The leader of the Conservative Party has demanded a council-led investigation into Rachel Reeves after she admitted breaking renting rules.
Sir Keir Starmer has waved off calls for the investigation into his Chancellor after she wrote to him informing the Prime Minister of her âinadvertent errorâ.
In her letter, she admitted that she failed to acquire a âselectiveâ rental licence which is necessary to rent out her home in the Capital after she took up lodgings in No11.
GB News Political Editor Christopher Hope questioned Mrs Badenoch on whether Southwark Council should investigate the rule breach.
âAbsolutely,â the Tory leader responded.
âIâve just spoken to two landlords this morning who rent homes in Southwark, and they said that they spent thousands of pounds on these lettings regulations and she should not be allowed to get off scot-free.
âI think there needs to be an investigation. If she has broken the law then she should go.
âIn Keir Starmerâs own words, lawmakers should not be law breakers.â
Boris Johnson warns Tories risk losing next election by âbashing the green agendaâ
Boris Johnson has warned the Conservatives they could lose the next General Election if they keep âbashing the green agenda.â
Current party leader Kemi Badenoch has committed the party to abandoning the commitment to reach net zero by 2050, arguing that the current target threatens to bankrupt Britain.
Speaking on the Smart Society Show podcast, Mr Johnson said: âCertainly in my party, itâs all about bashing the green agenda, and personally I donât think weâll get elected on that. I
âI didnât see us soaring in the polls as a result of saying what rubbish net zero is. I didnât see a massive leap in support for the Conservatives.â
Farmer hits out at Labour ahead of Budget after âripping up 40 years of tax planningâ for his farm

A British farmer has hit out at Chancellor Rachel Reeves for âripping upâ four decades worth of tax planning for his farm, following last yearâs Budget statement.
Speaking to GB News, Farm Manager Tim Hayward accused Labour of âpreying on the elderly and the illâ ahead of the next Budget, which Ms Reeves will unveil at the end of November.
Britons are expected to be inflicted with tax hikes on November 26.
Labour councillors in mass defection as they slam party as âunfit to hold powerâ
A group of Nottinghamshire Labour councillors has broken away from Sir Keir Starmerâs party, blasting them as âunfit to hold powerâ.
The new party, the Nottingham Peopleâs Alliance, consists of Nottingham City councillors Kirsty L Jones, Imran Jalil, Anwar Khan, Naim Saqab Salim and Faith Gakanje-Ajala.
Councillor Jones, who represents Mapperley ward, said: âLabour has failed my community, our city and the country. I think it is dead to be honest. This is the beginning of the end of the Labour partyâs dominance over Nottingham.
âWe are against council cuts, we want to improve the economy locally and we want to have the freedom to speak out about national and international issues which we care about.â
The Labour group still has a majority on Nottingham City Council, with 43 councillors.
Downing Street âwonât get into hypotheticalsâ over future of Rachel Reeves
The Prime Minister refused to speculate on the Chancellorâs future
 | PADowning Street declined to say if Sir Keir Starmer would sack Rachel Reeves if she received a fine or a criminal sanction.
A spokesman for the Prime Minister said: âAs Iâve said, I refer you to the letter on thisâŠâIâm satisfied that this matter can be drawn to a close following an apology.’â
When pressed, the spokesman responded: âI wonât get into hypotheticals.â
Downing Street refuses to say if Rachel Reeves broke ministerial code over renting
Downing Street declined to say whether Rachel Reeves broke the ministerial code when she failed to follow local housing rules when renting out her family home.
The Prime Ministerâs spokesman said that the ministerial code sets out that an apology is a âsufficient resolutionâ in certain cases but would not confirm when asked repeatedly that the Chancellorâs failure to obtain a licence required to rent out the property was a breach of the code.
He said: âThe Chancellor rightly acted with urgency on this matter. She has set out that it was an inadvertent mistake and as soon as it was brought to her attention took immediate action, applying for the licence and speaking to the independent adviser on ministerial standards.
âShe made the Prime Minister aware of this issue at the earliest opportunity, at which point he immediately sought advice from the independent adviser.
âIt was advised that in the light of the Chancellorâs prompt action to rectify the position, including her apology, further investigation is not necessary.
âThe ministerial code makes clear that in certain circumstances, an apology is a sufficient resolution.â
Kemi Badenoch calls for Rachel Reeves to be âaxedâ if she raises taxes for Britons

Reform UK issues warning against SNP and Plaid Cymru âprogressive allianceâ
Plaid Cymru Leader Rhun ap Iorwerth and First Minister John Swinney during a meeting at Bute House in Edinburgh
 | PA
Reform UK has warned voters in Scotland and Wales against a potential âprogressive alliance âbetween the SNP and Plaid Cymru.
Scottish First Minister and SNP leader John Swinney and Plaid Cymru leader Rhun ap Iorwerth held talks where they vowed to work with each other to combat the rise of Reform UK.
First Minister Swinney said: âA strong, centre-left SNP and Plaid governments, we will also be sending a clear message that the hateful, extreme politics of Nigel Farage will never be allowed to win in our nations.â
In response, a Reform UK Wales spokesman said the meeting had âraised the stakes for next yearâs Senedd elections even furtherâ.
They told the BBC: âPlaid Cymru are copying the SNPâs homework, even though they have delivered the highest drug deaths in Europe, higher income tax than the rest of the UK and an obsession with breaking up the union to the detriment of our NHS.â
Bristol Labour councillor defects to the Greens â âThe party left me, rather than the other way aroundâ
A Labour councillor has defected to Zack Polanskiâs Green Party with a damning message to Sir Keir Starmer.
Councillor Alsayed Al-Maghrabi criticised Labour for âenabling genocide and echoing Reformâs divisive rhetoric on immigration.â
Mr Al-Maghrabi, who represents Frome Vale on Bristol City Council told BristolLive: âI joined Labour seven years ago to fight for fairness, compassion and social justice. Sadly, I no longer recognise those values in the national Labour Party.
âOver time, it has become apparent that the party left me, rather than the other way around, making myself and many others on the left in Labour politically homeless.
âMy decision is based on the deep disappointment with the direction of the national leadership.â
Mr Polanski welcomed the councillorâs decision, accusing Labour of âupholding the status quo of austerity, inequality and division.â
Shadow Chancellor Mel Stride dismisses claims that he suggested Rachel Reeves should increase taxes

Kemi Badenoch refuses to say if Tories would scrap 2p income tax rise
Kemi Badenoch has declined to commit to reversing a 2p tax rise in income tax if it is introduced by Sir Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves.
The Tory leader told The Telegraph: âThis is one of those things where we have to see where we are in four years time.
âWe talked about the things which we are going to reverse, the family farms tax, family business taxes, taxes on education.
âWe want to abolish stamp duty. We want to scrap business rates for high streets.
âBut we donât know what kind of mess Labour is going to be leaving in four years time. All we know is that theyâre going to be leaving one hell of a mess.
âAnd weâve got to clear it up, and we will do that through applying our golden economic rule, making sure that weâre paying down the deficit as well as making investments.â
WATCH: Shadow Chancellor Mel Stride criticises the Labour Government for âdestroyingâ growth and businesses in Britain, saying they have âbroken their wordâ.

Sir Mel Stride has said Labour has âbroken its promisesâ over taxation
The Shadow Chancellor said: âThis was a party that went into last GE and promised not to put up taxes left right and centre but in a period of a few months they have just done that.â
Sir Mel was stood surrounded by Tory MPs holding signs saying âIf She Puts Up Tax, Give Reeves the Axe.â
Labour minister defends decision to give Epping migrant sex offender ÂŁ500
A policing minister has defended the decision to give ÂŁ500 to a migrant sex offender who was mistakenly released from prison after he threatened to disrupt his deportation flight.
Sarah Jones said removing him from the flight and taking him back into custody would have cost thousands of pounds, which is why the choice was made that it was âbetter to get him out of our country.â
âAnd that was the choice, galling, though that is ⊠I hope people understand that that was the choice they faced, and that was the right thing to do,â she told Sky News.
Ms Jones, the MP for Croydon West, added: âSo it sticks in the throat, right? I get that. It does for me. It does for most people.â
Kemi Badenoch calls for a âbudget of good newsâ in tax hike warning
Kemi Badenoch and Mel Stride hold a press conference
 | GB NEWS
Kemi Badenoch has called for a âbudget of good newsâ as she warned against potential tax rises.
The Tory Leader said: âDucks quack, Cows moo, Labour puts up tax. We need to get spending under control, that is the only way to get the economy back on track.â
âIf the Chancellor canât even got on top of her own paperwork how is she going to get on top of the countryâs paperwork.
âOur message is simple, if she puts up tax, give Reeves the axe.â
Mel Stride takes aim at Rachel Reeves in blistering speech
Sir Mel Stride has said Labour has âbroken its promisesâ over taxation
The Shadow Chancellor said: âThis was a party that went into last GE and promised not to put up taxes left right and centre but in a period of a few months they have just done that.â
Sir Mel was stood surrounded by Tory MPs holding signs saying âIf She Puts Up Tax, Give Reeves the Axe.â
John Curtice issues warning to Reform as polling stalls
Sir John Curtice has provided his take on Reformâs polling
 | GB NEWSPolling guru Sir John Curtice has issued a warning to Reform UK, suggesting Nigel Farageâs party may have âstood on a landmine.â
Writing for GB News members, the Professor of Politics at Strathclyde University said: âIt first reached an average of 30 per cent in the polls in the immediate wake of its success in winning control of ten councils in the English local elections in May.
âYet it has made no discernible further progress since then.It briefly hit 32 per cent in September when the partyâs new proposals for curbing migration hit the airwaves.
âHowever, it has since fallen back again to the 30 per cent mark. Rather than gradually forging further ahead, the partyâs support has been flatlining, as though there might be a ceiling to what the party can achieve.â
GB NEWS MEMBERS CAN READ SIR JOHNâS ANALYSIS HERE
Pensions tax raid would slash ÂŁ50BILLION from retirement savings, Rachel Reeves warned
Chancellor Rachel Reeves faces stark warnings that proposed reforms to pension tax relief could drain ÂŁ50billion from Britainâs retirement savings within five years, new analysis has found.
Implementing a uniform 25 per cent tax relief rate would significantly discourage pension contributions, particularly among higher earners who currently benefit from more generous allowances.
READ THE FULL STORY HERE.
Nigel Farage wins âPolitician of the Yearâ at Spectator Awards
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage won the award last night
 | REUTERS
Nigel Farage scooped the Politician of the Year at the prestigious annual Spectator Awards.
Meanwhile, Green Party Leader Zack Polanski won Leader of the Year, while Political Moment of the Year went to Reform Mayor Andrea Jenkynsâ performance of âInsomniacâ at the partyâs annual conference.
Reform policy boss Zia Yusuf won Resignation of the Year, while Survivor of the Year went to Energy Secretary Ed Miliband.
Whatâs happening today in Westminster?
Weâll be hearing business questions to Leader of the House of Commons Alan Campbell, followed by a select committee statement on the first special report of the Foreign Affairs Committee: âThe Israeli-Palestinian conflict: Government response.â
This afternoon, thereâll be a general debate on ageing communities and end of life care, led by DUP MP, Jim Shannon.
On GB News, weâll be joined by Shadow Chancellor Sir Mel Stride from 8am, followed by Policing Minister Sarah Jones MP at 9.05am.
Keir Starmer refuses to take action against Rachel Reeves after she broke housing rules
Keir Starmer has refused to take action against Rachel Reeves after the Chancellor admitted to breaking housing rules.
Late on Wednesday evening, No10 released an exchange of letters between the pair detailing their correspondence to the breach.
Ms Reeves told the PM she âsincerely apologisedâ for the âerrorâ after alerting parliamentary authorities.
In response, Sir Keir told his Downing Street neighbour that it was âright you have taken the appropriate steps⊠to address thisâ.
READ THE FULL STORY HERE.
Charlie Rowley believes that Rachel Reeves needs to apologise for failing to obtain a rental licence for her property in Dulwich

David Lammy hits back at Sarah Pochin over advert comments
Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy says comments by a Reform MP about the number of ethnic minorities appearing in television adverts ânormalisedâ and marked a return to âflagrant racism.â
Sarah Pochin said she was driven âmadâ by seeing âadverts full of black and Asian peopleâ, comments that sparked widespread criticism.
Writing in The Independent to mark Black History Month, Mr Lammy said many people were âdisgustedâ by the remarks, criticising those âwho would have us believe that we are more divided than we really areâ.
âThey feel the peril of such comments becoming normalised and stand with us against the return of such flagrant racism,â he said.
 
                



