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ANDREW PIERCE: Why does BBC never tell you its favourite cost of living ‘expert’ is a Labour darling?

May 19, 2022 by www.dailymail.co.uk Leave a Comment

He is is a memorable name with which listeners to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme have become all too familiar.

Indeed, barely a week seems to go by without Torsten Bell, chief executive of the charitable think-tank the Resolution Foundation, being wheeled out.

The self-styled champion of low-income families was at it again yesterday, warmly welcomed by presenter Amol Rajan between 7am and 8am just as news was breaking that inflation had hit 9 per cent.

So grateful was Rajan for Bell’s sagacity on the subject that he was asked to return an hour or so later – an invitation rarely extended to many contributors.

It brought his number of outings on the show this year alone to ten. Which would be all very well if Bell’s lofty opinings were objective and impartial.

What the BBC spectacularly fails to inform listeners is that Torsten Bell is the living embodiment of Labour thinking and policy, a party apparatchik whose tweets down the years reveal endless criticism of free-market policies.

No wonder that following his second interview on Today, the next guest, Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves, gratefully seized on his pronouncements to pillory the Tories for the cost-of-living crisis.

He has a long-standing relationship with Labour that started when he arrived, fresh out of university, at the Treasury during Gordon Brown’s premiership.

Torsten Bell, chief executive of the charitable think-tank the Resolution Foundation, speaking during the Fabian Society Summer Conference at King’s College London

Bell later served as a high-flying adviser to Labour big beasts including Alistair Darling, Brown’s chancellor, before becoming Ed Miliband’s ‘too-clever-by-half ’ head of policy when he was party leader between 2010 and 2015.

Infamously, he was the architect of the risible ‘EdStone’ on which Labour carved out its pledges to the electorate ahead of an ignominious defeat in the 2015 election.

Now 40, Bell heads up the Resolution Foundation with a stated mission to ‘improve living standards’ for millions of people in Britain on low and middle incomes.

That, of course, is an admirable aim. The exquisite irony is that Bell doesn’t have much personal experience of low or middle incomes given that he’s on a hefty salary of between £130,000 to £140,000, according to the Charity Commission.

His deputy earns between £120,000 and £130,000, and four more staff members are paid between £70,000 and £80,000 – the kind of salaries that the low paid whom Bell champions could only dream of.

Labour leader Ed Miliband unveils Labour’s pledges carved into a stone plinth in Hastings during 2015 General Election

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Oxford-educated and undoubtedly possessed of a sharp intellect, Bell’s initiatives don’t always have the intended result.

When he worked for Miliband he set up no fewer than 26 policy working groups which produced few eye-catching ideas.

He also devised the strategy that saw Miliband constantly talk about the rising cost of living in interviews.

Disastrously, the then Labour leader was revealed to have no idea of the actual cost of living himself. When, not long before the 2015 election, he appeared on Good Morning Britain he told viewers that the cost of an average weekly family shopping bill was £70 to £80.

He looked aghast to be told average families spend more than £100. ‘If Ed had more advisers called Trevor rather than Torsten, he would have known the answer to that obvious question,’ one Labour wag noted at the time.

Alistair Darling, who hired Bell as a special adviser, with former Prime Minister Gordon Brown in 2014

Incidentally, Bell used to operate under his full name, Torsten Henricson-Bell, but after some MPs mocked him for sounding like a ‘Scandinavian washing machine designer’, he reverted to plain Bell.

Another Bell gaffe was to send an email to a Tory MP (rather than to a Labour pollster of the same name) revealing that Miliband’s office was having ‘nightmare’ trouble with the then shadow chancellor Ed Balls.

According to Tom Baldwin, who was Miliband’s head of communications, the ‘proper brilliance’ of Torsten was first recognised when he was just a 21-year-old junior Treasury official.

On one occasion he left Brown and his chancellor Darling ‘open mouthed’ after telling them where ‘they were going wrong and what they needed to do to fix it’.

That single encounter, Baldwin says, was the catalyst for Darling’s decision to hire him as a special adviser.

And his ‘brilliance’ continues to be recognised and sought after by Labour. Several senior figures have urged the party to secure a safe Commons seat for him at the next general election.

Torsten Bell, Chief Executive, Resolution Foundation at ‘How should Labour navigate the 2020s’ event

However, Torsten Bell has that one major blot on his otherwise impressive (in Left-wing circles) CV – the 8ft 6in tombstone engraved with Labour’s six pledges on tax, immigration, the NHS, etc.

The plan was to put the EdStone in the rose garden at No10 when Ed was victorious in the 2015 election as a reminder to the new PM to keep its promises.

Instead, the £8,000 slab of limestone is regarded as one of the most embarrassing stunts in Labour history.

One party commentator described it as the most ‘absurd, ugly, embarrassing, childish, silly, patronising, idiotic, insane, ridiculous gimmick I have ever seen’.

Damian McBride, who was Brown’s pugnacious chief spin doctor, was contemptous of Bell when he worked alongside him.

‘He’s one of those arrogant oafs with brains to spare but no common sense,’ he said. But Sir Keir Starmer & Co can’t get enough of him – and why not?

Whenever he’s invited on to TV or radio, he’s doing their work for them in providing ammunition with which to attack the Tories.

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Labour shadow minister faces second probe after ‘prescription-only drug possession’

May 19, 2022 by www.express.co.uk Leave a Comment

Stephen Doughty

the MP apologised ‘unreservedly for any error he made’ (Image: House of Commons)

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Mr Doughty admitted receiving prescription-only diazepam from a constituent last year. Byron Long, who supplied the class-C drug, was later issued with a formal caution by the police. However, the Cardiff South and Penarth Labour MP, was not cautioned.

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Yesterday, it emerged the Independent Office for Police Conduct has referred the matter back to South Wales Police following a complaint from Mr Long.

In a statement the IOPC said: “We can confirm that we have partly upheld a review over the handling of a complaint by South Wales Police.

“We have decided that a further investigation by the force into aspects of the complaint is necessary, including addressing a difference in outcomes for the individuals involved.

“While we have advised that South Wales Police should review its decision-making process, we cannot and have not asked the force to conduct a criminal investigation.”

Last May, Mr Long claimed he had handed over tablets of diazepam to Mr Doughty at up to 20 meetings with him in a Cardiff coffee shop.

Mr Long, 63, said he handed over an estimated 140 diazepam pills.

However, the MP dismissed the allegation saying it happened only once.

In a statement issued at the time, he said he had asked Mr Long for “a few spare diazepam” in 2019 before a flight abroad as he had not been able to see his doctor.

Trending

In a statement, the MP apologised “unreservedly for any error he made”.

The drug was first marketed as Valium and is used for treating a range of conditions including anxiety, insomnia and “restless leg syndrome.”

Possession of diazepam, which is a class C drug without a prescription, carries a maximum sentence of two years in prison.

South Wales Police said: “The matter has been referred back to South Wales Police and while it is ongoing it would be inappropriate to comment further at this time.”

A Labour Party spokesman said Mr Doughty had nothing to add to his previous statements.

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Virginia board considers restoring names of schools named for Confederate generals

May 19, 2022 by www.nbcnews.com Leave a Comment

A Virginia board is considering restoring the names of two schools which were originally named for Confederate generals but changed in 2020 after the murder of George Floyd .

The Shenandoah County School Board in 2020 voted to change Stonewall Jackson High School to Mountain View High School and Ashby-Lee Elementary School to Honey Run Elementary School.

But in the two years since, community members — especially alumni — have expressed opposition to the name changes, school board member Cynthia Walsh told NBC News.

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More than 4,000 people have signed a petition to change the names back, Vice Chair Dennis Barlow said at a board meeting , where the issue was discussed at length last week.

Walsh is one of three members who were on the board when the name changes were approved. The current, all-white board is made up of six members.

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Some new board members feel the decision to change the names was rushed and did not consider the opinion of the community.

Barlow, who characterized those who were in favor of changing the names as outsiders who are “creepy,” “elitist” and from “the dark side,” said the school board’s decision was “undemocratic and unfair.”

He added that he regards Jackson as a “gallant commander.”

Walsh, who does not think the names should be changed back, argued: “Most people who vote for elected officials then count on them to do the right thing on their behalf.”

“We do have a representative democracy. We don’t have a direct democracy,” she added.

After Floyd’s death, statues , monuments, schools and buildings named for Confederate leaders became a focal point of the racial justice movement around the country. A number of the statues and monuments have come down.

“Times have changed, the makeup of our schools has changed,” Walsh said. “And I sincerely believe that revisiting the name change is not what’s best for kids.”

The board decided at the meeting that they would poll constituents on whether they believe the names should be changed back. But the board could not settle on whether to poll only the residents who live within the schools in question, or the whole area.

Kyle Gutshall, a recent high school graduate who was elected to the board this year, argued: “In my opinion if you’re doing it countywide, you might as well throw the students out because they don’t care.”

But other board members were adamant throughout the night that the decision has to first be what’s right for the students.

“No. 1 criteria: what is best for kids,” Andrew Keller said earlier in the meeting. “The kids we’e going to teach today and the next 25 years.”

They also didn’t settle on what options would be included in the survey, which they mostly agreed should have the questions:

Do you want to keep the names?

Do you want to restore the original names?

“I suggested a compromise: adding a third” option — I did not agree to the name change but I do not think we should change it back — “and that’s where we left it that night, but we didn’t vote on it,” Walsh said.

The next school board meeting is June 9.

The board likely won’t vote on the issue then, because they are still hammering out the details of the survey, Walsh said.

If the vote is split, the issue will likely be tabled for a year, or until there is a new board, she said.

Shenandoah County Public Schools declined to weigh in on the matter.

“It is the responsibility of the Shenandoah County School Board to determine the name of schools, school facilities, and areas of school facilities or grounds in the division. We do not have a comment or statement as a division at this time,” the district said in a statement.

The system serves about 6,000 students. More than 75 percent of them are white and about 3 percent are Black, according to U.S. News and World Report.

But Walsh said the statistics don’t show the full picture. “In one of our elementary schools, there are 10 languages spoken,” she said. “There is diversity.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized usd 418 school board, usd 418 school board members, usd 418 school board meeting

Boris Johnson branded a ‘lucky general’ after avoiding any further Partygate fines as Met Police dish out 126 penalties

May 19, 2022 by www.thesun.co.uk Leave a Comment

BORIS Johnson was last night branded a “lucky general” after he avoided any further Partygate fines.

Cops called time on their probe yesterday and revealed they issued 126 penalties to ministers and aides .

A staggering 83 people were stung — making Whitehall the country’s most fined workplace.

But the PM and his wife Carrie walked away with just the one penalty they had already received — despite being at a string of the lockdown-busting gatherings.

As the news swept through Westminster, several Tory rebels laid down their weapons and declared Mr Johnson was now safe in No10.

At least one MP is understood to have withdrawn their letter of no confidence in the PM.

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It was also confirmed Chancellor Rishi Sunak , fined last month for singing Happy Birthday at the PM’s event , would face no further action.

Meanwhile, former critic Sir Charles Walker compared “extra-ordinary” Mr Johnson to a written-off cricket star who defies his critics to “smash 100”.

But others warned the PM is not out of the woods yet as he is set to get roasted by Whitehall sleaze-buster Sue Gray in her long-awaited report next week .

Mr Johnson did not comment on the end of the probe , although he is expected to issue a grovelling apology to Parliament next week.

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The PM’s spokesman said: “He is focused on issues that affect the public. This morning he was speaking to [Ukraine] President Zelensky, this afternoon he will hold meetings on the global cost-of-living challenge.”

Costing nearly half a million pounds, the Met Police Partygate inquiry saw 12 coppers spend four months combing through hundreds of photos, diary entries and witness statements.

They issued 126 fines to Whitehall insiders for booze-fuelled lockdown-breaking bashes across eight dates during the pandemic.

The PM, Carrie and Chancellor were all stung for the infamous birthday party where Mr Johnson was “ambushed by cake”.

After months of open warfare in his party and plots to oust him from the top job, the PM appears safe as he escaped a second fine, potentially a final nail in the coffin.

Sir Keir Starmer repeated his call for him to quit over “industrial scale law-breaking” in No10.

But facing his own probe for allegations he broke lockdown with Currygate, he fell short of ordering a full onslaught on the PM.

Kit Malthouse, Cabinet Minister for Policing, said: “I’m pleased that it’s done, thankful to the police for conducting themselves efficiently.

“The PM has apologised for the cake incident, and I hope now we can now move on to the really pressing issues.”

It is believed Mr Johnson avoided getting multiple fines because Downing Street is both his workplace and his home.

Tory rebels last night admitted he looks safer in his job than he has for months.

HE’S NOT SAFE YET

By Kate Ferguson

SO is Boris safe? Not quite. His Tory critics still circle.

And next week we could see the publication of the long-awaited Sue Gray report.

The Whitehall sleazebuster is expected to say there was a rule-breaking culture in Downing Street with officials thinking lockdown rules did not apply to them.

The Tories are also predicted to suffer in two key by-elections next month — at Wakefield and Tiverton and Honiton. If Boris loses both then his party may decide he is no longer their golden boy.

The cost-of-living crisis is another which could see his Premiership hit the buffers.

If he survives until summer, chances are he will still be leader at the next election.

But he won’t be getting the champagne out just yet.

Sir Charles said: “Love him or loathe him, Boris Johnson is an extraordinary politician. Four months ago, most people thought he was down and out — I was one of those people — and he rewrote the script.

“He is a bit like that all-rounder who has been written off time and time again and then grabs the bowling ball and takes five for 15 or smashes 100 or does both things in the same match.”

Another Tory said: “He is a very lucky general.”

Admitting defeat, he added: “It seems I was wrong. The Prime Minister is going to continue in No10 now.

“Strangely, it could be that the Leader of the Opposition now faces calls to consider his position.”

Another Tory MP slammed police for wasting time and money to work out if the PM spent ten minutes in a room with a slice of cake he did not eat.

They added: “It has been a total waste of time and a total distraction. I think we are all glad the line has been drawn under the matter. Police should now come out and say, they will not issue any more fines for retrospective Covid breaches — and that includes Durham looking into Sir Keir Starmer. We have to move on.”

Other Tory rebels said the decision has “bought Boris time” – but a coup is still possible if he loses next month’s by-elections in Wakefield and Tiverton.

One said: “A lot of people feel he has survived it. But there is still rage bubbling beneath the surface in the party.”

Meanwhile, some Tory MPs are worried the PM has become “toxic” with voters and is a “drag” on the party. Conservative Campaign HQ polling given to some politicians show Mr Johnson is rating well below the Tory party with voters.

‘DRAG ON THE PARTY’

One usually loyal MP said: “He is a drag on the party in the polls.

“He needs to prove he can win back trust and is still a winner. I want to see him do something big on the cost-of-living crisis.”

A Savanta ComRes poll found that Labour are now seven points ahead of the Tories.

Sir Keir’s party is on 41 per cent, while the Conservatives are on 34 per cent, the survey found. This is Labour’s best rating since the beginning of April, but would still see them failing to score an outright election majority.

Allies of the PM said he had listened to the anger of Partygate and ordered a reorganisation of his Downing Street team.

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Head of the civil service Simon Case wrote to mandarins explaining the overhaul.

Key units in the Cabinet Office are being rolled into the No10 operation to form a dedicated office of the PM.

12 EVENTS IN PROBE SPOTLIGHT

POLICE have confirmed the 126 Partygate fines doled out to Whitehall workers related to eight dates.

There was more than one event on some days, although it was not stated if all resulted in fines.

Here we list the 12 events the police could have probed . . .

May 20, 2020 – ‘Bring Your Own Booze’ do : Leaked email from Boris Johnson’s private secretary Martin Reynolds showed No 10 staff were invited to an event in the Downing Street garden. The PM admitted he was there for 25 minutes to thank staff for their hard work — but went back to work after.

June 18, 2020 – Cabinet Office leaving bash: Gathering in 70 Whitehall to say goodbye to a No10 private secretary.

June 19, 2020 – Boris Johnson birthday party : The PM, his wife Carrie and Chancellor Rishi Sunak were all slapped with a fine after they gathered in the Cabinet Room before a meeting. It was a surprise get-together for Mr Johnson’s birthday — just weeks after he nearly died from Covid.

Downing Street officials have admitted staff “gathered briefly” in the Cabinet Room.

November 13, 2020 – ABBA party and leaving drinks : PM’S wife Carrie Johnson was said to have hosted pals in the flat above No11 where she lives, with music heard playing.

Separately, drinks were held and the Prime Minister gave a speech for his former communications chief when he left No10. Fines were issued for events on this day — but it was not revealed to which event they were linked.

December 17, 2020 – Simon Case festive quiz: Cabinet Secretary Simon Case took himself off the Whitehall party probe — and was replaced by Sue Gray — after his team were revealed to have hosted a Christmas quiz gathering.

It was organised by a private secretary. Mr Case played no part but “walked through the team’s office on the way to his own”.

December 17, 2020 – leaving drinks for two officials: Two events were held for officials leaving their jobs, from the Covid Taskforce and from Downing Street, despite Tier 3 rules coming into place which banned all such gatherings.

Kate Josephs, former director-general of the Government’s Covid Taskforce, said she was “truly sorry” over leaving drinks held in the Cabinet Office.

December 18, 2020 – Christmas do at No10: Officials and advisers shared cheese and wine and even exchanged Secret Santa gifts.

The PM’s former spokesperson, Allegra Stratton resigned after a video emerged which featured her joking about the celebration to staff at a press conference rehearsal in Downing Street’s swish new Press briefing room.

January 14, 2021 – yet more No10 leaving drinks : A departure of two private secretaries prompted another round of drinks — despite the country being under strict lockdown rules again.

April 16, 2021 – another two leaving dos: The night before the Queen was pictured sitting alone at Prince Philip’s funeral, two leaving dos were held — one for a Government photographer and one for the PM’s Comms chief.

But the Met has not said which ones saw fines and which did not. Downing Street apologised to Buckingham Palace after details of the boozy events came out.

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How Angela Rayner became a force to be reckoned with

April 30, 2022 by www.telegraph.co.uk Leave a Comment

When she appeared on the Matt Forde podcast in January, the most interesting thing Angela Rayner said wasn’t about the length of her skirt or the crossing and uncrossing of her legs in the House of Commons.

Although she did banter with the Left-wing comedian about “the meme about Sharon Stone” that had been doing the rounds, the most telling part of the interview came at the beginning when she was announced as “the most powerful woman in the Labour Party”.

Striding onto the stage at the Duchess Theatre in Covent Garden, where the podcasts are recorded in front of an audience, she joked: “I said he had to introduce me like that or I wouldn’t come on.”

Like everything the 42-year-old deputy Labour leader says in jest, there appeared to be an element of truth to it. Later revealing how, “God, yeah”, she’d love to be prime minister one day, it is perhaps little wonder that this teenage mother turned political powerhouse is fast emerging as one of the Opposition’s best hopes of electoral success. Perhaps even their only hope.

Cutting through to the public in a way that most MPs can only dream of, the self-styled “fiery, ginger northerner” has become such a well-known character in Westminster, she even has a cocktail named after her at the Strangers’ Bar (although her favourite tipple is in fact a vodka and coke).

Yet #Skirtgate has elevated the former union rep with a tattoo of Labour’s red rose to a new level of stardom beyond the confines of Westminster, which is not just being seen as a threat to Sir Keir Starmer – but the Tories, too.

Why else would Conservative MPs have “mischievously suggested” to The Mail on Sunday that the MP for Ashton-under-Lyne “likes to distract Boris Johnson when he is at the Dispatch Box by deploying a fully clothed Parliamentary equivalent of Sharon Stone’s infamous scene in the 1992 film Basic Instinct”?

Notwithstanding the fallout from last week’s story – including Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle’s ill-fated attempt to sanction the newspaper’s editor over the story – the fact the tale made page five shows that even Right-leaning newspapers view Ms Rayner as the MP of the moment.

So how has the self-confessed “street kid” reached such stratospheric heights so soon – and where does she go from here?

Boris-like in her ability to generate a headline with a loose-lipped remark, it wasn’t long ago that the mother-of-three and grandmother-of-one was being condemned for describing Tories as “scum” at last October’s Labour Party Conference.

Today, she’s being feted as a champion of women’s empowerment by both Left and Right – with the Prime Minister even vowing to unleash the “terrors of the earth” on the “sexist” and “misogynistic” colleagues who briefed against her.

Part of the secret of her success is that she shares with Mr Johnson that rare thing in politics: relatability. As PR guru Martin Townsend puts it: “She’s got what Boris has got and Farage has got: that slightly naughty side that appeals to the public. You’d want to go for a drink with her.

“She’s a character and she’s also good at playing the political game. The worst thing in politics right now is being boring. Keir Starmer is a glass of water but Angela Rayner is a cocktail with an umbrella sticking out of it. She’s basically Labour’s Boris .”

The similarities between the sworn ideological enemies are becoming increasingly plain to see – not only in their penchant for speaking without thinking but also in their colourful private lives and notoriety as politicians who appear to gleefully transcend their own parties. As one Labour colleague put it: “You could certainly say Angela is a bit like Boris in the way she trades on her big personality. She is also quite a complex character with a USP that appeals to the party membership.”

The unlikely kinship hasn’t been lost on Ms Rayner, who suggested on the podcast that Mr Johnson has got a “bit of romance going on there”, and that he wouldn’t attack her because she was a “working-class girl from council estate”, while he is “a posh guy from a posh school”.

She was speaking just days after a slightly flirty exchange standing in for Sir Keir at PMQs, when Mr Johnson appeared to delight in joking that the former comprehensive schoolgirl was now the “shadow minister for the future of work”, joking: “We all know what job she wants.”

Grinning broadly, Ms Rayner fired back: “I’ve heard on the grapevine there might be a vacancy for prime minister soon, so maybe I should show aspiration.”

Yet the truth is, while they may come from different sides of the track, Ms Rayner’s “chaotic childhood” is not dissimilar to the dysfunctionality at the heart of Mr Johnson’s upbringing.

Born in Stockport, Greater Manchester, in 1980, she attended Avondale School in Cheadle Heath, leaving aged 16 with no qualifications after getting pregnant following her first sexual encounter. She has subsequently given interviews about her “feral” childhood, recalling how her bipolar, sometimes suicidal mother once came back from the shops with dog food, thinking it was stewing steak, because she couldn’t read or write. She has also spoken of how she was “never loved and nurtured as a child” and how she had to “learn to take hugs” from her own children because she had suffered “emotional deprivation” when she was little, growing up in a household “full of fear”.

“My mum wasn’t motivated to play with us or entertain us, so we were feral,” Ms Rayner has said. “She wasn’t able to read with us, so we were behind. I remember walking my younger sister to primary school. We got ourselves ready. My mum wouldn’t be able to get up. I got bullied because my hair was always a mess. That’s why my hair is always immaculate now.” Her fondness for high heels stems from her being forced to wear black steel-capped shoes, which led to more teasing at school.

Mr Johnson’s late mother, Charlotte Wahl, suffered from mental health problems, often leaving them in the care of a “chain-smoking nanny”, according to his sister, Rachel. Ms Rayner has spoken of her father’s affairs and her parents’ “explosive” relationship – again revealing an upbringing with eerie similarities to Mr Johnson’s.

The teenage Ms Rayner resolved to prove to the world “that I could be a good mum” and started visiting a Sure Start nursery to learn how to bond with her newborn son. “When I got pregnant there wasn’t much disappointment,” she has said. “It was just accepted that that happened to girls like me. But I was determined to give Ryan everything I didn’t have.” In 2017, Ms Rayner became a grandmother, at the age of 37, when Ryan’s daughter Lilith was born. She announced the birth on Twitter using the hashtag #Grangela.

Having spent much of the short time she was at secondary school “hanging out with my mates”, she returned to education to study part-time at Stockport College, learning British Sign Language, and gained an NVQ Level 2 in social care before working for Stockport council as a care worker. Encouraged to join Unison by her colleagues because she was so vocal, she was elected as a trade union representative, rising through the ranks to become its most senior official in the region.

In 2010, she married Mark Rayner, a fellow Unison official and the couple went on to have two sons, one of whom was born so prematurely he is registered blind and has special educational needs.

Selected as the Labour candidate for her Greater Manchester constituency, Ms Rayner has said that she only stood to make the point that “people like me can’t get elected”, before “accidentally” winning the seat at the 2015 general election with an increased share of the vote.

Her rise up the Labour ranks was swift following Jeremy Corbyn’s election as leader in the same year. Although she shared a flat with arch Corbynista Rebecca Long-Bailey, insiders insist Ms Rayner is not as Left-wing as some have suggested. “She’s on the Left of the party on a lot of issues but she’s not a factional Lefty. She’s Left on the economy but quite Right on law and order. Ultimately, she’s very pragmatic in her politics,” says one.

She and Ms Long-Bailey may have gained a bit of a reputation for their boozy nights out, but Ms Rayner is far from cliquey, according to one former staffer: “She’s not in a cabal like some of the others, she gets on well with a wide range of colleagues.”

Despite serving in Mr Corbyn’s shadow cabinet, she continues to be regarded with suspicion by many on the far Left who fear her tougher stance on issues like immigration and the police, whom she once declared she “loved”.

And having developed a knack for being in the right place at the right time, when Mr Johnson trounced Mr Corbyn in the 2019 general election, she spied an opportunity and with characteristic determination, pushed herself forward.

As a former colleague pointed out: “Angela’s nobody’s fool. She knows how to do politics. Whatever anyone makes of her background, I’ve never got the impression she’s less clever – in fact in some of her manoeuvres, she’s outsmarted everyone.”

It is perhaps telling that in her spare time, Ms Rayner is apparently an “avid reader of non-fiction on work-related themes”, according to one insider. Recent books include Kleptopia by Tom Burgis, and Deep Cover by Shay Doyle and Scott Hesketh about the murder of two officers in her constituency. She is currently immersed in Beyond a Fringe, the memoirs of Andrew Mitchell, the Conservative MP of “Plebgate” fame. When not reading, she reportedly loves nothing more than listening to true crime podcasts late at night. As for her taste in interior decor? As one source puts it, “Ange has a statue of a flamingo in her house that she loves.”

Yet it seems that her stratospheric climb up Labour’s greasy pole was to the detriment of her marriage, as her 10-year union with Mark ended in 2020 – around the time, ironically, that Mr Johnson finalised his divorce from Marina Wheeler, his wife of 27 years. The break-up came a year after Ms Rayner had shed several stone by following a strict, calorie-controlled diet, transforming herself into a leopard print-wearing, tousle-haired glamour puss in the process.

Much has since been made of her closeness to Sam Tarry, the Momentum-backed MP for Ilford South, who ran her successful campaign to replace Tom Watson as deputy leader in April 2020.

The pair made the headlines in January when they were photographed emerging from Ms Rayner’s Westminster flat with a tell-tale toothbrush sticking out of Mr Tarry’s top pocket. She later stressed that both were single when they got together and have “not done anything wrong”.

The arrival onto the scene of the father-of-two, 39, who was once chairman of Young Labour and worked on Mr Corbyn’s leadership campaign, has also coincided with the reorganisation of Ms Rayner’s top team.

She remains loyally served by her longstanding lieutenant Nick Parrott, who proved his worth when he helped to negotiate her way back into the party after Sir Keir sacked her from Labour’s front bench last May. After losing the Hartlepool by-election, the Labour leader tried to reshuffle Ms Rayner out – only for her to furiously refuse and end up with four job titles instead. It helped her case that Andy Burnham, the Greater Manchester mayor, made his opposition to the move public, while Sir Keir’s office received a string of representations from shadow ministers and Labour-supporting unions. “Angela has so much political capital,” said one party official at the time. Or as a newspaper reported: “Friends say that nothing infuriates her more than the sense that she is being underestimated by anyone – but particularly a middle-class man – with more formal qualifications.”

According to one Labour MP with knowledge of what happened behind closed doors: “That was classic Angie. When she gets knocked off her stride , she just gets back up and gets on with it.”

Stressing the importance of Mr Parrott’s role in the operation, the MP and friend added: “Nick’s been with Angie all the way through. It was a moment of madness on Keir’s behalf, which spectacularly backfired when the membership fell in behind her. I think Keir learnt that weekend that he needs Angie. He needs that contrast because she’s the one who really connects with the public. He could arguably use her more.”

Describing their relationship as “ying and yang”, Ms Rayner insists she gets on with the Labour leader but concedes that their double act has echoes of Tony Blair and John Prescott.

“Obviously I’m a bit gobby,” she has admitted with trademark candour. “I’m outspoken and do my own thing. I’ve always gone with my gut and that’s got me into trouble sometimes.”

Yet as Sir Keir struggles to explain why Labour is only seven points ahead of the Conservatives, despite partygate – Ms Rayner has been busily bolstering her team, recently recruiting Alex Jones as her lead media adviser and Kate Robson on policy. Both are first-class degree graduates, well known in Left-leaning circles. Mr Jones was previously head of communications for the GMB, which will help keep the unions onside, while his role as head of political strategy for the National Union of Students should prove useful when it comes to attracting the youth vote. Ms Robson previously worked for shadow home secretaries Nick Thomas-Symonds and Yvette Cooper, so is used to grappling with thorny issues that matter to Red Wall constituents.

With the rising cost of living now the biggest concern for voters, the newly assembled team is planning “a big push on that ahead of polling day”, with the May 5 local elections at the top of Ms Rayner’s in-tray.

On Wednesday night she visited Southfields, in south-west London, where she posed for the obligatory campaign trail picture, cradling a baby. She then dashed back to the Commons to call on the Government to release information about the appointment of Lord Lebedev to the House of Lords, later describing it as a “murky business” on Twitter.

Having admitted that she feels guilty for not having seen much of her children over the past seven years, how serious is Ms Rayner about challenging for the leadership one day? According to a former employee: “She always, always said, for all the time I worked for her, that she’d do it if she thought she’d be good at it. That’s still her view. You have to be ambitious to have the trajectory she’s had. But she’d only run for leader if she thought it would be good for Labour.”

A close MP friend agrees: “People think she’s individualistic because she has this personality that stands out. They misunderstand her if they do. She’s actually more of a collectivist than that. What the people outside Westminster don’t see is, she’s trying to bring the different parts of the party together.

“Angie’s 42, so I don’t think she thinks anything needs to happen now. I think she thinks that being deputy Labour leader is the best thing she could ever be – but she’s a force of nature.

“We have, in the Labour Party, people who keep quiet for fear of causing controversy. That’s why she stands out. We’re used to people like her on the Right but not necessarily on the Left. What’s different about her is she has a personality as well as politics and principles. That’s what set her apart.”

An effective communicator who knows what it’s like to live on a shoestring? As Britain faces a cost of living emergency, we can expect to see and hear a lot more from the politician who recognises that her background has become her greatest strength.

As Ms Rayner herself has put it: “When I first came into Parliament, I thought, ‘I’m nowhere near as good as all these people that have got big brains and have been to private school.’ Now I look at it and think, ‘Oh my God, step aside, because you have not got a clue about what’s happening in people’s lives.’ I now think, ‘I could definitely do a better job.’”

Filed Under: Uncategorized Daily Features, Labour Party, Standard, Angela Rayner, Politics, Other features, force not to be reckoned with, where force to be reckoned with, reckoning force, reckoning force meaning, reckoning force bandcamp, reckoning force definition

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