Conservative Party

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The Orbánisation of British Politics: Farage and Braverman Headline with Hungarian Prime Minister at National Conservatism Conference

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 09/04/2024 - 11:39pm in

Suella Braverman and Nigel Farage have been announced as speakers alongside Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán at this year’s National Conservatism Conference (NatCon) in Brussels next week. 

Braverman also spoke at last year's UK event with other Conservative politicians including Michael Gove, Miriam Cates and Danny Kruger. Last year the Byline Times reported on NatCon's links to Orbán, US billionaire Peter Thiel, and the organisations funding this effort to mainstream Christian Nationalism.

The line-up for this year’s NatCon Brussels further demonstrates Orbán’s influence on the right of European politics and also includes many speakers with links to radical right networks in Europe and the US who aim to roll back reproductive and sexuality rights. 

Toby Young’s Free Speech Union (FSU) is again well represented at NatCon, demonstrating the organisation's links to the movement.

James Orr and Matthew Goodwin both spoke at NatCon UK and are speaking again in Brussels. Orr was chair of NatCon UK, and is UK chair of the Edmund Burke Foundation (EBF) which is the organisation behind NatCon. 

The FSU’s Frank Ferudi is also speaking. Ferudi, formerly of the Revolutionary Communist Party, is the Executive Director of the Brussels branch of the Hungarian government-backed college Mathias Corvinus Collegium (MCC). Furedi told Politico that his position at MCC Brussels was “a chance to fight back in the culture wars” in an article that labelled him “Orban’s attack dog”.

In May 2022, Furedi also spoke at the US-based Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) hosted in Budapest. CPAC is an annual conference organised by the American Conservative Union (ACU), the foremost Republican organisation in the US.

Another NatCon speaker Ralph Gert Schoellhammer is a Visiting Fellow at MCC Budapest. He is also a writer for UnHerd, Spiked, and the European Conservative and a regular on GB News and Talk TV. 

NatCon features several other speakers from institutes backed by the Hungarian Government.   John O'Sullivan is president of the Danube Institute, a Hungarian conservative think tank that receives state funding, and Rob Dreher is a fellow of the institute. Another speaker Gladden Pappin is president of the Hungarian Institute of International Affairs, Hungary’s foreign policy research institute of state.

NatCon has been linked to the brand of Christian Nationalism adopted by the radical right in the US. Kevin Roberts, president of the Heritage Foundation who spoke at NatCon UK 2023 is an author of Project 2025 which sets out the agenda for a second Trump presidency, including policies that would “rescind regulations prohibiting discrimination”  and roll back access to abortion and contraception with a “focus on strengthening marriage and sexual risk avoidance.”

Speaking at NatCon 2024, Paul Coleman is the executive director of Alliance Defending Freedom International (ADF) and a lawyer. The Southern Poverty Law Center based in the US which monitors far-right activity has labelled the ADF as a hate group. The organisation was also named in an EU report Tip of the Iceberg (TOTI) as being a key organisation in a Europe-wide network involved in funnelling US and Russian dark money into religious extremism with the aim of rolling back reproductive and sexuality rights. Between 2008 and 2019 ADF spent over $23,000,000 on anti-gender campaigning across Europe.

ADF’s UK entity has recently ramped up lobbying in Westminster, according to analysis by the Observer the latest financial accounts for ADF UK show it spent almost £1m in the year to June 2023, up from £392,556 in 2020, and that its income almost doubled between 2022 and 2023, from £553,823 to £1,068,552.

Another NatCon speaker Ladislav Ilčić MEP is a Croatian politician who represents Hrvatski suverenisti (Croatian Sovereigntists) and is part of the European Conservatives and Reformists Group (ECR).

Ilčić also attended the European Congress of Families conference (ECF) held in Croatia in September 2023 which featured speakers from other key organisations named in the TOTI report including Brian Brown of the International Organization of the Family which is directly linked to Russian oligarchs who have been under western sanctions since the annexation of Crimea. In 2014 Brown organised a conference inside the Kremlin palace.

Other ECF speakers included Conservative MPs Miriam Cates and Ranil Jayawardena. ECF was organised by the ECR which contains factions of socially conservative, right-wing populist, liberal-conservative, Christian democratic, far-right, and national conservative parties.

Three other members of the ECR are also speaking at NatCon 2024, co-chairman Ryszard Legutko from Poland, Dutch independent MEP Rob Roos, and Vice President Hermann Tertsch del Valle-Lersundi who is a member of the Spanish VOX Political Party which is named in the TOTI report as being part of the $700,000,000 anti-gender network.  

European politicians at NatCon 2024 also include members of the Identity and Democracy Party, Tom Vandendriessche of Belgium's Vlaams Belang party who although described themselves as centre-right are widely considered to be on the far right, and Patricia Chagnon, an MEP representing Marie Le Pen's National Rally party.

Other NatCon speakers include:

Melanie Phillips, columnist for The Times and the Jewish News Syndicate, and regular on the BBC is also speaking at the conference.

So too is Uzay Bulut, a Turkish journalist and political analyst who is a distinguished senior fellow at the Gatestone Institute, accused of being a hate group and fake news publisher that has received funding from the Mercer Family Foundation run by the billionaire Mercer family who also funded Cambridge Analytica. The Gatestone Institute has ties to the British 'think tanks' the Henry Jackson Society and Policy Exchange as reported by the Byline Times. 

Also speaking is German aristocrat Gloria von Thurn und Taxis who worked closely with conservative Traditionalist Catholic leaders within the church and former Trump advisor Steve Bannon, with whom she planned to set up a school to educate and train right-wing Catholics.

The conference's special guest is Gerhard Ludwig Müller, a German Cardinal of the Catholic Church who has courted controversy for public criticism of Pope Francis stating that the Pope has “uttered plenty of material heresies”.

The Conservative Party’s Campaign Against Sadiq Khan is Based on a ‘Barefaced Lie’ Which is Designed to Harvest Voters’ Data

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 09/04/2024 - 7:26pm in

The Conservative Party has been accused of running a campaign against Sadiq Khan which is based on a “barefaced lie” which will “panic” Londoners into handing over their personal data.

Londoners will go to the polls on May 2 to choose their next mayor. Polls suggest that the Labour incumbent Sadiq Khan is the strong favourite to win against a challenge from his Conservative rival Susan Hall.

However, Khan’s team fear that a “desperate” campaign by Hall, based on wrongly suggesting that Khan has committed to implement pay-per-mile road charging, could allow her to win the contest.

Proposals for pay-per-mile road charging have been discussed in the past by City Hall, including by Khan’s Conservative predecessor Boris Johnson. Rishi Sunak was also reportedly a previous supporter of such plans.

However, Khan has repeatedly ruled out bringing in pay-per-mile charging, saying again last month that he had “categorically” ruled out any such plans.

Despite these repeated denials, Hall’s campaign have sent out leaflets to Londoners which are designed to look exactly like driving penalty notices and which contain the text “DRIVING CHARGE NOTICE. DO NOT IGNORE. WARNING. THE MAYOR OF LONDON IS PLANNING ANOTHER TAX ON DRIVERS. IF YOUR’RE NOT PREPARED TO PAY THEN SCAN THE QR CODE BELOW”..

Anyone scanning the code will be taken to a website requesting they fill out a “petition” against the new “tax”, which then collects their data.

Hall’s opponents accused her of trying to “panic” Londoners into handing over their information.

“The Conservatives will panic people with this sort of leaflet - it really isn't acceptable” the Liberal Democrat’s London Mayor candidate Rob Blackie said.

Khan’s campaign accused Hall of peddling a “barefaced lie” in a “desperate” bid to win votes.

“These leaflets peddle a barefaced lie” a London Labour spokesperson told Byline Times.

“The Tories are clearly desperate and have resorted to deliberately misleading Londoners. It is nothing more than scaremongering.

“Sadiq has repeatedly, categorically, ruled out pay-per-mile for as long as he is mayor. Londoners will not be duped by these Tory lies."

Political campaigns are required to clearly label their campaign material to alert voters to their source.

However, Hall’s leaflets contain no reference to Susan Hall on the front of the leaflet, and only contain a single small print reference to Hall at the bottom of the reverse side.

The Conservative Party is not mentioned at all aside from a small print reference to 'CCHQ' which is an abbreviation for Conservative Campaign Headquarters.

The linked website does contain a small print reference to the Conservative Party. However, many Londoners receiving the leaflets are unlikely to realise the source of the supposed 'Driving Charge Notice' they have received.

A spokesperson for the Information Commissioners' Office said, "We are aware of issues raised in relation to campaign leaflets and are considering those concerns.

"If a candidate or party asks you to complete a survey or petition, they should be clear how that data will be used in future.

"In many cases, it won't be appropriate for the party or candidate to then repurpose that information for political campaigning."

Independent fact checking organisation Full Fact said in a statement that they were "concerned" by Hall's leaflets.

"We're concerned about these leaflets from the Conservative Party that some of our supporters are receiving through their doors. Deceptive campaign practices can mislead the public during elections - and that’s not on.

"Every voter deserves good information. This is why we’re demanding improvements to the rules around the transparency of campaign materials..."

The leaflets are the latest in a series of misleading claims made by the Conservative Party’s campaign in London. Last month the party deleted a video wrongly claiming that London had become “a crime capital of the world” after it was revealed that it contained a video clip of a terror scare which took place in New York, rather than in London.

Multiple tweets sent out by Hall and the party on X have also been labeled with 'community notes' by users due to misleading claims they have made.

The Conservative party’s former Deputy Chair Lee Anderson was also suspended from the party in February after wrongly suggesting that Khan was in the control of Islamists who were his “mates”.

Byline Times contacted Susan Hall’s campaign to request an explanation, or justification, for the use of their “Driving Charge Notice” leaflets as well as their broader claims about Khan’s plans, but did not receive a response.

Just One-in-Four Voters Back Rishi Sunak’s Threat to Quit ‘Foreign Court’ of ECHR

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 06/04/2024 - 12:14am in

The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak this week threatened to quit the ECHR, saying that he would take Britain out of what he described as the “foreign court” if it stood in the way of his plans to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda.

"I do believe that border security and making sure that we can control illegal migration is more important than membership of a foreign court", he told the Sun newspaper.

However, new polling commissioned by Byline Times this week suggests that just one-in-four (26%) voters would back leaving the European Court of Human Rights.

By contrast, 43% of those surveyed by pollsters We Think said that they would support remaining within the international court’s jurisdiction. 

A further third (32%) of voters said they don’t know what they thought about the issue either way.

Conservative MPs have been piling pressure on the Prime Minister to back quitting the ECHR in the party’s upcoming general election manifesto, with some commentators even suggesting that the party could promise to hold a referendum on the issue.

However, unlike Brexit which ultimately gathered support from a majority of voters, the issue of Britain’s membership of the ECHR appears to be only a minority concern.

Even among Conservative supporters, support for quitting the court is still not a majority proposition, the poll suggests, with just 46% of those surveyed agreeing that the UK should leave.

Sunak has previously dampened down expectations of ever quitting the ECHR, with the Rwandan Government hinting last December that the country would pull out of their deportation agreement with the UK if they quit the ECHR.

However, Rwandan officials appeared to back away from this suggestion this week following Sunak’s latest intervention, saying that the UK's membership of the court was a matter for Sunak's Government.

Despite Sunak's threat to leave the ECHR, the Prime Minister continues to insist that he believes doing so won't be necessary, saying this week that the Government's Rwanda scheme is "in compliance" with all international conventions the UK is already signed up to.

However, the UK's Supreme Court ruled last year that the Government's plan would not be in compliance with international law, due to their assessment that Rwanda is not a safe country.

The Council of Europe's Human Rights Commissioner last month savaged what it described as the "dangerous" Rwanda scheme, which it singled out as an example of states "dismantling collective human rights safeguards [and] eroding legal and democratic checks that protect all our rights".

Human rights groups have also criticised plans to deport people to the country, where political opponents of the country's dictator Paul Kagame continue to be targeted by the regime.

However, last month a Conservative peer defended the scheme, saying that the country was indeed a "perfectly safe country" as long as you "don't oppose the Government".

‘Panic, Misinformation and Hysteria About Freeports is Drowning Out the Real Concerns’

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 04/04/2024 - 10:22pm in

The serious allegations and revelations about Teesworks and the Teesside Freeport have sparked renewed attention to the dangers of freeports and other kinds of special economic zone (SEZ), as has recent Government confirmation that eight new investment zones will commence operation in the 2024-25 financial year, with a further five in prospect.

This attention is vitally important.

Although a recent Government-commissioned review of Teesworks did not find evidence to justify allegations of corruption or illegality, it did identify multiple defects in decision-making and transparency, as well as questioning whether it provides value for money.

Many commentators, including anti-corruption experts, consider that this review was insufficient in its powers and scope, and are dubious about its failure to identify corruption. Certainly, it is unlikely that this is the end of the matter as regards the Teesside freeport or others, and investigative journalism by Private Eye, especially, continues to undertake outstanding reporting of this unfolding story.

However, these important issues are being obscured by the swirl of errors, confusions, and hyperbole which has reappeared around UK freeports and ‘charter cities’ or ‘states within a state’ – particularly on social media but also crossing over into the traditional media.

Dispersing this fog is difficult because the claims made are convoluted, fragmented, hard to pin down, and difficult to disentangle from the occasional truth they contain. They would be easier to evaluate if they were based on published research reports about the actual operations or rules of UK SEZs but, tellingly, they are not.

Unpacking what is being said therefore requires a lengthy explanation but, with misinformation on this issue now spreading like wildfire, it is worthwhile both in the interests of accuracy and – crucially – to prevent the false or exaggerated claims being made, giving advocates of SEZs an easy way to discredit their critics.

There is also a more narrowly political issue. To the extent that Labour has no apparent plans to dissolve SEZs if it comes to power, it is being suggested that the party is ‘complicit’ in what is claimed these SEZs consist of. 

SEZs

Special economic zone is a generic term encompassing a wide variety of foreign trade zones, freeports, investment zones, industrial parks, export processing zones, enterprise zones, and even ‘charter cities’ (in this sense, the phrase ‘freeports and SEZs’ is a misnomer).

What all SEZs share is some form of derogation from the laws and regulations of the country within which they are located. But what that means, and the specific institutional and legal forms it takes, also varies considerably.

The actual or potential problems of SEZs around the world are well-established, including a lack of democratic accountability, tax evasion, money-laundering, and the erosion of environmental and labour standards, all the way through to grotesque breaches of human rights.

At the same time, one of the best-evidenced criticisms is that they are an ineffectual, and possibly counter-productive way of promoting economic activity, as they are more likely to draw existing activity to them – to the detriment of other areas – than to generate new activity.

With so many potential dangers and arguably so few benefits, it is entirely right and necessary that SEZs be subjected to very close scrutiny.  

In the UK, the derogations involved have predominantly meant tax exemptions of various sorts, including reduced or waived business rates and employer National Insurance contributions, investment support, and the relaxation of planning rules. Freeports, specifically, also suspend or simplify customs procedures and tariff payments until goods leave them.

It seems likely that some of the SEZs currently being developed in the UK will be given considerable rights to compulsorily purchase land and buildings as happened in the past with, for example, the London Docklands Development Corporation. The official intentions behind these SEZs have included boosting employment, economic growth, innovation, investment, and trade, and reducing regional inequalities, although their effectiveness in these respects is highly contested.

As this suggests, SEZs are not a new phenomenon in the UK, and can be traced back at least to the early 1980s, but they have come and gone, and changed name and detailed provisions over time. There have even been freeports in the past, although the last of these closed in 2012.

The variety of forms SEZs take also makes it hard to pin down the exact numbers involved, as does the fact that in the past few years the Government has made several proposals for different numbers of SEZs, some of which have been modified or abandoned, others of which are at different stages of creation.

As things stand, there are at least 60 enterprise zones still in operation across the UK which were created following the Coalition Government’s 2011 Budget. The current Government is creating at least 12 (perhaps 13) new freeports which are at various stages of development, and there are also the 13 new investment zones currently being created.

It is presumably adding all these together that leads to the figure of 86 frequently appearing on social media as the number of current and projected SEZs in the UK.

An aerial view of the Port of Felixstowe, Suffolk, part of 'Freeport East'. Photo: John Fielding/Wikimedia Commons

States Within a State?

The UK has, or will soon have, a mixture of SEZs. What it does not have, and there are no announced plans for it to have, are charter cities.

Charter cities are a particular, and intensely controversial, form of SEZ, generally found in economically developing countries, in which, typically, a private company or consortium takes over the laws and regulations of a territory within the ‘host country’.

The most famous, or infamous, examples are the now abandoned zones for employment and economic development in Honduras. The claim that UK freeports are, or will become, charter cities started floating around a couple of years ago, based mainly on some rambling essays, by an author using a false name, on a now deleted website.

At that time, and again now, a particular focus of concern was the size of areas denoted on then newly-published Government maps of freeport areas, showing them to extend for up to 45 square kilometres. The concern was reasonable, for the maps were poorly annotated and explained, and became all the more so when combined with the claim that these entire areas were set to become ‘charter cities’.

But that claim was based on a misunderstanding: in fact, as independent experts have explained, it denotes the area within which freeport facilities (customs and tax sites) must be located, not the area within which the derogations (such as tax breaks) apply, although there remain uncertainties, and therefore significant and genuine concerns, about the scope of changes to compulsory purchase and planning regulations.  

In recent weeks, there has been a resurgence of these and similar ideas, and even a X (formerly Twitter) community, which currently has more than 500 members, built around them. Though this latest upsurge does not always use the term ‘charter city’, it makes the same claims by talking of the UK SEZs being ‘states within a state’ or ‘countries within a country’ – with corporations able to set their own tax systems and laws, including environmental and employment laws, to the point where many rights are, or could be, suspended.

If anything, this latest version is even more alarming than before in claiming that all 86 UK SEZs (thus including the old enterprise zones) are such ‘states within a state’.

Flawed Logic and Motivated Reasoning

None of this was true when it was first claimed and none of it is true now.

What is certainly true is that there are free-market and libertarian think tanks which advocate for such developments. It is true that those think tanks, and many individuals within them, are influential with the Government.

It is true that, in 2010, one of them, the TaxPayers’ Alliance, circulated some notes championing charter cities in the UK. It is no doubt true that many Conservative MPs would agree. It is true that Jacob Rees-Mogg’s father wrote a book extolling the kind of libertarian dystopia associated with charter cities and their advocates. And it is true that Rishi Sunak, who is a longstanding advocate of freeports, was once taught by the Stanford economist Paul Romer who was the architect of the contemporary charter cities concept (whether this really means, as is invariably claimed as some kind of clinching evidence if true, that he was 'Sunak’s mentor’ seems improbable since Romer has “no recollection of ever interacting with him”).

But there are no ‘dots to be joined’ here. Whatever any of these individuals or organisations may want, as a matter of fact there is no legal basis in the UK, and no legislation in prospect, which would enable in name, or in effect, anything remotely like charter cities or ‘states within a state’ or ‘company towns’ or any of the similar claims which are circulating.

UK SEZs are part of the UK and remain entirely within the UK’s legal order, and there is no way that they could ‘become’ charter cities, or have their own legal order, without primary legislation (and, as will become clear later, without violating the UK’s trade deal with the EU).

This isn’t one of those issues where there are valid points on 'both sides’ of the debate. It is quite clear cut and beyond rational debate.

UK SEZs do not make their own laws and they do not have the power to set different employment or environmental regulations from the rest of the country.

Except in the most circuitous of ways, UK SEZs have nothing to do with the East India Company or with Hong Kong Freeports during the Opium Wars. Such comparisons make for good rhetoric but are based on the confusions arising from SEZ being a generic term which can be applied to multiple things.

The result has been to conflate all the different kinds of SEZs there are, or have ever been, or have ever been proposed, across different centuries and around the world, and to ascribe characteristics of any of them to current UK SEZs.

At its heart is a well-known logical fallacy along the lines of ‘a dog is an animal. An elephant is an animal. Therefore a dog is an elephant’. What then proceeds is the familiar practices of all ‘motivated reasoning’, which selects or twists evidence to fit assumptions, and mistakes absence of evidence for the presence of a hidden agenda. It soon becomes easy for perfectly well-intentioned people to become completely invested in ‘proving’ the fallacy to be true, and for social media echo chambers to amplify the message, and possibly make it even more inaccurate in the process.

In this particular case, it seems to have gained credence mainly among many who, confronted with similar logic and reasoning from Brexiters, would readily detect its deficiencies. If this case is different perhaps it is because, superficially, it looks like another of the well-founded critiques of Brexit.

Brexit and Freeports

Although most of the UK’s SEZs predate it, Brexit has given new impetus to concerns about them, not least because the Government proclaims the new freeports, specifically, to be a ‘Brexit benefit’ and trumpets the idea that this is because they will be free of EU rules that governed the previous UK freeports.

It is true that the EU has such rules and that these are more stringent than those of the World Trade Organisation, with which the UK has to comply. That the Government, in its desperation to show some value to Brexit, should make a great deal of this is not surprising.

What is more surprising is that critics of these new UK freeports should adopt a mirror-image form of the Government’s rhetoric, by inferring that this means that EU freeports, including those which the UK used to have, are not of concern because they are ‘tightly regulated’, whereas the new UK version will be completely different.

This is a rather starry-eyed view of EU freeports which, like other SEZs, have themselves been criticised for fostering corruption, tax evasion and criminality. That is clearly not an argument for UK freeports, but it does demonstrate that for critics to draw a sharp distinction between ‘tightly regulated’ EU freeports and post-Brexit UK freeports is misleading.

That, in turn, should give pause for thought to those who believe that post-Brexit freeports are set to be deeply malign – whereas their pre-Brexit version was, if not benign, then at least no worse than merely ineffective.

Freeports and State Aid

In reality, as these critics rightly identify, the principal way that post-Brexit freeports differ, or may differ, from those allowed by the EU, relates to state aid, which is indeed tightly controlled in the EU version. However, it is bizarre that they should focus on this issue, given that their wider critique comes primarily from a broadly left-wing viewpoint.

Are they suggesting that state aid is automatically a bad thing? After all, a standard criticism made of the EU by the left, including ‘Lexiters’, is that its restrictions on state aid mark it out as a neoliberal organisation. Why, then, would anyone on the left argue that the UK making more extensive use of state aid than the EU allows should be seen as a problem?

Conversely, if UK’s post-Brexit freeports are, as these critics insist, a playground for ‘anarcho-capitalism’ and the most extreme forms of neoliberalism and libertarianism, that can hardly be squared with the criticism that they are ramping up the provision of state aid.

This criticism is not just ideologically incoherent, it also misses or obscures two crucial points.

The first is that, in fact, post-Brexit UK freeports, and the UK generally, are not able to operate independently of EU state aid rules. It is true that the UK no longer has to obtain advance approval from the European Commission for things such as freeport tax breaks, but it is bound by the state aid provisions within the 'level playing field’ commitments of the Trade and Cooperation Agreement with the EU.

Indeed, there have already been concerns raised by the EU that UK freeport tax incentives (which is what is specifically at issue, though subsidised asset sales could become another) may violate those provisions. Whether they do so, and if they do what action the EU takes, remain to be seen, but it demonstrates the falsity of the claim that UK freeports can simply ignore EU state aid rules, and of the claim that UK freeports are constrained solely by WTO rules.

What is even more important is what this criticism obscures. The EU may object to freeport state aid because it gives the UK competitive advantage. Right-wing neoliberals may object to it because it distorts market competition. But the real concern should be whether freeport tax incentives and highly subsidised asset sales are in fact a cover for cronyism and corruption.

It is this possibility, rather than some idea that ‘state aid’ is inherently wrong, or that EU state aid rules are inherently virtuous, which lies at the heart of the accusations which have already been made about Teesside Freeport and which, very likely, will emerge about others in the future.

Finally, it has been suggested that, to the extent that UK Freeports do not comply with EU Freeport regulations, their existence is a bar to the UK re-joining the EU. This is not true. In the course of any accession process, UK SEZs would simply have to be amended over an agreed period of time to comply with EU rules, as has happened with the SEZs of many accession countries, such as Poland, in the past.

Since freeport derogations are time-limited, this would not likely give rise to contractual disputes. Even if it did, suggestions that this would lead to the UK facing legal claims in a ‘secretive court’ under an ‘investor-state dispute settlement’ (ISDS) mechanism are puzzling. ISDS features in some international trade and investment agreements and has had relevance to some charter city contracts, so this suggestion is likely to just be based on the underlying confusion of freeports and charter cities, since it is a mystery what agreement or associated ISDS mechanism might give rise to such legal claims in relation to UK freeports.

Retained EU Law

The other, quite different, Brexit issue which is being mentioned in relation to SEZs is that of EU law and regulation – especially that relating to employment and environmental standards. Specifically, it is claimed that the Government has axed huge swathes of what was Retained EU Law (REUL), with more to follow.

It is a strange shift in logic because, even if it was true, it would be true for the UK (or in some cases only Great Britain) as a whole, whereas the ‘state within a state’ claim is that SEZs have different laws and even different legal systems from the rest of the country.

But, in any case, it is also misleading.

It is true that Boris Johnson, Liz Truss and, at one time, Sunak, all promised to shred the majority of Retained EU Law. How deeply this would have bitten into employment and environmental protections will probably never be known, as we don’t know which things would have escaped the shredder. But the fact is that, much to the outrage of Conservative deregulatory Brexiters, Sunak was forced – for pragmatic rather than principled reasons – to substantially water-down what became the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act of 2023. The bulk of what is now called ‘assimilated law’ has been kept.

It is true that one thing which hasn’t been assimilated is the Retained EU law relating to port service regulations, and some of the freeport critics have lighted on this as being significant – but mistakenly so. It has been axed because UK ports are mostly not state-owned, which is nothing to do with Brexit, and the regulations are only relevant to freeports, specifically, to the extent that they might have contradicted some of the tax breaks being offered. However, the decision to create those tax breaks had already been taken, so the Act changed nothing in that respect.

Crucially, the Act has allowed almost no changes to employment rights, and most EU case law has been written into UK legislation. With regards to environmental regulations, the concerns about the extent of what would be scrapped under the original proposals have not eventuated, although there have been losses, especially of air pollution laws, and to the extent there is divergence from EU rules it is mainly passive (not following EU changes) rather than through actively scrapping existing rules.

That’s not to deny that there is plenty to be concerned about in this, including substantial uncertainty about how assimilated law will operate, and plenty more that could be written. But it has nothing to do with SEZs specifically.

Deregulation

Of course, it is always perfectly possible that this Government, or a future one, might remove some or all employment rights, environmental protections (and literally anything else). That could come from future UK legislation which might, in turn, annul some or even all assimilated law or, most concerningly of all, from individual ministers using statutory instruments, rather than legislation, to do so.

Nevertheless, as things stand there has been no significant, and certainly no wholesale, regulatory change in these areas.

In any case, as with the state aid issue, the UK would be constrained by the level playing field provisions of the Trade and Cooperation Agreement, which contain non-regression clauses relating to employment and environmental protections.

More generally, detailed academic research on post-Brexit regulatory divergence of any sort shows that is has been relatively limited and that, again much to the anger of Conservative deregulatory Brexiters, “non-divergence is the new consensus in British politics”. To reiterate, while this could change, doing so would affect the whole country, not just SEZs. So if a government was minded to make such a change, why would it want to confine it to SEZs? And, even if it did, that would still not make SEZs ‘states within a state’, setting their own law: it would be a political decision by the government, and enacted by national law, just like any other.

The understandable concern that the Government will pursue a strategy of deregulation stands in its own right – but it doesn’t need some bizarre theory behind it about the creation of charter cities.

In fact, the Government has explicitly stated that “there is no deregulatory agenda in freeports”, including in relation to workers’ rights and environmental standards. Of course, it may be misleading. If so, that could be demonstrated by pointing to evidence that there has been such deregulation, or that the legal apparatus has been created to make it possible. Yet, there was nothing in the freeport bidding process which made any reference at all to bidders acquiring the ability to make their own laws, or to set their own taxes, or to establish their own labour and environmental standards (in fact, the regulatory constraints enumerated would make many free-marketers weep). Even more importantly, there has been no law passed or ‘charter’ granted which would allow them to.

If that isn’t enough, consider that the first of these freeports became operational in 2022, but there are no examples of corporate-created law being in place, or of a different set of employment rights or environmental regulations being in force, within them.

The same goes for the 60 enterprise zones which, we are told, are among the 86 SEZ ‘states within a state’. They have had many years of operation, including three years since the Brexit transition period ended and EU law ceased to be binding, to create such corporate legal or regulatory systems. Yet here, too, there are no examples of this having happened.

Evidence and Expertise

The fact that so many exaggerated or inaccurate claims about UK SEZs are gaining traction is a testament to the Government’s failure to communicate its policy and, no doubt, to the lack of trust that many people have in its intentions.

But, even if the Government’s communication was perfect, it would not be able to disguise the genuine and serious criticisms of its SEZs which exist: their questionable economic value, their questionable value for money, their capacity to lead to corruption and criminality, their lack of transparency and accountability, and their capacity to dilute or over-ride local planning controls.

It is not necessary to deny these criticisms, and it is certainly not necessary to defend UK SEZs, including freeports, in order to challenge the wilder accusations that are being made about them. Indeed, challenging those accusations is an important part of ensuring that the real criticisms are not drowned out or discounted.

Similarly, to the extent that many of the accusations are associated with criticising Brexit, they detract from all the many real criticisms of Brexit. It becomes all too easy to dismiss these real criticisms as ‘Brexit Derangement Syndrome’ simply by pointing to such unfounded assertions.

That is especially unfortunate since, whereas Brexiters have been notoriously disdainful of experts and evidence, those opposed to Brexit have tended to be more careful to rely on them. Yet it is notable that these charter city or ‘states within a state’ claims about UK SEZs are not based on any professional research and are not coming from reputable academic experts in a relevant subject or established journalists.

It seems highly unlikely that such experts, many of whom are themselves highly critical of Brexit, are suddenly coy about endorsing what would, if true, be a major and damning critique of it.

The more obvious, and correct, conclusion is that, on the basis of the available evidence, they know it is not true.

Rishi Sunak’s Head Boy Energy

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 28/03/2024 - 8:45pm in

This article was first published in the February 2024 monthly print edition of Byline Times. Subscribe now to get ahead of the curve.

After the infamous 49 days of Liz Truss, Rishi Sunak was identified by the Conservative Party as the safest available pair of hands. He was a Prime Minister who could be trusted to knot his own tie and lace his own shoes, a dependable front-man for the increasingly unbalanced Conservative Brexit belief system. In short, he was Head Boy material.

Boyish and immature were qualities previously observed in Sunak’s male predecessors. Neither David Cameron nor Boris Johnson could quite carry off the role of grown-up, as if at heart both men remained fans of escapades without consequences. 

Cameron had his boyishly unlined face and Johnson his unbrushed hair. He had his arch schoolboy’s vocabulary – the fourth-form Latin and ripe English poppycock – and between them the old Etonian pals looked confident of doing what they wanted and not getting caught. Or not being punished if they were.

Sunak’s boyishness is of a slightly different order. 

Keen, compliant, he too gives off a sense of arrested development – the old school old boy who never grew up. The first clue is the hair. 

Hair statements are a conspicuous feature of 21st Century politics and, in the hothouse of Sunak’s private all-boys boarding school, Winchester College, he’d have understood hairstyles as a form of communication, a way of giving or withdrawing consent. His neat side-parting consents to authority and to the inherently traditional values of any institution founded in 1382.

His daily care with a comb projects a message that once, in his schooldays, was graciously received: Sunak was favoured by the adults and appointed Head Boy. 

As Prime Minister, he retains an unmistakable Head Boy Energy.

Importance Ingrained

In April 2022, Rishi Sunak made a donation of at least £100,000 to his old school. In an interview with Sky News, the then Chancellor said that Winchester College “helped make me who I am as a person and I’m sure it helps me to do the job in the way that I do it”. This sounds true enough, especially because since becoming Prime Minister Sunak has brought in former Winchester chums like James Forsyth as his closest advisors. 

In the same interview, Sunak thanked Winchester for the “opportunity”, like a contestant on The Apprentice. He isn’t wrong to do so, because in Conservative politics an education at a grand English public school is still today a gateway to the big end-of-series prize. 

Sadly for Sunak, achieving his schoolboy ambitions didn’t stop him getting stuck at Head Boy. He applies himself to public speaking, for example, as if no idea or policy is entirely his own, though his attempt at presenting as an adult should be commended considering his age. 

If he continues to do his duty and work hard he’s confident of earning adult approval and an impeccable termly report. Because isn’t that what always happens?

Take a look at the Conservatives’ poll ratings, and his own personal favourability with the public, and it would seem not.

Democracy was not a feature of Sunak’s appointment to the big job, now or then.

There was no public vote to make him Prime Minister and, back in the 1990s, Winchester’s Head Boy was anointed by the Head Man. I’ve asked former pupils what the position involved, but most have only vague memories of a ceremonial function, often involving Latin. No one remembers clearly what these Head Boys did (there were two of them, which Sunak has never managed to mention) and they tended to be ‘anonymous’.

I imagine it all felt much grander and more important to those who were actually chosen; a once-and-forever Head Boyness ingrained for the rest of a Head Boyish life. 

From now on, Sunak was not to be criticised but congratulated. He could have been forgiven, aged 18, for looking at life through the wrong end of a telescope. As Head Boy, his presence around the quads and classrooms was exaggerated in size, at least to himself. Looking ahead, the future appeared smaller and less simple. 

Now, from 2024, he can look back with the telescope the right way round – he’s learned that much at least – and school is magnified to look like the best days of his life. Worth a gift of a hundred thousand pounds, at least.

In his carefully curated biography – let’s call it the ‘Head Boy of Winchester College’ – is a widely-known, self-publicised fact about Rishi Sunak. It’s a boast he doesn’t recognise as a curse. If he did, he’d never have made Head Boy in the first place. Nor, as a schoolboy, could he have ingratiated himself so successfully if he hadn’t mastered an indifference to glaring class injustices or to the texture and traction of contemporary reality, which was refused entry at the Winchester College gates.

Sunak was proud to represent 800 years of elite plunder and token forays into the community. Later, he confirmed his horizons were so narrow and his mind so unquestioning he reliably came back with his gormless £100,000. 

Representation Not Responsibility

The Head Boy, by any old school measure, was someone who made the grown-ups happy. Children at boarding schools, like Sunak at Winchester, often find themselves making an unconscious promise to their parents not to fail or get into trouble. A stonking career compensates for the parental ‘sacrifice’ and justifies the family separation. 

But every step up the ladder is also an unresolved plea for attention and affection – a condition explored in 1970 by the Jamaican writer and politician Lucille Iremonger. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, like Johnson and Cameron before him, has the Phaeton complex.

Phaeton, in Greek mythology, is a frustrated child of the sun god Helios. He insists on driving his father’s chariot just for one day. When eventually he gets his chance he crashes the chariot, which in the ancient worldview explained why so much of Africa was a desert. According to Iremonger, a hunger for power was the tragic fate of children who suffered a trauma in childhood, and she developed her theory from a study of British prime ministers between 1809 and 1940. Most of them were abandoned by their parents in English private boarding schools. Phaeton’s blind sense of purpose, Iremonger notes, “could lead only to disaster for himself, and possibly for others”.

Pity the eager Head Boy. His character already compromised by boarding school adaptations, he now embraces the corruption of prestige without power. Head Boy is Sunak’s version of Tory immaturity, which like Cameron and Johnson he can use as a reason to be excused. 

In front of the COVID Inquiry, for example, he could convince himself he wasn’t included in significant decisions and that, to the best of his recollection, few communications of any importance passed across his desk. He may have been Chancellor of the Exchequer, but he was light on power and responsibility. The Head Boy always is.

What Sunak’s Head Boy persona does bring with it is a brittle neediness. He needs validation, which is what got him the job in the first place. When he isn’t liked, or when he’s challenged, his Head Boy face drops. He gets tetchy and confused when he can’t find the right answer or when his answer isn’t accepted as right. 

He’s a good boy, he really is. He’s done well and worked hard, so why doesn’t he get the respect his unelected Head Boy status deserves? Why isn’t he loved? He has no idea, and if a playful Christmas video might help he’ll try it. It turns out he’s not very good at playful, not after so many years of pretending to be fully grown-up. 

Due to his immense personal wealth, but also due to his schooling, Rishi Sunak is vulnerable to accusations that he’s out of touch. During his Sky News interview, for example, he appeared unaware of the fact that he was echoing the more hapless contestants from The Apprentice. Those who thank Lord Sugar for the opportunity are the ones about to leave the show.

Thank you for the opportunity, Winchester College. Sorry I couldn’t have done better.

Richard Beard is the author of ‘Sad Little Men: Private Schools and the Ruin of England’

Rishi Sunak Will Leave a Long List of ‘Big Nasties’ for the Next Government to Clear Up

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 28/03/2024 - 11:00am in

The next Government will inherit a long list of 'big nasties' from the Conservatives which will cost hundreds of billions of pounds to clear up, a report by the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee, warns today.

 After a year when her committee examined projects across Whitehall, the NHS and schools the chair of the Commons Public Accounts Committee, Dame Meg Hillier, lists what she calls a catalogue of “big nasties – essential spending which cannot be put off”.

The list includes failed projects to tackle crumbling schools, hospitals, public health laboratories, outdated IT and renewing and refurbishing Parliament.

She warns: "All too often, we have seen money misdirected or squandered, not because of corruption, but because of group-think, intransigence, inertia, and cultures which discourage whistle-blowing. On occasion, the scale of failure has been seismic, such as HS2 or Horizon in the Post Office, or the procurement of PPE during Covid. Other times, there has been a systemic failure to be agile and adaptable as events unfolded.”

Unless this is tackled she warns: “my successors as chair of the PAC will be doomed to a cycle of broken promises and wasted cash in perpetuity.”

The report produces eye-watering shortfalls of money showing where short-termism by the present Government has worsened the state of public services.

In schools instead of spending £5.3 billion a year to refurbish or replace crumbling schools attended by 700,000 pupils, the Treasury cut this to £3.1 billion a year increasing the backlog.

In the NHS the backlog of crumbling hospitals has jumped from £4.7 billion to £10.2 billion after the NHS raided the capital programme to keep patient services going. Despite spending £178.3 billion a year patient services are worse, waiting lists longer, particularly for cancer patients who need urgent treatment.

A delayed £530 million programme to modernise public health laboratories which handle the most dangerous diseases such as Ebola and Lassa fever will now cost £3.2 million. Failure to implement it “would present a significant risk to public health,” says the report.

The report says a decision not to decommission 20 nuclear submarines which have been withdrawn from service since 1980 has left the ministry of defence with a £500m maintenance bill and it has run out of space of where to store them. The ministry now has a £7.5 billion future liability to dispose of them.

The Ministry of Justice now has a £900 million maintenance backlog on the prison estate and plans to create 10,000 new prison places have only seen 206 new places.

Some £100 billion of spending by local councils remains unaccountable because of a shortage of auditors and councils like Birmingham, Nottingham, Slough and Thurrock have gone effectively bankrupt.

The country’s main animal health laboratory in Weybridge, Surrey, has “deteriorated at an alarming extent". It has a £2.8 billion piecemeal redevelopment plan over 15 years but if it fails, “the UK will have no capacity to react to new and emerging animal disease threats”.

There are a large number of failures among IT systems across Whitehall -some of them impacting on the general public – notably the DWP underpaying pensioners.

The report says: “DWP has underpaid pensioners £2.5 billion,138 with errors dating back to 1985, and many more pensioners may still be under-claiming. 90% of these underpaid pensioners are women. The errors were due to outdated systems dating back to 1988.”

The Conservative Party’s Disinformation Machine

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 26/03/2024 - 9:35pm in

"There needs to be greater awareness among the public of the risks [of online disinformation]” the Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden told MPs on Monday, adding that citizens should make themselves aware of the “need to treat images [online] with much more scepticism”.

Yet within minutes of Dowden warning about rogue states spreading disinformation , the Conservative Party had released its own attack advert falsely claiming that London had become a “crime capital of the world”.

The video, which later had to be deleted and re-edited after social media users pointed out it had been illustrated with footage from a terror scare in New York, is still available online despite containing a series of other falsehoods.

It's opening sequencecontinues to suggest that London has now become so dangerous that citizens have been forced to either stay at home or “go underground”. This is obviously untrue.

In fact the latest crime stats actually show that London is among the safest cities in the world, with violent crimes lower than they are in England as a whole.

And while the video claimed that Khan had “seized power” in the city, he had in fact won two mayoral elections by a healthy margin and is currently forecast to win a third by an even larger distance.

The Conservative party’s misinformation video was also linked to a new website detailing claims of what “Life under Labour” would look like.

One of the pictures used to demonstrate this supposed dereliction being experienced under the opposition, was of derelict housing in a Peterborough - a city which until recently was Conservative-led and is now independent, without any Labour control.

A source close to Sadiq Khan told Byline Times that the party’s latest attack on him, led by their candidate Susan Hall, was “true to form for the Tory campaign. It’s a deeply misleading attack, intentionally talking down London from a candidate who appears to have no love for the city she aspires to lead.”

The video is not a one off, however. In recent days Hall has repeatedly tied crime rates in the city to Khan's closure of a number of police stations to Londoners, while refusing to acknowledge that the closure programme actually began under the last Conservative Mayor Boris Johnson.

Not everyone in the party appears willing to go along with such misinformation, however.

The party’s former Minister for London, whose bid to become their candidate for City Hall was reportedly blocked by Rishi Sunak, shared his discomfort with the party's latest attack ad.

A post shared on X by Scully, attacked the “deeply negative video” about London and warned that the party should not be “disrespectful to Londoners”.

Yet showing such disrespect to this city of eight million people appears to be a big part of the Conservative party's political strategy.

'A Dog Whistle in a City With No Dogs'

Despite briefings from both side that the race between Khan and Hall is close, recent polls suggest that the Labour incumbent is more than 20 points ahead of his rival. As a result, the Conservatives appear to be putting very little effort into their ground campaign.

At her campaign launch last weekend, in what appeared to be a car park in Uxbridge, Hall was not joined by Rishi Sunak, or any other senior Cabinet minister. And whereas Khan’s own launch last week was accompanied by Keir Starmer and attended by multiple media outlets, the Conservative party appears to have deliberately excluded any journalists from attending Hall’s launch.

A spokesman for Hall did not respond to a request for comment on why journalists had been excluded.

However, while the Conservatives appear to have abandoned any real hope of fairly defeating Khan, they do appear determined to continue using the city as a tool for their campaign in the rest of the country.

By portraying London and other Labour-led cities such as Birmingham, as crime-ridden hellscapes, no matter what the facts actually show, the party is attempting to send out a dog-whistle message to its potential supporters in other parts of the country.

This strategy, which includes the Prime Minister regularly mocking Keir Starmer’s own London background, is a clear attempt to do down the UK’s capital city in an attempt to win votes elsewhere.

This strategy has sometimes backfired, most recently when the party’s then Deputy Chairman Lee Anderson falsely accused London’s Muslim mayor of being in league with Islamic extremists. However, it is not a new one.

When Khan first stood to win back City Hall for Labour in 2016, the Conservatives subjected him to a sustained campaign attempting to tie him to Islamic extremism. At the time one senior London Conservative described it to me as being a "Dog whistle campaign in a city with no dogs".

Yet while such dog whistle misinformation may have had little effect on Londoners themselves, Rishi Sunak and his party still appear to believe that it will have an impact elsewhere.

Just like Brexit campaign, which relied on spreading false claims about millions of Turks heading the UK, the Conservative party's latest campaign is designed to play on the worst prejudices of swing voters, while abandoning any interest in accuracy or the truth.

So while we have heard much from the Government in recent weeks about the threats of deep fakes and online 'extremism', the reality is that when it comes to inciting division and spreading misinformation, there are few parties who have proven more adept at it than the Conservative party.

‘Mental Health is the Elephant in the Room When It Comes to Prioritising Economic Growth’

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 26/03/2024 - 8:00pm in

Despite mental health being arguably the most significant health crisis facing the UK, Jeremy Hunt didn't mention it once during his Spring Budget.

One in four people in the UK are affected by mental health, with mental illness costing the country an estimated £118 billion annually – equivalent to 5% of GDP.

According to NHS data, the number of people in contact with mental health services has increased by almost 500,000 since 2020.

For these reasons, mental health charities did not welcome the Budget.

Mind was particularly critical of the decision not to commit more funding to the roll-out of 'Right Care, Right Person’, an initiative that aims to ensure that the right agency deals with health-related calls, rather than police forces being the default first responders.

"It is simply impossible to take a million hours of support out of the system without replacing it with investment," the charity said. "Failing to properly fund NHS mental health crisis services while instructing police forces to step back from mental health calls is an unsafe and frankly irresponsible decision."

Given that the NHS is facing extreme challenges in almost every aspect of its running, it does not have the capacity to handle the increasing number of people in the UK reaching crisis point with their mental health.

The Budget promised to deliver an NHS productivity plan, by making its technology more efficient and reducing healthcare time on admin. While this may ease time pressure for healthcare workers, it is not focused enough to address the broader, more systemic issue of underfunding and under-resourcing.

A recent British Medical Association report highlights an additional problem: mental health professionals are becoming so disillusioned that they are unable to work themselves. In September 2023, one in seven medical posts in NHS mental health trusts were vacant.

According to a report shared with The Independent on March 25, emergency departments are so overwhelmed, A&E staff are unable to look after the most vulnerable mental health patients or treat them with compassion. According to medical records, more than 40% of patients who needed emergency care due to self-harm or suicide attempts received no compassionate care, the newspaper reported.

It appears as if the Conservatives view our mental health crisis as a primarily financial burden, reprimanding the growing population of people out of work, many for mental ill-health.

The Autumn 2023 Budget, for example, announced the Government’s plan for short-term changes to how the Department for Work and Pensions classifies who is fit to work. It proposed stricter sanctions for people previously deemed unable to work, potentially pushing those who are too mentally unwell back into work to avoid losing access to support.

The driving force for these changes seems to be primarily one of labour, productivity, and money rather than addressing the underlying socio-economic factors such as, but not exclusively, racism, homelessness, poverty, and sexism.

People under 25 seem to bear the brunt of these pressures.

A week before Hunt's Budget, Young Minds delivered an open letter to the Chancellor, signed by 15,000 campaigners, urging the Government to invest in early intervention hubs for young people struggling with mental health.

Meanwhile, a new report published by the Children’s Commissioner showed that more than a quarter of a million children and young people are awaiting mental health support, and referrals for under-18s are up by 53%.

According to the Mental Health Foundation, 50% of mental health conditions emerge by the age of 15 and 75% by 24, so early intervention could help prevent severe mental health issues which may impact work and life quality into adulthood.

Responding the the Budget, Laura Bunt, chief executive at YoungMinds said, “Ultimately, until we focus on the systemic drivers of poor mental health, we will be fighting a broken system. We need a plan that works across Government, one that prioritises early intervention and prevention; we need this Government to wake up and take steps to stop this crisis from getting worse.”

The Government has also repeatedly fallen short on promises to deliver on mental health reform.

A previous commitment to a 10-year mental health plan to "level-up mental health across the country and put mental and physical health on an equal footing" was scrapped and absorbed into a ‘Major Conditions Strategy’. That aimed to tackle wider ill-health and removed the focus on mental health.

Recently announced National Insurance cuts will also do little to help those with low incomes, providing almost no support for those on the lowest threshold. Financial insecurity is a crucial indicator of poor mental health. Children from the poorest 20% of households in England are almost four times more likely to have serious mental health difficulties by age 11 than those from the wealthiest 20%.

Fazilet Hadi, head of policy at Disability Rights UK, told Byline Times that the Budget “totally ignored the deepening poverty and lack of support being experienced by millions of disabled people, including those experiencing mental distress".

"There are to be no further cost of living payments and the Household Support Fund, which enables councils to give discretionary payments, is only extended by six months,” she added.

The burgeoning mental health crisis is evident, with a high cost to the long-term productivity and growth the Conservative Party desires. Unless the Government prioritises mental health service funding and effective measures supporting the young and most vulnerable are in place, the crisis will only get worse.

‘An Assault on Democracy’: Rishi Sunak Backs Bill to Overturn Sadiq Khan’s ULEZ Extension

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 22/03/2024 - 10:28pm in

Rishi Sunak is backing a bill that would overturn the expansion of London’s Ultra Low Emission Zone, in a move which sources close to the city’s mayor described as an “unprecedented assault on democracy and devolution.”

Powers over transport and air quality are currently devolved to the Mayor.

Londoners will also soon be handed the opportunity to have their own voice heard on the issue when they vote in May's London mayoral elections.

Sadiq Khan's Conservative candidate Susan Hall has made scrapping the zone's extension her central pledge, but is currently 24 points behind him, according to a Savanta poll published on Friday.

However, under the new backbench bill, which is being brought to Parliament today by the Kent-based Conservative MP Gareth Johnson, the Government would be handed the ability to unilaterally scrap the extension of the zone anyway.

The Transport Secretary Mark Harper said in a statement that the Government was "happy to support" Johnson's Bill.

“The government has been clear the Mayor of London’s decision to expand ULEZ charging area to the London borders, in breach of his own manifesto commitment, is a tax on the poorest motorists, which his own impact assessment states, in terms of air pollution, will only have a moderate impact on NOx and minor impact on particulates", Harper said.

A spokesperson for the Prime Minister added that the bill would allow "communities to have their say".

A source close to Khan hit out at the bid to overturn the zone's extension.

“This unprecedented assault on democracy and devolution is a desperate distraction by a Government in its death throes which time and again has shown its contempt for Londoners and their rights,” the source said.

“Londoners will see through this pathetic attempt to play politics with the capital.”

Downing Street had previously ruled out seeking to overturn Sadiq Khan’s decision to extend the city’s air quality zone to Outer London.

A spokesman for the Prime Minister said last month that "road user charging is a matter for the Mayor of London and for him to justify his decision to residents and businesses."

The zone, in which owners of higher-emission vehicles are compelled to pay a daily charge if they drive inside London’s boundaries, has proven controversial with some Londoners.

Labour leader Keir Starmer has also previously criticised it, telling Khan last summer that he should “reflect” on the policy. A spokesman for Starmer told Byline Times that the Labour leader's view had not changed since the scheme was brought in.

However, City Hall say the scheme has been a success, with a spokesman saying that 95% of vehicles on London’s roads were now compliant with the newly expanded zone, which was “helping clean up London’s air and protect Londoners’ health.”

While the Government's apparent support for Johnson's bill will allow it time in Parliament, it is unclear whether it will be given sufficient time to pass into law before the next general election.

Sunak's spokesperson said plans for the bill's passage would be set out by the Leader of the House in the coming weeks.

It comes as Conservative MPs also call on the Prime Minister to remove the Mayor’s powers over policing.

Asked this week about the push to reduce the Mayor’s powers, Khan told this paper that “you can tell there's a general election and a mayoral election around the corner because of these silly gimmicks and games from the Tories.

“They should get their own house in order before they start lecturing us about taking powers away.”

A spokesman for the Prime Minister did not respond to a request for comment by the time of publication.

‘The Country has Noticed the Conservatives’ Lack of Levelling Up’

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 19/03/2024 - 8:45pm in

The Government could have used Boris Johnson's 'levelling up’ project not just to transform Britain’s regions, towns and poorer cities, but also to redraw the political map of the UK. That it has failed spectacularly to do both is a key reason why it is now facing political oblivion and why the Conservative Party will find it hard to rebuild public support. 

In 2019, levelling up was a masterstroke. Even then, the public was well aware that a decade of under-investment had damaged public services and made inequality between and within regions ever more stark. 

Johnson’s pledge to level up the UK – combined with specific promises to increase the number of nurses, doctors, police offices and hospitals – signalled a radical change from the policy of austerity pursued by his predecessors. 

Had Johnson been true to his word, levelling up could have transformed Britain’s regions, investment could have poured into regional transport and other infrastructure, and the NHS and other public services could have full quotas of staff instead of record shortages. 

Instead, as we approach another general election, the failure of levelling up has been made clear in a report published by the House of Commons’ Public Accounts Committee last week. 

As of last September, it found that local authorities had spent only £1.24 billion of the £10.47 billion the Government promised to tackle regional inequality across the UK. 

Crucially, the committee found that the Government has nothing in place to measure this policy’s impact in the long term. In other words, as has been pointed out, there is “no compelling evidence” that levelling up has achieved anything.

As recently as 2022, the Government were talking up the transformative impact of levelling up.

The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC) said in 2022 that the economic prize was potentially huge: “If under-performing places were levelled up towards the UK average, unlocking their potential, this could boost aggregate UK GDP by tens of billions of pounds each year.”

The disconnect between this rhetoric and the reality could not be more stark.

Since 2010-11, local authorities have experienced a 27% real-terms cut in core spending power due to reduced central government funding. Eight of the 317 English local authorities have effectively declared bankruptcy since 2018.

In the most egregious example, Birmingham City Council – Europe’s largest local authority – is to severely reduce or do away with a swathe of council services in pursuit of savings of about £300 million. This is the deepest programme of local cuts ever put through by a UK council.

Cuts will impact some of the most vulnerable groups in Birmingham. Spending on children will be cut by millions, including cuts to an early help service that helps families in crisis and to transport for children aged over 16 who have special educational needs. 

Youth services will be almost halved. Spending on the arts will now be zero. Eleven community centres are being sold off. Highway maintenance, street lighting, recycling, bin collection, and street cleaning suffer. Yet residents face an increase to council tax of 21% by 2026 – a cruel fate for residents facing years of cuts to what, for many, have been essential services. 

But it isn’t just Birmingham. In 2019, the entire country was promised increased investment, public services, and a restoration of the kind of public realm the Conservatives had dismantled over the previous decade.

What the public has received is more of the same – austerity and higher taxes from the Government and, in many cases, cash-strapped local councils. 

This is one of the main factors damaging the Conservatives’ poll ratings. They have wildly over promised and under delivered in a way that is obvious to anyone using public transport, the NHS, education, or other public services, or indeed anyone walking down their local high street. 

In 2019, Boris Johnson explicitly thanked Labour voters who had ‘lent him their vote’. He said “we have won votes and the trust of people who have never voted Conservative before" and that "those people want change".

"We cannot, must not, let them down," he added. "We must recognise the reality that we now speak for everyone from Woking to Workington, Clwyd South, Sedgefield [and] Wolverhampton."

He and his successors have betrayed that trust – a betrayal that will take a generation at least to overcome.

Those voters in Sedgfield, Clywd South, and Wolverhampton will not be so quick to trust a Conservative next time, whatever their policies and whoever their leader. 

But the failure of levelling up – and the prior decade of austerity that preceded it – is doing deeper harm to our politics and public realm

Resolution Foundation research shows that living with crumbling public services undermines people’s trust in the ability of the state to effect change for the better, whoever is in power. 

“This isn’t a small problem,” says the Resolution Foundation’s chief executive, Torsten Bell. “Change requires citizens to imagine a better future so they can embrace the disruption involved in getting there.”

This warning is consistent with wider research looking across 166 elections post-1980. It found that austerity measures tend to reduce voter turnout but also boost votes for non-mainstream parties – hence, at least in part, explaining last decade’s UKIP popularity and the more recent rise of Reform. 

Labour’s task, if as expected it wins a sizeable majority in the next election, will be not just one of rebuilding public services, but of rebuilding faith that politics can make a real difference to lives and communities. 

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