UK British News Megathread - aka CWCissey's news thread

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https://news.sky.com/story/row-over-new-greggs-vegan-sausage-rolls-heats-up-11597679 (https://archive.ph/5Ba6o)

A heated row has broken out over a move by Britain's largest bakery chain to launch a vegan sausage roll.

The pastry, which is filled with a meat substitute and encased in 96 pastry layers, is available in 950 Greggs stores across the country.

It was promised after 20,000 people signed a petition calling for the snack to be launched to accommodate plant-based diet eaters.


But the vegan sausage roll's launch has been greeted by a mixed reaction: Some consumers welcomed it, while others voiced their objections.

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spread happiness@p4leandp1nk
https://twitter.com/p4leandp1nk/status/1080767496569974785

#VEGANsausageroll thanks Greggs
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7
10:07 AM - Jan 3, 2019
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Cook and food poverty campaigner Jack Monroe declared she was "frantically googling to see what time my nearest opens tomorrow morning because I will be outside".

While TV writer Brydie Lee-Kennedy called herself "very pro the Greggs vegan sausage roll because anything that wrenches veganism back from the 'clean eating' wellness folk is a good thing".

One Twitter user wrote that finding vegan sausage rolls missing from a store in Corby had "ruined my morning".

Another said: "My son is allergic to dairy products which means I can't really go to Greggs when he's with me. Now I can. Thank you vegans."

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pg often@pgofton
https://twitter.com/pgofton/status/1080772793774624768

The hype got me like #Greggs #Veganuary

42
10:28 AM - Jan 3, 2019
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TV presenter Piers Morgan led the charge of those outraged by the new roll.

"Nobody was waiting for a vegan bloody sausage, you PC-ravaged clowns," he wrote on Twitter.

Mr Morgan later complained at receiving "howling abuse from vegans", adding: "I get it, you're all hangry. I would be too if I only ate plants and gruel."

Another Twitter user said: "I really struggle to believe that 20,000 vegans are that desperate to eat in a Greggs."

"You don't paint a mustach (sic) on the Mona Lisa and you don't mess with the perfect sausage roll," one quipped.

Journalist Nooruddean Choudry suggested Greggs introduce a halal steak bake to "crank the fume levels right up to 11".

The bakery chain told concerned customers that "change is good" and that there would "always be a classic sausage roll".

It comes on the same day McDonald's launched its first vegetarian "Happy Meal", designed for children.

The new dish comes with a "veggie wrap", instead of the usual chicken or beef option.

It should be noted that Piers Morgan and Greggs share the same PR firm, so I'm thinking this is some serious faux outrage and South Park KKK gambiting here.
 
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Given the ages, at least two of these boys are related, and I'll give you better than 50/50 that they are travellers.
God I love that when a gangrape happens in this country it can be reasonably attributed to like a dozen different ethnic/cultural groups.
 
They're sweating bullets over a possible collapse/mass defection of the Asian vote in the next GE, already happened a little bit with the local elections (but who gives a fuck about bin collections) where a number of should-of-wins turned into barely scraping bys or surprise tory survivals.
They aren't quite at that critical double digit % in most places but a solid few thousand worth of confirmable support is very much up in the air if they don't play their cards right, as in if sir keef ever grows a spine and puts his foot down he'll get the curry flavoured version of the SDP/cuckUK2 I reckon, this would mean dooom so I hope it happens.
I wouldn't be surprised if George Galloway wins the Rochdale by-election, if he hoovers up the Muzzie vote. From what I gather, his campaign is "FREE PALESTINE" and literally nothing else.
 
I wouldn't be surprised if George Galloway wins the Rochdale by-election, if he hoovers up the Muzzie vote. From what I gather, his campaign is "FREE PALESTINE" and literally nothing else.
It will be a complete tossup.
Rochdale is proper norf and therefore voted BREXIT and is still majority "ave ulways vorted LAYBAH!"oid who all have memories of Thatcher personally spiking their school milk with contaminated dead miner blood.
However the browns are reaching plurality, the kipper spoiler is Simon "17? alright with me!" Danczuk, and of course Gihadi George is there.
This same situation will play in every red wall seat, with every opposing force competing to be the most distasteful for the people actually voting for them, bloody annoying.
 
It will be a complete tossup.
Rochdale is proper norf and therefore voted BREXIT and is still majority "ave ulways vorted LAYBAH!"oid who all have memories of Thatcher personally spiking their school milk with contaminated dead miner blood.
However the browns are reaching plurality, the kipper spoiler is Simon "17? alright with me!" Danczuk, and of course Gihadi George is there.
This same situation will play in every red wall seat, with every opposing force competing to be the most distasteful for the people actually voting for them, bloody annoying.
Yep. Danczuk is a former Labour MP as well, to make things interesting. I wouldn't be surprised if the Tories come fourth or fifth and lose their deposit, prompting another shitfit within the parliamentary Conservative Party.
 
Is Labour still planning to give gyppo scum more "rights", or was that just Corbyn insanity?
OF course they are, even if they say otherwise. They could announce total pikey death in their manifest, but would still turn around to give them free vans after the election. The only way gypsies become a focus of national policy is if they can be used as a way to distract from the immigration problem.
 
Yep. Danczuk is a former Labour MP as well, to make things interesting. I wouldn't be surprised if the Tories come fourth or fifth and lose their deposit, prompting another shitfit within the parliamentary Conservative Party.
Labour have just withdrawn support from their candidate for his anti-semitism - they can't replace him as it's too late. What a clusterfuck!
 
Labour have just withdrawn support from their candidate for his anti-semitism - they can't replace him as it's too late. What a clusterfuck!
It gets better, it's not because of the remarks that have already come to light because he's apparently made further comments. Which is not surprising given the area he is running in but still funny


Labour says it has “withdrawn support” for Rochdale by-election candidate Azhar Ali after his comments on Israel.
The BBC understands Mr Ali has been suspended from Labour pending an investigation.
The party said the decision was taken after "new information about further comments" by Mr Ali came to light. Earlier on Monday, Labour had defended standing by him as a candidate.
It is too late for the party to replace Mr Ali as its candidate.
He is alleged to have told a Labour party meeting that Israel had "allowed" the deadly attack by Hamas gunmen on 7 October.
After the comments came to light, Mr Ali apologised "to Jewish leaders for my inexcusable comments".
Labour has faced intense pressure since the remarks surfaced, with widespread condemnation from party members and political rivals.
Withdrawing support for Mr Ali will come as a blow to Labour, who had initially stood by him as the candidate to take over as MP for Rochdale after the death Sir Tony Lloyd.
Frontbenchers Lisa Nandy and Anneliese Dodds had been out campaigning for Mr Ali in the constituency at the weekend.
Shadow minister Nick Thomas-Symonds had also been sent out to defend Labour's decision to back Mr Ali on Monday morning.
He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that the comments were "completely and utterly unacceptable" but suggested Mr Ali understood the "gravity of the offence that has been caused" and had "unreservedly apologised".
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak accused Labour of only withdrawing support for Mr Ali due to "enormous media pressure".
"That's not principled", Mr Sunak said.
Needs ousting from the party Suspended pending an investigation. Keeping him even without supporting him is going to let the Tories bang the anti-Semitism drum until we're all bored of it.

Edit - oh brilliant. If the Guardian is to be believed and I do believe it on this one the Daily Mail had more comments from their recordings they did not use in the first story. They let Labour leadership rally around him and then revealed there were more comments. Which were apparently bad enough that it merited this sudden u-turn.


Labour has withdrawn its support for Azhar Ali, its candidate for the Rochdale byelection, just days before voters go to the polls in a key test for Keir Starmer’s party.

Senior Labour MPs and members had urged the leadership to confirm Ali would be disciplined if he won the byelection as comments he had made soon after the 7 October attacks surfaced over the weekend. In them, he suggested Israel had deliberately relaxed security after warnings of an imminent threat.


They voiced their concern at the leadership’s continued support of Ali saying it marked a “huge and disappointing shift” from Starmer’s promises of taking a “zero-tolerance” to antisemitism, and all forms of racism.

On Monday night, the Daily Mail approached Labour with more comments Ali had made, prompting the party to withdraw its support. In line with electoral law, Labour cannot replace Ali with another candidate, because the deadline passed on 2 February. He will stand as a Labour candidate on the ballot paper, but if he’s elected he will not have the party whip and will sit as an independent MP.

Labour sources said that campaigners in Rochdale were told to stop leafleting and social media activity on Ali’s behalf at 5.30pm – an instruction that came from party HQ.

A local Labour insider said that some activists will seriously consider throwing their support behind Simon Danzcuk, the disgraced former Labour MP for Rochdale who was suspended from the party after sending inappropriate messages to a teenager. “Simon may be the best way of keeping [George Galloway, who is running as a Workers party candidate in the byelection] out,” a source said. “It’s the devil and the deep blue sea.”

Danzcuk, who is standing for the populist Reform party, told the Guardian that Labour should now take down posters and rip up leaflets supporting Ali, and ensure their activists no longer campaign for him.

“Labour under Keir Starmer has been campaigning for someone with antisemitic views,” he said. “The party must completely disassociate itself from this candidate. If the party appears to be tacitly supporting him, it will be a disgraceful state of affairs.”

Danzcuk’s campaign will now concentrate on stopping Galloway, he said. “My campaign will be to tell the electorate that thry will not want an MP who would prioritise Palestine over Rochdale. If elected I will prioritise Rochdale over Palestine”.

Galloway, who is concentrating on Rochdale’s sizeable Pakistani and Kasmiri Muslim community for votes, is expected to benefit from the row, with some local activists saying that Ali’s suspension makes him favourite to win.

The veteran campaigner, who have already been an MP for Respect and Labour, has appealed for voters to help put the plight of the people of Gaza on the map by voting him in. Any prospect that he could enter parliament again will appal some in the Jewish community. In 2014, he called for Bradford to become an “Israel-free zone”.

Ali had apologised after a recording was leaked to the Mail on Sunday in which he was heard saying: “The Egyptians are saying that they warned Israel 10 days earlier … Americans warned them a day before [that] … there’s something happening. They deliberately took the security off, they allowed … that massacre that gives them the green light to do whatever they bloody want.”

Lisa Nandy, the shadow international development minister, and Anneliese Dodds, the shadow women and equalities secretary, had been out campaigning for Ali in the constituency at the weekend. The shadow minister Nick Thomas-Symonds told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that he believed Ali had fallen “for an online conspiracy theory”, and he understood the “gravity of the offence that has been caused”.

A frontbencher told the Guardian: “This came far too late. The leadership’s continued support could still open the floodgates, allowing many others to think they can get away with antisemitism if they have posed with banners calling for an end to antisemitism without facing a reckoning.”

Another senior MP added: “What he said passed the threshold of what is acceptable and if he was a Labour MP would necessitate suspension of the whip if recent cases are a guide.”

It is understood Ali has also been suspended from the Labour party, pending an investigation. “Following new information about further comments made by Azhar Ali coming to light today, the Labour Party has withdrawn its support for Azhar Ali as our candidate in the Rochdale by-election,” a Labour spokesman said.

“Keir Starmer has changed Labour so that it is unrecognisable from the party of 2019. We understand that these are highly unusual circumstances, but it is vital that any candidate put forward by Labour fully represents its aims and values. Given that nominations have now closed, Azhar Ali cannot be replaced as the candidate.”

Rishi Sunak made a direct reference to the scandal during a GB News interview, accusing Starmer of standing by the politician and having “no principles at all”.

“So no the Labour Party hasn’t changed,” he said during a one-hour Q&A with voters. “It’s a con.”

A spokesperson for Campaign Against Antisemitism said: “Sir Keir Starmer has blotted an otherwise fairly admirable copy book and given the public reason to doubt the earnestness of his promise to tear antisemitism out ‘by its roots’ in Labour.

“People will have to judge for themselves whether the additional reported comments by Azhar Ali are really any worse than the comments that had already been reported. Rather than appearing as a principled decision, Labour’s withdrawal of support for its candidate at this late stage just looks as expedient as the failed attempt to defend him.

“It is the worst of all worlds for Labour.”

Last year, Martin Forde KC, the senior lawyer commissioned by Starmer to investigate the Labour party’s culture, criticised the leadership for vowing to take a “zero-tolerance” approach to antisemitism and all other forms of racism without having “transparent systems in place”.

Calling for an independent directorate to oversee Labour’s disciplinary processes, which has since been rejected, Forde said at the time: “I think part of the reason that factionalism has arisen around this is because there is a perception that different groups are treated differently.”

Activists in Rochdale have told of their shock at Ali’s remarks, saying he was known for being an ally and supportive of rooting out antisemitism from the party. They believe this is why the leadership has treated him with sympathy.

Kate Osamor, a Labour MP, was suspended in January for saying Gaza should be remembered as a genocide on Holocaust Memorial Day, while Andy McDonald lost the whip in October for using the controversial phrase “between the river and the sea” at a pro-Palestine rally.
 
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Edit - oh brilliant. If the Guardian is to be believed and I do believe it on this one the Daily Mail had more comments from their recordings they did not use in the first story. They let Labour leadership rally around him and then revealed there were more comments. Which were apparently bad enough that it merited this sudden u-turn.
The response has been predictable. Starmer is a zionist islamophobe now, which is making me warm to him just a little, and the corbynites are poking their heads over the parapet to whine about how their leader was done rotten for his support of hamas, while demanding Starmer be forced to resign. Labour's attempts to court the islamist vote are tearing the party apart. He just can't catch a break, can he?
 
The response has been predictable. Starmer is a zionist islamophobe now, which is making me warm to him just a little, and the corbynites are poking their heads over the parapet to whine about how their leader was done rotten for his support of hamas, while demanding Starmer be forced to resign. Labour's attempts to court the islamist vote are tearing the party apart. He just can't catch a break, can he?
Couldn't be happening to a nicer non-entity as far as I'm concerned.
 
oh brilliant. If the Guardian is to be believed and I do believe it on this one the Daily Mail had more comments from their recordings they did not use in the first story. They let Labour leadership rally around him and then revealed there were more comments. Which were apparently bad enough that it merited this sudden u-turn.
Our times just got a tiny bit more interesting, the actual results will tell but until then;
ALL BETS ARE OFF.png
 
He just can't catch a break, can he?
Rishi honestly has nailed it with Kier. The man has no positions, he just swings to whichever side will earn votes. Which means nothing he said can be trusted because he will change if it means winning and as such no election promises will be delivered on when Labour are in place except the least palatable for the public since once voted in he has no need to pretend anymore.
Our times just got a tiny bit more interesting, the actual results will tell but until then;
I think the Tories will still manage to lose it, by now most of them will have lined up their new jobs and be eager to go.
 
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Steve Wright: BBC Radio 2 presenter dies aged 69

DJ Steve Wright, who presented programmes for BBC Radio 1 and Radio 2 for more than four decades, has died at the age of 69.

His family confirmed his death "with deep sorrow and profound regret" in a statement on Tuesday.

Wright joined the BBC in the 1970s and went on to host the afternoon shows on Radio 1 and Radio 2.

He also fronted television programmes for the BBC, including Top of the Pops.

Wright was last on air on Sunday, hosting a pre-recorded special Valentine's Day edition of his Love Songs programme.

The DJ died on Monday. In a statement, his family said: "It is with deep sorrow and profound regret that we announce the passing of our beloved Steve Wright.

"In addition to his son, Tom, and daughter, Lucy, Steve leaves behind his brother, Laurence and his father Richard. Also, much-loved close friends and colleagues, and millions of devoted radio listeners who had the good fortune and great pleasure of allowing Steve
into their daily lives as one of the UK's most enduring and popular radio personalities.

"As we all grieve, the family requests privacy at this immensely difficult time."

Paying tribute to Wright after his death was announced, an emotional Radio 2 presenter Sara Cox said: "It's really hard to know what to say about the news of Steve Wright's passing, except we are all shocked and devastated and blindsided by this news.

"Steve was an extraordinary broadcaster, a really kind person, he was witty, he was warm, and he was a huge, huge part of the Radio 2 family, and I know my fellow DJs will all be absolutely shattered too."

Steve Wright in radio studio

BBC director general Tim Davie said: "All of us at the BBC are heartbroken to hear this terribly sad news. Steve was a truly wonderful broadcaster who has been a huge part of so many of our lives over many decades.

"He was the ultimate professional - passionate about the craft of radio and deeply in touch with his listeners. This was deservedly recognised in the New Year Honours list with his MBE for services to radio.

"No-one had more energy to deliver shows that put a smile on audiences' faces. They loved him deeply. We are thinking of Steve and his family and will miss him terribly."

Born in Greenwich, south London, in 1954, Wright's career at the BBC began when he started working as a clerk. His broadcasting career began in 1976, when Wright left the BBC to join Radio 210 in Reading.

Four years later, he joined BBC Radio 1, presenting weekend programmes before launching Steve Wright in the Afternoon in 1981 - the show that would ultimately define his career.

After a brief stint hosting the Radio 1 breakfast show for a year from 1994, Wright left to join Talk Radio, but rejoined the BBC in 1996.

He began presenting a Saturday programme and Sunday Love Songs on Radio 2 from 1996, before launching his afternoon show in 1999, a slot he would keep until 2022.

Scott Mills took over the afternoon programme during a string of schedule changes at the station in 2022, but Wright stayed with Radio 2, continuing to present Sunday Love Songs as well as a series of specials and podcasts.

Radio 2 said it planned to celebrate Wright's life with a range of programming across the station.

'A huge loss'

Presenter Jeremy Vine told BBC News: "It's come as a complete shock to us. The Radio 2 family are in mourning. The thing about Steve is that he was 69 when he died, but he still sounded like he did when he was 30. He was such an incredible professional... a lovely man.

"He was so encouraging to the next generation of presenters like me. He was so generous with his time. He was such a huge figure in British radio. That cheerful voice is gone, and there are so many people who will feel his loss."

The station's boss Helen Thomas said: "Steve understood the connection and companionship that radio engenders better than anyone, and we all loved him for it. He was a consummate professional whose attention to detail was always second to none."

Fellow DJ Tony Blackburn posted on social media:"I am so sad that my dear friend Steve Wright has passed away. He was a great broadcaster and we just loved one another's company. I was shocked at the news and will miss him terribly."

Former Radio 2 drivetime host Simon Mayo said it was "awful news", describing Wright as "one of the greats".

Jo Whiley, who also presented on Radio 1 and Radio 2 during Wright's respective tenures, said she was "so utterly devastated" to hear of his death.

"He was a class act," she continued. "An utter perfectionist when it came to radio. No-one cared more about the quality of what came of the your speakers than Wrighty. But he was also extraordinarily kind and big-hearted.

"We saw each other a lot doing our shows during the pandemic and I loved the banter we had. He was a huge fan of new music and he loved a gossip. When I joined Radio 2 he took the time to come into the studio and was never anything less than encouraging and supportive over the years."

Former Radio 2 DJ Ken Bruce saidhe was "totally shocked to hear the news about the great Steve Wright".

"We were planning lunch to celebrate the award of his richly deserved MBE," Bruce said. "An outstanding and innovative broadcaster whose listeners loved him. What a loss to the world of radio."

The station;s current breakfast show host Zoe Ball said Wright was "our radio friend, our inspiration, master of broadcasting, the Godfather, always there for us all with support, advice, love & most importantly laughter"

"rest well you wonderful magic man," she added. "Life won't be the same without you here."

Scott Mills, who took over the afternoon slot from Wright, posted:"He made everything sound effortless, and worked so hard to make every show world class. He was a constant inspiration to me on how to do radio that sounded big."

Dame Esther Rantzen, who was interviewed by Steve Wright on many occasions, said he was a unique broadcaster.

"He created a kind of club which whether he was interviewing you or whether you were enjoying it as a listener, you looked forward to joining every day," she told the PA news agency.

"It is a very rare quality, and he made it sound easy. It was frequently very funny, and when he left his daily afternoon show he really knocked a hole in the day for many of us who relied on his company.

TV presenter Matt Lucas described Wright as the "most brilliant radio broadcaster of them all".

"So gifted and natural and engaging. It was always a pleasure and an honour to appear on his show. What a huge loss."

He was on the radio just two days ago and sounded fine. Whatever did him in must have been sudden. At least when Wogan went, it was expected. Same with Jimmy Young. Why couldn't it have been vinegary vine to go?
 
He was on the radio just two days ago and sounded fine. Whatever did him in must have been sudden. At least when Wogan went, it was expected. Same with Jimmy Young. Why couldn't it have been vinegary vine to go?
Never a big fan but he did decent work. I preferred Wogan and Paul O'Grady's styles as presenters who've but cannot say this is not a shame.
The good die young(er than the bastards)
 
Nice to see Sue Gray's getting paid for her slimy moves.


The son of partygate investigator Sue Gray has been selected as a Labour candidate to become an MP at the next general election.
Liam Conlon will contest Beckenham and Penge in south-east London after being selected as the party’s candidate for the constituency.

The election is widely expected to take place in 2024.

Mr Conlon tweeted: “Thank you everyone who supported me and engaged in this process.
“The past weeks have shown the incredible potential of our new local party.
“Look forward to campaigning to win Beckenham and Penge together.”
He praised his rivals for their “engaging campaigns” and said he was “proud to call them friends”.
The long-time Labour activist announced his decision to run for selection in the newly created seat last month.
According to Jill Rutter, an associate fellow at think tank British Future, Mr Conlon has been active in the party for “longer” than his mother.

Ms Gray, who investigated parties held in Downing Street during the coronavirus lockdowns, quit her position this year as a senior civil servant to take on the job of Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer’s chief of staff.
Her report about lockdown breaches in government played a key role in the downfall of Boris Johnson’s premiership.
Since Ms Gray’s job change in September, she has been credited with taking a leading role in attempting to unite the party after splits emerged following Sir Keir’s decision not to demand a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war.
She is regularly seen around the parliamentary estate in Westminster, having been tasked with preparing the party — which is consistently well ahead of the Conservatives in the polls — for potentially entering 10 Downing Street after the next election.
The partygate investigation saw Ms Gray go within months from an influential but little-known arbiter of conduct in government to a household name.

Unfortunately it runs out relying someone unwilling to follow the rules might backfire on Kier.
Labour staffers have lodged a complaint over Sue Gray’s handling of an inquiry into a leak about the party’s plans to drop the £28 billion green pledge.
Sir Keir Starmer’s chief of staff allegedly made staff cry as she was said to have inspected several phones and spoken to employees without trade union representatives present.
Party officials have said that they were denied due process during the internal investigation, following a story that emerged in The Guardian which correctly predicted Labour’s about-turn on its flagship pledge.

The Times reported that the Labour Party branch of the GMB union submitted a formal complaint about Ms Gray’s investigation to David Evans, the party’s general secretary.
They later sent an email to all staff reminding them of their rights during a workplace investigation.
Ms Gray, a former civil servant, has reportedly called some of those affected by the investigation to apologise.
Those told to turn their phones over included senior members of Sir Keir’s team.
A party spokesman said he did not comment on disciplinary matters, but a source confirmed to The Times that “there was an investigation last week”, which involved speaking to members of staff.
It is not known whether anyone has been identified as being behind the leak, or whether Ms Gray has evidence of any unauthorised disclosure. It is understood not to be the first leak inquiry of Sir Keir’s leadership.

The Human resources team for the opposition party is understood to also have been involved in this investigation, and only those who were prepared to hand over their phones did so – with staff told that they could hand over their devices voluntarily.
Anybody seeking union representation was said to have been supported.

Ms Gray, 66, was poached by Sir Keir’s team in March last year, having previously investigated Boris Johnson over lockdown breaches at No 10.
She first worked in the Civil Service in the 1970s and went on to become the head of the Government’s propriety and ethics team in the Cabinet Office for six years.

The news that she was jumping ship to join Sir Keir’s top team sparked anger in the Conservative Party, with Government figures urging Acoba, the Whitehall appointments watchdog, to impose a cooling-off period of at least a year.
But despite saying it “shared some of the concerns” over a potential risk to the Civil Service’s integrity, the committee cleared Ms Gray to start as the Labour leader’s chief of staff after just six months.
Led by Conservative peer Lord Pickles, it said it had seen “no evidence” that her decision-making or impartiality were “impaired” while serving in Whitehall. She officially started the role in September.
A separate, damning Cabinet Office inquiry found that Ms Gray had breached impartiality rules and could have been suspended or sacked had she not quit.

The assessment, signed off by Simon Case, the Cabinet Secretary, and the Government’s most senior lawyer concluded that Ms Gray “fell short” of the requirements of both the Civil Service Code and her employment contract when she quietly took part in talks about joining Labour.
Ms Gray declined to co-operate with the internal inquiry and Dave Penman, the general secretary of the FDA trade union, insisted that it was his understanding that there was “no conclusion”.
The investigation revelations come as Sir Keir faces a difficult week as leader of the Labour Party, having suspended two parliamentary candidates within 24 hours.
He has faced criticism for his handling of the Rochdale by-election candidate, Azhar Ali, claiming that Israel let Hamas attack its own citizens on Oct 7 to get the “green light” to invade Gaza.

Shadow ministers were sent out to defend Mr Ali, who had apologised for the remarks, before the party then withdrew its support on Monday evening.
Labour has been approached for comment.
 

So he did go for a little swim after all.....
I bet there are some relieved oinkers tonight.
I suppose the conspiracy that this is being faked and it is a mutually satisfactory outcome for the rozzers and the good Christian sex offender is a bit far fetched. More interesting though......
I assume the story will be conveniently memory holed as it raises far too many inconvenient questions regarding a lot of the current systems in place and how they are failing the indigenous public.
 
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