Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Politics
Adam Forrest, Ashley Cowburn

Boris Johnson news: PM's 'ludicrous' plan for bridge to Northern Ireland attacked, as backlash builds over 'mansion tax' and HS2

Boris Johnson’s spokesman said government officials have begun a “proper piece of work” examining the potential for a bridge linking Scotland and Northern Ireland. The proposal was immediately criticised as “ludicrous”, “crazy” and “a vanity project” by opposition politicians.

The prime minister is also facing a backlash from Conservative MPs as he prepares to give the go-ahead to the controversial HS2 rail project, and mulls over a possible “mansion tax” on the owners of expensive homes to help fund a public spending boost.

It comes as Sir Keir Starmer’s team claimed “factional” dirty tricks were behind allegations of membership database hacking after the Labour Party reported his campaign. Up to 40 MPs are thought to be considering quitting the party if Rebecca Long-Bailey succeeds Jeremy Corbyn.

This liveblog has now closed

Good morning and welcome to The Independent’s live coverage of events at Westminster and beyond.
PM set to give HS2 green light

Boris Johnson is expected to give the green light on Tuesday to the first section of the HS2 high-speed rail project – and risk a furious reaction from as many as 60 Conservative MPs opposed to the costs.

The PM will set out his response to the Oakervee Review in an announcement to parliament and is set to approve the first stretch, linking London to Birmingham.

But it is thought he will stop short of approving the project’s Y-shaped extension to Manchester and Leeds, saying that more analysis needs to be done on the cost – risking a furious reaction from business leaders in the north firmly behind the project.
 

Boris Johnson set to give green light for HS2

Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham calls for PM to bring forward railway to link northern cities
Starmer’s team claim ‘dirty tricks’ by party insiders over hackling claims

Sources close to Labour leadership frontrunner Keir Starmer have claimed “dirty tricks” by party insiders, after two members of his team were reported to the Information Commissioner’s Office over an alleged breach of data protection rules.

Members of the Starmer team were reportedly accused of “data-scraping”, by hacking information from the membership database which could have been used to lobby activists for their votes in the ballot.

A source close to the campaign said that the supposed breach had in fact arisen as a result of Starmer officials checking out a previous allegation that Rebecca Long-Bailey may have broken the rules.

“This is a factional attack by the party machine on our campaign,” the source told The Independent. “This contest was always going to be a David against Goliath struggle because we have the entire party machine on the side of one candidate.”

More details here:

 

Keir Starmer's team claim 'dirty tricks' by party insiders after being accused of hacking into Labour's membership database

Source close to frontrunner blames ‘factional attack’ by supporters of rival Rebecca Long-Bailey
PM ‘mulls over mansion tax’ on wealth property owners

Boris Johnson is said to be considering stealing one of Ed Miliband’s old policies – a “mansion tax” imposed on owners of expensive homes.

According to The Telegraph, the prime minister is set for a Tory backlash over tax raising measures, as he and chancellor Sajid Javid come up with ways to fund a big public spending boost at next month’s Budget.

The PM is also mulling over cuts to pension tax relief at the Budget to help pay for a public spending boost.

“It is ridiculous,” a senior Tory MP told the newspaper. “If you are happy for people to get on in the world … you vote Conservative.”

The City doesn’t sound too enthused. George Bull of RSM, the accountancy firm, said: “A mansion tax in isolation would be half-baked.”

Tom McPhail of Hargreaves Lansdown, the investment firm, said scrapping high-rate pension tax relief “would be an act of fiscal hooliganism and would be really negative”.
 
Boris Johnson and Sajid Javid (Getty)
Tory minister defends deportations as ‘right’ and ‘reasonable’

Chief Secretary to the Treasury Rishi Sunak has defended a plan to push on with a flight deporting 50 people to Jamaica despite widespread calls for the jet to be grounded.

He insisted that those being forcibly removed had committed “very serious offences” and their deportations were “reasonable”.

More than 150 cross-party MPs have called on the government to halt Tuesday’s flight, which is expected to include a young man who moved to the UK aged five. And a leaked report commissioned by ministers and seen by the PA news agency warned the government that the policy should be reconsidered in all but the “most severe cases”.

But Sunak said he believes the flight is “right” and the British public would expect foreign national offenders to be deported.

“What that plane is about is deporting foreign national criminals,” the Tory MP told Sky News. “It’s reasonable, it’s proportionate, and something the British people would expect us to do for foreign criminals who have committed very serious crimes who should be sent back to their countries where they have a right to reside elsewhere.”

Sunak was asked about the case of Tajay Thompson who is facing deportation to Jamaica having served half of a 15-month sentence in 2015 after being convicted of possessing class A drugs with intent to supply at 17.

Thompson, now 23 and living in south London, told PA he has no links to the Caribbean nation which he has only visited twice since coming to the UK aged five. “I feel like I was born here. Jamaica is not my country,” Thompson said as he insisted he was groomed into a gang as a teenager.
 
Chief secretary to the Treasury Rishi Sunak (AFP)
David Lammy rejects ‘scurrilous’ claims against Starmer campaign

Members of Keir Starmer’s Labour leadership campaign have been talking about the claims of breached data rules after the party reported allegations to the Information Commissioner.

Campaign vice-chair David Lammy described the accusations as “scurrilous” on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “It didn’t happen. There was no data-scraping. I can say categorically that this did not happen and it's denied fundamentally.”

“There was no attempt by the campaign to do this – it’s scurrilous to suggest so and I’m quite sure that the Information Commissioner will find the allegations completely untrue.”

The Tottenham MP did not link the allegation to the rival campaign of Rebecca Long-Bailey when asked, but said the report was “disappointing”.

“I hope this isn’t now a scramble to the bottom of the barrel because there’s not been any scraping of data, it feels more about the barrel really," he said. “As I say there’s no substance at all to these allegations.”

Lammy also appeared on Sky News and said it was “deeply unsavoury that it’s been shared to the media.”

Tory minister denies post-Brexit ‘freeports’ will let super-rich avoid tax

A chain of 10 “freeports” planned by the government will be used by the super-rich to hoard assets and avoid taxes, Labour has warned.

Following the 10-week consultation, sea ports and airports will be able to bid for status as a free trade zone – where UK taxes and tariffs will not apply – with successful applicants named around the end of the year.

Labour’s John McDonnell said: “This is the revival of a failed Thatcherite plan from the 1980s … There is very little solid evidence that so-called freeports create jobs or boost economic growth, showing this up as another ideological move from a far-right government.”

But chief secretary to the Treasury Rishi Sunak dismissing allegations they will boost tax avoidance as a “red herring”.

The Tory minister told Sky News a US trade boss reassured them they are safer than other ports.

“It’s worth pointing out that the EU is pretty much the only place in the world that doesn’t use freeports, for example there are over 200 in the US, employing several hundred thousand people, hundreds, billions of dollars of trade happens in those areas and that’s replicated around the world.”
 

Post-Brexit 'free ports' will let companies and super-rich avoid tax, Labour warns

Ministers say scheme will create business hubs and turbocharge economy
Dozens of Labour MPs ‘considering quitting’ if Long-Bailey wins

Up to 40 MPs are understood to be considering quitting the party if Rebecca Long-Bailey succeeds Jeremy Corbyn as leader – which could see some sit as independents or some leave politics.

One MP told The Independent: “Some of us have been talking about walking out for some time. Between 30 or 40 MPs. I would sit as an independent.”

Bermondsey and Old Southwark MP Neil Coyle, who put the number “closer to a dozen”, told HuffPost UK: “Continuity Corbyn is a death knell for Labour. 

“Division, factionalism and introspection will continue. Favouritism and bullying will continue. Antisemitism will continue. Failure in elections will continue.”

Our correspondent Lizzy Buchan has all the latest details:
 

Up to 40 MPs 'considering quitting' Labour if Rebecca Long-Bailey wins race to lead party

Splits emerge as contest to succeed Jeremy Corbyn descends into acrimony
Labour and Tories almost did Brexit deal, claims ex-minister

Former PM Theresa May’s de facto deputy Sir David Lidington has revealed that the cross-party talks between the Conservatives and Labour came “pretty close” to finding a compromise over Brexit.

“I think, at the end of the day, perhaps late in the day, it was just there was an unwillingness on both sides, I think, to make the final leap.”

He also said he thought it was a mistake to create a separate department to deal with Brexit, a former minister has said. Lidington said the Department for Exiting the European Union (DExEU) should have been “an annex to the Cabinet Office and Number 10”.

The former Cabinet Office minister added that with a different approach to Brexit negotiations at the start of the process “it would have been possible then to come to the deal earlier”.
New powers will allow government to forcibly quarantine victims

Health secretary Matt Hancock has introduced new powers to quarantine people in light of the “public health emergency” from coronavirus originating in China.

Under new measures announced on Monday, the Department of Health said people with coronavirus can now be forcibly quarantined and will not be free to leave, and can be forcibly sent into isolation if they pose a threat to public health.

A spokesman said: “Our infection control procedures are world leading and the NHS is well prepared to deal with novel coronavirus.

“We are strengthening our regulations so we can keep individuals in supported isolation for their own safety and if public health professionals consider they may be at risk of spreading the virus to other members of the public.

“This measure will rightly make it easier for health professionals to help keep people safe across the country.”
 
Health secretary Matt Hancock (Reuters)
Sinn Fein win ‘nightmare’ for Boris Johnson, says Labour advisor

Sinn Fein leader Mary Lou McDonald said the party would soon work to form a “people’s government” after making historic gains in the Irish general election.

The left-wing republican party has emerged as the most popular in the country, securing the most first preference votes and topping the polls in the vast majority of constituencies.

Sinn Fein received 24.5 per cent of the vote share on first preference, Fianna Fail got 22.2 per cent and Fine Gael 20.9 per cent.

Fine Gael leader Leo Varadkar has refused to form a coalition with Sinn Fein, but Fianna Fail leader Michael Martin has refused to rule it out – saying he would “listen to the people”.

Labour policy advisor Thom Brooks said the result would be a “nightmare” for Boris Johnson “who has never taken Ireland (or Northern Ireland) seriously”.

He added: “One EU member state veto can sink any hopes of a trade deal – and will put new pressure on Irish reunification risking fragmentation of the UK.”

No 10 bust-up? Symonds said to havechallenged Cummings

There have been reports of a dispute between the prime minister’s closest adviser Dominic Cummings and his partner Carrie Symonds over the looming cabinet reshuffle.

According to The Daily Mail, Symonds was not happy that Cummings wanted to fire several ministers and ministerial special advisers she favours.

A Treasury source told the paper: “There was always a risk that Carrie and Dom were going to fall out and that the PM would get caught in the crossfire.

“Dom is trying to run the government the same way he won the referendum campaign. He doesn’t care who he insults if it makes the government more effective. Carrie is just as determined and is very loyal to her friends.”
 
Boris Johnson and Carrie Symonds (Reuters)
No 10 denies misleading Dunn family following spy claims

Downing Street has insisted it was told Anne Sacoolas was not a spy, as it denied Dominic Raab misled Harry Dunn’s parents.

The prime minister’s spokesman said: “Ann Sacoolas was notified to the UK government as a spouse with no official role.”

Asked – after a Sunday newspaper reported that the woman who was driving the car who has killed Harry had been a spy – if the family had been “misled” by the foreign secretary, the spokesman replied: “No.”

He declined to respond further on whether the US had misled the UK government about Sacoolas.

The comments came as it was announced that the cabinet will meet on Tuesday, rather than Thursday – fuelling speculation that the go-ahead will be given to HS2 straight afterwards.
EU chiefs report Scottish nationalist projection to police

According to our Europe correspondent Jon Stone, the European Commission has reported the Brexit day projection of the message “Scotland loves Europe” on the side of its building to the Belgian police.

Scotland’s first minister Nicola Sturgeon tweeted a picture of the image shortly before the UK formally quit the EU.

Scoping work into Scotland-NI bridge under way, says No 10

More from today’s lobby briefing. The prime minister’s spokesman said, for the first time, that “work is underway” on Boris Johnson’s dream – many people say fantasy – of building a bridge between Scotland and Northern Ireland.

He said a scoping report was being drawn up for the PM, but declined to say by whom, how many people were working on the project, or when it might be completed.

He also declined to respond to the suggestion it could end up being a bridge between two countries outside the United Kingdom – if Scotland ever votes for independence and Brexit triggers a referendum resulting in Northern Ireland joining with the Republic.

The PM’s spokesman also defended the deportation flight, insisting that those on board were convicted of serious offences.

“It’s correct to say that some of those on board are convicted of manslaughter, rape, violence and drug dealing,” he said.

“It is long-standing government policy that any foreign national offender sentenced to 12 months or more in prison should be considered for deportation.”
Judicial review launched in bid to halt deportation flight

Lawyers are launching a judicial review in a bid to halt a flight deporting 50 people to Jamaica amid widespread calls for the jet to be grounded.

Duncan Lewis Solicitors, which is representing 15 people due to be on the flight, is expected to file the papers at the High Court imminently and have called for an urgent oral hearing on Monday afternoon to discuss the matter.

The move comes after the government insisted it would be pressing ahead with the flight, which is thought to be leaving the UK at 6.30am on Tuesday.

Toufique Hossain, director of public law at Duncan Lewis - who is leading the legal challenge, said many of the clients had come to the UK as young children aged between four and 13. Hossain said: “We are about to submit court papers to launch a judicial review and have asked for an urgent oral hearing in the High Court this afternoon.”

A number of the people due on the flight are thought to have been convicted of drug offences when they were young.

Chief secretary to the Treasury Rishi Sunak said earlier those being forcibly removed had committed "very serious offences” and their deportations were “reasonable”.

But more than 150 cross-party MPs have called on the prime minister to halt the flight.
 
Chief secretary to the Treasury Rishi Sunak (Getty)
Mansion tax: a short history

Boris Johnson is reportedly considering imposing a “mansion tax” owners of expensive homes at next month’s Budget.

Vince Cable is credited with bringing the idea of an annual property tax on high-value homes into frontline politics – having first suggested all properties valued at over £1m could be taxed when he was still Lib Dem leader in 2009.

In 2012, a mansion tax proposal with a £2m threshold was passed at the Lib Dem conference – but the Tories, the party’s coalition partners, ruled it out.

In 2013, then Labour leader Ed Miliband picked up the idea – saying a Labour government would introduce a mansion tax.

The following year Ed Balls, then shadow chancellor, fleshed it out – claiming properties valued between £2m and £3m would pay £3,000 per year under a Labour government.

But when the 2015 Labour leadership contest took place, candidates distanced themselves from the concept. It then languished in the wilderness – until, apparently, Johnson and his chancellor Sajid Javid were looking around for ways to help fund a boost public spending.
 
London property for sale (Reuters)
Predicting political year ahead a mug’s game – John Rentoul

Our chief political commentator says the “Peter Mandelson Memorial Dim Sum Supper” – a group issued its predictions for the political year ahead – has recently reconvened.

“The event began on 23 December 1998, when I was in a Chinese restaurant with a group of friends in Soho and the news came through that Mandelson had resigned from the cabinet. By coincidence, the same group was lunching on 24 January 2001, when Mandelson resigned again.”

“Since then we have gathered every year, just before or after Christmas, to discuss what we think is going to happen in the coming year.”

Read more here:
 

The predictions we made over dinner for the political year ahead

Our Peter Mandelson Memorial Dim Sum Supper has finally reconvened
‘Ludicrous’: Reactions to government plan for Scotland-NI bridge

Plenty of reaction to the news No 10 has commissioned “scoping” work on building a bridge linking Scotland and Northern Ireland.

Labour’s Lord Adonis said “the big infrastructure projects that Belfast needs are decent railway lines to Dublin and Derry” – arguing they would cost “a fraction of this ludicrous bridge to Stranraer”.

Nigel Farage responded: “This is crazy. What about the North of England?”

Labour MP Wes Streeting tweeted: “We’ve been here before with vast sums of public money wasted on vanity projects like the Cable Car, Garden Bridge, and ‘Boris Island Airport’. The man never learns.”


PM steps up ‘bonkers’ plan for £20bn bridge

Our deputy political editor Rob Merrick has more on the Scotland to Northern Ireland bridge proposal.

A No 10 spokesman has described the scoping exercise as a “proper piece of work”. Yet one expert has dismissed the infrastructure project – which could cost up to £20bn – as “bonkers”.

Chris Wise, the engineering designer of the 2012 Olympic velodrome, said last year: “It’s socially admirable but technically clueless.”
 
In December 2019 the PM told MPs “watch this space” when asked about the prospect of a “Boris bridge” in the Commons.

Johnson previously rejected the idea an explosives disposal area in the Irish Sea called Beaufort’s Dyke was a stumbling block. In November 2018, he said: “The problem is not the undersea Beaufort’s Dyke or lack of funds. The problem is an absence of political will.”
 
Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.