
Shabana Mahmood's star is rising
The Justice Secretary was bequeathed a prison system close to collapse – having operated at 99 per cent capacity since the start of 2023 – by Rishi Sunak (as an independent review confirmed last week). This left her with one unpalatable move when she entered government: the early release of thousands of prisoners who had served 40 per cent of their sentence. Though Mahmood, the UK's most senior Muslim MP, blamed the Tories' 'guilty men', she could easily have become a politically toxic figure, typecast by Labour's opponents and the media as 'soft on crime'.
Instead, by turning a crisis into an opportunity, she has emerged as one of the government's most effective cabinet ministers. Mahmood knew sentencing reform was unavoidable but has advanced liberal measures with a conservative face, appointing the former Tory justice secretary David Gauke to lead a review and choosing Texas as her model (rather than the Netherlands or the Nordics). Plans to expand chemical castration for sex offenders, which dominated the debate on the day Gauke published his report in May, was an act of astute media management.
Over the weekend, Mahmood again demonstrated her radical streak by announcing that most foreign criminals will now face immediate deportation upon sentencing and be barred from returning. Only terrorists – for security reasons – and those on indeterminate sentences such as murderers will be exempt (the government has already increased deportations by 14 per cent).
The move partly reflects the need for extra prison capacity – foreign criminals account for around 12 per cent of the inmate population – and a sea change in public opinion. 'Where once people wanted to force someone to spend time in our prisons first, now they just want them out,' says a Mahmood aide. Internal polling by Labour – which clearly stated that foreign criminals would not necessarily face imprisonment abroad – found that 80 per cent favour the policy.
But for Mahmood it is also a point of principle. As the child of migrant parents, who came to the UK from rural Kashmir, she has an authentic outrage over foreign criminals. 'To be welcomed into this country, as my parents were, is to assume responsibilities as well as rights,' she wrote in the Sunday Telegraph.
Mahmood, as I reported in my column last week, is one of the cabinet champions of 'contribution', an idea being discussed at the top of government that makes clearer the link between what voters put in and get out. For some, this could mean a more generous system of 'unemployment insurance' or protection from the tax rises looming in Rachel Reeves' Budget. But Mahmood has shown the tougher side of the contributory principle: those who do not live up to their responsibilities will be penalised.
Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe
Obstacles remain: foreign criminals will have the right to appeal against deportation under the European Convention on Human Rights. For this reason, Cooper's review of article 8, which protects the right to a family life and has been blamed for thwarting action, is regarded inside government as pivotal. 'We will discover after that whether domestic law can triumph over international law,' says a Mahmood ally.
For now, the Justice Secretary can draw satisfaction from the praise she is attracting across the spectrum. Michael Gove, one of her predecessors, last week named her the politically sharpest cabinet minister. Charlie Falconer, who held the same role under Tony Blair and criticised Mahmood for her opposition to assisted dying, told the Guardian: 'Shabana has been an absolutely brilliant, reforming lord chancellor in enormously difficult circumstances. She is somebody whose sense of confidence about what she's doing is something the whole government should emulate.'
Yet while some ponder the role Mahmood could play in a future Labour leadership contest, others ask whether she will keep her seat. Zarah Sultana, the putative co-leader of the new left party, is considering standing against her in Birmingham Ladywood (Mahmood's majority is 3,421). 'It would be a big mistake to go for Ladywood where Shabana's roots are deep and Sultana's are non-existent,' warns a Mahmood source.
But whatever her future, we can already say with certainty that no one will remember Shabana Mahmood as a cabinet minister who wasted her time.
This piece first appeared in the Morning Call newsletter; receive it every morning by subscribing on Substack here
[See also: Israel and Benjamin Netanyahu are trapped]
Related

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
2 minutes ago
- The Sun
Labour unveils £100m plan to battle housing crisis by training 40,000 builders by 2029
JOBLESS youngsters need to get off the couch and on to the building site, the Education Secretary says. Bridget Phillipson warned the housing crisis was being made worse by a lack of construction workers. 2 2 And she added that Brits, rather than migrants, must fill the shortage. She will today announce £100million in funding for technical colleges to train 40,000 brickies, roofers and electricians by 2029. Labour's pledge to build 1.5 million homes by the next election hinges on plugging 35,000 vacancies in the sector. Meanwhile, 12.5 per cent of all 16 to 24-year-olds — around one million — are not in education, employment or training. Ms Phillipson welcomed The Sun's Builder Better Britain campaign for 'putting construction on the map' as we bang a drum for the industry. And she added: 'If you're an out-of-work young person or looking for a career change, get up, get skills and get building.' She said training homegrown talent was the best way to build the homes, schools and hospitals Britain is crying out for. The Department for Education last night said the ten new technical excellence colleges would help end the reliance on overseas construction workers. It said: 'Britain cannot and should not rely on foreign labour.' David Hughes, chief executive of the Association of Colleges, said: 'Today's announcement is very positive news for people wanting good jobs, for the construction employers looking for skilled people and for the Government's ambitions to build 1.5 million new homes.'


The Sun
2 minutes ago
- The Sun
Labour slammed for masking true cost of handing Chagos Islands to Mauritius
LABOUR is under fire for masking the true cost of handing the Chagos Islands to Mauritius. Taxpayers will spend £34.7million on a 99-year lease of the archipelago's military base, a freedom of information request reveals. 2 But yesterday Justice minister Alex Davies-Jones said the government does 'not recognise' that figure. She told GB News: 'The Prime Minister has been forthright in saying the true cost of this is £3.4billion.' Defending the deal as vital to national security, she added: 'The US is on board with this agreement to make sure we can maintain the Diego Garcia base for national security.' But Shadow Chancellor Mel Stride slammed the government's assurances on the cost of leasing the base as 'totally and utterly unacceptable'. He said: 'They want to make the numbers look smaller. 'We don't think that's being straight with the British people.' The £34.7billion figure — obtained by the Government Actuary's Department — is the lease's total cost over 99 years. Financial experts estimate it is the equivalent to around £10billion in today's money, once the effects on inflation have been stripped out. But that's still nearly three times the figure given by Sir Keir Starmer. A Government spokesman said: 'The Diego Garcia military base is essential to the security of the UK and our key allies. Starmer signs deal with Mauritius to hand over Chagos Islands 'The average cost is £101million per year, and the net present value of payments is £3.4billion — less than 0.2 per cent of the annual defence budget. 'The costs compare favourably with other international military base agreements.'


Glasgow Times
2 hours ago
- Glasgow Times
Glasgow City Council send £13m of recycling waste to Spain
According to the Daily Record, almost £13 million worth of rubbish has made the journey to be recycled amid a landfill ban coming in across the country. Labour Councillor Paul Carey, who uncovered the figures, told the newspaper: "I am astonished and concerned that this waste is leaving Scotland to go to other countries. The question is: do we have the equipment to recycle this waste here? If not, why not? "We could be creating jobs in Glasgow if we had the infrastructure to recycle our own waste." Glasgow City Council send £13m of recycling waste to Spain (Image: Newsquest) READ MORE: Glasgow to be almost as warm as Ibiza as temperatures soar this week READ MORE: 7 amazing pictures from Spider-Man set as hero hangs off of tank during stunt Councils across Scotland may have to send truckloads of waste to England every day once the landfill ban comes in at the end of this year. The Scottish Government is banning waste from being buried in landfill as part of the bill, and sending it across the border will be a temporary solution. Glasgow council has confirmed that some of its waste is sent to Europe as part of its drive to boost recycling. In a freedom of information response, town hall chiefs said they had not sent any waste directly to landfill since October 2023. Speaking to the newspaper, they added: "Due to the lack of re-processing facilities within the Glasgow City Council boundaries, the majority of the other waste managed by the council is sent out with the city for treatment. "A small quantity of waste may initially be sent to facilities in Glasgow for some pre-treatment, for example, mixed papers, but end destinations will be out with the city." Some of the waste is sent to a contractor in Northern Ireland, including paper, cardboard, and plastic bottles, before it is reprocessed in plants in Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Spain. Other waste, from grey bins, such as plastic and metal containers, is also claimed to end up in the same countries for similar reprocessing. The council confirmed that the total bill for sending and treating waste last year, 2023, came to around £12.8 million. A Glasgow council spokesman told the publication: "Glasgow's aim is to increase recycling performance, divert as much waste from landfill as possible and reduce the carbon impact of the city's waste . There are clear signs of improvement in waste-related carbon emissions, landfill levels and recycling performance. "Annual landfill is now almost 120,000 tonnes lower than it was in 2018 when the city's recycling and renewable energy centre opened. Waste-related carbon emissions have also fallen significantly, down by over 125,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions in the past three years. "Recycling rates are also rising following a range of measures to encourage more household recycling. We are hopeful we will see further improvements in recycling rates as further reforms and substantial investment are implemented. We are expanding the range of materials that all Glasgow householders can recycle and our new material recycling facility at Queenslie will dramatically improve how we sort and separate recyclable waste."