
Hermer admits Nazi comments were ‘clumsy'
As if the Attorney General hadn't proven his ability for conjuring up negative headlines enough, Lord Hermer took it upon himself on Thursday to compare political threats to leave the ECHR to the Nazis. Speaking to the Royal Institute for International Affairs (RUSI) defence think tank, Hermer earnestly told his audience: 'The claim that international law is fine as far as it goes, but can be put aside when conditions change, is a claim that was made in the early 1930s by 'realist' jurists in Germany.' But today, after a momentous backlash, Hermer has finally apologised for his, er, 'clumsy' language. You can say that again!
Now Hermer's spokesperson has issued a short statement on the Attorney General's comments, noting brusquely that:
He rejects the characterisation of his speech by the Conservatives. He acknowledges though that his choice of words was clumsy and regrets having used this reference.
It's hardly a full-throated apology, eh?
The row-back comes after the Conservatives and Reform UK politicians alike slammed his remarks – with Nigel Farage fuming that the comments were 'disgraceful' while Tory leader Kemi Badenoch's spokesperson noted that 'it was ironic' that Lord Hermer had said he hoped to depolarise the debate and 'simultaneously called everyone he disagreed with Nazis'.
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Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Most Tory voters want to ditch Badenoch and bring back Johnson
Nearly two thirds of Conservative voters would like Boris Johnson to replace Kemi Badenoch as Tory leader, new polling has revealed Some 60 per cent of Conservative supporters at last year's general election said Mr Johnson, the former prime minister, would make a better leader than Mrs Badenoch. Nearly half said they would be more likely to vote for the party at the next general election if she were replaced, the exclusive polling, by Survation for The Telegraph, showed. Of those who voted Conservative at the last election, 45 per cent said a new leader would make them more inclined to do so again, with only eight per cent saying such a change would put them off. Mrs Badenoch's supporters have maintained that another leadership election would not turn the party's fortunes around and could harm its reputation further. At the last election, the Conservatives won 23.7 per cent of the vote, but the latest polls have shown their support dropping as low as 16 per cent. After Mrs Badenoch took over from Rishi Sunak last November, the Conservatives briefly enjoyed a small poll lead over Labour and were in first place on 29 per cent. A haemorrhaging of support to Reform UK since has been blamed for the party's dwindling fortunes. In the last round of local elections, the Tories lost 674 council seats, many of them to Nigel Farage's party. Mr Johnson also polled well among those who supported Reform UK at the general election, with half saying he would make a better leader of the Conservatives than Mrs Badenoch. It comes amid plotting by some party figures to return him to the head of the party. Despite continuing support for Mr Johnson among Tory voters, senior MPs in the party's 121-strong parliamentary cohort said there was no 'appetite' or 'enthusiasm' in the Commons for him to return. His popularity among the public at large is also considerably lower than with Conservatives, with only 33 per cent of all voters saying he would make a better Tory leader. The figures also show that 49 per cent of Tory voters from the last general election were satisfied with Mrs Badenoch's performance, while 19 per cent said they were dissatisfied. She currently has a net negative rating among voters in general, according to Survation's polling, with 31 per cent disapproving of her performance and 27 per cent approving, although a large portion remained undecided. The polling showed that her other perceived rivals for the leadership have had far less cut through with Tory voters than Mr Johnson. Robert Jenrick and James Cleverly, both of whom stood against her in last year's leadership election, are considered a better option now by 27 per cent and 22 per cent respectively. A Conservative Party source said: 'Changing leader again would be the worst possible step in trying to convince voters we're a serious party who understand where we went wrong in the past. 'We all need to be focused on the real goal – kicking out this terrible Labour government that is making everything worse.' Mrs Badenoch has faced a difficult few months as leader of the opposition, with Reform surging and the Conservatives dropping into fourth place behind the Liberal Democrats in some polls. Sir Keir Starmer, the Prime Minister, has described the Conservatives as a 'dead party walking' and declared that Mr Farage would be his main opponent at the next general election.


Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Telegraph
Reform to end gold-plated pensions for council workers
Reform UK has unveiled plans to reduce gold-plated staff pensions at the councils it won from Labour and the Tories at the local elections. Richard Tice, the party's deputy leader, said it would take an axe to final salary schemes, describing them as unaffordable and an 'outrage'. Speaking to The Telegraph, he said Reform-controlled authorities would stop offering such generous terms to new recruits. He added that staff on existing contracts would have to accept lower annual pay rises to balance out the huge cost of funding their retirement. Nigel Farage's party won control of 10 councils across England last month, marking its major electoral breakthrough. It did so on a pledge to find huge savings, promising to end local authority focus on diversity and inclusion schemes and hitting net zero targets. 'Country is going bust' Mr Tice is fronting efforts to free up money that could be reinvested in improving services like bin collections or used to freeze council tax. He has identified wasteful and underperforming pension schemes as an area where Reform councils can save hundreds of millions of pounds. 'Whether people like it or not we should not be employing people on defined benefit contribution schemes,' he told The Telegraph. 'It's an outrage – the public can't afford it. It's absolutely ludicrous, and this is why the country is going bust and it's all got to stop. 'We're going to have to go to war with these people. Our job is to wake people up as to where their money is going and why we're all being ripped off.' Mr Tice said under many gold-plated pension schemes councils were having to contribute up to 30 per cent of their officials' salaries. Such final salary schemes are substantially more generous than those in the private sector. He said that if staff are on such terms 'then candidly that has to be taken into account when you look at people's annual pay rises'. 'You look at the overall cost of employment and if they're not prepared to then a whole load of people are going to have to be made redundant,' he warned. 'Councils are going bust all over the country – the country's going bust, and until we've come along no one dared admit it.' Last year it emerged that a quarter of council tax revenue was now being spent on pension schemes that are 'unjustifiably generous'. It means the average household is now contributing £230 a year to the retirement plans of officials who, on average, earn nearly £40,000 a year. Last year local authorities contributed almost £7 billion to staff pension pots, The Times revealed, making them one of their highest costs. Mr Tice said that, as well as the generous contributions, many councils were also investing in 'woke' pension funds that were underperforming. He said Reform would be examining how much money was being put into net zero funds and whether they were making below average returns. The councils controlled by the party could also save upwards of £200 million a year just by renegotiating the investment fees they are charged, he added. 'I can smell the taxpayer being ripped off,' he said. 'Their council tax is being gobbled up by pension fund contributions because they're overgenerous and they've been badly managed for decades.'

The National
2 hours ago
- The National
'Scotland is not an island of strangers', says Humza Yousaf
Speaking at the Stand Up To Racism 'Stop Reform 2026' summit in The Boardwalk, Glasgow, Yousaf stressed the need to mobilise against growing far-right rhetoric, emboldened by Reform and Keir Starmer's language regarding immigration, whilst highlighting the contributions made to Scotland by migrants over several decades. Yousaf criticised Starmer's language in a speech which drew comparisons to Enoch Powell, saying: "Let me be absolutely clear, Prime Minister: Scotland is not an island of strangers. "We are a nation that is proud of its many cultures, many languages, many threads. That tartan, each colour, each strand is different, but woven together to something strong, something beautiful, that we are proud of in Scotland." READ MORE: Labour have 'given up' on by-election amid SNP-Reform contest, says John Swinney The Glasgow Pollok MSP also spoke at length about the contributions from and importance of migrants in Scotland and the rest of the UK. 'This country could not survive without immigrants. This continent requires immigration if we are to prosper", he said. 'I ask you, in the 1960s, who drove the buses that kept this city moving? Immigrants. Who kept the factories running when there was labour shortages, like my grandfather, who worked in the Singer Sewing Machine factory in Clydebank? 'It's immigrants today, when our loved ones need care, be that in the NHS or social care system — who is there, propping up our vital public services? Immigrants. 'When the crops need picking, the parcels need delivering, children need teaching, who's ready and willing to put in the hard graft? Immigrants.' The SNP MSP went on to 'bust myths' peddled by anti-immigration rhetoric, noting the significant economic contributions made by migrants through taxes and job creation, as well as highlighting failures of the Tory government in replacing social housing lost through Thatcher's Right to Buy scheme. He added: 'Successive UK governments did that through austerity, through awful financial mismanagement, like Trussonomics, through a lack of political courage. 'So let's bust another myth while we're here: migrants aren't taking your jobs. Migrants are creating your jobs.' Yousaf also criticised Nigel Farage's recent attacks on Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar, stating that whilst their political views differ, Sarwar 'loves Scotland infinitely more than Nigel Farage'. Yousaf, Anwar and Foyer were joined by Labour councillor Matt Kerr at the sold-out event (Image: Gordon Terris) Regarding the upcoming Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election, he told The National: 'There has never been a more important moment to stand up against the advance of the far-right. 'Scotland, I am afraid, is not immune to the rise of populism, and next Thursday's by-election in Hamilton will be a key moment, where I hope, the good people of Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse will roundly reject the politics of racial division. 'We need to wake up to the fact that Farage's Reform are gaining support. Those of us who are progressive, and believe in inclusive values, need to organise, mobilise and most importantly articulate an alternative vision to what Farage is offering. 'We need to articulate a vision rooted in hope, that is bold, radical and promises to make the lives of the majority better. 'If we do that, then we can stop the rise of the far-right. If not, well, the alternative does not bear thinking about.' READ MORE: Why the UK media 180 on Gaza is too little, too late Human rights lawyer Aamer Anwar also gave a speech at the summit, where he criticised First Minister John Swinney and Police Scotland's handling of the recent Kneecap controversies, which saw the Irish rap trio axed from the TRNSMT lineup. Anwar said: 'A message also for John Swinney and Police Scotland over Kneecap: mind your own business. 'Don't tell us what we can listen to. You stopped Kneecap, while only days earlier the police protected fascists on our streets. 'You are punishing Kneecap for speaking out against Israel's genocide in Gaza, but when will you stop the arms trade? When will you hold the politicians who armed the genocide accountable?'