Tuesday, November 5, 2024 |
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The Treasury 'broke the law' |
An incendiary claim by Richard Hughes, the chair of the Office for Budget Responsibility: giving evidence to the Treasury select committee, he said the Treasury was "aware" at the time of Jeremy Hunt's Budget in March of about £9.5bn of unfunded commitments that they should have told the OBR about. That was something that "under the law and under the act they should have done", he said, referring to the Budget Responsibility and National Audit Act 2011. "We had a high-trust relationship with the Treasury that these things were being well managed; that system very clearly broke down." This is scaling up the war of words over the "black hole" bequeathed by the Conservatives to Labour. It may not be as much as the £22bn claimed by Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, but if it was half that much and concealed unlawfully that is bad. |
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| | The Reform UK leader has offered some sage advice, writes Sean O'Grady. But will his 'friend' listen? |
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| Moments after joining Kemi Badenoch's shadow cabinet, he clashed with junior minister |
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| Lib Dem figures are disputed by the Department for Transport |
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What else you need to know today |
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Can Keir Starmer reduce the numbers arriving in small boats? |
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The prime minister and Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, are trying to avoid making undeliverable pledges, but what can they achieve ...? Read more |
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Tomorrow inside the Westminster bubble |
Our political commentator Andrew Grice on what to look out for |
Westminster will lift its gaze temporarily from the US election results to watch Kemi Badenoch's debut at Prime Minister's Questions at noon. Both she and Keir Starmer will be very keen to "win" the first "Kemi versus Keir" battle. Later Badenoch is expected to address Conservative MPs at the weekly meeting of the 1922 Committee. Before that, the Commons will start its proceedings at 11.30am for questions on Wales. After PMQs, MPs will conclude their five-day debate on the Budget and vote on some of its measures. Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, will make her first appearance before the Treasury select committee at 2.30pm as part of its inquiry into her Budget. Kevin Hollinrake, the minister responsible for the Post Office in the last government, will appear before the inquiry into the Horizon scandal at 9.30am. Then the Commons will rise for an inexplicable "November recess", taking Thursday off as well as the usual non-sitting Friday. |
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"We are the party of law and order, and I think the right honourable gentleman needs to look at his previous record" Alex Davies-Jones, victims minister, to Robert Jenrick, shadow justice secretary, who urged Labour to build more prisons |
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