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Burnham says he ‘cannot launch management marketing campaign’ with out being MP
Burnham mentioned that he was not ready to launch a management bid.
I can’t launch a management marketing campaign. I’m not in parliament. So that’s the backside line.
He additionally mentioned that it was a mistake to imagine that he was determined to return to London.
Within the early Nineteen Nineties he left the north and went to London as a result of that was what younger folks needed to do to get on. However that was not the case now, he mentioned. He mentioned folks must “wrench me out of the place” in the event that they needed him to go away Manchester.
Key occasions
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Sadiq Khan declines to name Reform UK’s migrant coverage racist, saying he’s cautious of devaluing ‘highly effective phrase’
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Bridget Phillipson says poorest college students will get upkeep grants for some programs, funded by worldwide pupil levy
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Emily Thornberry urges authorities to dam bid by Elon Musk’s Tesla to get licence to suppy electrical energy in UK
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Burnham (55) says he needs UK to rejoin EU in his lifetime
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Burnham says he needs outdated folks and disabled folks to have the ability to use ‘twirly’ bus move earlier than 9.30am
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Burnham says fiscal guidelines needs to be extra ‘versatile’, however strongly rejects declare he’s not fiscally accountable
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Burnham says he ‘cannot launch management marketing campaign’ with out being MP
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Burnham says his Telegraph interview that infuriated Labour MPs was ‘overwritten, and inaccurate in some respects’
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Burnham says Labour management is just too ‘factional’, claiming MPs by no means misplaced whip beneath Blair for coverage disagreements
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Andy Burnham in dialog with Guardian’s Politics Weekly podcast
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Labour plans to seek the advice of on use of reside facial recognition earlier than wider roll-out
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Reeves’ speech – snap verdict
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Reeves ends speech telling her get together to ‘have religion’
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Reeves says Labour pushing for ‘formidable’ youth mobility scheme with EU, giving ‘most’ opportunites to younger folks
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Reeves says Reform UK biggest risk to dwelling requirements of working folks at election
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Reeves delivers warning to Burnham, and Labour’s left, saying letting spending get uncontrolled ‘dangerously’ improper
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Reeves says Covid corruption comissioner has recovered nearly £400m misplaced throughout pandemic
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Reeves lists Labour’s achievements
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Reeves wins assist of delegates as she hits again at pro-Gaza heckler, saying Labour not get together of protest
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Labour ‘selected funding’ when it took workplace, Reeves says
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Why Scottish Labour’s leaders assume there’s path to victory in subsequent yr’s Holyrood elections
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Growth minister Jenny Chapman says she’s ‘extremely nervous’ about illness breaking out in Gaza
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Elections guru John Curtice delivers grim prognosis for Labour, saying simply attacking Reform UK will not deliver restoration
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Lib Dems accuse Reeves of planning ‘£10bn stealth tax’ by extending threshold freeze
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‘That is genocide’, and ready for courtroom to verify that ‘too late’, says Unison’s Christine McAnea
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Labour activists urged to again movement saying Israel has dedicated genocide in Gaza
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Jackie Baillie tells Burnham to shelve management positioning, amid issues it can hurt Labour at Holyrood elections
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Reeves suggests massive tax rises coming in funds, saying ‘world has modified’ and pledges made at CBI final yr not apply
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Reeves performs down, however doesn’t deny, report saying Treasury expects tax should rise by £30bn in funds
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Reeves to induce enterprise leaders to resist threat Reform UK poses to economic system
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Reeves says a lot of hypothesis about doable tax rises in funds is ‘garbage’
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Reeves confirms she not stands by pledge to CBI final yr about not coming again with extra tax rises
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Reeves says advantages invoice too excessive
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Reeves doesn’t dispute LBC presenter’s suggestion that Andy Burnham bond market feedback makes him ‘Trussesque’
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Reeves says folks can assist racist coverage with out being racist, in reference to PM’s remark about Reform UK
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Reeves pushes again at ideas VAT could rise, saying dedication to not put it up nonetheless stands
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Reeves to pledge Youth Assure to ‘abolish’ unemployment for younger folks
Sadiq Khan declines to name Reform UK’s migrant coverage racist, saying he’s cautious of devaluing ‘highly effective phrase’
Peter Walker
Peter Walker is a senior Guardian political correspondent.
Sadiq Khan has declined to observe Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves in calling Reform’s coverage of retrospectively stripping folks of their proper to stay completely within the UK racist, saying he’s cautious of giving the impression that this meant Reform supporters should essentially be racist.
He informed a fringe assembly:
While you use the r-word – I’ve been the recipient of racist behaviour. I feel it’s a very loaded phrase, and so I’m very cautious after I use it, for the plain purpose, I don’t wish to devalue this actually highly effective phrase.
Khan mentioned he was “at all times nervous, given the impression that one way or the other I’m name-calling” in utilizing the phrase.
This didn’t imply it ought to by no means occur, he added:
You’ve acquired to name out folks. That’s why I wasn’t afraid to say just a few days in the past that I feel President Trump is a racist, he’s sexist, he’s misogynistic and he’s homophobic. So I’m fairly clear in relation to Donald Trump.
Talking on Sunday Starmer mentioned Reform’s plan to take away the standing of getting indefinite depart to stay and deport hundreds of individuals already legally dwelling within the UK as “racist” and “immoral”. Talking on Monday, Reeves agreed together with his view.
Khan was on a platform with Fraser Nelson, the previous Spectator editor, who yesterday argued that calling Reform UK’s coverage racist would backfire.
Bridget Phillipson says poorest college students will get upkeep grants for some programs, funded by worldwide pupil levy
Bridget Phillipson, the schooling secrertary, has introduced that new, focused means-tested upkeep grants might be launched for college students in England earlier than the final election.
In her convention speech, she mentioned:
Immediately I’m saying that this Labour authorities will introduce new focused upkeep grants for college students who want them most.
Convention, their time in school or college needs to be spent studying or coaching.
Not working each hour God sends.
That’s the distinction that this Labour authorities makes.
In a information launch, Labour mentioned the grants would assist college students from the lowest-income households. It mentioned:
The upkeep grants will assist to assist tens of hundreds of scholars from stage 4 – 6 learning precedence programs that assist the economic technique and the Labour authorities’s wider mission to resume Britain …
The grants will present younger working-class folks with essential focused extra monetary assist to undertake each college levels and technical {qualifications} beneath the Lifelong Studying Entitlement, together with Certificates of Larger Schooling (CertHEs), Diplomas of Larger Schooling (DipHEs), technical {qualifications}, and levels.
The brand new upkeep grants might be totally funded by a brand new worldwide pupil levy, guaranteeing that income from worldwide college students is used to profit working-class home college students, and assist progress and alternative.
Additional particulars on upkeep grants and the Worldwide Scholar Levy might be set out within the autumn assertion.
The Division for Schooling has just a few extra particulars right here.
Peter Kyle, the enterprise secretary, claimed in his speech to the convention this morning that extra funding is coming to the UK as a result of Labour is in workplace. He mentioned:
Corporations who wouldn’t take a look at this nation 15 months in the past are actually investing in our future, our jobs, our folks.
So we welcome the investments of:
Microsoft – a £22bn funding, their largest ever into the UK;
Google – £5bn;
CoreWeave – £1.5bn;
Salesforce – £1.4bn into our nation.
And why are they coming right here?
They’re coming right here due to a Labour authorities.
The Palestine Youth Motion and London for a Free Palestine have claimed duty after the pro-Palestine heckler interrupted Rachel Reeves’ speech this morning.
As PA Media stories, in response to the 2 teams, the activist, named “Sam P” stood up with a big Palestinian flag and mentioned: “Why is Britain nonetheless arming Israel?”
In a press release issued by the protest teams following the disruption, the activist mentioned:
It’s insufferable to look at this British-backed genocide unfolding on our screens whereas Labour carries on with enterprise as normal.
We should always do no matter we are able to to push for an finish to the atrocities.
It’s understood the heckler was faraway from the corridor by safety and handed over to Merseyside police.
Emily Thornberry urges authorities to dam bid by Elon Musk’s Tesla to get licence to suppy electrical energy in UK

Helena Horton
Helena Horton is a Guardian surroundings reporter.
Emily Thornberry, the chair of the overseas affairs choose committee had warned the federal government towards permitting Elon Musk to have any management of the UK power grid.
Tesla has utilized to Ofgem for a licence to be allowed to produce electrical energy on to British properties. The appliance went in throughout July.
Vitality secretary Ed Miliband yesterday refused to remark, saying “it’s a matter for the regulator”.
Nonetheless, Thornberry informed a Labour Local weather and Atmosphere Discussion board occasion on the annual get together convention that the federal government needs to be cautious about granting the appliance as a result of it could possibly be a nationwide safety risk.
She mentioned:
I’d be very involved about about Elon Musk and about his motivations and what he may do to the nation. I feel that any choices that we could make about funding in infrastructure needs to be led first by the problem of safety.
So I do assume we should always have a protracted, onerous look whether or not it’s in our nation for somebody like Elon Musk to be allowed to spend money on infrastructure within the UK.
Musk just lately referred to as for the overthrow of the British authorities and was accused of inciting violence on UK’s streets at a latest look at a far proper rally in Britain.
Thornberry added:
I feel it’s fairly fascinating that the Chinese language gained’t permit Teslas close to public buildings or authorities buildings as a result of they’re nervous about espionage.
She additionally mentioned that Keir Starmer ought to go to the Cop local weather change convention, and that he ought to let King Charles go to the summit in November.
She mentioned:
In six weeks time, I’m going to be going to Cop 30 in Belem, the place I’ll witness what it’s that governments are actually doing, and the federal government can have a chance there to display the management with regards to local weather change. This implies the senior leaders, and I hope that features the prime minister, will attend and have interaction.
I feel the King ought to after all be allowed to go to Cop, I’m positive he needs to go.
Treasury minister Torsten Bell ruffled some feathers on Monday evening after mocking Lib Dem chief Ed Davey’s look. He mentioned:
What Britain must sort out Farage is a imaginative and prescient. And the imaginative and prescient they want isn’t a fats bloke in a moist go well with which is what the Lib Dems have gotten to supply Britain within the twenty first century.
A Lib Dem councillor in Liverpool, Carl Cashman, posted that it confirmed Labour have been “the nasty get together”.
Burnham (55) says he needs UK to rejoin EU in his lifetime
Burnham says he needs to see the UK rejoin the EU in lifetime.
He says:
I’m going to be trustworthy. I’m going to say I wish to rejoin. I hope, in my lifetime, I see this nation rejoining the European Union.
Burnham is 55. Keir Starmer, who’s 63, has mentioned he doesn’t count on the UK to rejoin in his lifetime.
Burnham says he needs outdated folks and disabled folks to have the ability to use ‘twirly’ bus move earlier than 9.30am
Burnham says he’s taking a look at eradicating the rule in Larger Manchester saying older folks’s bus passes and disabled folks’s bus passes can’t be used earlier than 9.30am.
He says within the metropolis these passes are referred to as twirly bus passes, due to when drivers have to inform folks, “Sorry, you’re too early.”
He says there are financial benefis from folks being about to make use of public transport. And he cites this for instance of how, as mayor, he could make optimistic modifications because of having management of the bus community.
Burnham says fiscal guidelines needs to be extra ‘versatile’, however strongly rejects declare he’s not fiscally accountable
Pippa Crerar mentioned she had been asking cupboard ministers for questions for Burnham, and her first one was, would he keep on with the fiscal guidelines?
Burnham replied:
Sure, I’d. You want robust fiscal guidelines. However it doesn’t imply in precisely their present kind, is what I’d say.
Burnham mentioned that generally it may be prudent to speculate, to decrease present spending. So there needs to be a “extra versatile” method. However he would hold guidelines.
There’s nothing about me that’s saying I’ll simply throw the cash all over the place. And I’d say to that member of the cupboard – and certainly, any member of the cupboard – look what I’ve completed to Larger Manchester. In a decade. I’ve been overseeing the funds of the nation’s second metropolis, first metropolis, I imply. It’s fairly, fairly buoyant.
He additionally identified that he was a former chief secretary to the Treasury.
UPDATE: Burnham mentioned:
I reject fully this concept that I’m form of hopeless and I’ve no concept about easy methods to make it add up.
I’m doing it day-after-day in Larger Manchester. No-one ever says Larger Manchester is run in a financially imprudent approach.
Burnham says he ‘cannot launch management marketing campaign’ with out being MP
Burnham mentioned that he was not ready to launch a management bid.
I can’t launch a management marketing campaign. I’m not in parliament. So that’s the backside line.
He additionally mentioned that it was a mistake to imagine that he was determined to return to London.
Within the early Nineteen Nineties he left the north and went to London as a result of that was what younger folks needed to do to get on. However that was not the case now, he mentioned. He mentioned folks must “wrench me out of the place” in the event that they needed him to go away Manchester.
Burnham says his Telegraph interview that infuriated Labour MPs was ‘overwritten, and inaccurate in some respects’
Final week Burnham gave an interview to the Each day Telegraph that was headlined: Andy Burnham: MPs need me to problem Starmer. That infuriated Keir Starmer’s allies greater than something. An interview revealed the day prior to this within the New Statesman was seen as unhelpful, however the Telegraph interview prompted Starmer loyalists to launch a full-on briefing warfare towards him.
Burnham mentioned the interview was “overwritten, and inaccurate in some respects”.
He mentioned that, whereas he informed the Telegraph that Labour MPs had been in contact with him over the summer time, he didn’t say they have been urging him to run for Labour chief. He mentioned he didn’t focus on with the Telegraph what these MPs have been saying.
(Burnham didn’t say that the Telegraph was improper concerning the contents of these calls; simply that it was improper to say he had revealed all to the Telegraph.)
He went on:
[The Telegraph] mentioned I’d borrow £40bn extra. I mentioned no such factor. No such factor in any respect.
Burnham mentioned the purpose he was making was that, of the £39bn allotted within the spending evaluation for housing, he needed all of it to be allotted to social and council housing.
In a paragraph about Burnham’s plans, the Telegraph mentioned that he needed “£40bn of borrowing to construct council homes”. The article didn’t embrace a quote to again this up.
Burnham says Labour management is just too ‘factional’, claiming MPs by no means misplaced whip beneath Blair for coverage disagreements
The Guardian podcast with Andy Burnham has began.
Requested what he would say to individuals who say he’s selling his management ambitions, Burnham says all he has been doing is beginning a debate.
He says, when Tony Blair and Gordon Brown have been main the Labour get together, he can’t recall anybody having the whip withdrawn for disagreements over coverage.
He says, if the get together is being run in a “factional” approach, the get together will be unable to profit from having a spread of voices working collectively.
Most cupboard ministers talking on the Labour convention have handled Reform UK as their foremost opponents, whereas Rachel Reeves spoke extra concerning the Conservatives.
In his speech to the convention this morning, John Healey, the defence secretary, attacked all the primary opposition events. He mentioned:
, convention, who gained’t again defence jobs? The Scottish nationalists.
They refused to fund a brand new superior welding centre in Glasgow, so I can announce right now that the Labour authorities now will step in and supply the funding wanted – they gained’t, we’ll.
And what of the opposite events? Are they any higher on defence?
The Tories – they left our armed forces hollowed out and underfunded.
The Lib Dems – they reduce the dimensions of the British Military to its smallest since Napoleon.
And Reform – they reward [Vladimir] Putin and so they put down Nato. Convention, we’re the get together that created Nato in that nice [Clement] Attlee authorities after the warfare.
Now, we’re the get together rising jobs and rising the military, the get together dealing with down Russia and strengthening Nato. Convention, Labour is once more the get together of Britain’s defence.
Andy Burnham in dialog with Guardian’s Politics Weekly podcast
Andy Burnham will shortly be collaborating in a reside Q&A interview with the Guardian’s Politics Weekly podcast, on the Labour convention. Pippa Crerar and Kiran Stacey are internet hosting it.
There’s a reside feed right here.
Labour plans to seek the advice of on use of reside facial recognition earlier than wider roll-out
Labour plans to seek the advice of on the usage of reside facial recognition (LFR) expertise earlier than increasing it throughout England, the brand new policing minister has informed the get together’s annual convention, Rajeev Syal stories.
Reeves’ speech – snap verdict
In 2021, in her first speech to a Labour convention as shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves introduced a plan to spend £28bn a yr on a inexperienced jobs plan. That’s the form of massive, muscular, consequential intervention {that a} Labour convention needs to listen to. At that stage the UK was already chin-deep in Covid debt, however there was nonetheless an optimism the financial prospects for the second half of the last decade. 4 years on, what was placing about Rachel Reeves’ second speech as chancellor to a Labour convention as chancellor was fairly how little she needed to announce.
There may be an apparent purpose for that, after all, and in case your officers are telling you that you simply’ll must raised taxes by £30bn (see 10am), a Gordon Brown-style funding splurge isn’t an possibility. As a substitute we acquired an announcement concerning the Youth Assure (see 7.44am), libraries for main faculties (see 12.14pm) and a youth mobility scheme with the EU (see 12.41pm). All tremendous, however none of those are the form of massive ticket announcement you’ll get in a chancellor’s convention speech within the glory when Britain was not having to spent £100bn a yr paying off debt curiosity. And, given the federal government spent the primary few months of the yr saying it had “no plans” for a youth mobility scheme, some scepticism about how formidable this might be might be justified.
As a substitute, Reeves needed to make an impression along with her argument, and he or she did this gorgeous nicely. The speech was obtained enthusiastically within the corridor. The chancellor talked at size about what the federal government has already achieved, and constructing initiatives which can be going forward as a result of she has prioritised funding. She was sturdy in defence of her fiscal guidelines, and her perception within the want for controls on borrowing. (See 12.29pm.) This passage amounted to an implied rebuke Andy Burnham, however with out being it being personalised or antagonistic. And her foremost goal was the Conservative get together. Different audio system at this convention have been specializing in Reform UK, however Reeves has most likely spent extra time than anybody else pondering why her financial consequence is so dire and that’s one space the place it’s more durable responsible Reform UK.
She additionally responded nicely to the heckle. The protest appeared a bit half-hearted, however Reeves hit again with a model of the retort that Keir Starmer used when he confronted heckler sabotage in his speech in 2021 and it labored. She had the viewers on her facet – at this second, and till she completed. She could not have had an enormous quantity to supply them past “religion” (see 12.46pm) however within the corridor it was sufficient.
Reeves ends speech telling her get together to ‘have religion’
Reeves appears to be wrapping up now.
No matter checks confront us, have religion as a result of our get together and our nation have overcome higher challenges than these.
Have religion, as a result of the chance to serve [John Smith’s famous phrase] is what we got here into this for.
Have religion, understanding that this Labour authorities won’t relaxation – I cannot relaxation – till our patriotic trigger is realised in a Britain that prizes contribution, that unlocks alternative, that silences the nagging voices of decline.
And by no means let anybody let you know that there’s no distinction between a Labour authorities and a Conservative authorities.
Reeves says a “higher Britain” is inside attain, “a Britain the place the boundaries to alternative are torn asunder, a Britain in a position to look outwards with confidence, defiant in an unsure world, powered by the contribution of its folks, longing for our shared future, a proud Britain, a affluent Britain, a Labour Britain”.