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Tuesday 7 July 2020 12:15
Boris Johnson has been accused of trying to shift the blame for the high coronavirus death toll onto care homes after the PM claimed some facilities “didn’t really follow the procedures”. Care sector chiefs condemned his remarks as “cowardly” and “hugely insulting”.
It comes as Russia said it would hit back at UK sanctions with reciprocal measures. It follows moves against 25 Russian officials announced by foreign secretary Dominic Raab as part of a new, post-Brexit framework targeting foreign nationals accused of human rights abuses.
Elsewhere, Huawei has denied targeting members of the British elite for support. It follows claims made in a new dossier – reportedly compiled with the help of former MI6 spy Christopher Steele – that the firm tried to persuade high-profile figures in the UK to act as “useful idiots”.
‘Boris Johnson’s boomerang of blame has hit him in the face’
Our chief political commentator John Rentoul has taken a look at the flak received by the prime minister over his claim care homes “didn’t really follow the procedures” – and the idea he is trying to shift the blame for Britain’s high coronavirus death toll.
“The worst thing about Johnson’s comment from his own point of view is that it feeds an unhealthy public mood of hunting out someone to blame,” he writes.
“By trying to shift the blame from himself and his government, the prime minister has only lit the torches of the pitchfork-wielding crowd besieging No 10.”
PM refuses to apologise for blaming care homes for coronavirus death toll
Boris Johnson is not offering an apology or formal retraction for his claim that some care homes “didn’t really follow the procedures” to protect residents and staff from coronavirus, Downing Street has indicated.
Asked what Johnson meant by his comments, the PM’s official spokesman told a Westminster briefing: “Throughout the pandemic care homes have done a brilliant job under very difficult circumstances.
“The prime minister was pointing out that nobody knew what the correct procedures were because the extent of asymptomatic transmission was not known at the time.”
Asked if Johnson would like to apologise or retract the comments, the spokesman said:
“As I’ve just set out, the PM thinks that throughout the pandemic care homes have done a brilliant job under very difficult circumstances.”
Police forces should record misogyny as hate crime, says campaigner
Police forces across the UK should immediately start recording misogyny as a hate crime, a leading campaigner has said.
The comments come as Labour’s metro mayors lent their support to a parliamentary proposal launched by MP Stella Creasy centred around making the police start recording misogyny as a hate crime. The Labour MP for Walthamstow has put forward an amendment to the domestic abuse bill which would make this possible.
Sylvie Pope, who helped spearhead the campaign for misogyny to be treated as a hate crime, told The Independent seven police are already recording misogynistic hate crimes – and called on more to act. “Police can start doing it from today … we hope to see more police forces adopting it immediately.”
Our women’s correspondent Maya Oppenheim has more details.
Former Labour MP pleads guilty to child sex offence
Former Labour MP Eric Joyce has pleaded guilty to making an indecent photograph of a child. Joyce, who represented the party for Falkirk between 2000 and 2012, appeared at Ipswich Crown Court today for a pre-trial hearing.
According to the BBC, Joyce was charged last month after being arrested in November 2018. The charge alleged that he had made an indecent photograph of a child which was found on a device and classified as a Category A image.
Judge Emma Peters said that the single 51-second movie, found on a device, “depicts a number of children”.
No 10 must ‘tread carefully’ with China, ex-chancellor warns
A closer look now at ex-chancellor Phillip Hammond’s warned of an alarming rise of “anti-Chinese sentiment” within the Conservative Party – as he suggested the UK should avoid jeopardising its trading relationship with the world’s second largest economy.
Hammond, foreign secretary when David Cameron declared a “Golden Era” of Sino-British relations, said the UK was already “loosening its ties” with the EU in “the name of expanding its global reach”.
“It seems to me this is not a time to be wanting to weaken our trade links with the world’s second largest economy,” he said. Hammond added: “I’m concerned about the outbreak of anti-Chinese sentiment within the Conservative Party.
“As I say, it’s always been right to be clear-eyed about the challenges of a relationship with China and frank about the differences we have with China, but that seems to me over the last months to have accelerated into something which is becoming a little bit more alarming.
“At the same time, we are in a position where need to build our trade relationships around the globe, but China is Britain’s third largest trading partner after the EU and the US and I think we need to tread carefully in how we manage this relationship.”
Our correspondent Ashley Cowburn has more:
Kremlin: Russia will respond to UK sanctions with ‘reciprocal measures’
Russia will respond with reciprocal measures to British sanctions against 25 Russians, including the country’s top state investigator, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
Britain imposed sanctions on 25 Russians and 20 Saudis on Monday as part of post-Brexit measures foreign minister Dominic Raab said were aimed at stopping the laundering of “blood money”.
‘British sanctions won’t have impact without EU’
What impact can the UK have now the country is going it alone of sanctions against alleged human rights abusers?
Commentator Lauren Crosby Medlicott argues that the foreign secretary Dominic Raab’s autonomous programme “will not produce proposed results and is ill-timed”.
“Following Brexit and coronaviurs, the UK is in a weak position. We are not in a place to bargain with other countries as all of our chips are gone,” she writes.
More here:
Covid-19 death toll officially reaches 50,000 in England and Wales
The coronavirus death toll in England and Wales has reached 50,000, according to newly published Office for National Statistics figures.
Weekly data published on Tuesday show there were 50,000 cases where Covid-19 was mentioned on death certificates between 28 December and 26 June.
Johnson ‘certainly not blaming care homes’, says minister
Business secretary Alok Sharma has claimed Boris Johnson did not mean to blame care homes for deaths – and had only been pointing out that no-one had known what the correct procedures were.
“The prime minister is certainly not blaming care homes,” the cabinet minister told the BBC.
“What the prime minister was pointing out is nobody knew what the correct procedures were, because we know that the extent of the asymptomatic cases was not known at the time.”
Was Johnson actually said was: “We discovered too many care homes didn’t really follow the procedures in the way that they could have, but we’re learning lesson the whole time”.
Labour’s response to the row? MP Rushanara Ali told Newsnight last night: “The audacity to blame care workers who have lost lives, who have sacrificed so much, is shocking and I think it’s got to stop.”
Chancellor Rishi Sunak is being urged to unveil a cash injection worth £200bn in order to help the economy recover after the coronavirus crisis.
The Resolution Foundation think tank has called on the Cabinet minister to further loosen the purse strings, having already announced a string of wage subsidy and emergency loan schemes since the outbreak started.
James Smith, research director at the Resolution Foundation, said: “The Covid-induced economic crisis is like no other crisis we’ve seen.
“A £200bn fiscal stimulus should therefore focus on protecting jobs and supporting spending in hard-hit sectors of the economy, and reflect the fact that low-income households have found it far hardest to cope.”
Legislation will look at all investments, says minister
Business secretary Alok Sharma said new legislation would be reviewing major investment from all countries, not only projects where China was involved.
Asked on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme whether the government would be reviewing China’s investment in UK nuclear power, he said: “We will be looking at all of this in the round.”
He added: “The key thing I just want to say is … we will look at all investments that are made in the UK, we will look at that against the criteria we have set out in the Enterprise Act, that will be set out in the National Security Investment Bill, and that will be for all investments that are made rather than picking and choosing individual countries.”
Moving on to discussing Huawei, Sharma said: “I don’t want to go into the details of a particular country but you will know that, as a result of the initial sanctions that the US has put in place against Huawei specifically, we are having a look to see what the impact would be on UK networks.
“There is a process ongoing, we will see what that review comes to and we will set out our next steps.”
Former chancellor worried by Tory ‘outbreak of anti-Chinese sentiment’
Philip Hammond said the UK should not be distancing itself from China while “loosening ties” with Europe. The ex-chancellor told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “Right now, the UK is in the process of loosening its ties with trade partners in Europe in the name of expanding its global reach.
“It seems to me this is not a time to be wanting to weaken our trade links with the world’s second largest economy.
“We have to find a way, and I think we have done it in the past with many countries, of continuing to trade, continuing to invest and welcome investment from countries with which we have frank disagreements about political issues.”
The ex-foreign secretary said he is “concerned about the outbreak of anti-Chinese sentiment within the Conservative Party” and called its rise “alarming”.
Piers Morgan calls PM ‘disgusting’ for care home comments
Piers Morgan has labelled Boris Johnson “disgusting” over comments the prime minister made suggesting some care homes properly follow procedures during the Covid-19 crisis.
Johnson sparked widespread anger after he said “too many” in the care home sector “didn’t really follow the procedures”.
Morgan accused the PM and other ministers of attempting to “shift the narrative” around the UK’s high coronavirus death toll. “I think it’s honestly disgusting. What we’re seeing now is the blame game.”
He added: “The prime minister and Matt Hancock and other ministers are starting to shift the narrative away from themselves and their decisions to other people like Public Health England, NHS England the care homes – everyone but the government is going to end up being blamed for this by the government.”
Huawei denies trying to target ‘useful idiots’ of British elite
More now on the claims that China has been accused of trying to persuade influential individuals to support Huawei’s integration into the UK’s 5G network.
A controversial dossier – reportedly compiled with the help of former MI6 spy Christopher Steele – claims high-profile people were targeted to act as “useful idiots” for Beijing.
The Daily Mail reported that the 86-page document commissioned by a US film producer Andrew Duncan claimed politicians and academics were among those in the UK whose backing China sought to secure.
Huawei was said to be described as “Beijing’s strategic asset” in the report.
A spokesman for the Chinese telecoms giant described the allegations as “unfounded”, and said they were part of a “long-running US campaign” against the company.
The spokesman addedd: “We categorically refute these unfounded allegations, which do not bear scrutiny and are regrettably the latest in the long-running US campaign against Huawei.”
Barnier and Frost hold one-on-one face-to-face Brexit talks
The EU’s chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier is in London on Tuesday for talks with his UK counterpart David Frost.
Last week, discussions between the two sides on a post-Brexit trade deal broke up early with “significant differences” remaining. But Barnier and Frost will meet face-to-face today before talks with the rest of their teams on Wednesday.
Frost said last week that though the ability to meet in person had given “extra depth and flexibility” to the discussions, there was more to do. Barnier said that while Brussels had engaged “constructively”, officials needed to see an “equivalent engagement from the UK side”.
“Our goal was to get negotiations successfully and quickly on a trajectory to reach an agreement,” he said. “However, after four days of discussions, serious divergences remain.”
It had been hoped the face-to-face meetings – agreed following a high-level conference call last month between Boris Johnson and the European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen – would inject new momentum into the process.
The PM has been adamant he will not allow the discussions to drag on into the autumn, arguing that British businesses and citizens need certainty on the way forward before then.
Don’t indulge Huawei ‘conspiracy theory’, Beijing advisor warns No 10
Dr Huiyao Wang, president of the Centre for China and Globalisation and an adviser to the Chinese government, urged the UK not to indulge in any “conspiracy theory” about technology firm Huawei.
The comments come after suggestions the government could reverse its earlier decision and block Huawei involvement in the roll-out of Britain’s 5G network.
Dr Wang told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “You can see what the US is doing in starting a trade war – China doesn’t want to have a trade war, it has been forced into those kind of things.
“But it is not good. It puts you on the downward spiral. We don’t want to see that happen. The UK is a country that invented a lot of trade formats and now it is getting more independent, has a lot of soft power.
“It should really take a lead on safeguarding the multilateral trading system, including technology usage around the world, rather than going back to conspiracy theory and really has no hard evidence and no proof and to deny a company of the most advanced technology in the world.”
Sunak accused of watering down green spending pledges
Rishi Sunak has been accused of watering down a Tory manifesto pledge with a £1bn programme to plug energy-leaking buildings – after the party promised £9.2bn would be spent.
The chancellor is set to unveil a new voucher scheme in the “mini-budget” on Wednesday to allow homeowners to carry out £5,000-worth of energy-saving home improvements
But the cash is a fraction of what was promised and is also a fraction of the tens of billions being spent on a green recovery in Germany and France, campaigners warned.
Greenpeace said it was “much less than was committed to”, while the Green Alliance argued it “does not live up to the government’s own ambitions”.
Our deputy political editor Rob Merrick has more details:
China warns trade will suffer if Huawei decision reversed
It wasn’t so long ago Boris Johnson hailed a “golden age” in Sino-British relations. The age appears to be over.
Beijing’s ambassador to the UK Liu Xiaoming said the PM’s path to citizenship offer to almost three million Hong Kongers amounted to “gross interference” and warned that denying Huawei a role in the 5G network would “send a very bad message” to other Chinese firms.
Elsewhere this morning, The Daily Mail reports that Christopher Steele – the ex-spy behind the Trump-Russia dossier – has helped compile a new document claiming Beijing has been trying to “capture” members of Britain’s elite to win support for Huawei.
Russia ‘reserves right to retaliate’ new British sanctions
On Monday Dominic Raab announced that 25 Russians and 20 Saudis implicated in the murders of whistle-blowing auditor Sergei Magnitsky and journalist Jamal Khashoggi – as well as those responsible for the persecution of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar and those running prison camps in North Korea – will be on Britain’s first post-Brexit sanctions list.
The foreign secretary said the UK would take action against the “thugs of despots and henchmen of dictators”.
No response yet from Saudi Arabia, Myanmar or North Korea, but Moscow has threatened has retaliatory moves. The Russian embassy in London warned: “The Russian side reserves the right to take retaliatory measures in connection with Britain’s hostile decision.”
‘Cowardly’ PM accused of trying to re-write history after blaming care homes for high death toll
Boris Johnson is coming in for some considerable criticism after he appeared to blame care home owners for the high coronavirus death toll in their facilities.
“We discovered too many care homes didn’t really follow the procedures in the way that they could have,” the PM claimed on Monday.
The National Care Association called the suggestion a “huge slap in the face”, while the National Care Forum described his remarks as “hugely insulting”.
This morning the chief executive officer of Community Integrated Care, Mark Adams, expressing his anger at Mr Johnson’s “cowardly” and “appalling” remarks – and claimed there had been a “travesty of leadership” during the health crisis.
Adams told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “To be honest with you if this is genuinely his view I think we’re almost entering a Kafkaesque alternative reality where the government set the rules, we follow them, they don’t like the results, they then deny setting them. It is hugely frustrating.”
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