Sir Keir Starmer is set to meet Donald Trump in New York before delivering a speech to world leaders at the UN General Assembly.
As part of a raft of bilateral meetings, he will discuss ongoing conflicts between Israel, Lebanon and Palestine with world leaders and US presidential candidate Kamala Harris.
The prime minister will use tonight’s address to say that the UK is returning to “responsible global leadership” because it is in British interests to address problems around the world.
The 79th UN summit comes as the Middle East teeters on the brink of all-out conflict and the bloody war in Ukraine grinds on.
It follows an intervention at the UN Security Council where he tore into Russia over its actions in Ukraine, saying Vladimir Putin was treating his own citizens as “bits of meat to fling into the grinder” in the conflict.
Sir Keir has been embroiled in a donotations row after borrowing an £18m penthouse flat from Labour donor Lord Waheed Alli during the general election and to film a Covid video. But Downing Street claims he did not break the rules.
Cleverly accuses Lammy of making ‘self-indulgent speeches about himself’
James Cleverly has accused David Lammy of making “self-indulgent speeches about himself” instead of addressing ongoing conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East.
The former foreign minister attacked Mr Lammy after he compared his African ancestry to the fight against Russia during his speech at the UN on Wednesday.
The foreign secretary told the UN: “I say to the Russian representative, on his phone as I speak, that I stand here also as a black man whose ancestors were taken in chains from Africa, at the barrel of a gun to be enslaved. Imperialism. I know it when I see it, and I will call it out for what it is.”
Reacting to the speech, Mr Cleverly told Times Radio: “David Lammy needs to stop making self-indulgent speeches about himself at the UN, talking about himself when he should be talking about Ukraine and he should be getting the Middle East, as I did, talking to the people who can reach out.”
Salma Ouaguira26 September 2024 19:30
Sir Keir Sarmer meets with United Nations Secretary-General
Keir Starmer was pictured signing a guest book before his meeting with United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.
The pair were then photographed shaking hands ahead of a speech later this evening.
The 79th session of the United Nations General Assembly addresses the urgent need for enhanced international cooperation to deal with pressing global challenges such as climate change, poverty and inequality while tackling the impacts of ongoing conflicts and global health crises.
Barney Davis26 September 2024 19:26
Labour chair defends Starmer for using flat of donor during pandemic
Labour’s Tan Dhesi has appeared on the morning media round to defend Sir Keir Starmer after claims emerged he took £20,000 in donations from Lord Alli.
Sir Keir reportedly used a flat from the donor during his son’s GCSE’s and to record a video urging people to work from home during Covid.
Asked whether this was acceptable, the defence select committee chair told Sky News Sir Keir was “fearing for the safety of his family” and worried about his son failing his exams.
But when put to him that the prime minister also stayed during the pandemic, he said: “For me the key thing around the accommodation it is a fact that outside the prime minister’s home there were people camped out.”
Mr Dhesi added: “We do need to bear in mind that the hoome of leader of the opposition at the time was constantly being deluged by protesters, journalists, investigators.
“As the prime minister said, nothing illegal happened and all the rules were followed. I will take him by his word. He is a man of integrity.”
Salma Ouaguira26 September 2024 19:00
Transport Secretary looks to new repair technology to tackle pothole ‘plague’
Transport Secretary Louise Haigh has declared war on potholes, vowing to use cutting-edge repair technology to battle the “plague”.
Potholes delay journeys, put the lives of drivers and cyclists at risk, and damages vehicles, the government said.
During the general election campaign, Labour pledged to fix an additional one million potholes across England in each year of the next parliament.
Ms Haigh said the state of the nation’s roads had become a “constant and visible reminder of the decline in our country’s infrastructure”.
Last month, new research revealed that concern about the state of local roads had reached record levels.
Some 27 per cent of those questioned in a survey commissioned by the RAC said their vehicle had suffered damage as a result of potholes in the previous 12 months.
During a visit to Blackpool today, the Transport Secretary met road workers and councillors to learn about high-definition imagery technology.
The town’s Project Amber scheme uses an advanced imagery system that takes high-definition pictures of roads to detect potholes and compile data on areas most in need of repair.
It is hoped similar systems can be replicated across the country.
Salma Ouaguira26 September 2024 18:30
Tory peer and vocal critic of Islamaphobia in the party quits
Baroness Sayeeda Warsi has said she is quitting the Conservative Party in which she was a vocal critic of Islamaphobia.
She posted on X: “It is with a heavy heart that I have today informed my whip and decided for now to no longer take the @Conservatives whip.
“This is a sad day for me. I am a Conservative and remain so but sadly the current Party are far removed from the Party I joined and served in Cabinet.
“My decision is a reflection of how far right my Party has moved and the hypocrisy and double standards in its treatment of different communities. A timely reminder of the issues that I raise in my book Muslims Don’t Matter.”
The Conservative peer had previously criticised Tory leader frontrunner Robert Jenrick after he suggested people who say “Allahu Akbar” should be “immediately arrested”.
She previously wrote on X: “Every day before we start parliamentary business in the Commons and Lords we say a prayer and praise God – we say our parliamentary version of Allah hu Akbars at the heart of democracy – a process Robert Jenrick is a part of.
“This language from Jenrick is more of his usual nasty divisive rhetoric – he is such a tool.”
Barney Davis26 September 2024 18:30
Sir Keir Starmer appears on CNBC programme
Prime Minister Keir Starmer is pictured being interviewed by Andrew Ross Sorkin during CNBC “Squawk Box” financial program on Thursday in New York.
Sir Keir is in New York to attend the 79th session of the United Nations General Assembly.
He had already visited Wall Street standing with Adena Friedman, Chief Executive Officer of Nasdaq as he meets the team and family behind BioAge as it starts trading on the Nasdaq
Barney Davis26 September 2024 18:22
ICYMI: Starmer’s Covid broadcast urging work from home filmed in donor’s flat
Sir Keir Starmer recorded a Covid-era broadcast urging the public to work from home from a Labour donor’s £18 million penthouse.
The Christmas message, broadcast in December 2021, was reportedly filmed at a flat belonging to Lord Waheed Alli – a donor who has handed hundreds of thousands of pounds to the Labour Party over the last two decades.
Our political correspondent Millie Cooke has the full story:
Salma Ouaguira26 September 2024 18:00
Police issue arrest warning to protesters showing support for Hezbollah
Barney Davis26 September 2024 17:47
ICYMI: Rayner and Reeves lead cabinet turnout for Labour Friends of Israel
Chancellor Rachel Reeves and deputy prime minister Angela Rayner were among five cabinet ministers to attend a Labour Party conference fringe event to show solidarity with Israel and the remaining 101 hostages held by Hamas.
Labour Friends of Israel (LFI) on Tuesday evening had one of the most significant and largest turnouts by senior ministers for the entire event, as Palestinian flag-waving protesters remained outside the conference in Liverpool all week.
Our political editor David Maddox has the full story:
Salma Ouaguira26 September 2024 17:30
Watch: Starmer refuses 4 times to apologise for cutting winter fuel payments
Starmer refuses four times to apologise to pensioners for axing winter fuel payments
Sir Keir Starmer refused four times to apologise to pensioners for cutting winter fuel payments during an interview with Good Morning Britain. The prime minister sat down with Susanna Reid at the Labour Party conference in Liverpool. “Would you like to take this opportunity to say sorry?” the presenter asked. “I am really concerned that we have been put in this position,” Sir Keir responded. The question was then repeated another three times but was not directly answered. “I promised we would stabilise the economy,” the PM responded, suggesting the people who should be apologising are the previous government.
Salma Ouaguira26 September 2024 17:00