Selasa, 16 Juli 2024

Angela Rayner dismisses ‘Islamist’ Labour comment by new Trump running mate – politics live - The Guardian

Good morning. Yesterday Donald Trump named the Ohio senator JD Vance as his vice presidential running mate and very quickly attention focused on what this might mean for the UK. David Lammy, the new foreign secretary, knows Vance quite well and has praised his memoir about growing up poor, Hillbilly Elegy (“These are themes in my own political story,” Lammy told Politico). But we have not heard yet what Lammy has to say about Vance telling the National Conservatism conference recently that, with Labour now in power, Britain could end up as “the first truly Islamist country” with a nuclear weapon.

Looking at the clip, it was clearly more of a joke rather than a prediction. But jokes can be provocative, dangerous and offensive, and they reveal a lot about what people think. Daniel Finkelstein, the Times columnist and Conservative party peer, has described this as an “outrageous racist comment”.

We have not heard Lammy’s response, but Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister, has been giving interviews this morning and on ITV’s Good Morning Britain she said that Vance was wrong about the UK. Asked how she felt about his description of the Labour in this comment, she replied:

Well, I think he said quite a lot of fruity things in the past as well. Look, I don’t recognize that characterisation. I’m very proud of the election success that Labour had recently. We won votes across all different communities, across the whole of the country. And we’re interested in governing on behalf of Britain and also working with our international allies.

So I look forward to that meeting [with Vance] if that is the result [ie if Trump wins]. It’s up to the American people to decide.

Rayner also said that US was a key ally for the UK, that it was for the American people to decide who they wanted as president and vice president, and that whoever they elected, “we will work with them, of course we will”.

I will post more from her interviews shortly.

Here is the agenda for the day.

Morning: Keir Starmer chairs cabinet.

11.30am: The Commons sits so that MPs who have not yet taken the oath can do so.

If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line (BTL) or message me on X (Twitter). I can’t read all the messages BTL, but if you put “Andrew” in a message aimed at me, I am more likely to see it because I search for posts containing that word. If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use X; I’ll see something addressed to @AndrewSparrow very quickly. I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos (no error is too small to correct). And I find your questions very interesting too. I can’t promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog.

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In an interview on BBC Breakfast this morning Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister, was repeatedly asked why Labour has not committed to abolishing the two-child benefit cap, which means families on benefits can lose more than £3,455 if they have a third child because benefits are only paid for the first two children. Jon Kay, the presenter, told Rayner she had previously described this rule as obscene and inhumane.

In response, Rayner said she was pleased that Labour is prioritising requiring primary schools to offer breakfast clubs. As someone who grew up in a poor family, she said she used to go to school hungry. She said the government would be using “not just one lever” to tackle child poverty.

She said what the Tories had done was “abhorrent”. But, using the line Labour stuck to before the election, she said Labour would only commit to policies when they knew how they could be funded.

However, she also said that the government would be reviewing universal credit. And she said she expected the government to make “significant changes” to child poverty. She said:

All I would say is look at what Labour’s history and what we do when we’re in government and as someone who grew up in poverty, I am not prepared to leave office after a Labour government where we haven’t made those significant changes and child poverty is an issue for us.

And we’re absolutely appalled that children haven’t got beds to sleep in at night. This is the 21st century, this shouldn’t be the situation we’re in but this is the inheritance that the Conservatives have left us and we will continue to tackle those issues.

Angela Rayner on BBC Breakfast

Sunder Katwala, who used to run a Labour thinktank and who is now director of British Future, a thinktank focusing on race and identity issues, has welcomed the Tory response (see 8.58am) to the JD Vance comment. Katwala has also described what Vance said as “basic crass prejudice”.

A very sensible response from @AndrewBowie_MP for the Conservatives on why the JD Vance remarks to National Cons on an Islamist UK Labour government are wrong, “offensive” after a democratic election + reflect the coarsening of political discourse that many are warning against.

James Murray, a Treasury minister, has also been giving interviews on behalf of the government this morning. When he was asked about JD Vance’s line about Britain becoming an Islamist country under Labour (see 8.42am) in an interview with Sky News, he repeatedly claimed he did not know what Vance meant by the comment (although he did also at one point say “we”, meaning the government presumably, disagreed with it).

Murray said:

I don’t really understand those comments …

I genuinely heard that comment, and I don’t know what [Vance] was driving at in that comment, to be honest. I mean, in Britain, we’re very proud of our diversity.

I’m very proud that we have a new government, I’m very proud that our Labour government is committed to national security and economic growth. I’m very clear where we are. I don’t really know how that comment fits in.

In an interview with Times Radio, Murray also claimed he did not know what Vance meant by the “Islamist” comment.

As a line to take, this was a cop-out. Everyone else seems to know what the comment meant.

Conservatives seem more willing this morning to criticise what JD Vance said about the UK (see 8.42am) than Labour politicians. Although the Tories are more aligned with US Republicans than Labour, this is not particularly surprising because Labour has to worry about diplomatic relations with a possible Trump administration while that is not something a Conservative leader is probably every going to have to worry about.

Angela Rayner found a polite way of saying she disagreed with Vance’s comment about the UK becoming an “Islamist” country. But Andrew Bowie, the new shadow veterans minister, has also been on an interview round this morning and he told Times Radio that the US senator was being offensive.

Asked if Labour was creating an “Islamist” country, Bowie said:

No, absolutely not. The Labour party, I disagree with the Labour party fundamentally on many issues, but I do not agree with that view. I think it’s actually quite offensive, frankly, to my colleagues in the Labour party.

They have just won the election. It’s now up to us to form an opposition. But we need to relearn how to disagree agreeably and have those full, frank disagreements out in public – but be able to do so with civility.

Good morning. Yesterday Donald Trump named the Ohio senator JD Vance as his vice presidential running mate and very quickly attention focused on what this might mean for the UK. David Lammy, the new foreign secretary, knows Vance quite well and has praised his memoir about growing up poor, Hillbilly Elegy (“These are themes in my own political story,” Lammy told Politico). But we have not heard yet what Lammy has to say about Vance telling the National Conservatism conference recently that, with Labour now in power, Britain could end up as “the first truly Islamist country” with a nuclear weapon.

Looking at the clip, it was clearly more of a joke rather than a prediction. But jokes can be provocative, dangerous and offensive, and they reveal a lot about what people think. Daniel Finkelstein, the Times columnist and Conservative party peer, has described this as an “outrageous racist comment”.

We have not heard Lammy’s response, but Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister, has been giving interviews this morning and on ITV’s Good Morning Britain she said that Vance was wrong about the UK. Asked how she felt about his description of the Labour in this comment, she replied:

Well, I think he said quite a lot of fruity things in the past as well. Look, I don’t recognize that characterisation. I’m very proud of the election success that Labour had recently. We won votes across all different communities, across the whole of the country. And we’re interested in governing on behalf of Britain and also working with our international allies.

So I look forward to that meeting [with Vance] if that is the result [ie if Trump wins]. It’s up to the American people to decide.

Rayner also said that US was a key ally for the UK, that it was for the American people to decide who they wanted as president and vice president, and that whoever they elected, “we will work with them, of course we will”.

I will post more from her interviews shortly.

Here is the agenda for the day.

Morning: Keir Starmer chairs cabinet.

11.30am: The Commons sits so that MPs who have not yet taken the oath can do so.

If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line (BTL) or message me on X (Twitter). I can’t read all the messages BTL, but if you put “Andrew” in a message aimed at me, I am more likely to see it because I search for posts containing that word. If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use X; I’ll see something addressed to @AndrewSparrow very quickly. I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos (no error is too small to correct). And I find your questions very interesting too. I can’t promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog.

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2024-07-16 07:42:00Z
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