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Farage feuds won’t faze Reform followers | Letters
Your editorial (10 March) makes the same old mistake with the assumption that Nigel Farage is damaging the Reform brand. The party’s followers don’t care, don’t read critical analysis of his behaviour, won’t even know about the spat with Rupert Lowe and aren’t swayed by unseemly behaviour or arguing in public. It’s all perfectly acceptable, even normal, for them. They just need to know someone backs their argument that foreigners are the reason for their woes. Their undying passion for the Farage cause will only get stronger
UK politics: UK expels Russian diplomat and says Moscow is seeking closure of British embassy in city – as it happened
Britain said it would revoke accreditation for a Russian diplomat in response to a similar move by Russia earlier this week against British diplomats.A government spokesperson said in a statement that Russia’s accusations made against the British diplomats were “entirely false” and “fabricated in order to justify their increasing harassment of UK diplomats”.A Foreign Office spokesperson said:During the past twelve months, Russia has pursued an increasingly aggressive and coordinated campaign of harassment against British diplomats, pumping out malicious and completely baseless accusations about their work.Russia’s expulsion this week of a British diplomat and diplomatic spouse is yet another escalation.The accusations made against these individuals are entirely false, fabricated in order to justify their increasing harassment of UK diplomats
Peers working for City firms dominate Lords panel scrutinising financial sector
Peers working for big City firms including Santander, Secure Trust Bank and the London Stock Exchange are sitting on a new Lords committee scrutinising regulation of the financial services industry, the Guardian has found.The House of Lords financial services regulation committee was formed in January last year and 10 of its 13 members have declared current or recent interests in the sector.From the start, it has been highly critical of the City regulator, the Financial Conduct Authority, despite a number of the committee members being paid by companies that are overseen by the watchdog.Established to consider the regulation of financial services in the post-Brexit era, in common with other Lords committees it has the power to investigate and ultimately influence laws and public policy by holding inquiries and summoning ministers and officials to give evidence.Its chair, Michael Forsyth, was until May last year paid a salary of £230,000 a year as chair of the UK retail bank Secure Trust Bank, which is regulated by the FCA and has 1 million customers
Nicola Sturgeon to stand down as MSP next year
Scotland’s former first minister Nicola Sturgeon has announced she is standing down as an MSP.Sturgeon, who led the Scottish National party from 2014 until her shock resignation in 2023, said she would not seek re-election in 2026, telling her Glasgow Southside constituency party members: “I have known in my heart for a while that the time is right for me to embrace different opportunities in a new chapter of my life.”In the letter, which she also posted on social media, Sturgeon – who has been a member of the Scottish parliament since its inception in 1999 and the first woman to lead her party and country – said she hoped the policies she had implemented as first minister – including the Scottish child payment, expanded early years education, investment in housing and new hospitals – had benefited people across Scotland.Sturgeon, who remains popular among many sections of the SNP, also addressed party members across the country in her social media post, telling them: “I may be leaving parliament, but I will be by your side every step of the way as we complete our journey to independence.”She added that “given the challenges facing the world today, it is more important than ever that progressive voices continue to speak up for fairness, equality and dignity for all”
As Starmer prepares to cut the number of quangos, what are they and what do they do?
Keir Starmer will this week set out plans to cut some quangos to reduce red tape and a bloated state, helping with economic growth. Politicians have embarked on similar programmes before. This is what quangos are and what they do:A quango is a quasi-autonomous non-governmental organisation, although the government calls them “arm’s length bodies” or ALBs. They oversee regulations for the government and operate independently from politicians.Everything from the running of the NHS to issuing driving licences, maintaining railways and monitoring food standards is carried out by ALBs
Plan to cut thousands of civil service jobs in radical government shake-up
A radical blueprint for reforming the state is being drawn up by government officials, including a crackdown on quangos and thousands more civil service job cuts, the Guardian understands.Proposals to restructure NHS England, with entire teams axed to save money and avoid duplication, could be replicated across a range of arm’s length bodies that spend about £353bn of public money.Separately, No 10 and the Treasury are understood to be taking a close interest in proposals drawn up by Labour Together, a thinktank with close links to the government, to reshape the state under plans dubbed “project chainsaw”.The project’s nickname is a reference to Elon Musk’s stunt wielding a chainsaw to symbolise controversial government cuts for Donald Trump’s administration.Keir Starmer told his cabinet at their weekly meeting on Tuesday that they should stop “outsourcing” decisions to regulators and quangos and take more responsibility for their own departments
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