08.22 GMT
Ed Miliband urges Labour to move on after Starmer
apologises to Streeting for hostile briefings from No 10
Good morning. In an interview around this time
yesterday morning, Wes Streeting, the health secretary, said that if Keir
Starmer were to ring him about the anti-Streeting briefing by Starmer allies
reported by the Guardian and others on Tuesday, Streeting would reply: “Why are
you bothering with this?” It was an attempt to play down a new episode of
Labour turmoil that has turned out to counter-productive for Starmer, though
helpful for Streeting.
But, by the time the two men did speak last
night, the conversation took a different turn.
Starmer apologised to Streeting, journalists have
been told. The conversation was short, and they did not discuss Morgan
McSweeney, Starmer’s chief of staff, whom Starmer is now under pressure to
sack. The pair also agreed they would speak again soon – which doesn’t mean
much (they both attend cabinet, and have to speak to each other), but is the
sort of thing No 10 briefers say about a meeting to make it sound cordial.
Here is our analysis by Eleni Courea, Jessical
Elgot and Pippa Crerar as to what is going on.
Thursday
briefing: Is Wes Streeting a traitor or a faithful?
Quoting
Jess Elgot, she says:
Two
months ago, Andy Burnham, the Manchester mayor, launched his own leadership
manoeuvrings, and since then, there’s been continuing conversation around
replacing Starmer, as if it’s inevitable that he won’t be in position to fight
at the next election. This, Jess says, has led to a “paranoia” in No 10.
“People
close to No 10 will say to me: ‘I actually don’t think they intended to put the
spotlight on Wes. What they wanted to do was make it really clear that Keir is
not going anywhere, that he will fight any attempt to dislodge him, that he is
not the sort of person who will go meekly away, that he will fight.’”
But the
briefing backfired, because it ended up looking like a hit-job on Streeting,
who is the cabinet minister whose leadership ambitions are most blatant.
Ed
Miliband, the energy secretary, has been doing interviews this morning, and he
is urging the Labour party to calm down. This is what he told Sky News:
Look, I
think the briefing has been bad, no question.
But my
message to the Labour party, though, is quite simple today, which is we need to
focus on the country, not ourselves.
We were
given a historic mandate last July, a historic opportunity to change our
country. And we have a historic responsibility.
I’ve been
at this a long time. Governments going through days of turbulence. I was there
during the Blair/Brown years. What gets you through, what sustains you, is your
sense of mission, your values, what you believe in, who you stand up for. And
that is what really, really matters.
I know
that Keir will hate all this nonsense and we’re going to focus on the country
and that’s what we need to do.
Here is
the agenda for the day.
9.30am:
NHS England publishes its monthly performance figures.
Morning:
Wes Streeting, the health secretary, is on a visit in Liverpool.
Morning:
Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, is on a visit where she is due to speak to the
media.
11.30am:
Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.
Morning:
Keir Starmer is on a visit to promote the news that the government is going
ahead with the construction of the UK’s first small modular nuclear reactors at
Wylfa on Anglesey.
Noon:
John Swinney, Scotland’s first minister, takes questions at Holyrood.
2pm: Mark
Rowley, the Metropolitan police commissioner, and Sadiq Khan, the mayor of
London, are questioned by the London assembly.
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