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Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson says she’s been the victim of sexist briefings

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Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson has told the BBC she’s been the victim of “sexist briefings”.

Phillipson is running to be the Labour Party’s deputy leader against former Commons Leader Lucy Powell, following the resignation of Angela Rayner.

In past weeks, rumours were circulating that she would be sacked from her Cabinet role, while in fact, Phillipson was left in post by Sir Keir Starmer in his recent reshuffle.

Speaking in the week before the Labour Party’s autumn conference in Liverpool, where she will go head-to-head with Powell in a hustings, Phillipson laughed off suggestions she was Downing Street’s preferred candidate, saying there was “a certain irony” in those assertions.

In an interview about the deputy leadership contest, BBC Radio 5 Live’s Matt Chorley asked Phillipson if she felt she’d been on the on the receiving end of sexist briefings.

A briefing often sees insiders suggest to the media that a minister might be promoted or sacked.

Phillipson replied: “Yeah completely, but you know that’s life.”

Describing “all of this negativity”, Phillipson said “there’s a certain irony” in then being described as the PM’s favourite.

“I’ve been underestimated most of my life,” she said, adding she’ll just “continue getting on and doing what I’m doing”.

“But I do slightly have to laugh because there’s this idea swirling around somehow that I’m Number 10’s preferred candidate for all of this.”

Matt Chorley challenged Phillipson on whether there is a problem with the culture of the team around Sir Keir, asking: “Sue Gray had also probably raised similar issues, the Boys Club, the lads club, the sexist briefings. Is it too male, too bloke-ish in Number 10?”

Phillipson said she believed some people did feel left out, in government and in the wider party.

She said: “We had lots of new colleagues who were elected last year, lots of brilliant people who haven’t felt that they’ve been part of the team in the way that they should.

“And that’s true from the conversations I’ve had, not just with colleagues in Parliament, but actually across our movement — we’ve got to get better at working together as a team in Parliament but also uniting our party and our movement.

“That’s what I would bring in terms of my ability to unite the party and to allow us to get into it the strongest possible position for the really vital elections we’ve got coming up next May.”

Her comments come as the mayor of Greater Manchester threw his weight behind her rival for the deputy post, Lucy Powell.

In an interview with the New Statesman, Andy Burnham said he believed the Labour party was being run in a “factional and quite divisive” way, and that Powell’s victory would be key to weakening Downing Street’s grip on the party.

Powell, who has cast herself as the “independent choice” in the contest, has also been boosted by a £15,000 donation from green energy industrialist Dale Vince.

Burnham said: “I believe it’s right to go all the way and have a deputy leader that is not in the government and thus less constrained by collective responsibility.”

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Twenty injured in Yemen drone attack on Israel, rescuers and military say

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Rescuers say at least 20 people have been injured in southern Israel after the Israeli military said a drone was launched from Yemen.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said the drone struck the resort town of Eilat on the Red Sea coast, with attempts made to intercept it.

The Magen David Adom emergency medical service said 20 people were taken to Yoseftal Hospital – including two men with serious limb injuries.

Israeli media has described it as a Houthi strike but the Yemeni group has not officially claimed responsibility.

Israeli TV stations broadcast live footage said to be of the drone strike and the area it hit, which showed billowing smoke rising from the site.

Footage posted on social media, verified by the BBC, shows a drone in the sky disappearing out of view as it flies down behind buildings. A few moments later, birds scatter as they fly up into the sky.

“IDF troops, alongside the Israel Police, were dispatched to the area of Eilat after receiving a report of a UAV attack,” the IDF said in a statement.

It added troops and the police were assisting in evacuating the area and a helicopter had been deployed to evacuate the wounded from the scene.

Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said: “Wishing a full recovery to those injured in the UAV strike in Eilat.

“The Houthi terrorists refuse to learn from Iran, Lebanon and Gaza – and will learn the hard way.

“Anyone who harms Israel will be harmed sevenfold.”

The army earlier said air raid sirens had rung through the town.

The attack, if claimed by the Houthis, would be one of the most serious launched by the group in terms of casualties.

In July 2024, one person was killed and 10 injured in a Houthi drone attack on Tel Aviv when a drone hit an apartment building near the US embassy branch office.

Eilat, popular with tourists, has been the location of other recent drone attacks, with one striking the town’s hotel area last week, according to Israeli authorities. No casualties were reported.

Earlier in September, one person was wounded when a Houthi drone hit Ramon Airport, just north of Eilat.

The rebel Houthi group has been launching missiles and drones towards Israel as part of what it describes as acts of solidarity with the Palestinians in the war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.

The Houthis have also been attacking vessels in the Red Sea since the start of the war in Gaza.

The Iranian-backed rebel group, which considers Israel its enemy, controls Sanaa and the north-west of Yemen, but is not the country’s internationally recognised government.

Israel has retaliated by bombing Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen, including the Red Sea port of Hudaydah.

Earlier in September, the Houthi-run health ministry said 35 people were killed in Israeli strikes on Sanaa and al-Jawf province.

And in August, the group said its self-proclaimed Prime Minister Ahmed Ghaleb Nasser al-Rahawi was killed in an Israeli air strike.

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First migrants arrive in UK from France under ‘one in one out’ deal

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Kathryn Armstrong

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A family of three, including a small child, are the first people to arrive in the UK under the government’s “one in, one out” agreement with France.

The move follows the removal of four migrants from the UK so far under the pilot scheme.

“This is a clear message to people-smuggling gangs that illegal entry into the UK will not be tolerated,” a Home Office spokesperson said.

“We will continue to detain and remove those who arrive by small boat.”

It is the latest development in the implementation of an agreement the government hopes will deter people from making the dangerous and illegal journey over the English Channel.

There is no suggestion from either the French or British governments that the plan will, on its own, smash the cross-channel trade.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer is also seeking to dismantle criminal smuggling networks behind the crossings that the Home Office say “profit from human misery”.

However, the pilot has faced criticism from political opponents and rights groups.

Conservative shadow home secretary Chris Philp has previously said the government’s deal with the French would be less effective than the Rwanda plan proposed by the previous Tory government, and would offer “no deterrent effect whatsoever”.

The numbers returned so far were “pathetic”, he added.

The charity Asylum Matters, meanwhile, has argued that “the only way to stop people from making dangerous journeys is to give them real safe routes to seek sanctuary”.

The “one in, one out” scheme was announced in July.

Under the treaty, France agreed to take back migrants who had travelled to the UK by small boat and had their asylum claim withdrawn or declared inadmissible.

For each person returned to France, the UK will accept someone with a case for protection as a refugee who has not attempted to cross the Channel.

While this removal has been delayed, the government has been successful in sending four others to France who had arrived in the UK on a small boat.

Last week, an Indian national was the first person to be removed from the UK, followed days later by an Eritrean man, despite a legal bid to delay his departure.

Home Office sources said an Iranian male had also been returned to France, and later the department said an Afghan national had been returned.

However, the Home Office was refused permission on Tuesday to appeal against a temporary injunction blocking another Eritrean man from being removed.

In a last-minute reprieve, the High Court in London gave him at least 14 days to make representations to support his claim that he is a victim of modern slavery.

More than 30,000 people have crossed the Channel in small boats so far this year.

The total number of small boat crossings in the English Channel this year has dipped below record levels for the first time since 3 March, new government figures suggest.

In the year to 23 September, 32,188 people arrived in the UK by small boat, 148 fewer than at the same point in 2022.

French authorities say they have prevented more than 17,600 attempted crossings this year. But under maritime law, French officers say they cannot intervene once boats are in the water unless there is a threat to life.

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Father urges State to help him get toddler daughter back to Ireland

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In what a judge described as a “heart-rending” case, a father wants orders directing the State to take immediate steps for the return to Ireland of his child who he has not seen since early this year.

The toddler was taken by her mother to her native Poland without her father’s consent and remains there after a Polish court directed her return to Ireland.

The parents are in dispute over the mother’s claim the child will receive better treatment in Poland for her medical condition.

On Wednesday, the man told the High Court’s Mr Justice Micheál P O’Higgins, who was dealing with the court’s vacation list, he has not seen his daughter since he saw her in a Polish court last January. He is “the only one fighting for her rights”, he said.

Paul McCarthy SC, for various State defendants, said this is “a human story” and there was no lack of sympathy from the defendants for the predicament of the man and his child.

It is also a legal matter and the man has no cause of action against the State parties, counsel said. The State is “doing all it can” but there were legal and diplomatic limits on what it can do.

Mr Justice O’Higgins said it was a “heart-rending” matter and the court required further materials and legal documents and submissions before deciding how to proceed.

He made directions for exchange of those documents and returned the man’s application for various orders and declarations to October 8th.

He adjourned to the same date the defendants’ application to strike out the man’s proceedings on grounds they disclose no cause of action and are bound to fail.

The judge made orders preventing identification of the parties.

Earlier, he was told that a Polish ombudsman has sought to bring an appeal there concerning the court orders for return of the child.

The man said he wanted orders for the Irish Government to challenge Poland about the failure to return his child to Ireland. He has been left on his own and has “no time for legal gymnastics”, he said.

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