London Playbook: See you in court — Vape no more
— Land grab
BY ROSA
PRINCE
MAY 30,
2023 8:00 AM CET
https://www.politico.eu/newsletter/london-playbook/see-you-in-court-vape-no-more-land-grab/
Good
Tuesday morning. This is Rosa Prince. Eleni Courea is your Playbook author into
Wednesday.
DRIVING THE
DAY
OK, SO
WE’RE DOING THIS: The Covid Inquiry’s deadline for its request for unredacted
messages sent between Boris Johnson and the most senior members of government
during the pandemic passes at 4 p.m. today — and word on the street is the
Cabinet Office ain’t backing down. Pretty much all the papers today say BoJo
and co. won’t hand over the trove of WhatsApps and diaries.
See you in
court: That means the Cabinet Office is preparing to launch a legal challenge
to the Section 21 Order issued by inquiry chair Heather Hallett last week
demanding the documents; she has said that failing to surrender them would
constitute a criminal offense.
Still
considering: On the record, a Cabinet Office spokesperson dismissed as
“speculation” suggestions a decision had been made by last night, saying
officials were “still considering” the options. But everyone Playbook spoke to
stressed the government stood by the response sent by its lawyers to the
inquiry last week, which said much of the requested material was “unambiguously
irrelevant,” and “inherently sensitive and personal.” The Times said the
government was “resolute” and “unlikely” to back down.
Going to
the wire: The Mail’s Harriet Line says officials do not believe Hallett has the
powers to demand the docs, when doing so would set a harmful precedent and
could identify junior colleagues. However, she quotes an “insider” saying
Cabinet Office lawyers are continuing to seek a “middle ground,” adding that
it’s not a case of “everything or nothing.”
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Damned if
they do: Boris Johnson isn’t the only person affected by all this — despite his
impressive ability to consume all the air in a room. The Telegraph says serving
ministers are among those who have expressed disquiet about the possibility of
private messages being released, setting a precedent that would have an impact
far beyond the historic episodes of the pandemic.
Disappearing
function on: If you were a minister, would you send an indiscreet message on
WhatsApp today, knowing it could be poured over by some future inquiry?
Damned if
they don’t: Then again, do ministers really want the hassle of a court fight,
particularly in defense of a PM-but-two? As Liberal Democrat health
spokesperson Daisy Cooper pointed out, defying the chair of the inquiry they
set up themselves is a bad look. She added: “It looks like Rishi Sunak is too
worried about upsetting Boris Johnson and his allies to do the right thing.”
Delays on
the line: Legal action could also have the effect of delaying the inquiry,
which is due to hold its first hearings in two weeks’ time.
CARDS ON
THE TABLE: Separately, the Times’ George Grylls spoke to Cabinet Office
“sources,” who urged Johnson to release his diaries himself, rather than
continue to blame former colleagues for passing them on to police after his
government-appointed lawyers raised concerns about further lockdown breaches. A
spokesman for Johnson basically told the Cabinet Office to jog on.
HOT DATE:
Downing Street confirmed that Sunak and Johnson have yet to meet for their
clear-the-air chinwag, but a Tory insider told Playbook it was definitely going
ahead this week.
BANK
HOLIDAY FUN: Instead, the Telegraph says Johnson, his pregnant wife Carrie, son
Wilf and daughter Romy headed off on a chicken run; sorry, attended a lovely
summer fete in his former constituency of Henley, where the sitting MP just
happens to be standing down. The Telegraph has all the deets.
Will you
look at that: Applications to replace John Hayes in Henley opened last night,
along with those for 23 other winnable seats. Michael Crick has the full list.
TOP OF THE
POPS: The results of ConHome’s latest monthly ministerial (un)popularity
contest make for fascinating reading. Penny Mordaunt’s coronation
sword-wielding propels her up the league table from fourth to second, while
Kemi Badenoch’s European Retained Law Bill woes see her make the reverse
journey. Ben Wallace tops the tree, as per, while Rishi Sunak takes a tumble.
But it’s the fact that a record six Cabinet ministers, including Michael Gove,
Jeremy Hunt and Grant Shapps, receive a negative rating that is perhaps the
most eye-catching line.
Kemi v
Grant: POLITICO’s Stefan Boscia hears that Shapps and Badenoch are at
loggerheads over the former’s drive for a green border tax, called a “carbon
border adjustment mechanism” to help cut emissions to net zero. The plan would
lead to tariffs on overseas imports from countries including China and India,
which Badenoch is said to fear would stifle trade. More here for our Pro
subscribers.
WHAT THE
GOVERNMENT WANTS TO TALK ABOUT
VAPE
NATION: Ministers will take steps to discourage the use of vaping by children,
as alarm grows about the number of teens using e-cigarettes. The plans are
aimed at curbing sales, particularly to youngsters, rather than banning vaping
altogether, a move that will disappoint campaigners.
PM to the
rescue: Rishi Sunak will highlight the proposals with a visit to Kent alongside
Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty, where they will visit a lab that tests
vapes for corrupt chemicals. While there the PM will release a pool clip and
record some regional interviews and have a sit down with the Beeb’s Hugh Pym.
Health Minister Neil O’Brien will also take part in interviews about the
proposals.
Rishi
writes: In an op-ed in the Sun, Sunak refers to his own pre-teen children,
saying: “My daughters are 10 and 12, and I do not want the way vapes are
marketed, promoted and sold to be attractive to them.”
The
details: The plan will see the closing of a loophole that allows firms to offer
free samples of vapes to children — e-cigs are illegal for under-18s, but
giving them out gratis is not a crime. More liaison officers will be put into
schools to stop vaping in class, accompanied by £3 million in funding, and
levels of fines for shops caught selling illicit vapes will be reviewed, amid
concern about their relatively low level. Ministers will also review whether
“nicotine-free” vapes should be banned for under-18s. Whitty described the
crackdown as a “very welcome step.” The Mail has more.
Vape ban? A
full ban on non-prescription vapes, along the lines of new laws introduced in
Australia this month, is thought unlikely after the industry argued that vapes
are helpful to those seeking to kick a smoking habit.
Leave our
kids alone: NHS figures show that in 2021, 9 percent of 11 to 15-year-olds had
used e-cigarettes, up from 6 percent in 2018. Campaigners say bright packaging
and tempting fruity or bubblegum flavors are clearly aimed at under-18s.
Call for
evidence: A government call for evidence into youth vaping remains open until
June 6.
Wes Sez: In
response to the vaping announcement, Shadow Health Secretary Wes Streeting
said: “The Conservatives voted down Labour’s plan to ban the marketing of vapes
to children. This new announcement is a baby step when we need urgent action
now.”
WHAT LABOUR
WANTS TO TALK ABOUT
BUILDING
TODAY: A Labour government would force landowners to sell at lower prices in
order to tackle the housing crisis, under plans the FT and Guardian both trail
today. The scheme would cancel rules which mean agricultural land subject to compulsory
purchase is given a price tag equivalent to its value if it already had
planning permission. Under the 1961 Land Compensation Act, land purchased by
the state can be valued at several times more than it would otherwise cost.
Quite the
markup: As Jim Pickard tweets, current rules inflate the price of land, making
it impossible for councils to find enough new places to build to keep up with
demand. The proposals, drawn up by Shadow Leveling Up Secretary Lisa Nandy, are
the latest attempt by Labour to pitch for the votes of young people and their
parents, who despair of ever getting on the property ladder.
Fancy a
tilt? A party aid tells the Guardian’s Kiran Stacey: We want local areas to
capture a lot more of the value that is created when you build on land nearby.
The principal is to tilt the balance of power, which right now is tilted
towards landowners and not communities.”
What will
Gove say? The government has already launched a consultation into eliminating
so-called “hope” payments — which factor in the “hope” the owner has of
securing planning permission. So will Leveling Up Secretary Michael Gove oppose
Labour’s plans?
NOT HAPPY:
The Times’ Geraldine Scott hears the Conservatives could lose millions in
donations from house builders angry at the government’s failure to build new
homes. A fifth of donations to the Tories in the last 10 years, amounting to
£60 million, came from housing developers and builders, and many are furious at
what the paper describes as some “selfish” MPs’ “anti-development agenda.”
EQUAL BUT
DIFFERENT: To mark the anniversary of the Equal Pay Act yesterday, Deputy
Labour leader Angela Rayner wrote for the Independent. “We still have a long
way to go. New analysis shows that the gender pay gap for women in their 50s will
not close until 2050 at current rates. That’s bad for women — and bad for the
economy.”
BAD NEWS
FOR THE BROTHERS AND SISTERS: Trade union membership has slumped, particularly
among younger workers, new data released by the Department for Business and
reported in the Times reveals. Only four percent of 16 to 24-year-olds were in
a union last year, down from seven percent in 1995.
Broken
Britain: The Mail’s David Churchill reports that industrial action on the
railways is set to cost businesses a staggering £1 billion. There are more rail
strikes due tomorrow, Friday and Saturday.
TAKING STOCK
SUNAK BACKS
STOCK: Rishi Sunak has given his unequivocal backing to Kathleen Stock, the
feminist academic currently fighting it out in the trans culture wars after her
views on gender led to student protests and she ultimately resigned from her
job at Sussex University in 2021. The prime minister called for Stock to be
“heard,” amid controversy over her latest speaking engagement, at the Oxford
Union this evening. His words splash the Telegraph.
Free
debate: In what the Telegraph describes as a “rare intervention” into the
campus free speech row, the PM said: “University should be an environment where
debate is supported, not stifled. We mustn’t allow a small but vocal few to
shut down discussion. Students should be allowed to hear and debate her views.”
Moderately
speaking: Earlier, Stock insisted “I’m a moderate,” during an appearance on the
Good Morning Britain sofa (whose bosses were presumably thrilled to see someone
else at the center of a s***storm).
Nonetheless:
Protests are expected in Oxford, where the student union threatened to bar the
Union from its freshers’ fair in retaliation for inviting Stock to speak about
her view that transgender people cannot expect to enjoy all the rights afforded
by biological gender. The Guardian has a writeup.
Gender
Wars: Stock also appears in a documentary, Gender Wars, which airs on Channel 4
at 10 p.m. tonight.
ICYMI: The
Mail on Sunday reported that Sunak is set to announce Cambridge professor Arif
Ahmed as his “free speech tsar” this week, with a mission to investigate
possible breaches of new free speech rules, introduced this month, and impose
fines on student unions and other bodies found to have stifled debate.
GENDER
DELAY: Plans by Equalities Secretary Kemi Badenoch to force teachers to inform
parents if children wish to change gender could be delayed until the fall, the
Sun’s Natasha Clark reports. The new guidance had been due before the end of
the school year.
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TODAY IN
WESTMINSTER
PARLIAMENT:
In recess until June 5.
CANTERBURY
TALES: Former Archbishop of Canterbury George Carey said the government should
allow time for a debate on a law permitting assisting dying. Carey said it was
“profoundly Christian” to prevent suffering. The Telegraph has the full story.
WASTE NOT:
The i splashes on calls by the government for householders to put less in their
recycling bins to avoid contaminating the recycling chain. Ministers want to
crack down on ‘wishcycling,’ where well-meaning people try to recycle items
that cannot be processed.
WE DON’T
NEED NO EDUCATION: More than 90 English primary schools will close or are at
risk of closing because they are more than two-thirds empty, according to
Guardian analysis of government data.
SAFETY
FIRST: Plans to disband specialist teams that deliver treatment courses for sex
offenders present a “real and present danger to public safety,” according to
probation union Napo General Secretary Ian Lawrence. The Guardian has more.
INSTITUTIONAL
RACISM: The Public and Commercial Services Union accused Whitehall of “racist
institutional bias,” claiming white staff were twice as likely to be promoted
as non-white colleagues. The Times has a write-up.
MILLENNIAL
MOMENT: The Onward think tank holds an online discussion about the role of
millennials in politics from 9 a.m., with speakers including Tory MP Bim
Afolami and Onward Director Sebastian Payne. The event coincides with Onward’s
“Missing Millennials” report, which included polling showing nearly two-thirds
of millennials believe the Tories deserve to lose the next election. The
Guardian has more details.
Talking of
Seb: Michael Crick hears Payne, who’s an ex-FT journalist, is on the shortlist
for selection in Selby, where MP Nigel Adams announced he was standing down
last month.
Other SW1
events: Chatham House analyzes the future for Hong Kong’s democracy with
panelists including activist Nathan Law at 6 p.m. The Young Fabians Academy
hosts an online discussion on how to get involved with Labour policy-making
with Durham University Professor Thom Brooks from 7 p.m.
BEYOND THE
M25
CLEVERLY
HEADS EAST: James Cleverly is in Estonia to visit British armed forces on
NATO’s “eastern flank” and hold talks in Tallinn with members of the new
government there. On the agenda today is a visit to a school for Ukrainian
refugee children, and he’ll also speak to Estonian tech company chiefs and seek
to promote economic ties with the U.K.
Norwegian
would: The foreign secretary heads to Norway tomorrow for a gathering of NATO
foreign ministers in Oslo; top of the agenda is support for Ukraine and for
Swedish accession to the allaince ahead of the meeting of NATO leaders in
Vilnius in July. In words briefed ahead of the trip, Cleverly said: “As NATO
Allies, we are stronger than ever before — unified against hostility and in
defence of democracy and freedom.”
ANDREW’S
ANGER: Development Minster Andrew Mitchell condemned Uganda’s new anti-gay
legislation, labeling it “appalling” and “deeply discriminatory.” He said the
legislation will “increase the risk of violence, discrimination and
persecution, will set back the fight against HIV/Aids, and will damage Uganda’s
international reputation.” The Independent has the story.
NOT ANOTHER
ONE: Spain goes to the polls on July 23 after Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez
called a snap election the day after conservatives and the far right made
strong gains in regional polls. My POLITICO colleague Aitor Hernández-Morales
has more details.
Meanwhile
in Athens: Greece’s parliament dissolved less than 24 hours after convening,
ahead of an election on June 25. My POLITICO colleague Nektaria Stamouli has
the rundown.
KOSOVO
CONFLICT: NATO condemned an attack on peacekeepers in Kosovo which left
approximately 25 international troops wounded. Kosovo Force members, a NATO-led
peacekeeping mission, were injured during clashes with Serb protestors — my
POLITICO colleague Lili Bayer has the details.
UKRAINE
UPDATE: General Kyrylo Budanov, head of Ukraine’s military intelligence, warned
of a swift response to Russia’s missile strikes in Kyiv. The missiles, which
unusually fell during the day, were targeted at the city center and all shot
down. The BBC has a write-up.
OVER IN
NIGERIA: Nigeria’s President Bola Ahmed Tinubu was sworn into office at the
5,000-capacity Eagle Square venue in the capital Abuja. Tinubu spoke of his
swearing-in as a “sublime moment.” CNN has more.
JAPAN’S
THREAT: Japan’s military is on standby after North Korea notified of plans to
launch a satellite in the coming days. ITV News has the details.
CENTRAL
BANKING BONANZA: The European Central Bank is turning 25 — and POLITICO is
launching our brand new Central Banker Pro vertical. For those nostalgic for
the past 25 years, Johanna Treeck looks back at the 25 most exciting moments at
the ECB.
And for
those who just can’t get enough, we’re holding a Twitter Space to discuss how
central banking has taken a political hammering in recent years. We’ll be
joined by special guests including former Pimco boss Mohamed A. El-Erian, the
Peterson Institute for International Economics’ Nicolas Véron, and global
liquidity plumbing expert James Aitken. Our Editor-in-Chief Jamil Anderlini
will give you the down-low on what’s to come from our new vertical, before our
host, Senior Finance Editor Izabella Kaminska, takes the mic. Join us here at 3
p.m. CET.
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MEDIA ROUND
GB News
Breakfast: Former Labour Adviser Scarlett MccGwire (6.30 a.m., 7.30 a.m. and
8.30 a.m.).
Nick
Ferrari at Breakfast: Tory Police and Crime Commissioner for Sussex Katy Bourne
(7.10 a.m.) … Mental Health U.K. Chief Executive Brian Dow (7.15 a.m.).
TalkTV
Breakfast: Tory MP Christopher Chope (7.20 a.m.) … U.K. Onshore Oil & Gas
Director Charles McAllister (7.30 a.m.) … Defense committee chair Tobias
Ellwood (8.30 a.m.) … Former Green Party Leader Natalie Bennett (9.20 a.m.) …
The aforementioned Kathleen Stock (9.30 a.m.).
Sky News
Breakfast: Author Anthony Seldon (7.20 a.m.) … Barrister Adam Wagner (7.40
a.m.) … Labour peer Charlie Falconer (8.05 a.m.) … Former Deputy Chief of the Defense Staff
Simon Mayall (8.30 a.m.) … Former GCHQ Director David Omand (9.20 a.m.).
Good
Morning Britain: Royal College of Psychiatrists President Adrian James and
former Met Police Chief Superintendent Dal Babu (both 7.25 a.m.).
Times Radio
Breakfast: Tory Party donor Mohamed Amersi (8.35 a.m.) … Former Tory Leader
William Hague and former Scottish Labour Leader Kezia Dugdale (both 9.10 a.m.)
… Ukrainian MP Lesia Vasylenko (9.40 a.m.).
TODAY’S
FRONT PAGES
POLITICO
UK: Specter of China looms over EU-U.S. summit.
Daily
Express: Stop banks ‘ripping off’ loyal savers.
Daily Mail:
Fury at Starmer’s £1.5 million from Just Stop Oil donor.
Daily
Mirror: I lost my little boy … this must stop.
Daily Star:
A pint of foam please barman.
Financial
Times: Labour plans land valuation reform to ease housing crisis.
i:
Households urged to recycle less to cut waste.
Metro: The
gloves are off.
The Daily
Telegraph: PM backs feminist in Oxford row over free speech.
The
Guardian: Labour to let councils buy land cheaply to tackle housing crisis.
The
Independent: How we saved this four-year-old girl from killer mould.
The Times:
Legal wrangle looms over Johnson’s WhatsApp chats.
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