Starmer Refutes Claims Abbott Has Been Banned From Standing As Labour Candidate

Starmer Refutes Claims Abbott Has Been Banned From Standing As Labour Candidate

By Charlotte  Webster-

Labour leader Keir Starmer has said that Diane Abbott has not been barred from standing as a Labour candidate, hours after the veteran MP said she had banned from standing for election.

The long-serving MP was suspended last year for saying Jewish, Irish and Traveller people do not face racism “all their lives”

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Some observers believe the denial from Starmer may be designed to quell a row over the issue which  threatened to overshadow Sir Keir Starmer’s pitch to voters on the NHS.

During his campaign trail in Devon, Rishi Sunak has called for Sir Keir Starmer to clear the air and explain Labour’s position over the row.

Meanwhile, the two major party leaders are set to go head-to-head on a televised ITV election debate on June 4, but Lib Dem leader Sir Ed Davey has said that he should have been invited too.

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Today, thousands of patients face having their care cancelled after the British Medical Association announced a strike from 7am on 27 June until 7am on 2 July. Voters go to the polls on 4 July.

Labour is setting its sights on tackling NHS backlogs, with leader Sir Keir detailing first steps to clear waits of more than 18 weeks within five years of taking office.

Ms Abbott had the Labour whip suspended in April 2023 pending an investigation after she suggested Jewish, Irish and Traveller people experience prejudice, but not racism.

The whip was restored on Tuesday, but Ms Abbott has claimed she has been barred from standing on July 4.

“Although the whip has been restored, I am banned from standing as a Labour candidate,” she told the BBC.

But a Labour source questioned her claim to have been banned from standing for the party, suggesting it might be an attempt to “bounce” party leaders into a deal ahead of a meeting of the ruling National Executive Committee (NEC).

The source said: “(I’m) not quite sure that’s right – the NEC is due to finalise candidate endorsements on Tuesday.

“I think this may be an attempt to bounce Loto (Leader of the Opposition’s Office) into some sort of deal.”

Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting said Ms Abbott, the UK’s first black woman to be elected to Parliament in 1987, is a “trailblazer” but that it is a “decision for the Labour Party’s National Executive Committee” whether she can stand.

He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I have no idea (of) the basis upon which the decision is made.”

Meanwhile, former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn – an ally of Ms Abbott – will launch his campaign as an independent candidate in Islington North.

On NHS policy, Labour warned that the treatment backlog, which currently stands at 7.54 million, could rise to 10 million if the Conservatives are in office for another five years.

Measures Labour would take include creating an additional 40,000 appointments, scans and operations in England each week during evenings and weekends and doubling the numbers of scanners.

Health Secretary Victoria Atkins criticised the plans as “more ‘copy and paste’ politics from Labour” while highlighting the Tories’ long-term workforce plan and £3.4 billion plan to upgrade NHS technology.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies said achieving Labour’s goal would be “highly stretching” because “the challenging fiscal situation facing the next government will make it incredibly difficult to increase health spending at anywhere near similar rates” as previous Labour governments, which made big reductions in waiting times alongside spending increases of more than 7% a year in real terms.

Meanwhile, Rishi Sunak arrived in Cornwall after taking the sleeper train overnight, pushing a plan to create 100,000 more apprenticeships by shutting down “rip-off” degrees.

The Prime Minister wants to see the worst-performing university courses replaced with high-skilled apprenticeships if the Conservatives stay in power after the General Election.

He said his party is offering young people “the employment opportunities and financial security they need to thrive” as he seeks to narrow Labour’s double-digit lead in the polls.

The law would be changed to give England’s universities watchdog new powers to shut down courses deemed as underperforming.

Mr Sunak said: “Improving education is the closest thing we have to a silver bullet for boosting life chances. So it’s not fair that some university courses are ripping young people off.

“Thanks to our plan, apprenticeships are much higher quality than they were under Labour. And now we will create 100,000 more, by putting an end to rip-off degrees and offering our young people the employment opportunities and financial security they need to thrive.”

An additional 5.8 million apprenticeships have been delivered under Conservative governments since 2010, with 340,000 starting in 2022/23, the Tories said.

But Labour pointed out that apprenticeship achievements among under-19s are down 50% since 2015/16, while starts have dropped by at least 30% in every English region.

Shadow education secretary Bridget Phillipson said: “It is laughable that the Tories, who have presided over a halving of apprenticeships for young people, are now announcing this.”

Liberal Democrat education spokeswoman Munira Wilson said: “The shockingly low pay for those on apprenticeships will remain, doing nothing to encourage more people to take apprenticeships up or tackle soaring drop-out rates.”

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