanitarian aid at a centre about one kilometre (0.6 miles) away, operated by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. Actress and playwright Tracy-Ann Oberman said she was 'saddened' by the post Samir Abu Hadid, who was witnessed the shooting, said thousands of people had gathered near the roundabout. 'As soon as some people tried to advance towards the aid centre, the Israeli occupation forces opened fire from armoured vehicles stationed near the centre, firing into the air and then at civilians,' Abu Hadid said. The Israeli military said it was looking into the incident, the latest deadly fire near the Al-Alam aid point. The GHF began operations in late May as Israel partially eased a more than two-month blockade on the Gaza Strip. The United Nations, which has refused to cooperate with the GHF over neutrality concerns, has warned that Gaza's entire population of more than two million people was at risk of starvation. In the territory's north early Saturday, Bassal said seven people were killed in an Israeli strike that hit a house near Gaza City's Al-Shifa hospital. Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz also said today that the IDF had recovered the body of a Thai hostage taken on October 7. Nattapong Pinta's body was held by a Palestinian militant group called the Mujahedeen Brigades, and was recovered from the area of Rafah in southern Gaza, Katz said. His family in Thailand has been notified. Pinta, an agricultural worker, was abducted from Kibbutz Nir Oz, a small Israeli community near the Gaza border where a quarter of the population was killed or taken hostage during the Hamas attack that triggered the devastating war in Gaza. Israel's military said Pinta had been abducted alive and killed by his captors, who had also killed and taken to Gaza the bodies of two more Israeli-American hostages that were retrieved earlier this week. Israel has been waging a military campaign in Gaza since Hamas' incursion on October 7, 2023, in which 1,200 people were killed and 251 taken hostage. At least 20 of the remaining 55 hostages still held by Hamas are thought to be alive. According to official Hamas figures, at least 54,772 people have been killed in Gaza since the start of the war. The Israeli military issued an evacuation order on Friday for residents of parts of Gaza City ahead of an attack that 'will strike all areas from which rockets are launched'. Israel has recently stepped up its campaign in Gaza in what it says is a renewed push to defeat Hamas amid growing international calls for a negotiated ceasefire.


Telegraph
39 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Thomas Frank ally is leading search for new Tottenham manager
Tottenham Hotspur have cleared the decks for Ange Postecoglou's successor to arrive with a new backroom team by dismissing three of the Australian's staff, but Johan Lange has remained as sporting director to lead the search for a new head coach. Assistant coaches Mile Jedinak, Nick Montgomery and Sérgio Raimundo have followed Postecoglou out of the exit. Senior assistant coach Matt Wells and goalkeeping coach Rob Burch have remained in position, although it remains to be seen whether or not that changes when a new appointment is made. Sources believe that Thomas Frank is interested in taking over from Postecoglou and that he would ideally want to take a number of members of his Brentford backroom staff with him to Spurs. As revealed by Telegraph Sport, Tottenham sacked Postecoglou and chief football officer Scott Munn on Friday, but Lange has not been part of the cull. His position remains unchanged and he is expected to be helped by Fabio Paratici. Paratici has remained a consultant to Spurs and chairman Daniel Levy, and is expected to return to a full-time post at the club this summer once his worldwide football ban is lifted. Spurs understood to be 'carefully assessing' options Frank is considered a leading candidate to succeed Postecoglou, although his exit fee – believed to be in the region of £10 million – may still provide a stumbling block and interest has existed in Fulham manager Marco Silva and his Bournemouth counterpart Andoni Iraola. Tottenham are said to be carefully assessing their options, with Levy aware of the expense involved in hiring Frank, and Lange perfectly positioned to assess his capabilities for the post. Lange and Frank used to share an office when they were coaching together at Danish club Lyngby, and are said to have maintained a good relationship. That could be a boost to Frank, although Lange may also be aware of any of the potential drawbacks in Tottenham replacing Postecoglou with a coach who has never managed in a full European competition and is yet to win a title. As well as presenting their preferred candidate for the head coach role to Levy and the Spurs board, Lange and Paratici are expected to take responsibility for the club's summer transfer window. That may include decisions over the futures of defender Cristian Romero, who is wanted by Atlético Madrid and captain Son Heung-min, who has left some players and staff with the impression he could leave Spurs amid interest from Saudi Arabia. Telegraph Sport reported that Levy is facing the threat of a Tottenham player revolt over the decision to sack Postecoglou and the way in which it was done, and Son has led a number of dressing-room tributes to the Australian. In a message posted on Instagram, Son wrote: 'Gaffer. You've changed the trajectory of this club. You believed in yourself, and us, since day one and never wavered for a second. Even when others did.