Home » Starmer suffers record ratings slump as Musk’s conspiracy barrage continues: Live

Starmer suffers record ratings slump as Musk’s conspiracy barrage continues: Live

Starmer suffers record ratings slump as Musk’s conspiracy barrage continues: Live

Elon Musk’s father believes ‘good chance’ Tommy Robinson will be prime minister one day

Safeguarding minister Jess Phillips has spoken about her fears for her safety after Elon Musk unleashed a torrent of abuse against her over the child grooming scandal.

Ms Phillips found herself at the centre of an international storm when she decided not to agree to a national inquiry into child grooming and rape across towns in the north of England because one had already been conducted.

The attacks were led by the X social media platform boss who described her as “a witch” and a “rape genocide apologist”.

Speaking to ITV News, she said: “Of course I worry about my safety. Of course, and you have to, you know, anyone who has worked in the fields of violence against women and girls. Risk is dynamic and I have to take account of the risks in my life and this is one of them currently.”

The Tesla boss has launched a series of baseless attacks on the Labour government over grooming gangs, while also calling for the release of jailed far-right activist Tommy Robinson – a development which also saw him turn on Reform leader Nigel Farage on Sunday, claiming he “does not have what it takes” to lead the party.

Wes Streeting acknowledges ‘eye-watering’ social care costs facing families

Individuals are shouldering an “imbalance” in paying for social care, Wes Streeting said as he was confronted about the sums one family is facing.

The health secretary has faced criticism in recent days for not giving a hard deadline on his plans to create a National Care Service, aimed at tackling the massive costs of social care. An independent commission is expected to begin exploring the future of the service in the spring, but its timeline means proposals for long-term funding and major reform may not be delivered until 2028.

As he took questions from LBC radio listeners, a woman from Leeds told the health secretary she is paying £85,000 a year to provide care for her 97-year-old mother, who has dementia – meaning her family savings and the proceeds from selling her mother’s home are swiftly being eroded.

“It sounds really terrible, but sometimes I even find myself wishing that my mum would pass away soon, before it’s all gone and the family is left with absolutely nothing. And it shouldn’t be about money, but unfortunately, it is,” she said.

The caller added: “I want to know, when will something be done to stop this happening? And I need a real answer, not just the sort of ‘we get it, we have no money’ kind of answer.”

Mr Streeting described the sums as “eye-watering”, adding: “I think that where we’ve got to as a country is a situation where I think the burden on individuals and families and the state is imbalanced, and it’s almost a game of pot luck and chance.”

(Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire)

Andy Gregory7 January 2025 22:00

New duty to report child sex abuse should include teachers and sports coaches, No 10 says

A new legal duty to report child sexual abuse should apply to people engaged in regulated activities with children, including teachers, healthcare professionals, sports coaches and faith instructors, No 10 has said.

Home secretary Yvette Cooper announced on Monday that ministers would begin implementing the recommendation by the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse to bring in mandatory reporting.

More details are expected to be set out in the coming weeks.

Andy Gregory7 January 2025 21:00

Watch: Elon Musk’s ‘disinformation’ is endangering me, says Jess Phillips

Elon Musk’s ‘disinformation’ is endangering me, says Jess Phillips

Jabed Ahmed7 January 2025 20:16

Watch: Robert Jenrick in heated clash with BBC’s Nick Robinson over grooming gangs

Robert Jenrick in heated clash with BBC’s Nick Robinson over grooming gangs

Andy Gregory7 January 2025 20:00

UK ‘must become to wind what Saudi Arabia is to crude oil’, says Labour MP

The United Kingdom must “become to wind what Saudi Arabia is to crude oil”, a Labour MP has urged.

Henry Tufnell, MP for Mid and South Pembrokeshire, told the House of Commons: “In our United Kingdom, one of our biggest and most powerful natural resources is wind. To cut bills, deliver energy security and achieve net zero, we have to become to wind what Saudi Arabia is to crude oil.”

Speaking during a debate on new legislation to give the Crown Estate new borrowing powers, he added: “The population of South Wales and the South West will never forgive us if we don’t seize this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to redevelop their regional economies.”

Liberal Dem energy spokesperson Pippa Heylings had earlier told MPs: “While the new borrowing powers will enable investment in offshore wind, they will also facilitate property development across the 185,000 acres of the Crown Estate, so this Bill must do more to ensure that these developments do not ride roughshod over community concerns regarding planning, infrastructure and environmental standards, both on land and at sea.

“People must have a say in the decisions that affect them, and where infrastructure’s concerned they should also receive the benefits where appropriate.”

Andy Gregory7 January 2025 19:30

What the London Stock Exchange exodus could mean for Britain

It comes amid fears of the capital’s shrinking relevance as a place to do business following Britain’s exit from the European Union.

The shrinkage of London as a global market has been steady. Twenty years ago, when banks, manufacturers, oil companies and pharmaceutical firms dominated lists of the biggest companies, UK-listed stocks accounted for 11 per cent of the global market. Now it is about 4 per cent.

The trend is as much about America’s growth as it is about London’s shrinkage as the US and its giant tech stocks have dominated world markets.

Howard Mustoe has more analysis here:

Andy Gregory7 January 2025 19:01

Plans to boost Crown Estate borrowing powers will help aid net zero transition, MPs told

Plans to give the Crown Estate more borrowing powers will help it return more money to taxpayers and aid the transition to net zero, MPs have been told.

Opening a Commons debate ahead of a new Bill’s second reading, Treasury minister Darren Jones said it would change the outdated Crown Estate Act 1961 and bring it into place for the modern age.

He said: “The Crown Estate is a commercial business, independent from government, that operates for profit and competes in the marketplace for investment. Yet it is restricted in its ability to do so by legislation that has not been amended since 1961.

“With less ability to compete and to invest, it is less able to deliver returns for the public purse than it might otherwise be able to do.”

The new Bill will enable the Crown Estate to decarbonise and redevelop land it owns in the West End of London, Mr Jones said, adding that it will be able to seek finance from external partners, including in the City of London, and invest in more schemes with the aim of getting a financial return.

Andy Gregory7 January 2025 18:32

Full report: Jess Phillips worries about her safety after Elon Musk social media attacks

The Independent’s Political Editor David Maddox reports:

Jabed Ahmed7 January 2025 18:21

Musk’s social media posts are ‘ridiculous’, Jess Phillips says

Elon Musk’s social media posts are “ridiculous” and the social media mogul “knows absolutely nothing” about the subject of grooming gangs, Jess Phillips has said.

Asked about the billionaire, who accused her of being a “rape genocide apologist” after she declined a request for a Whitehall-led inquiry into child sexual abuse in Oldham, Home Office minister Ms Phillips told ITV News: “It’s ridiculous isn’t it? The things that he’s saying are so ridiculous as to initially make me just go what?

“But then you wake up with the realisation that that’s millions of people that he has said that to and you feel immediately like this is going to turn my world upside down and I have to try and limit for how long that is the case.

“But you know, your immediate, my immediate thought was like just, it’s sort of like, what a joke. And then the realisation of what this is probably going to mean for you.”

Asked if it had turned her world upside down, Ms Phillips replied: “Yeah a little bit, a lot. Well, a lot actually it’s… it’s not great.”

She added: “The thing that annoys me the most about it is it takes up so much bandwidth of my time from a man who knows absolutely nothing about the subject he’s talking about, when the only thing I ever want to be doing is being able to use all of my brain power to focus on the hundreds of girls I have supported over the years who have been victims of grooming gangs and what needs to happen to make their lives better and to stop what is still happening today.”

Jabed Ahmed7 January 2025 18:13

Government savings from winter fuel payment changes falling fast, analysis claims

Government savings from last year’s changes to the winter fuel payment are already less than planned, new analysis has revealed.

Announcing the cutting back of the cold weather benefit in July last year, Rachel Reeves said the measure would shave £1.4bn from the DWP bill this financial year. This was done by means-testing the payment to make only pensioners claiming pension credit eligible for it.

But research from Policy in Practice shows that the number of new pension credit claims meant the government had been forced to overspend on the change already, in the first week of January. And any more claims made before April will continue to eat into the savings further.

My colleague Albert Toth has more details:

Andy Gregory7 January 2025 18:04