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Chris Mason: Starmer’s irritation with Burnham shows as he seeks to tackle critics
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Chris MasonPolitical editor
The prime minister will address a conference of centre-left leaders from around the world on Friday and argue it is time to “look ourselves in the mirror and recognise where we’ve allowed our parties to shy away from people’s concerns.”
A key theme of the Global Progressive Action Conference is about how the Labour Party and its sister outfits around the world take on Reform UK and their equivalents.
“This is the defining political choice of our times: a politics of predatory grievance, preying on the problems of working people… against the politics of patriotic renewal,” Sir Keir Starmer will claim.
And it is this challenge that unites the two big things in politics in the last 48 hours.
First there was the blizzard of headlines about the Mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham.
Then, conveniently timed, the blizzard of headlines yesterday afternoon about the government’s plans for compulsory digital ID.
This, yes, is the daily din of Westminster, but there is a signal amid the noise.
Personnel, policy and ambitions are all in the mix here, three of the staples of politics, but they are also both a symptom of the same thing: a party and a movement wrestling with how to confront what senior figures agree is a generational challenge – the rise of Reform UK.
This, for so many Labour folk, is not merely the traditional political tussle with the party’s oldest adversary, the Conservatives.
Instead, it is an insurgency which utterly horrifies so many of them.
It is Reform’s recent rise – and the durability of its support, up to now at least – that has fast forwarded the collywobbles in a vast parliamentary Labour Party so soon after a general election.
Of all the criticisms of Sir Keir, there is one that has stuck, almost to the point of cliche, and is acknowledged as being fair within government and beyond.
It is the persistent critique that there has long been a lack of definition about the government’s direction.
And it is into this perceived vacuum that Andy Burnham has stridden, again, to the intense irritation of Downing Street and plenty of Labour MPs.
I know what Labour should stand for and I’d know how I’d communicate it is the underlying message from Manchester, with the implication the prime minister isn’t doing either.
Sir Keir may not strike you as the kind of bloke to be frequently demonstrably angry or irritated.
But when a Labour prime minister compares a Labour colleague to former Conservative Prime Minister Liz Truss, you know just how narked he is by the whole thing.
The prime minister and those around him have long privately rolled their eyes at Burnham’s antics.
But when Sir Keir invokes the memory of a prime minister associated with economic calamity and near immediate political oblivion – and, on top of that, suggests his economic prospectus could lead to the same outcomes – you know he isn’t messing about.
Incidentally, the scale of the backlash from Labour MPs to Burnham’s interviews was quite the thing to witness.
Burnham has his supporters in the Parliamentary Labour Party, but boy, plenty told us he should just shut up.
And amid all this comes the crucial new detail about a plan the prime minister has talked up enthusiastically in recent weeks – digital ID.
The new key point – it will be compulsory.
Sir Keir will talk about the idea in his speech at a gathering also attended by Anthony Albanese, the prime minister of Australia, and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney.
He hopes it is a practical example of how he can give definition to his premiership, have what he hopes is a useful tool in tackling illegal working and therefore illegal immigration, and give himself a useful political dividing line with his opponents.
Reform UK, the Liberal Democrats and the Scottish National Party are opposed to the plan.
The Conservative position is more ambiguous. They see it for now at least as a “desperate gimmick” but do remain open to being persuaded it is a good idea.
Is it something he can lean into as a defining idea of his time in office and help him address the predicament he and his party find themselves in? He has to hope so.
Breaking News
Trump announces tariff on branded pharmaceutical imports
This post was originally published on this site.
In the United States, President Donald Trump has announced a new tariff of 100% on branded pharmaceutical imports from companies that are not building manufacturing plants in the US.
On his social media platform Truth Social, President Trump said beginning 1 October, the US will levy a 100% tariff on “any branded or patented pharmaceutical unless a company is building their pharmaceutical plant in America”.
He defined building a plant as “breaking ground and/or under construction”.
In August, the Trump Administration imposed a 15% tariff on most pharmaceutical exports from the European Union.
Ireland is one of the biggest exporters of pharmaceutical products to the US from the EU, accounting for €33 billion of €120 billion of pharmaceutical exports to the US last year.
President Trump also announced a 50% tariff on kitchen cabinets and bathroom vanity units, which he said were “flooding into the country”, and had to be controlled for “national security” and other reasons to protect the US manufacturing base.
Similar reasons were cited for imposing a 25% tariff on heavy trucks imported into the US market.
Breaking News
Human remains confirmed as father accused of killing his three daughters
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Human remains found in a remote wooded area of Washington state have been confirmed to be those of a former soldier suspected of kidnapping and murdering his three daughters, authorities have said.
Travis Decker, 32, had been wanted since 2 June when an officer found his truck and the bodies of his three daughters – nine-year-old Paityn Decker, eight-year-old Evelyn Decker and five-year-old Olivia Decker – at a campsite outside Leavenworth.
They had been bound with zip ties and had plastic bags placed over their heads. Post-mortems found they had been suffocated.
Human remains believed to be Decker’s were discovered on a steep, remote, wooded slope up Grindstone Mountain, less than a mile (1.6km) from the campsite, last week, according to the Chelan County Sheriff’s Office.
Sheriff Mike Morrison said DNA tests on clothing found at the scene, as well as from the remains, matched Decker. The coroner’s office is working to determine the cause and time of his death.
The identification of the remains as Decker ended a three-month search by officers, who wanted to honour the girls’ memory, the sheriff said.
Mr Morrison apologised to the daughters’ mother, Whitney Decker, for the search taking so long, telling her: “I hope you can rest easier at night knowing that Travis is accounted for.”
The girls’ bodies were found three days after Decker had failed to return his daughters to their mother’s home in Wenatchee, about 100 miles east of Seattle, following a scheduled visit.
Mrs Decker told police the girls did not return as planned and that Decker’s phone went straight to voicemail.
Last September, she had warned authorities that Decker was experiencing mental health issues and had become increasingly unstable.
She described him as homeless and living in his truck, and sought to have their parenting plan changed to restrict him from having overnight visits with their daughters until he found somewhere to live.
Officials said Decker joined the US army in 2013 and was deployed to Afghanistan for four months in 2014.
He moved to the Washington National Guard in 2021, going part-time in the past few years, but stopped attending drills about a year ago.
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Authorities said he had training in navigation, survival and other skills, and once spent more than two months living in the backwoods off the grid.
The search for Decker involved 100 personnel from state and federal agencies across hundreds of square miles, much of it mountainous and remote, by land, water and air.
The US Marshals Service offered a reward of up to $20,000 (£14,800) for information leading to his capture.
Breaking News
Life-saving stem cell centre welcomes first donors
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Rob Sissons, East Midlands health correspondent
The UK’s first stem cell collection centre strictly dedicated to transplants has started welcoming donors.
The Anthony Nolan Cell Collection Centre, based at Nottingham’s Queen’s Medical Centre (QMC), will help more people across the UK donate potentially life-saving cells to patients with blood cancers and disorders.
The Anthony Nolan charity said the centre would create 1,300 new donation slots a year, helping to tackle a “longstanding global shortage of cell collection facilities”.
Jordan, from London, said he was “proud” to be one of the first to donate. “I am really happy because today I could save someone’s life,” he added.
The centre will be run by the Anthony Nolan charity, in partnership with the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Nottingham Clinical Research Facility.
Jordan was called by the charity to donate stem cells after analysis of a saliva sample he gave nine years ago, when he signed up to the stem cell register at a freshers’ fair at the University of Exeter, proved to be a good match to a stranger.
“It is such an easy thing to do to help someone else,” he said.
“I’m not the biggest fan of needles, but I’m happy to do anything if it helps another person.”
‘Special’ feeling
Anthony Nolan has more than 900,000 people on its own register of potential donors.
It said a “longstanding global shortage of cell collection facilities” meant some patients did not receive a transplant at the best time.
Growing demand for cell-based treatments has put donation facilities at some NHS and private hospitals under more pressure than ever, it added.
According to its own data, in 2022-23, only a fifth of donors on the UK registry were able to donate on the date requested by the patient’s medical team due to capacity issues.
Not having a transplant at the right time can have an irreversible impact on a patient’s mental and physical health, said Anthony Nolan, and sometimes leave them in a life-threatening condition.
The charity said the chance of being matched from its UK-wide register was one in 800, in the first five years of being on the register.
Jordan said it felt “special” to help a stranger, for whom a stem cell transplant might be their only hope of staying alive.
“I like to think if something were to happen to me, then someone would be willing to do the same,” he added.
What is a stem cell transplant?
A stem cell or bone marrow transplant is a life-saving treatment for thousands of patients with blood cancers and disorders. It replaces damaged blood cells with healthy ones.
Stem cells are special cells produced by bone marrow, a spongy tissue found in the centre of some bones, that can turn into different types of blood cells.
Donation is simple, Nicola Alderson – chief operating officer at Anthony Nolan – said.
“You are put on to a machine that has a needle in both arms,” she said. “The blood goes through the machine which takes out the stem cells and puts the rest of the blood back through.”
The process usually takes about five hours. Once the cells are collected from the bloodstream, they are typically transplanted into the recipient within 72 hours.
Anthony Nolan said any contact between a donor and patient depended on privacy regulations of the patient’s country, and was led by the patient.
UK rules allow direct contact from two years since the last transplant, although some overseas registries may not allow contact until five years post-donation.
Anthony Nolan co-ordinates transplants for the NHS, collecting and delivering cells to hospitals across the UK and sending cells abroad. It is involved in more than 1,000 UK transplants between donors and unrelated recipients each year and sends cells abroad to another 300 patients.
Ms Alderson said prior to the new centre, the charity had struggled to get stem cells collected “at the time the clinical community need us to”.
“It is only one in five times where we have been able to get collections to donors on the day doctors have asked for them,” she added.
She said when recipients saw a bag of stem cells, “it is an incredible moment”.
“Ultimately, that small bag can save someone’s life. It is a bag of magic,” she added.
“We will make sure [donors] have the best experience at our new centre.”
The centre has been part-funded by Omaze, which partnered with Anthony Nolan and raised £3.7m through a house prize draw in June.
It is estimated the money will help fund the centre’s work for 18 months.
Kathryn Fairbrother, director of clinical operations for research and innovation at Nottingham University Hospitals (NUH) NHS Trust – which runs the QMC – added: “There are opportunities for Anthony Nolan and for ourselves to do research that we wouldn’t have done before.”
One of the research projects planned involves using stem cells to treat liver disease.
Stem cell transplant recipients, like Raj, will benefit from the new centre.
The 32-year-old, a University of Liverpool student, received a stem cell transplant in Leicester in 2020 after being diagnosed with a rare blood cancer called myelofibrosis.
His cells came from an anonymous donor in Germany.
“I sent him an anonymous thank you letter but I haven’t tried to get in direct contact yet. I’d like to,” Raj said.
“It took me about a year and a half to two years to recover. It took quite a long time, and I was off sick from work for about a year.”
Raj added: “The Nottingham development is a brilliant set-up.
“Being able to be more efficient collecting and delivering stem cells to patients who don’t have time to wait is fantastic.”
Raj would like to see more people sign up to become potential donors at Anthony Nolan.
They need to be aged 16 to 30 years old to register, and can stay on as a potential donor until the age of 61.
Potential donors send off a cheek swab sample and wait to see if they are a match for anyone.
“We need more. It is the ultimate act of kindness,” Raj added.
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