
Nigel Farage calls for cuts to Kent's school transport spending
The party took control of Kent County Council on 2 May, wiping out the Conservative majority after nearly 30 years.Reform UK's Doge was launched in Maidstone in June, designed to identify areas where councils can save money.The party would not be drawn on how much Kent would be looking to save or which budgets, though Linden Kemkaran, council leader, told the BBC it would be "in the millions".She said: "I've always said from day one I would ask awkward questions."Cutting the budget for home to school transport was a subject the party was keen to talk about.Currently the council spends £98m per year on school transport, according to Reform UK. Children are eligible for that if they are over eight years old and living more than three miles (4.8km) from school, if they have special educational needs or are a family on a low income.Farage said: "If you've got two kids living next door to each other getting separate taxis that is crazy."To have crept to a position where school transport is costing taxpayers almost £100m per year is unacceptable."He did say there would be exceptions for children with special educational needs.The authority has its first full meeting on Thursday and it is expected to announce the findings of its audit.
The visit comes after news that James McMurdock, Reform UK MP for South Basildon and East Thurrock in Essex, resigned the party whip amid allegations that he took out government loans during the Covid-19 pandemic for businesses with no employees.Farage was keen to distance himself from the absence of candidate vetting processes for the 2024 general election, and said he "can't apologise" for it.He said: "I came in, I inherited this situation where hundreds of candidates who stood in the last general election had not gone through a vetting process."The Reform UK leader did not answer when asked whether the allegations faced by McMurdock were an embarrassment for his party."Let's find out the truth, I know as much about this right now as you do," he said.Additional reporting by PA Media.
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The Independent
28 minutes ago
- The Independent
Diane Abbott: Labour ‘wants me out' after second suspension
Diane Abbott has been suspended from the Labour Party for a second time after repeating comments about racism for which she had previously apologised. The Hackney North and Stoke Newington MP said the Labour leadership 'wants me out' and that her comments in a BBC interview released this week were 'factually correct'. It comes a day after Sir Keir Starmer stripped the whip from four Labour MPs for persistent breaches of discipline. Ms Abbott, the longest-serving female MP in the Commons, lost the whip and had a lengthy stint sitting as an independent after she suggested in 2023 that Jewish, Irish and Traveller people experience prejudice, but not racism. She apologised for those remarks at the time and was eventually readmitted to the party just in time to stand as a Labour candidate in the 2024 general election. But in a BBC interview released this week, she said she did not regret the incident. 'Diane Abbott has been administratively suspended from the Labour Party, pending an investigation. We cannot comment further while this investigation is ongoing,' a Labour spokesperson said. Ms Abbott posted a clip of her BBC interview after news of her suspension emerged. She did not respond to a request for comment, but gave a statement to BBC Newsnight. 'It is obvious this Labour leadership wants me out. 'My comments in the interview with James Naughtie were factually correct, as any fair-minded person would accept,' she said. The original comments in 2023 were in a letter to The Observer newspaper, and she withdrew the remarks the same day and apologised 'for any anguish caused'. In the interview with BBC Radio 4's Reflections programme, she was asked whether she looked back on the incident with regret. 'No, not at all,' she said. 'Clearly, there must be a difference between racism which is about colour and other types of racism, because you can see a Traveller or a Jewish person walking down the street, you don't know. 'You don't know unless you stop to speak to them or you're in a meeting with them. 'But if you see a black person walking down the street, you see straight away that they're black. There are different types of racism.' She added: 'I just think that it's silly to try and claim that racism which is about skin colour is the same as other types of racism.' Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner was asked if she was disappointed by the comments. 'I was. There's no place for antisemitism in the Labour Party, and obviously the Labour Party has processes for that,' she told The Guardian newspaper. 'Diane had reflected on how she'd put that article together, and said that 'was not supposed to be the version', and now to double down and say 'Well, actually I didn't mean that. I actually meant what I originally said', I think is a real challenge.' Ms Abbott entered Parliament in 1987 and holds the honorary title of Mother of the House. Her suspension comes in the same week that Sir Keir carried out a purge of troublesome backbenchers in a bid to assert authority over the party. Rachael Maskell, who spearheaded plans to halt the Government's welfare reforms, had the whip suspended alongside Neil Duncan-Jordan, Brian Leishman and Chris Hinchliff. Party sources said the decision to suspend the whip was taken as a result of persistent breaches of discipline rather than a single rebellion.


The Independent
28 minutes ago
- The Independent
Ten more years of injustice: Figures lay bare scale of IPP scandal
It will take a decade to free 2,544 prisoners trapped on 'inhumane' indefinite jail terms, damning new figures suggest, as campaigners warn the government 'must go further and faster' to end the scandal. The number of Imprisonment for Public Protection (IPP) prisoners being released for the first time has hit an all-time low, according to the Ministry of Justice data, with just 172 freed for the first time last year. At current rates, the overall population is decreasing by less than 10 per cent a year – despite some prisoners having served up to 22 times longer than their original sentence. This excludes a further 233 people on IPP sentences who are being held in secure hospitals after their mental health has deteriorated in prison. The figures, released on Thursday in an annual report, lay bare the toxic legacy of the open-ended jail terms as pressure mounts on the government to take up fresh proposals to help those languishing without a release date. The jail term – described as 'psychological torture' by the UN – was outlawed in 2012, but not retrospectively, leaving those already jailed incarcerated indefinitely. Victims of the scandal, whose tragic cases have been highlighted by The Independent, include: Leroy Douglas, who has served almost 20 years for robbing a mobile phone; Thomas White, 42, who set himself alight in his cell and has served 13 years for stealing a phone; and Abdullahi Suleman, 41, who is still inside 19 years after he was jailed for a laptop robbery. At least 94 prisoners have taken their own lives in custody after losing hope of ever getting out. A further 37 self-inflicted deaths have taken place in the community under strict licence conditions which leave offenders in fear of being hauled back to prison indefinitely for minor breaches. Successive governments have refused justice committee recommendations to resentence IPP prisoners, claiming it will lead to dangerous prisoners being released without supervision. However an expert panel, convened by the Howard League for Penal Reform and former top judge Lord John Thomas, last month urged the government to end the injustice by giving prisoners a release date at their next review by the Parole Board within a two-year window. Other measures being considered by ministers include reducing numbers recalled to prison and providing a package of mental health support for IPP prisoners on release. The Howard League's director of campaigns, Andrew Neilson, said the data in the annual report 'underlines how much further and faster ministers will have to go to end a scandal that leaves thousands of people still in prison without an end date in sight'. "The government must provide hope for those still serving this unjust sentence, and the best way to do this would be to accept the carefully considered proposals put forward by the working group chaired by Lord Thomas,' he added. Campaigner Shirley Debono, who co-founded IPP Committee in Action, told The Independent: 'It's a travesty. This has been devastating for families. 'It's going to take a decade to clear the backlog of IPPs. In that time people are going to die and family members are going to die.' She claims the government's IPP Action Plan, designed to help support prisoners to progress towards release by the Parole Board, is only working to keep prisoners in jail for longer as her son Shaun Lloyd languishes in prison. Mr Lloyd, who was handed a two and a half year IPP sentence in 2005 after stealing a mobile phone, has served a total of 14 years after being recalled four times. He has been held for 17 months on his latest recall, despite facing no further police action, and told he must complete a five-month course before the Parole Board will consider him for release. The latest figures show prisoners serve a further 25 months on average before they are re-released, even if they are not convicted of a further offence. A spokesperson for The United Group for Reform of IPP (UNGRIPP) said the latest report shows the government's plan 'misses the mark in the urgency that is needed to put an end to this 20 year long injustice'. 'By sticking with this approach the government are committing themselves to a slow change scenario,' they added. 'UNGRIPP do not believe that this or any action plan can fix the IPP sentence, the only true way to fix it is through parliamentary policy and the politicians know this but are choosing to ignore it.' Last week former justice secretary Alex Chalk said the jail terms are 'overbearing' and 'unfair' as he urged his successor Shabana Mahmood to look carefully at the Howard League's proposals to end the historic wrong. Prisons minister James Timpson admitted there is more work to do to help IPP prisoners. "It is absolutely right that the IPP sentence was abolished,' he added. "As this report shows, we have significantly improved support for these offenders, with greater access to rehabilitation and mental health support. 'There is more work to do as we reduce the number of IPP offenders in custody, but will only do so in a way that protects the public.'


Daily Mail
29 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
It's not working! Now jobless rate hits four-year high under Labour
Unemployment has surged to a four-year high as Labour's 'triple whammy' of minimum wage hikes, tax rises and workers' rights rules hit employers. Joblessness rose to 4.7 per cent in the three months to May, the highest since June 2021, according to the Office for National Statistics. The number of workers on UK payrolls has fallen for five months in a row, and sank by 41,000 in June alone, the biggest monthly fall since Covid. Overall, the total has dropped by 178,000 since Labour came to power while pay growth is now at a three-year low, the ONS also revealed. It said the jobs market 'continues to weaken' and that 'some firms may not be recruiting new workers or replacing workers who have left'. Bosses from Ocado and Frasers yesterday became the latest to warn against imposing further taxes that will inflict more damage. It comes after Chancellor Rachel Reeves launched a £25billion raid on employer national insurance in last autumn's Budget – which took effect in April. Alongside a sharp rise in the minimum wage and plans to impose a raft of new workers' rights, it is making it more expensive to take on staff. Business groups blamed ministers for implementing policies dreamed up by 'misguided wishful thinkers'. 'Today's disturbing figures add to a weight of evidence that if you make it more expensive and riskier to give someone a job, the result will be fewer jobs,' said Tina McKenzie, of the Federation of Small Businesses. And Kallum Pickering, chief economist at broker Peel Hunt, said the jobs bloodbath was 'the consequences of a predictable error', adding: 'With each month, the negative impact of the Government's triple whammy of anti-employment policy measures... becomes clearer and clearer.' The job figures represent another black mark against the Government's record a year after it took office, with recent figures showing the economy is shrinking and warnings that Britain's debt is becoming unsustainable. Yesterday, there were further warnings of worse to come if – as feared – Ms Reeves launches a fresh tax raid on business in her next Budget this autumn as she looks to fill a multi- billion hole in the public finances. Ocado boss Tim Steiner said 'any tax increases will not be favourable to the economy or business'. And Chris Wootton, finance chief of retail group Frasers, warned of 'dark new clouds' over this autumn's Budget. Yesterday's ONS figures sketched out a grim picture of how hard-hit parts of the economy were suffering in Keir Starmer's Britain. Jobs in the hotel and restaurant sector were down by 108,000 over the past year, while tens of thousands more disappeared in retail and manufacturing. Kate Nicholls, of trade association UK Hospitality, said: 'These devastating job losses are a direct consequence of policy decisions at last year's Budget, which have disproportionately hit the hospitality sector.' Dee Corsi, at trade association High Streets UK, said the figures are a 'reminder that the growing cost of doing business has a tangible impact on the prospects of working people'. Among the few winners were public sector-dominated areas such as health and social work, with an increase of 67,000 workers since Labour took power. But Britain's sicknote crisis continues, with 2.8million on long-term leave. Annual wage growth of 5 per cent is the slowest since 2022. And accounting for inflation, real-terms growth was 1.8 per cent – down from 3.3 per cent shortly before Labour came to power. Alex Hall-Chen, at the Institute of Directors (IoD), said the slump in demand for labour is the 'result of a series of policy blows to the case for hiring staff'. IoD research shows more business chiefs plan to cut staff headcount in the next year than increase it, she said, adding: 'This situation is unlikely to improve any time soon.'