Street acknowledges reforms could be the main opposition in the next election - British Politics Live | Politics
Key Events
Joint Secretary-General Christina McAnea The results of the local election were said to be the "wake-up call" from the Labor government.
McAnea said in a Sunday address with Laura Kuenssberg: “Just talk about voice and speech will not work anymore.
McAnea said Labor could consider relaxing fiscal rules. “This will make them more flexible where they can spend money.”
Wes Street Already said Lucy Powell's According to the PA, it appears that a comment describing a problem of grooming the gang as a "dog whistle" was not interpreted as the intention of his cabinet colleagues.
Asked whether he and his labor colleagues viewed the health gang scandal as a dog barking issue or “a signal to encode racists,” the health minister said: “No, I don’t think this is what Lucy intends to suggest in the heated debate on Radio 4, which is why she apologized for what she said.
“I don’t think she means or wants to suggest that asking these questions, talking about them, is the whistle of a dog.”
The street told Sky News and Trevor Phillips on Sunday morning that “we all make mistakes” and it’s important that “we have it.” Asked if Powell’s job as leader of the House of Commons was safe, he said: “I think she made a real mistake, she owned it, she was sorry for it, and we will keep going.”
Health Minister says reforms are "absolutely a real threat"
Minister of Health Wes Street Reforms have been said to be "absolutely a real threat" to labor and they are taking it seriously.
"I think it's clear that the readjustment is obvious in British political rights. In the next election, it's not clear whether reform or conservatives are the main challengers of Labor," the street said in a Sunday morning in a speech at Sky News.
In other developments:
Reform Chairman Zia Yusuf said his party would build statues of “great British figures” and “end all this awakening bullshit” in the first few months of the government if they were to win power. Yusuf also criticized Keir Starmer's decision not to visit Runcorn in his speech in The Sunday Times, and the reform won Thursday's by-election. By contrast, he said Nigel Farage visited the constituency three to four times and took "50,000 steps" on the polling day, knocking on the door.
Donald Trump's Tariff Tsar (TSAR) accused Britain of being a "compliant servant of Communist China" and Beijing of "blood-sucking" risks. Peter Navarro, the president's trade adviser, said in a comment to the telegram that the government must boycott Beijing's "carrying string gifts" and avoid becoming a "trash dump" for goods China no longer sells to the United States.
Kemi Badenoch apologized for the “bloody” of local elections after the Conservative Party lost 674 MPs. Conservative leaders will appear with Laura Kuenssberg this morning on the BBC's Sunday.