Political Headlines – Raab, Corbyn, Williamson and Rees-Mogg
Today’s Political Headlines include Raab’s blame game, Corbyn’s tech giants plan to subsidise the licence fee, Williamson’s crackpot ideas and Rees-Mogg urging the PM to chuck Chequers.
Raab to ask the EU to do more to prepare for no-deal Brexit
The Times reports that Dominic Raab is to use his first major speech as Brexit Secretary to start a ‘blame game’ with the EU. He will accuse the bloc of failing to do enough to keep data and goods moving in the event of a no-deal Brexit. The first batch of UK plans for a no-deal Brexit will be published today, including a commitment to fund EU aid projects carried out by British organisations. The Sun adds that the 25 notes show that UK citizens who work or have worked in the EU may lose access to their pensions, the City could face ‘turmoil’ and that borders will be opened ‘unilaterally’ for goods by the Government.
Corbyn to make tech giants subsidise licence fee
The Guardian says that Jeremy Corbyn is to propose taxing large technology firms in order to subsidise the BBC licence fee. Other ideas to be outlined by the Labour leader in a speech today include having representatives elected by licence fee payers on the BBC’s board and making the corporation publish equality data, including social class, for all content creators.
Williamson attacked over ‘crackpot ideas’
According to The Sun, the Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson has ‘stunned military chiefs with crackpot ideas’, such as mounting guns on tractors, converting old ferries into beach assault craft and disguising missile systems as Coca-Cola lorries. A source told the paper that ‘The man is out of his mind. No one knows what to do.’ Military leaders are now said to fear that Williamson’s behaviour will prevent them from receiving extra Treasury funding.
Rees-Mogg uses letter to urge Prime Minister to ‘chuck Chequers’
The Daily Telegraph says that Jacob Rees-Mogg and over 60 other Conservative Eurosceptics have written to Conservative Associations, with a point-by-point analysis of Theresa may’s Chequers plan, which claims that it is the ‘wrong deal for Britain’. The letter insists that the Prime Minister should ‘believe in Britain’ and ‘chuck Chequers’, claiming that the EU needs a deal with the UK but the UK does not need a deal with the EU.
Founders of ‘pioneering’ free school hand it over to academy chain
The Guardian reports that the Greenwich Free School, which was one of the first to be approved by Michael Gove, and whose founders include a former Department for Education head of strategy, have decided to hand it over to a larger academy trust as the governors did not have the ‘capacity’ to provide the level of oversight needed.
Poll shows May would perform better in election than rivals
The Daily Mail carries the findings of an ICM poll which shows that the Conservatives would do better at a general election if they were led by Theresa May than by any of five named alternatives, including Boris Johnson and Jacob Rees-Mogg. The only scenario in which may would do worse was if the party was led by someone ‘quite young and able’ and ‘not currently in Government’.
Labour raised £10m more than the Conservatives last year
The Financial Times reports that the Labour Party’s membership surge led to it raising £10m more than the Conservative Party last year, according to figures released by the Electoral Commission. The party’s revenue from subscriptions rose from £6m in 2014 to £16m in 2017.
Government asked to take action against ‘essay mills’
The Times claims that the Government is being urged by the Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education to ban so-called ‘essay mills’ which enable cheating by students. The Government has previously pressed the agency to tackle the problem without legislation but the QAA now believes further action is needed.
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