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Jeremy Corbyn accuses Sir Keir Starmer of ‘flagrant attack’ on his future as an MP | Politics News

Jeremy Corbyn has accused Sir Keir Starmer of “a flagrant attack on the democratic rights of Islington North Labour Party members” after he ruled out allowing the former party leader to stand as a Labour candidate in the next general election.

Earlier today, marking a watchdog’s decision to no longer monitor the party over antisemitism, Sir Keir said his predecessor would have to stand as an independent if he wished to remain a member of parliament.

Asked if Mr Corbyn would be allowed to run under the party’s banner, Sir Keir – who served in his predecessor’s shadow cabinet – said: “Let me be very clear about that. Jeremy Corbyn will not stand for Labour at the general election as a Labour Party candidate.

Bold prediction from Labour frontbencher after Nicola Sturgeon announces shock departure – politics latest

“What I said about the party changing, I meant that. We are not going back. And that is why Jeremy Corbyn will not stand as a Labour candidate at the next general election.”

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‘Jeremy Corbyn will not stand for Labour’

Responding to Sir Keir’s comments, Mr Corbyn released a statement saying it should be up to his constituents to decide who their candidate is.

“Ever since I was elected as a Labour MP 40 years ago, I have fought on behalf of my community for a more equal, caring and peaceful society.

“Day in and day out, I am focused on the most important issues facing people in Islington North: poverty, rising rents, the healthcare crisis, the safety of refugees, and the fate of our planet.

“Keir Starmer’s statement about my future is a flagrant attack on the democratic rights of Islington North Labour Party members.

“It is up to them – not party leaders – to decide who their candidate should be.

“Any attempt to block my candidacy is a denial of due process and should be opposed by anybody who believes in the value of democracy.

“At a time when the government is overseeing the worst cost of living crisis in a generation, this is a divisive distraction from our overriding goal: to defeat the Conservative Party at the next general election.

“I am proud to represent the labour movement in parliament through my constituency.

“I am focused on standing up for workers on the picket line, the marginalised, and all those worried about their futures.

“That is what I’ll continue to do.

“I suggest the Labour Party does the same.”

The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) had been scrutinising the Labour Party for more than two years since ruling it was responsible for unlawful acts of harassment and discrimination, and demanding changes over its law-breaking handling of antisemitism under Sir Keir’s predecessor.

But the watchdog has said that, under Sir Keir’s leadership, the party has improved its complaints and training procedures to protect current and future party members.

Speaking after the decision was published, Sir Keir called it an “important moment in the history of the Labour Party” that had taken “many, many months of hard work and humility”.

Read more on Sky News:
How Sturgeon survived ‘cesspit of vipers’ but failed to achieve dream
The controversies which piled pressure on Sturgeon

The EHRC’s report into the Labour Party was published in October 2020 and detailed the “breakdown of trust between the party, its Jewish members and the wider Jewish community”.

The report was critical of the party’s handling of antisemitism complaints under Mr Corbyn’s leadership.

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‘Are you to blame for Labour’s antisemitism problem?’

Immediately after its publication, Mr Corbyn claimed “the scale of the problem” of Labour antisemitism allegations was “dramatically overstated for political reasons by our opponents”.

He also said he did not accept all of the EHRC report’s findings in comments that prompted his suspension from the party.

It led to him being kicked off Labour’s backbenches by Sir Keir – meaning he now sits as an independent MP – but he remains a member of the wider party.

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‘Antisemitism has no place in our society’

Mr Corbyn subsequently sought to clarify his remarks and a five-member disciplinary panel of Labour’s National Executive Committee decided that he should be reinstated.

But Sir Keir stuck to his decision after facing pressure from MPs not to allow him back into the parliamentary party.

Is Heatherwood Hospital a model for the future of the NHS? | UK News

Pradeep Gill can see very little of the intense activity around him. He is leaning back in a reclining chair inside one of Heatherwood Hospital’s operating theatres.

Buzzing around him is the operating team, led by consultant orthopaedic surgeon Jeremy Granville-Chapman.

For the surgeon and his team, this procedure is the very definition of routine. They have carried out more than 1,000 joint operations in the past 10 months.

Mr Gill is conscious but his body is covered by a gown.

Pradeep Gill was conscious during his operation
Image:
Pradeep Gill was conscious during his operation

His left arm, which is propped up on a hydraulic rest, has been made numb by a block, working the same way as a local anaesthetic.

Inside his shoulder is a camera that is sending back images to a large screen in the centre of the room above the patient. There is also an ablating tool being carefully guided by the surgeon.

The monitor shows Mr Granville-Chapman cutting through scarred tissue and clearing the inflammation that has left Mr Gill unable to move his arm since a fall in his garden in last August.

Three hours after his surgery in Ascot, Berkshire, Mr Gill’s bed is wheeled into the busy post-op recovery area.

“You’ve had surgery, here you are, and in a couple of hours you’ll be sent home, that must come as a real relief to you,” I asked Mr Gill.

“Yeah,” he replied. “You don’t realise how much you take things for granted with your mobility and being able to move your arms, how much it restricts you, so yeah, I’m glad.”

NHS tracker postcode search: See how your local trust is performing

Consultant orthopaedic surgeon Jeremy Granville-Chapman and his team operate on Pradeep Gill
Image:
Consultant orthopaedic surgeon Jeremy Granville-Chapman and his team operate on Pradeep Gill

Heatherwood Hospital, part of the Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust, is busy. But it is a good-busy, not the bad-busy we have come to associate with the NHS during this winter crisis.

The modern building is bright and airy, mostly glass and exposed brickwork. There are lots of patients sitting around, sipping coffee and reading newspapers. And they all seem relaxed.

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‘NHS Crisis: Your Say’ highlights

The site opened in March last year and Frimley’s hospital executives are keen to stress the impact it has made.

“As a specialist planned care facility, Heatherwood has been able to perform surgery six days a week with four out of its six state-of-the-art theatres dedicated to orthopaedic procedures,” it said in a press release.

“The hospital has also successfully reduced the length of time patients stay in hospital, with 40% of patients safely discharged within 24 hours.”

This is the practice the NHS wants to adopt as it battles a record seven-million-strong waiting list: specialist elective hubs where patients can come in for routine but life-changing surgery at a super-charged pace with theatres working at full tilt, six days a week.

Orthopaedic surgeon Mr Rakesh Kucheira says Heatherwood is the model for the future of the NHS
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Orthopaedic surgeon Mr Rakesh Kucheira says Heatherwood is the model for the future of the NHS

Heatherwood can do that because the hospital is ring-fenced from acute pressures that affect other hospitals, as one its most senior orthopaedic surgeons, Mr Rakesh Kucheira, explained.

“We have now realised that winter pressures are 12 months not just three months, which means the acute sites are not going to be able to do planned activity that they planned for, so we’ve got to create more space,” he said.

“Is this going to be a model for the future,” I asked. “This is the model, we’re already looking, can we expand this unit, can we make two more theatres next year to take the pressure off?”

Read more:
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NHS to treat 50,000 elderly and vulnerable patients in ‘virtual wards’ at home

According to the latest NHS data, the number of patients waiting more than 18 months has started to increase again.

In November 2022, it was 48,961 and has now increased to 54,882 patients waiting 18 months (78 weeks) or more in December 2022 for consultant-led hospital treatment.

The government’s elective recovery plan has a target to eliminate NHS waits of more than 18 months by April 2023.

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Can ‘virtual wards’ help to ease NHS pressure?

The most common long waits seen were for trauma and orthopaedic treatment – such as hip and knee replacements (797,630), ear, nose and throat treatment (549,656), or general surgery – such as gallbladder removals and hernia operations (442,948).

Have you been affected by the strikes? To share your experience anonymously, please email NHSstories@sky.uk

As the NHS begins to ease out of the crippling winter pressure of the past few months, the impact of health worker strikes is being felt.

More than 41,000 hospital appointments were postponed this week due to the strikes.

All of these patients will need to be seen at some stage and if they require surgical procedures their numbers will swell the waiting list.

So while elective hubs like Heatherwood Hospital will have an impact, exactly how much will depend on problems across the wider NHS.

‘We are worthy people’: Albanians smuggled into UK say they are ‘excited for the future’ | UK News

Five days after being smuggled into the UK in a lorry, Albanian Iva Memaj dialled the Home Office’s freephone number to claim asylum.

“I feel very excited for my future,” she told us.

“I feel safe here.”

Iva said she ran from the lorry when it got to England, hid and was then picked up by a friend. She said the Romanian driver never got the £18,000 he was expecting.

Now she’s trying to register her arrival with the Home Office on its dedicated hotline – entering a system which she knows could take years to process her application.

But she believes it will be worth the wait, telling us life in Albania is intolerable.

I asked Iva, 31, who was a stockbroker in Albania, why she would make such a dangerous journey in the back of a lorry.

She said: “It doesn’t make sense. But when you look at Albania and the opportunities it gives to young people it will make sense.

“I just want to live in a happy environment. I just want to live in a safe environment. I want to live in a society that is well-structured and well-organised. I don’t want to live in chaos anymore.”

‘See us as worthy people’

Iva is part of what Home Secretary Suella Braverman has called “an invasion” of migrants, with the numbers coming from Albania soaring.

The vast majority travel by small boat, paying smugglers to get them across the channel – like Iva’s friend, 26-year-old Denis Arapi, who is also from Albania.

Iva and Denis, who say they are both university educated, told us they want to speak to Sky News because of the “stigma” surrounding Albanian asylum seekers.

‘”Why see migrants as a problem,” Denis said. “Start to see us as worthy people.”

The British government said Albania is a safe country and too many asylum seekers are abusing the system claiming to be the victims of modern slavery.

It has also pledged to break the “business model” of the smugglers.

Denis Arapi
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Denis Arapi

How people smugglers recruit

Denis gave us a rare insight into how the smugglers persuade people to join their criminal gangs in the UK.

Denis, who worked in a private hospital as a co-ordinator in Albania, said when he crossed the channel in July – he spoke to other Albanians on the boat and half of them planned to claim asylum but get cash-in-hand work in the construction industry whilst they waited for their claims to be processed.

He claims a quarter – the younger men on the boat – said they would connect with the criminal gangs who smuggled them on arrival in the UK and disappear from the asylum system.

Denis said: “They (the smugglers) know the system is broken and they use this as a strong point to convince people to do this.

“They say ‘you’ll never get asylum papers’. They say ‘you’ll never be integrated into society’. They say ‘There are cases which have been going on for more than three years and they don’t get a work permit.’ They tell you this. They convince you that you come here and you can’t do anything else (except join the gangs).”

The UK authorities say of the more than 12,000 Albanians who’ve arrived in the UK so far this year, about 10,000 are single, adult men.

Too difficult to get a visa

Denis said it’s too difficult to get a visa to come to the UK: “Seeking asylum is the only option to be here.”

He said without money in your bank account, you can’t get a visa.

“I was expecting, when I arrived, the asylum system in Britain would evaluate the migrant.”

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Why are Albanians coming to the UK?

Iva said: “I want to do legal stuff here. I’m a decent person. I can be integrated in society.

“I chose the right way to live my life. Albanians have a bad reputation about it, but I’m one of the Albanians who is not part of the smuggling society, and I wouldn’t like to choose that road.”

David Tennant surprises Doctor Who fans as show bosses pledge future of ‘horror, robots and puppets’ | Ents & Arts News

David Tennant surprised Doctor Who fans as he reprised his role as the Time Lord – with the actor set to star in three special episodes before handing over control of the Tardis next Christmas.

Jodie Whittaker’s 13th Time Lord regenerated into Tennant in the dramatic conclusion of the show’s BBC centenary special.

It was previously announced that the Scottish actor, who first stepped into the Tardis in 2005 to play the 10th Doctor, would be returning to the sci-fi series for the show’s 60th anniversary celebrations.

Following Sunday’s 90-minute special, the BBC confirmed Tennant will become the 14th incarnation with Catherine Tate reprising her role as his former companion Donna Noble for three special episodes set to air in November 2023.

Ncuti Gatwa will then take control of the Tardis as the 15th Doctor, with his first episode due to air over the festive period in 2023.

Returning showrunner Russell T Davies, said: “If you thought the appearance of David Tennant was a shock, we’ve got plenty more surprises on the way.

“The path to Ncuti’s 15th Doctor is laden with mystery, horror, robots, puppets, danger and fun.

“And how is it connected to the return of the wonderful Donna Noble? How, what, why? We’re giving you a year to speculate, and then all hell lets loose.”

Whittaker’s last venture as the Doctor was loaded with drama as it saw her fight for her existence against some of her deadliest enemies: The Master, the Daleks and the Cybermen.

It also saw her land in a limbo world where she was confronted with former incarnations of the Doctor who offer her advice.

The Doctor (Ncuti Gatwa) during Doctor Who - The Power of the Doctor. Issue date: Sunday October 23, 2022
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Ncuti Gatwa will become the 15th Doctor

Among them were Colin Baker, Peter Davison, Paul McGann and actor David Bradley to portray the late William Hartnell’s First Doctor, with Sylvester McCoy appearing as well.

After the episode, a teaser trailer for the 60th anniversary special episodes aired which showed Tennant and Tate facing a deadly enemy played by Neil Patrick Harris and a brief glance at Gatwa’s 15th Doctor.

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Whittaker, 40, became the first woman to portray the Doctor when she took over the role from Peter Capaldi in 2017.

Showrunner Chris Chibnall is also set to leave the programme, to be replaced by Davies, who was behind the 2005 revival of the show.

‘You are the future, you are the present’: Meghan gives first UK speech since stepping back as a senior royal | Ents & Arts News

The Duchess of Sussex has told young leaders from around the world “you are the future, you are the present” in her first UK speech since stepping back as a senior royal.

Prince Harry was also in attendance as Meghan gave a short speech at the opening ceremony of the One Young World summit at Bridgewater Hall in Manchester.

The Sussexes’ attendance at the ceremony was their first UK public appearance since the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee in June.

Meghan told young leaders from more than 190 countries: “You are the ones driving the positive and necessary change across the globe now, in this very moment.

“And for that I am so grateful to be in your company today.”

She also told those gathered: “You are the future…. you are also the present”.

Meghan also spoke about having a “pinch me moment” after the first time she was asked to be a counsellor for One Young World in 2014.

More on Duchess Of Sussex

She said: “And there I was, the girl from Suits. I was surrounded by world leaders, humanitarians, prime ministers and activists that I had such a deep and long-standing respect and admiration for.

“And I was allowed in, to pull up a seat at the table.

“I was so overwhelmed by this experience, I think, I think I even saved my little paper place-marker with my name on it.

“Just proof: proof that I was there, proof that I belonged, because the truth was, I wasn’t sure that I belonged.”

“I was so nervous, I doubted myself and I wondered, wondered if I was good enough to be there?”

But she added One Young World, “saw in me, just as I see in you, the present and the future”.

Meghan told the 2,000 or so delegates listening to her speech: “I want to make that point because often times I speak to young adults about the years ahead.

“About what you will do, about what you will have to adopt to fix from previous generations and also what legacy you will leave.

“Too often in that, we neglect the point – you are doing it now.

“You, here, in this present moment, this is where it is all beginning.”

Before the duchess’ speech, Harry and Meghan were sat centre stage on a bench together as they watched bearers carry the flags of more than 200 countries.

Meghan, with her hair in a sleek ponytail, sat with her legs crossed and swayed in time to a rendition of Dancing In The Streets as she clapped her hands.

Reports suggest Harry and Meghan arrived in Britain on Saturday, but a spokeswoman for the couple declined to confirm their arrival.

The couple were pictured walking into a side entrance of London Euston station on Monday as they took the train up to Manchester for the summit.

They were reportedly driven the 27 miles from their UK base at Frogmore Cottage in Windsor to Euston in a hybrid electric Range Rover.

Their UK trip comes just days after Meghan’s wide-ranging interview with The Cut magazine, in which she said she had “really made an active effort to forgive” both her in-laws and members of her own family after stepping back from royal duties.

She added that she is “still healing” from the ordeal.

The former Suits actress also said that “just by existing” she and Harry were “upsetting the dynamic of the hierarchy” before they stepped down as senior working royals.

Meanwhile, in the latest episode of her Archetypes podcast, Meghan said her life only became more focused on her race after she started dating Prince Harry.

Boris Johnson will not intervene in cost of living crisis as that is ‘for future prime minister’ | Politics News

Downing Street has rejected calls for Boris Johnson to summon an emergency COBRA meeting to deal with the cost of living crisis.

Gordon Brown, the former Labour prime minister, has called for Mr Johnson to meet with his two potential successors and thrash out a financial package of measures before energy bills soar in October.

He said people will go cold and hungry this winter if urgent action isn’t taken now, telling Sky News he was seeing poverty in his hometown in Fife “that I did not expect to see ever again in my lifetime“.

Politics Hub: Brown slams ‘vacuum’ at heart of government

But the prime minister’s spokesman said that although the government recognises the challenges facing struggling households, “by convention it is not for this prime minister to make major fiscal interventions during this period. It will be for a future prime minister.”

He also defended Mr Johnson for going on holiday as the Bank of England warned of a looming recession, saying the public understand it’s “not unusual for ministers to take time off during recess”.

Mr Johnson and Chancellor Nadhim Zahawi faced criticism for being missing in action amid grim forecasts that the UK is heading for the worst financial crisis since the 2008 crash, with interests rates soaring to their highest level in 27 years.

The PM’s spokesperson said Mr Johnson – who is now back in No 10 after his holiday in Slovenia – had spoken to Mr Zahawi while on his break to discuss measures that will be coming in this year.

He suggested Mr Johnson had no plans to sit down with Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak, saying: “Both candidates have spoken about new things they would introduce.”

(left to right) Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Chancellor of the Exchequer Nadhim Zahawi, and Work and Pensions Secretary Therese Coffey, during a Cabinet meeting at 10 Downing Street, London. Picture date: Tuesday July 19, 2022.
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Boris Johnson and Nadhim Zahawi have been criticised for doing nothing in the face of a grim economic forecast

Ms Truss has pledged to reverse the national insurance tax rise immediately if she becomes prime minister, while Mr Sunak has promised a VAT cut on energy bills.

Neither have ruled out further direct support for families struggling with mounting energy bills, which are expected to climb to nearly £4,000 a year from January as gas prices continue to push upward.

However, Mr Brown said new measures cannot wait as he criticised their “obsession” with tax cuts.

Read more:
Calls for emergency increase to Universal Credit
PM and chancellor ‘completely on top’ of economy despite being on holiday
Truss and Sunak face calls for daily COBRA meetings

Mr Brown set out his own vision for dealing with the cost of living crisis, including changing the windfall tax, a cap on energy bills and reforming the benefits system.

He branded the Tory party’s windfall tax “stupid”, claiming the opt-outs included in the tax brought forward when Mr Sunak was chancellor reduced the value of the tax from £15bn to £5bn.

Ms Truss and Mr Sunak continue to clash over their plans for the economy.

Mr Sunak launched a fresh attack on his opponent’s plan for tax cuts in an emergency budget, describing it as a “big bung” for large businesses and the better-off that would do little to help those most in need over the coming winter.

Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis – who is backing Ms Truss, the foreign secretary – said they would look to do “whatever we can” to help people under pressure from rising inflation.

“She’s willing to do more to help people but her focus is around doing it in a way that puts more money in people’s pockets, creating a high-growth economy with higher wages, more people in work,” he said.

“So rather than having handouts, what we do is have a low-tax economy that’s driving growth and therefore with people having more money in their pockets, they’re better placed to deal with some of the challenges that we see.”