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Like Clement Attlee, Keir Starmer must rise to the occasion

Like Clement Attlee, Keir Starmer must rise to the occasion

The Guardian7 days ago
Martin Kettle rightly says Aneurin Bevan is the one politician other than Clement Attlee whom Labour leaders regularly invoke (Critics say Starmer is no Attlee – and they're right. Labour must look to the future, not the past, 31 July). Keir Starmer has drawn on Harold Wilson for inspiration, but more pertinent to Kettle's argument is David Lammy claiming a role model in Ernest Bevin. Made minister of labour in 1940 and foreign secretary in 1945, Ernie Bevin dominated the decade. Bevin sought a continued US military presence in Europe but had no illusions about the 'special relationship'. The 1956 Suez crisis was a calamitous reality check, confirming the White House's prioritising of US self-interest above any presumed obligation to an ally, however close.
Larry Elliott's pessimism over Trump's trade deal with Europe is understandable (This trade deal is the EU's Suez moment – its subservience to Trump is on show for all to see, 31 July), but the EU can take heart from how France responded to the United States torpedoing its joint effort with the UK to regain control of the Suez canal: a renewed commitment to pan-European economic collaboration saw the swift confirmation of a six-nation common market, and a determination that French foreign policy would never again be subject to transatlantic pressure saw the Fourth and then the Fifth Republic develop its own advanced weaponry, both conventional and nuclear. Had Attlee, not Eden, been prime minister in 1956, we can be certain that he would never have sanctioned collusion with France and Israel to invade Egypt, and then repeatedly denied having done so. Attlee's greatest quality wasn't succinctness – it was integrity.Adrian SmithEmeritus professor of modern history, University of Southampton
I do not feel Martin Kettle is entirely fair or correct to say that Clement Attlee, on becoming prime minister, 'pulled Britain out of India as fast as he could'.
Attlee had been closely involved in India for more than 20 years, going back to the Simon commission, which had been established in 1927, specifically to consider the possibility of Indian independence and self-rule. As an MP and a member of the commission, Attlee visited India several times before the war (no mean feat in those days), understood the issues and knew the leaders of the political parties and factions.
He did not underestimate the problems that independence might bring (although certainly not the violence and bloodshed), noting that partition would 'necessarily leave minorities in both states' but emphasising that his Labour government was 'in earnest in seeking to implement the promises made by Britain'.
Eighty years on, another Labour prime minister now faces similar challenges over Palestine. I am sure Keir Starmer, like his distinguished predecessor, will rise to the occasion.Robert EvansFormer chair of the south Asia delegation, European parliament
Martin Kettle's interesting article on Clement Attlee referred to his wife driving him to Buckingham Palace to meet King George VI on his historic 1945 victory over Churchill. Mrs Attlee was apparently a notoriously bad driver. My late father told me Mrs Attlee once collided with his car when driving the prime minister on a foggy night in London. Fortunately, no one was injured.Robin ArnfieldVancouver, Canada
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Hundreds march to Downing Street urging release of Israeli hostages
Hundreds march to Downing Street urging release of Israeli hostages

The Independent

time24 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Hundreds march to Downing Street urging release of Israeli hostages

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Total number of Palestine Action support arrests in London rises to 522
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BreakingNews.ie

time25 minutes ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Total number of Palestine Action support arrests in London rises to 522

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‘I've been in the gun trade for 40 years. I fear Labour's crackdown will destroy it'
‘I've been in the gun trade for 40 years. I fear Labour's crackdown will destroy it'

Telegraph

time25 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

‘I've been in the gun trade for 40 years. I fear Labour's crackdown will destroy it'

Simon Rheinhold, one of shooting's most respected figures and Head of Operations for Holts, the country's leading specialist gun auctioneers, believes the Government has wholly misunderstood the issue. This new legislation, he says, will create greater challenges and costs for police, rather than reducing them. 'Firearms licensing is about two things: public safety and providing a service to individuals who wish to own guns,' he says. 'If you place shotguns under Section 1 firearms, you are doing neither of those two things well. All such a measure will do is increase the cost and burden [on police] and thereby reduce public safety. Neither the police, nor the gun-owning public, are adverse to change. They just don't need these changes.' Many members of the shooting community agree that it is not licensed gun owners, but the creaking administrative system of firearms licensing that puts the public at potential risk. Shotgun certificates are still made from paper and their issue relies on manual input by FEOs in the applicant's own local police force. Each of the 43 police constabularies interprets the law slightly differently, as their Chief Constable sees it. Individual forces are also responsible for the time consuming, and therefore costly, administration, compliance and enforcement of gun ownership in their area. Seddon believes the Government's additional changes to licensing will 'more than double the workload of FEOs who are already experiencing backlogs in applications and renewals, in some cases for up to three years.' Tim Bonner, CEO of the Countryside Alliance adds: 'Firearms licensing would be significantly improved if its administration was removed from the hands of the police completely and instead run by a centralised body, along the efficient lines of the DVLA.' While the Government claims the new legislation will better protect the public and save police up to £103 million a year, experts within the UK gun trade insist the reforms will fail to make any cost savings or improve public safety. Instead, they say that the moves will decimate an industry worth more than £3 billion annually to the economy and place rare wildlife under greater threat. Conservation and wildlife will suffer the most BASC has calculated that the shooting community carries out £500 million worth of conservation work each year. Much of this involves the use of shotguns to control pest species such as carrion crows, grey squirrels and foxes. The importance of lethal predator control was proven in two recent landmark studies by the Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust (GWCT), which highlight that if red-listed species, such as the curlew, golden plover and grey partridge are to be saved, the use of shotguns and rifles in predator control is essential. Dr Alastair Leake, Director of Policy at the GWCT says: 'The free service provided by amateur keepers and pest controllers is invaluable to wildlife, and saves the Treasury millions per annum. The RSPB recently calculated that professional predator controllers cost them an average of £180 per hour.' With the ONS reporting a record 6,365 agriculture, forestry and fishing businesses closing since Sir Keir Starmer took office, it is understandable that the shooting sector feels it is just the next rural sector in line to fall into Labour's seemingly vindictive sights. As Harris points out, this will have wider implications than solely ruining his beloved gun trade. 'If you destroy shooting, you remove all of the conservation that comes with it. It is our wildlife that will suffer the most.'

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