4.30am EDT
04:30
This is from the Labour backbencher Steve McCabe, pointing out that Angela Rayner is not the only MP in trouble this weekend over a remark deemed offensive.
(@steve_mccabe)
All those Tories criticising Angela Rayner this morning should be made to comment on this.
Tory MP sorry for saying ‘a bomb’ should be planted in Labour politician’s office | Daily Mail Online https://t.co/RJzC30mqKT
4.21am EDT
04:21
How Rayner defended her claim about Tories being ‘scum’
This is what Angela Rayner told Sky’s Trevor Phillips on Sunday about why she called the Tories “scum” at a meeting last night. She said:
Anyone who leaves children hungry during a pandemic and can give billions of pounds to their mates on WhatsApp, I think that was pretty scummy.
Now that is a phrase, and let me contextualise it, it’s a phrase that you would hear very often in northern working class towns. We’d even say it jovially to other people. And that to me is my street language …
I’m not saying that anyone who voted for Conservatives are racist, scummy and homophobic …
I’m saying the prime minister has said those things and has acted in that way ….
If the prime minister wants to apologise, and remove himself from those comments that he’s made that are homophobic that racist, that are misogynistic, then I will apologise for calling him scummy.
4.11am EDT
04:11
Asked about Angela Rayner’s “scum” comment, McDonnell says “we’ve all been there, late at night”. He says he likes the way Rayner sounds like an ordinary person.
He says sometimes people do not get their language right. But people will forgive them if they understanding their motives, he says.
4.08am EDT
04:08
John McDonnell, the former shadow chancellor, is being interviewed on Sky News. He says he thinks it will be “touch and go” whether the watered-down changes to the party leadership rules being debated this afternoon pass.
Asked if he thinks the proposal reflects the fact that the leadership does not trust the membership, McDonnell agrees. He says some people do not trust party democracy.
3.51am EDT
03:51
Rayner says she considers Starmer feminist. She says during the Covid crisis Starmer discussed with her making arrangements for her to take over if he fell ill. That was a sign of respect for her status and role, she says.
Q: How can women trust Labour when the Labour MP Rosie Duffield does not feel safe to come to conference?
Rayner says the abuse the Duffield has faced is “completely unacceptable”. She says the MP has her full support.
3.43am EDT
03:43
Rayner defends calling Tory ministers ‘scum’, saying it’s ‘street language’ and leaving kids hungry ‘scummy thing to do’
Angela Rayner, the Labour deputy leader, is being interviewed on Sky.
Q: Did Sir Keir Starmer talk to you in advance about his proposed rule changes?
Yes, says Rayner. And she says he spoke to the unions too.
Q: So you did not agree, because you proposed a separate plan to the national executive committee?
Rayner says she will not discuss private conversations, but she says she wanted to make sure the rule changes did not stop a broad selection of candidates being on the ballot.
Q: How can people believe you and Starmer are together when you cannot agree?
Rayner says they did agree. Her amendment was a friendly amendment to ensure that they did achieve the goal both she and Starmer wanted.
Q: Margaret Beckett yesterday talked about civility. So did David Evans, the general secretary. You called the Tories last night “a bunch of scum”. Is that the kind of civility the Starmer/Rayner party envisages?
Rayner says that was “post-watershed”, to some activists. She says the PM has said racist and homophobic things, and he has wasted money by contracts for mates. She says she was speaking to activists to get “fire in their belly”. She says when she was young the Tories said women like her got pregnant just to get a council house. And she says the PM has not apologised for what he said about Muslim women.
Q: But you were talking about a bunch of them.
Rayner says cabinet ministers are involved in what the government has done. She cites Priti Patel. She says to leave children hungry during the pandemic is “a scummy thing to do”. That is “street language”, she says.
Q: Are you saying people who vote Tory are scum?
No, says Rayner. She says she is not saying that.
Q: Will you apologise to the PM for calling him scum?
Rayner says she will if the PM apologises for the racist things he has said.
Updated
at 3.51am EDT
3.40am EDT
03:40
Good morning. It is the first full day of the Labour conference in Brighton, and so far it is not going well. Here is the Observer splash by my colleagues Toby Helm and Michael Savage.
And here is an extract.
Keir Starmer is battling to restore authority over the Labour party after a bruising defeat at the hands of unions and the left sparked a storm of criticism over his performance as leader.
Ahead of a conference billed as the moment when Starmer would introduce himself as a future prime minister to the British people, the Labour leader on Saturday was forced to withdraw plans to limit the role of party members, and increase that of MPs, in selecting future party leaders, after the unions united in opposition to block the move …
Starmer loyalists tried to talk up the leader’s success in forcing through other reforms that would make it more difficult for hard-left activists to deselect Labour MPs. “He has locked out the hard left. This is a major achievement,” said one frontbencher.
But there was widespread dismay in all wings of the party over the way Labour had been plunged into more divisive internal arguments just at the point when it had hoped to train its guns on the Tories and present its leader as a future occupant of No 10 …
Anger at Starmer’s misjudgment over the leadership rule changes has seriously dented morale, even among shadow ministers who see themselves as scrupulously loyal. “This is a total disaster,” one member of the frontbench said.
Still, things can only get better, as they used to say at these events. Here are some of the other Labour conference stories around this morning.
Starmer says Labour would end charitable status for private schools, forcing them to pay an extra GBP1.7bn in tax, the Sunday Mirror reports. The money would be used to improve state schools, including by offering better citizenship education. Starmer told the paper:
Employers in every sector told me how much they need well-rounded young people with relevant skills and literate in technology.
And young people have told me how ambitious they are for their own futures.” Labour’s reforms would mean every child having a laptop at home. To ensure teenagers are fit for jobs, two weeks’ work experience would be compulsory. And to prepare for the real world, statutory citizenship courses would include pension planning, mortgage applications, and understanding credit ratings and employment and rental contracts.
(@AllieHBNews)
Sunday MIRROR: “Keir: I Will Tax Private Schools To Help Poorer Kids” #TomorrowsPapersToday pic.twitter.com/Yi6Mowam18
John McDonnell, the former shadow chancellor, has used an article in the Observer to say “people have been left without knowing what or who the party stands for” under Starmer.
Rachel Reeves, the shadow chancellor, has told the Sunday Times (paywall) that she does not believe in a magic money rules and that Labour would apply its own fiscal rules. In their write-up of the interview, Tim Shipman and Caroline Wheeler report:
A Labour government would balance day-to-day government spending, but allow itself to borrow for capital investment. Crucially, it would be committed to reducing the national debt as a proportion of national income. Going into the 2008 financial crisis it was 38 per cent of the UK’s gross domestic product (GDP), rising to 60 per cent when Labour left office in 2010. By the start of the Covid crisis it was 80 per cent and now it has hit 98 per cent of GDP …
Reeves has two further rules which will give her more wriggle room: Labour would take government assets into account when examining the books, which would deter the sell-off of assets that make a return for the taxpayer, a move that has the backing of the new OBR boss Richard Hughes. (This she is keen for us to know “means it isn’t mad”).
Finally, the OBR could declare a crisis situation where all the rules are suspended for a period. Reeves argues that it is important to work such a scenario into the rules so unexpected events do not simply lead to them being torn up. “It will be up to the OBR, not to the government, to say we’re in a crisis,” she explains.
Angela Rayner, the party’s deputy leader, has been criticised by the Conservatives after describing them as “a bunch of scum, homophobic, racist, misogynistic” at a conference event.
Len McCluskey, the former Unite general secretary, has said at a conference event it is “almost impossible” for Labour to win the next election, the Sunday Telegraph reports.
Here is the main agenda for the day.
8.30am: Angela Rayner, the Labour deputy leader, is interviewed on Sky’s Trevor Phillips on Sunday. Other guests include John McDonnell, the former shadow chancellor, and Christina McAnea, the Unison general secretary.
After 9am: Sir Keir Starmer is interviewed on the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show.
9.50am: The conference opens. Ed Miliband, the shadow business secretary, opens a debate on the environment and the green new deal.
12.25pm: Jo Stevens, the shadow culture secretary, speaks to the conference.
Lunchtime: Jeremy Corbyn, the former party leader, is due to speak at lunchtime fringe events
2.15pm: Lucy Powell, the shadow housing secretary, opens a debate on housing and transport.
4.10pm: Jim McMahon, the shadow transport secretary, speaks to the conference.
4.20pm: Delegates begin a debate on party rule changes, including requiring leadership candidates to be nominated by 20% of MPs, not 10% as now, and changes to the way disciplinary complaints are investigated (a response to criticism of the party by the Equalities and Human Rights Commission).
I try to monitor the comments below the line (BTL) but it is impossible to read them all. If you have a direct question, do include “Andrew” in it somewhere and I’m more likely to find it. I do try to answer questions, and if they are of general interest, I will post the question and reply above the line (ATL), although I can’t promise to do this for everyone.
If you want to attract my attention quickly, it is probably better to use Twitter. I’m on @AndrewSparrow.
Alternatively, you can email me at andrew.sparrow@theguardian.com
Updated
at 3.53am EDT