Badenoch criticises Michael Sheen over comment about Port Talbot steel plant in interview promoting new drama
Never one to turn down the chance for a good political fight, Kemi Badenoch, the business secretary, hasnât just gone to war this week with the former chair of the Post Office. (See 9.21am.) She has also used an article in the Daily Mail to condemn the actor Michael Sheen over a comment he made about the steel plant in Port Talbot. She said:
Promoting his new drama The Way, Michael Sheen has said that âthe people of Port Talbot have been let downâ regarding redundancies at its steel plant.
But he is wrong. Port Talbot is iconic to British industry and thatâs why the government is investing so much to ensure we keep its steelworks for the next century at a time when the market says we should abandon it.
The first episode of The Way goes out on BBC One tonight and itâs a drama about a workersâ uprising in response to the closure of a steel plant in south Wales. The BBC insists its fictional, and not about the Tata factory in Port Talbot. Sheen is a supporter of leftwing causes, but the quote Badenoch refers to is from a Times interview about the drama in which Sheen was not even directly criticising the government.
The Mail has run the article alongside a news story quoting the Tory MP Lee Anderson, and another unnamed Conservative, claiming the drama is evidence of the BBC being biased against the government.
Xan Brooks wrote a piece about the thriller, written by James Graham, for the Guardian earlier this month.
Key events
Foreign Office minister Leo Docherty will make a statement in the Commons following the death of jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, No 10 has said. As PA Media reports, Rishi Sunak is also expected to hold a cabinet meeting this afternoon, bringing it forward from its usual Tuesday morning slot.
At the morning lobby briefing the PMâs spokesperson told reporters:
It is very clear that the Russian authorities saw him as a threat and that is why they imprisoned him on fabricated charges.
The fact that the FSB [the Russian federal security service] poisoned him with a banned nerve agent and then sent him to an Arctic penal colony ⦠His death must be investigated fully, and all of those in the Russian regime must be held to account.
The spokesperson would not comment on possible future sanctions but said the UK had agreed the âmost comprehensive package of sanctions ever brought to bear on a major economyâ in response to Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine.
No 10 defends Badenoch in row with ex-Post Office chief but declines to back her claim he lied about their conversation
No 10 has declined to repeat Kemi Badenochâs claim that the former chair of the Post Office gave an interview âfull of liesâ about the conversation she had when she sacked him.
At the morning lobby briefing, the PMâs spokesperson would not adopt the language used by Badenoch in a post on X yesterday and instead claimed that Badenoch believes that the account of what she said given by Henry Staunton is a âmisrepresentationâ.
It also emerged that Badenoch herself is not expected to be in the Commons herself this afternoon defending her conduct in this matter. Instead Kevin Hollinrake, the postal services minister, is expected to address MPs.
Yesterday Badenoch said that Stauntonâs interview with the Sunday Times about the conversation they had when she sacked him recently was âfull of liesâ. Asked if No 10 agreed that Staunton was a liar, the spokesperson said:
Obviously this referred to a conversation that she had with Henry Staunton, and youâll have seen her words on this; sheâs very clear that the interview that he gave was a misrepresentation of her conversation with him and the reasons for his dismissal.
And the government has being clear, and will refute the allegations [that it wanted to slow down compensation to victims]. The government has taken action to speed up the compensation to victims, and weâve consistently encouraged postmasters to come forward with their claims. Any suggestions otherwise [are] not correct.
The spokesperson also refused to say whether No 10 has seen the record kept by officials of the call between Badenoch and Staunton, or whether those notes will be published.
The spokesperson said the letter sent to Staunton by the business department showed that the government did not want the Post Office to slow down the payment of compensation to post office operators. When it was put to him that the letter also showed Staunton was expected to control costs (see 9.21am), the spokesperson did not accept that this meant the government was not committed to paying compensation promptly.
Asked if he could categorically say that no one from government asked Staunton to stall compensation payments, the spokesperson said the government had sped up compensation to victims and any suggestions otherwise were not correct.
The Guardian has produced an opinion poll tracker that we will be updating daily between now and the general election. You can find it here.
And here are the most recent figures.
Ofcom launches investigation into whether Rishi Sunak’s People’s Forum Q&A on GB News broke impartiality rules
Ofcom has announced that it has launched an investigation into whether the GB News Peopleâs Forum event with Rishi Sunak last week broke impartiality rules. It says:
We have received around 500 complaints about the programme which aired on GB News on 12 February 2024.
We are investigating under Rules 5.11 and 5.12 of the Broadcasting Code which provide additional due impartiality requirements for programmes dealing with matters of major political controversy and major matters relating to current public policy. Specifically, Rules 5.11 and 5.12 require that an appropriately wide range of significant views must be included and given due weight in such programmes, or in clearly linked and timely programmes.
The show has been criticised because Sunak was not subject to the sort of comeback and challenge during the Q&A that he would get from a similar event staged by an established broadcaster like the BBC or Sky News. In his sketch, John Crace wrote: âNearly every Conservative MP has their own show on GB News, so it was only a matter of time before it was Rishi Sunakâs turn.â
GB News has been found to have broken Ofcom rules at least five times, and other complaints are outstanding, but that has not stopped commentators arguing that the regulator should be doing a lot more to ensure it maintains conventional impartiality standards. Jane Martinson made this case last week.
Badenoch criticises Michael Sheen over comment about Port Talbot steel plant in interview promoting new drama
Never one to turn down the chance for a good political fight, Kemi Badenoch, the business secretary, hasnât just gone to war this week with the former chair of the Post Office. (See 9.21am.) She has also used an article in the Daily Mail to condemn the actor Michael Sheen over a comment he made about the steel plant in Port Talbot. She said:
Promoting his new drama The Way, Michael Sheen has said that âthe people of Port Talbot have been let downâ regarding redundancies at its steel plant.
But he is wrong. Port Talbot is iconic to British industry and thatâs why the government is investing so much to ensure we keep its steelworks for the next century at a time when the market says we should abandon it.
The first episode of The Way goes out on BBC One tonight and itâs a drama about a workersâ uprising in response to the closure of a steel plant in south Wales. The BBC insists its fictional, and not about the Tata factory in Port Talbot. Sheen is a supporter of leftwing causes, but the quote Badenoch refers to is from a Times interview about the drama in which Sheen was not even directly criticising the government.
The Mail has run the article alongside a news story quoting the Tory MP Lee Anderson, and another unnamed Conservative, claiming the drama is evidence of the BBC being biased against the government.
Xan Brooks wrote a piece about the thriller, written by James Graham, for the Guardian earlier this month.
Gove announces plan to give councils new power to restrict spread of Airbnb-type short-term lets
Michael Gove, the levelling up secretary, has announced plans intended to give councils in England new powers to restrict the spread of Airbnb-type short-term lets.
In a news release explaining the moves, the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities says:
Under the reforms councils will be given greater power to control short-term lets by making them subject to the planning process. This will support local people in areas where high numbers of short-term lets are preventing them from finding housing they can afford to buy or to rent.
These changes are part of a long-term plan to prevent a âhollowing outâ of communities, address anti-social behaviour and ensure local people can continue to live in the place they call home.
Meanwhile, a new mandatory national register will give local authorities the information they need about short-term lets in their area. This will help councils understand the extent of short-term lets in their area, the effects on their communities, and underpin compliance with key health and safety regulations â¦
The proposed planning changes would see a new planning âuse classâ created for short-term lets not used as a sole or main home. Existing dedicated short-term lets will automatically be reclassified into the new use class and will not require a planning application.
Streeting says he would probably spoil his ballot paper if he had to vote in Rochdale byelection
In another interview this morning Wes Streeting, the shadow health secretary, described the situation for Labour voters in the Rochdale byelection as âappallingâ. The constituency will elect a new MP next week, but now that Labour has withdrawn support from its candidate, Azhar Ali, voters canât choose someone who will be able to take the whip as a Labour MP. Streeting said:
Iâm not going to pretend that this has been Labourâs finest hour. Weâve got people going to the polls in Rochdale who donât have a good Labour candidate to vote for. Iâm really sorry thatâs the case â I think itâs an appalling position to be in.
But what I wouldnât want is for Labour to stand by someone whoâs peddled antisemitic conspiracy theories, and thatâs why Keirâs taken this unprecedented action.
UPDATE: Streeting also said, if he lived in Rochdale, he would probably refuse to vote for any candidate and spoil his ballot paper.
âScandalousâ if UK watchdog role left empty when Rwanda plan starts, says inspector
David Neal, the UKâs chief inspector of borders and immigration, has said it is âscandalousâ that his watchdog role could be left vacant while the Rwanda scheme is introduced, Kevin Rawlinson reports.
Labour won’t be ‘pushed around by SNP’ on Gaza, says Streeting
In an interview with the Today programme, Wes Streeting, the shadow health secretary, also said that Labour would not be âpushed around the by the SNPâ in setting out its policy on Gaza.
Asked if Labour would be voting for the SNP motion on Wednesday, Streeting at first said the party would wait until the final wording was out. When it was pointed out to him that the SNP has already published the text of its motion, Streeting said he did not think it had been tabled in the Commons yet.
He implied Labour might table an amendment to the motion, saying: âWe will put our own position out.â And he went on:
We were not going to be pushed around by the SNP. Where I think we would like to get to is a position where the United Kingdom and the international community speak with one voice.
The SNP is calling for an immediate ceasefire, while Labour is still arguing that a ceasefire should be sustainable too. Setting out the partyâs position at the Scottish Labour conference yesterday, Keir Starmer said:
I have just returned from the Munich security conference, where every conversation I had came back to the situation in Israel and Gaza and the question of what we can do practically to deliver what we all want to see â a return of all the hostages taken on 7 October, an end to the killing of innocent Palestinians, a huge scaling-up of humanitarian relief and an end to the fighting.
Not just for now, not just for a pause, but permanently. A ceasefire that lasts. That is what must happen now. The fighting must stop now.
Here is the text of the SNP motion for debate on Wednesday.
That this house calls for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and Israel; notes with shock and distress that the death toll has now risen beyond 28,000, the vast majority of whom were women and children; further notes that there are currently 1.5 million Palestinians sheltering in Rafah, 610,000 of whom are children; also notes that they have nowhere else to go; condemns any military assault on what is now the largest refugee camp in the world; further calls for the immediate release of all hostages taken by Hamas and an end to the collective punishment of the Palestinian people; and recognises that the only way to stop the slaughter of innocent civilians is to press for a ceasefire now.
Streeting says Israel has ‘gone too far’ in Gaza and its actions go ‘beyond reasonable self-defence’
Wes Streeting, the shadow health secretary, has said that Israel has âgone too farâ in Gaza and that its military offensive goes âbeyond reasonable self-defenceâ.
In an interview with Sky News this morning, ahead of a Commons debate on Wednesday where Labour must decide whether or not to vote for an SNP motion calling for âan immediate ceasefireâ in Gaza, Streeting said:
We want to see a ceasefire, of course we do. And we have been increasingly concerned, as the wider international community has been, with the disproportionate loss of civilian life in Gaza.
Israel has a responsibility to get its hostages back, every country in the world has a right to defend itself.
But I think what we have seen are actions that go beyond reasonable self-defence and also call into question whether Israel has broken international law.
The ICJ [International Court of Justice] are now investigating and we take all of that seriously.
Asked whether he thought Israel had âgone too fastâ, Streeting replied:
I think, objectively, yes, Israel has gone too far. And we have seen that with a disproportionate loss of innocent civilian life.
Minister suggests Kemi Badenoch should publish evidence to confirm her claim about ex-Post Office chair lying about call
Good morning. Yesterday Kemi Badenoch, the business and trade secretary, accused the former Post Office chair, Henry Staunton, of giving an interview âfull of liesâ about the conversation they had when she sacked him recently. Josh Halliday has the story here, and here is one of the tweets from a thread that Badenoch posted on Twitter.
My call with Staunton was with officials. They took a complete record. He has given an interview full of lies about our conversation during his dismissal. The details will emerge soon enough as I wonât let the matter rest here, but will be discussing with govt lawyers. (3/5)
My call with Staunton was with officials. They took a complete record.
He has given an interview full of lies about our conversation during his dismissal.
The details will emerge soon enough as I wonât let the matter rest here, but will be discussing with govt lawyers. (3/5)— Kemi Badenoch (@KemiBadenoch) February 18, 2024
Badenoch said she would be making a further statement today.
The row is partly, but not entirely, about what was said in that Badenoch/Staunton conversation where he was sacked. Staunton told the Sunday Times that he had not even met Badenoch, that he learned he was going to lose his job from a Sky News journalist shortly before she called, and that in the conversation she referred to the Post Office Horizon scandal, telling him: âWell, someoneâs got to take the rap for this.â Badenoch said yesterday that officials were listening in on the call and that they took a complete record.
The education secretary, Gillian Keegan, was doing the morning interview round for the government and she suggested that Badenoch should release the record of the conversation to prove her claims about Staunton telling lies. Asked on the Today programme if Badenoch would releasing those notes, she replied:
Iâm sure they will make a statement or release something. My understanding is that the government made clear in the appointment letter that focusing on and prioritising the compensation for sub-postmasters was a key aspect of the job.
The presenter, Mishal Husain, asked again if notes of the call would be released. Keegan said she had not spoken to Badenoch directly about this, but she said that she was sure officials did keep a record of what was said. Asked again if Badenoch would provide evidence to back up her claims, Keegan said:
I havenât spoken to her, but Iâm sure she will back it up.
The most serious claim made by Staunton in his Sunday Times interview was not about what Badenoch said when she sacked him, but what he said about another conversation, with an unnamed senior official in the business department. Staunton said he was told âto stall on spend on compensation [for victims of the Post Office Horizon scandal] and on the replacement of Horizon, and to limp, in quotation marks â I did a file note on it â limp into the electionâ.
In her Today interview, Keegan said this claim was âat oddsâ with what Staunton was told in his appointment letter, released by the department last night.
ð¨ Fact Check ð¨
The Government made clear to the Chair of the Post Office that reaching payment settlements with victims of the Horizon scandal was a priority when he took the role. Claims to the contrary are simply not true.
Read the full letter below
ð pic.twitter.com/QzPjDUURf2
— Department for Business and Trade (@biztradegovuk) February 18, 2024
Keegan said the letter âbasically says youâre to prioritise the sub-postmasters and their fair compensationâ.
But in fact the letter, sent by Sarah Munby, who at the time was permanent secretary at the department, does not quite say that. It says âresolving historical litigation issuesâ should be a priority. But it also implies an even more important priority is effective financial management, including âeffective management of legal costsâ.
The letter does not disprove Stauntonâs claim about being told to âstallâ on compensation payments. Staunton told the Sunday Times this was just a money issue, and arguably his claim is consistent with what the letter says about the need to control costs.
Here is the agenda for the day.
10am: Humza Yousaf, Scotlandâs first minister, gives a speech on Scotlandâs green future.
10.30am: Mark Drakeford, the Welsh first minister, holds a press conference on how the Welsh government is looking to strengthen international relationships.
11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.
2.30pm: Grant Shapps, the defence secretary, takes questions in the Commons.
After 3.30pm: A Foreign Office minister is expected to give a statement on the death of Alexei Navalny, and Kemi Badenoch, the business secretary, is expected to give a statement on claims made by the former Post Office chair.
Afternoon: Peers resume the committee stage debate for the safety of Rwanda (asylum and immigration) bill.
4pm: Tim Davie, the BBC director general, gives evidence to the Commons public accounts committee.
Afternoon: David Cameron, the foreign secretary, is expected to arrive in the Falkland Islands.
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