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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Politics
Adam Forrest, Ashley Cowburn

Boris Johnson news – live: PM told to 'look again' at Huawei decision by US, as Farage predicts Brexit will lead to EU's demise

US secretary of state Mike Pompeo dodged questions on the American suspect wanted in the UK over the death of teenager Harry Dunn, as he discussed a range of issues with foreign secretary Dominic Raab. “Good friends don’t always agree,” said Mr Raab.

It comes as Liberal Democrat acting leader Sir Ed Davey is urging Remain voters to come together with the rest of the country after Britain’s “dark day” on Friday, as the nation prepares to leave the EU.

Meanwhile chancellor Sajid Javid was set to throw his weight behind the controversial HS2 rail project at a meeting with Boris Johnson and transport secretary Grant Shapps today.

Long-Bailey’s failure to acknowledge defeat ‘huge problem’, says Ed Balls
 
The former Labour minister turned TV presenter offered his tuppenceworth on the party’s leadership contest on BBC’s Victoria Derbyshire programme earlier.
 
“I don’t think any leadership candidate can turn things for Labour around unless they acknowledge the scale of the defeat and the scale of the failures – and I don’t think Rebecca Long-Bailey at all. And that is a huge problem.”
 
Balls added: “Labour’s got to be for patriotism, for security, for jobs for all, for uniting the towns and the cities.”
 
He said Labour could be in opposition for a very long time.
 
Mike Pompeo dodges questions on refusal to extradite Anne Sacoolas
 
Our deputy political editor Rob Merrick has more on Mike Pompeo’s appearance alongside Dominic Raab at a Policy Exchange event – at which he refused to explain why the wife of a spy whose car killed British teenager Harry Dunn is being allowed to avoid extradition.
 
Declined to set out the rationale for rejecting the UK’s extradition request, saying only that the two governments were “doing everything we can to make it right” and seeking “a resolution that reflects the tragedy that took place”.
 
More details here:
 

Mike Pompeo dodges questions on US refusal to extradite Anne Sacoolas over Harry Dunn's death

US secretary of state and foreign secretary staged a show of unity
Is the PM ducking serious scrutiny?
 
The panel on today’s BBC Politics Live have been arguing about Boris Johnson’s “People PMQs” on Facebook Live.
 
The Mirror’s Pippa Crear said the staged format means Johnson is dodging more challenging forms of scrutiny.
 
“When you’re doing it instead of being accountable to public scrutiny … he’s done one interview since he became prime minister. He’s barely been seen. It’s very difficult to get anywhere near him. They’re certainly to exclude certain parts of the media from briefings – it’s setting a worrying precedents.”
 
Tory MP Andrew Bowie said: “We’ve ever had a more accessible prime minister than the one we’ve got right now.”
 
Answering selected questions on Facebook live on Wednesday, Johnson didn’t say much – revealing only he would be marking our EU exit at 11pm on Friday in a “dignified” manner.
 
Rory Stewart wants to set up EU university exchange scheme for London
 
The independent London mayoral candidate has announced plans for a new Erasmus scheme for the capital’s universities if he wins the race for City Hall.
 
Speaking to The Independent, Stewart said he would set up a mayoral scholarship to enable students from London to spend time in EU universities and London universities to host visiting students from Europe.
 
With the future of the existing scheme uncertain for British students after Brexit, Stewart said a £15m “Erasmus More” fund would help 5,000 London students and residents to study and work abroad each year.
 
If the government negotiates continued participation in the existing scheme, Stewart’s initiative would go ahead in parallel, focusing on the capital's most disadvantaged populations.
 
The former Tory MP also said he would establish a business mission for London in Brussels after Brexit.
 
All the details here:
 

Rory Stewart pledges to set up EU university exchange scheme for London if he wins mayoral race

Exclusive: Ex-minister who quit Tories says he wants city to be 'capital of Europe' after Brexit
Sir Ed Davey: still worth fighting against hard Brexit
 
The acting Lib Dem leader said he was committed to working with “progressive” parties to push for a soft Brexit during the upcoming trade talks.
 
Davey used a speech in Manchester to concede that the campaign to stop Brexit was over – but he told supporters he wanted to fight for opportunities for British citizens to study and receive free healthcare in Europe to continue after the transition period ends in 2021.
 
“Liberal Democrats will be on a damage limitation exercise to stop a hard Brexit hurting British people,” he said in his speech at the Science and Industry Museum.
 
In an open invitation to other parties, the former energy secretary said the 11 Lib Dem MPs would be prepared to “work with anyone” in the UK to “reunite our country”.
 
And while Sir Ed said Friday would be a “heart-breaking” day for pro-Brussels campaigners, he called for the divisions of the referendum to be put to bed, adding: “We must no longer be a country that is divided by Leave and Remain.”
 
The 54-year-old continued: “As I accept that tomorrow at 11pm our campaign to stop Brexit is over, I do so standing shoulder to shoulder with the millions of pro-Europeans I have campaigned with over the past four years.
 
“Tomorrow will be a celebration for some, but for us it will be a heart-breaking day.
 
“Whilst some may relish this Tory Brexit experiment, many will be anxious and upset, worried about what the future holds for them, their families, communities and businesses.”
 
Acting Lib Dem leader Sir Ed Davey (PA)
 
British nationals trapped in Wuhan will return home tonight
 
A flight carrying British citizens stuck in China during the coronavirus outbreak will leave Wuhan airport at 9pm (UK time) tonight.
 
The foreign secretary said: “We are pleased to have confirmation from the Chinese authorities that the evacuation flight from Wuhan airport to the UK can depart at 0500 local time on Friday 31 January.
 
“The safety and security of British nationals is our top priority. Our Embassy in Beijing and consular teams remain in close contact with British nationals in the region to ensure they have the latest information they need.”
End of free roaming and pet travel looms at end of 2020
 
The government has revealed – one day before “Brexit day” – that British holidaymakers and business travellers to the EU face onerous changes when the transition agreement expires at the end of December this year.
 
New online advice says the guarantee of free mobile phone roaming throughout the EU will end.
 
Motorists will need a “green card” – a certificate extending their travel insurance to Europe, and the “Pet Passport” arrangements will also be scrapped.
 
It was already known that UK passports will be subject to new rules on validity, which means that someone with almost 15 months to run on a British passport could be denied boarding a flight to Europe.
 
Our travel correspondent Simon Calder has all the details:
 

UK travellers to EU face end of free roaming and pet travel from 2021

New government advice confirms extra red tape and expense for British travellers to Europe
Former health secretary Jeremy Hunt to chair committee scrutinising government's NHS performance

Former health secretary Jeremy Hunt has been elected chair of an influential Commons committee responsible for scrutinising the government’s NHS and social care performance. 

Mr Hunt, the longest serving health secretary and a cabinet minister in both David Cameron and Theresa May’s administration, defeated Tory rivals to head the committee in a secret ballot on Wednesday. 

He will now serve as chair of the Health and Social Care committee for the duration of the current parliament, replacing Sarah Wollaston, a former Tory MP who defected to the Lib Dems and lost her seat at the election.

Nationalisation ‘common sense’, says Lisa Nandy – but urges Labour to think more ‘creatively’
 
Rebecca Long-Bailey has challenged her Labour leadership rivals to stay loyal to Jeremy Corbyn’s commitment to nationalise a swathe of utilities.
 
The business secretary has pledged to retain the 2019 manifesto commitments to bring energy, water, rail and mail into public ownership.
 
Lisa Nandy has been the first to bite, claiming Labour should be thinking “creatively” about nationalisation.
 
The Wigan MP told Politics Home: “It’s common sense to bring the railways and post office back into public ownership, but that shouldn’t be the limit of our ambition.
 
“We should be thinking creatively about community ownership, co-ops and municipal energy companies – that’s how you genuinely empower people.”
 
Labour leadership candidate Lisa Nandy (Getty)
 

Pompeo dodges questions on extradition of US diplomat over death of British teenager.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has dodged questions over why an American woman wanted for trial over the death of a British teenager has been allowed to “evade justice” by returning to the United States.

Pompeo caused fury in the UK by declining an extradition request for intelligence officer’s wife Anne Sacoolas, who is facing a charge of causing the death of 19-year-old Harry Dunn in Northamptonshire by dangerous driving last year.

Foreign secretary Dominic Raab last night expressed “disappointment” over the decision during talks with Pompeo on the first day of a two-day visit to London.

Pompeo was confronted directly about the Sacoolas case when he appeared on-stage with Mr Raab at a event in London, where he was asked: “Can you explain to us what is it about the special relationship that allows a US citizen to run over and kill an English boy and evade justice.”

The US secretary of state ducked the question, replying: “This was an enormous tragedy. An American had an accident here. The US is terribly sorry for the tragedy that took place and the loss of a British citizen’s life. It was horrible.

“We are doing everything we can to make it right. We are doing so in a way that I think protects the important relationship between the two countries as well.

“We will continue to work on this. Dominic raised this yesterday when we spoke. He has raised it each time we have spoken since it happened. 

“We will continue to work our way through it to try to get a good resolution, a resolution that reflects the tragedy that took place that day.”

Later, the foreign secretary said he had never had any conversations about whether Prince Andrew could be traded for Sacoolas to assist the FBI investigation into the prince’s former friend Jeffrey Epstein.

Pompeo said he was “confident each of these cases will be resolved on their relative merits”.

Raab added: “I totally agree. There’s no barter, it’s a rules-based approach. That's what the treaty does. And we both see the extradition treaty works for both sides.”

He said it had never been raised with him before.

US Secretary of State says UK will be 'front of the line' for a post-Brexit trade deal

Warm words on Brexit from Mike Pompeo - despite the tensions of the UK's decision to allow Huawei to build part of its 5G network.

“The previous administration took the view that if the United Kingdom made this decision it would be at the back of the line. We intend to put the United Kingdom at the front of the line,” Mr Pompeo told a Policy Exchange event in Westminster.

Mr Pompeo said the US wanted to “lower every barrier” to trade during negotiations with the UK.

He said: “An important part of this relationship is reducing the friction between these kinds of things, whether it is the friction of the ease of travel, it's the ease of exchange or confidence in information systems, of our students going to each other's schools and the cross-generation of knowledge that will flow from that, whether it is tariff barriers.

“We want to put all the places where friction happens across sovereign boundaries - we want to protect those boundaries because we owe it to our people to do, but once we've done that, once we've protected sovereignty, we want to lower every barrier towards the free flow of information, talent, capital - all the things that promote wealth and prosperity.

“Those and security. Those are the things that, if we do this well together, will be special and unique about the relationship after the United Kingdom finishes this process of departure from the EU.”

Dominic Raab with Mike Pompeo at Policy Exchange event (Getty)
 
Brexit secretary entitled to redundancy as PM to visit staff ahead of department closure

Steve Barclay, the Brexit secretary, and other ministers will lose their jobs at 11.01pm on Friday as the UK leaves the EU. They will entitled to a redundancy package - under usual rules  - but it will be up to them to decide whether to take it.

Boris Johnson is to meet with Department for Exiting the European Union staff on Thursday to thank them before the department is dissolved.

The Prime Minister's official spokesman said Mr Johnson wrote to the workers before the afternoon meeting.

"I want to take this opportunity to thank each of you for your hard work over the last three and a half years," the PM wrote.

"Your contribution and that of the department has been vital for getting us to this moment.

"Some of you will have joined near the very beginning of the journey, and others more recently, but without your combined efforts we would not be where we are today."

No10 does not rule out overturning Javid over HS2

Downing Street declined to rule out Boris Johnson overruling Chancellor Sajid Javid, who is set to back HS2.

"The decision on HS2 is an important decision for the country and it will be taken based on the facts," the PM's official spokesman said.

Asked whether Mr Johnson could overrule the Chancellor, the spokesman replied: "It's an important decision that will be taken based on the facts and we will announce it when we are ready."

Government ‘working urgently’ with Chinese authorities on flights for British nationals in Wuhan

The government is doing “everything it can” to bring British nationals trapped in corona virus-hit Wuhan back to the UK, No 10 has said.

The PM’s official spokesman said around 200 people were waiting to be repatriated and the government was working closely with the Chinese authorities to get the necessary permissions for the plane to leave.

The spokesman told a Westminster briefing: “We are doing everything we can to get British people in Wuhan safely back to the UK.

“A number of countries flights have been unable to take off as planned including the British repatriation from Wuhan. We are working urgently with the Chinese authorities to make sure the flight can take off as soon as possible.”

The UK has not received the “necessary clearances” for the flight to take off, the spokesman said.

Once returned to the UK, people will be taken into quarantine at an NHS facility in an unnamed location.

Are Brexit tribes more united than they realise?
 
“Remainers” and “Leavers” may have more in common than they think and talk of deep-rooted divisions may be overblown, a study has suggested.
 
The report by researchers from the Universities of Bath and Essex shows that 90 per cent of the time the two groups agree on important topics including poverty, climate change, housing and the importance of communities.
 
Even on subjects viewed as the most divisive – such as attitudes to immigration and national identity – they showed more than 50 per cent “similarity”.
 
Lead researcher Dr Paul Hanel, from the University of Essex, said: “It has been claimed the EU referendum of June 2016 revealed a divided, rather than a United Kingdom, with growing tensions among those who voted ‘leave’ and those who voted ‘remain’.
 
“Previous research has concentrated on the differences between the two sides, but our study shows that in fact there is more to unite them than divide them.”
 
A mural on Brexit by Banksy found in Dover (AFP)
 
Thornberry: Trump peace plan ‘a monstrosity’
 
MPs are now discussing Donald Trump’s Middle East “peace plan” in the Commons.
 
Labour leadership hopeful Emily Thornberry has condemned the president’s blueprint. “This is not a peace plan, it is a monstrosity,” she said, adding that it “destroys any prospects of an independent … Palestinian state”.
 
The shadow foreign secretary referred to Trump and Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu as “corrupt, racist, power-crazed leaders”.
 
Thornberry also apologised to SNP MPs for her language at a recent hustings (she said “I hate the SNP”).
 
The Labour hopeful said: “There is no place for hatred in our politics … We have opposed the Tory government, and I apologise for what I said.”
 
HS2 ‘catastrophic waste of money’ says Tory MP
 
Backbench Conservative MPs have been asking questions – and airing their views – on HS2 in the House of Commons.
 
Philip Davies said: “If the government were to scrap HS2 – which everyone knows is a catastrophic waste of money – there would have a huge amount available for more rail infrastructure in west Yorkshire and across the north.
 
The Shipley MP asked: “When the government’s intended timetable for completing Northern powerhouse rail?
 
Responding for the government, transport minister Chris Heaton-Harris said the government was “spending a huge amount of money improving the infrastructure in the north”.
 
He added: “HS2 and various other bits of infrastructure are not either/or – they are additional investments.”
 
Philip Davies speaking in the Commons (Parliament TV)
 
Special Brexit coins on sale for hundreds of pounds
 
You know those 50p Brexit coins? How do you fancy paying £945 for one?
 
A set of commemorative coins – inscribed with the word: “Peace, prosperity and friendship with all nations” – are to be put on sale by the Royal Mint.
 
The gold version, produced in a limited edition of 1,500, is priced at just under a cool grand.
 
More details here:
 

Brexit 50p coin costing up to £945 to go on sale

Design will feature the words: 'Peace, prosperity and friendship with all nations'
Farage explained merits of populism to EU parliament – just after Auschwitz survivor spoke
 
The Brexit Party leader, making his farewell-and-up-yours speech in Brussels, raved about how populism was taking over.
 
“There is a battle going on, in the west and elsewhere. It is globalism against populism. And you may loathe populism, but I’ll tell you a funny thing, it’s becoming very popular,” he told them.
 
It came scarcely more than an hour after the chamber had heard from 89-year-old Auschwitz survivor, Liliana Segre.
 
Our sketch writer Tom Peck has more:
 

Tom Peck: Nigel Farage raved about populism to EU parliament – right after an Auschwitz survivor spoke

It was fitting, in a strange way, that he should save his most crass moment till last
Brexit: history of a portmanteau
 
The word “Brexit” was first spoken in the House of Commons in April 2014 – more than two years before the UK voted to leave the European Union, new analysis reveals.
 
It has since been mentioned in the Commons more than 24,000 times, with nearly 9,000 appearances in 2019 alone.
 
The word was slow to catch on among MPs. The first ever mention is recorded as happening on April 2014, by former Conservative MP David Nuttall, who referred to a competition run by the Institute of Economic Affairs called the “Brexit prize”.
 
But the very first use of the word “Brexit” anywhere in the world is recorded by the Oxford English Dictionary as taking place around two years earlier, in May 2012.
 
It is ascribed to Peter Wilding, founder of pro-EU think tank British Influence, who wrote in an article online: “Unless a clear view is pushed that Britain must lead in Europe at the very least to achieve the completion of the single market then the portmanteau for Greek euro exit (Grexit) might be followed by another sad word, Brexit.”
 
Britain will exit EU on Friday (AFP)
 
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