Wednesday, October 29, 2025
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Keir Starmer faces Kemi Badenoch at PMQs – UK politics live

Conservative leader expected to challenge prime minister on immigration policy

Keir Starmer faces Kemi Badenoch at PMQs – UK politics live

11.57am GMT

There will be two urgent questions after PMQs, and a ministerial statement.
After 12.30pm: A Foreign Office minister responds to a UQ from Priti Patel, the shadow home secretary, on Gaza and Hamas.
Around 1.15pm: A Home Office minister responds to a UQ from Angus MacDonald, a Lib Dem, about the planned use off MoD bases for asylum seekers.
Around 2pm: Luke Pollard, a defence minister, makes a statement about the deal to sell Typhoon jets to Turkey.
After those are over, Nigel Farage will present his 10-minute rule bill on leaving the ECHR.

11.54am GMT
Starmer faces Badenoch at PMQs

PMQs is starting very soon.
Here is the list of MPs down to ask a question.

11.51am GMT
Jones rejects claim from Labour committee chair that government seems to be 'kowtowing to China'

Matt Western, the Labour chair of the JCNSS, used his final question to point out that, even though Australia is much more dependent on trade with China than the UK is, it is “much more muscular” in its approach to Beijing. He went on:

Yet we appear, and this is the public perception, that we are kowtowing to China in our approach.

Hermer said this prosecution did not fail because anyone in government was kowtowing to China. It failed because the test for a prosecution was not met.
He went on:

This process [the committee’s inquiry] has exposed the both baseless and dangerous allegations that somehow politicians intervened in a prosecution to stop it because of fears about a foreign power.These are baseless. And those allegations, I suggest, are the ones that caused the most long-lasting damage to both our national security reputation and our criminal justice reputation.

Jones said he did not accept the premise of Western’s question. He said the government was “robust” with China, but did have a relationship with it. The previous government’s policy of not talking to China was not wise, he said.

11.37am GMT
Hermer rejects claim from former Labour defence secretary Lord Hutton that government complacent about China threat

Lord Hutton, a Labour peer and former defence secretary, says the joint committee has not heard any evidence that politicians interferred with the CPS decisions in this case.
But he says he is worried about “complacency” in government. He says he is worried that the “inherent reticence on the part of government to really call out the dangerous nature of Chinese espionage activity” could lead to other alleged spies not being prosecuted in future.
Hermer disputes this. He says the new legislation will make it possible to prosecute allege spies. He goes on:

We now have legislation that is fit for purpose, and we will use that legislation whenever there’s credible evidence that people are seeking to damage the national interest of this country.

11.30am GMT

Back at the joint committee on the national security strategy hearing, Darren Jones, the Cabinet Office minister, says the Tory claim that ministers interferred in this case was a “grave” one. It was not true, he says.
He says the Tories than alleged that ministers should have got involved.
But “that’s not how we do things in this country”, he says. He says the CPS is independent, as it should be.

11.28am GMT
Statistics watchdog reprimands Steve Reed for saying water pollution worse in Scotland than in Wales

Helena Horton is a Guardian environment reporter.
Steve Reed, the housing secretary, has been slapped down by the UK Statistics Authority for falsely claiming that Scottish rivers and lakes are more polluted than those in England.
Reed made these comments this summer when he was environment secretary in order to demonstrate that a nationalised water sector would not necessarily deliver cleaner waterways. Scotland’s water is nationalised; England’s isn’t.
These claims were obviously false; Scotland has a much lower population density than England and many remote lakes and rivers which are not near town centres.
Prof Dame Carol Propper, chair of the UKSA’s regulation committee, said in a letter to the SNP Seamus Logan:

The authority expects that ministers take care to avoid using data that is overly selective or missing appropriate context. Based on the statements made without discussion of their context, sources, and limitations, there is the potential for people to be misled about English and Scottish water quality and infrastructure.

She added that the evidence Reed used to back up his claims such as that Scottish households have a lower take up of smart water meters (which is about water use rather than pollution) were not relevant and that he did not share any information which proved his comments to be true.
His comments were derided as false by many commentators at the time. If you look at the metrics of pollution levels, Scotland’s rivers and lakes are doing better than England’s. Well over half of Scotland’s are in high or good condition vs 16% in England (with none of those being high).
Reed at the time said “pollution levels in Scotland are worse than they are in England” and the civil servants at Defra said that claims to the contrary were “absolute rubbish”.

11.25am GMT
Cabinet Office minister Darren Jones ducks question about whether China should be in enhanced tier for Firs rules

Edward Morello, a Lib Dem MP, is asking the questions now.
Q: Shouldn’t China be in the enhanced tier for the Firs scheme?
Darren Jones, the Cabinet Office minister, is replying. He says Hermer said earlier that China would not have to be in the enhanced tier for a spy prosecution to be considered.
Q: But shouldn’t China be in that tier anyway?
Jones says the Firs legislation has only recently come into force. What to do about China is being considered, he says. He says the government is dealing with this in the proper way.

11.15am GMT
Hermer accuses Gavin Williamson of making bogus allegations against Jonathan Powell, underming faith in justice system

Gavin Williamson, the former Tory defence secretary, is asking the questions now. He asks how common it is for officials to hold a meeting to discuss a CPS prosecution, as happened in this case.
Hermer says he has never been in a meeting of that kind where details of a prosecution were discussed, and he would never expect to be in a meeting of that kind.
Willamson asks the question again. He is referring to the meeting that took place on 1 September, convened by Jonathan Powell, the national security adviser.
Hermer says No 10 would never hold a meeting to discuss evidence in a forthcoming prosecution.
He says the meeting Williamson is referring to was to discuss the fallout from a trial that, at that point, everyone expected would go ahead.
He goes on:

Trying to insinuate bad faith into our national security [decision making] does nothing, nothing, to increase public confidence in it.

He says trying to undermine faith in the national security process, and in the criminal justice system, in this manner is “dangerous”. And he suggests Williamson should know better, particularly as a privy counsellor.

11.00am GMT
Counting in 2026 Scottish parliamentary elections will start on Friday morning, not overnight, officials announce

Severin Carrell is the Guardian’s Scotland editor.
Holyrood candidates, election agents, politics junkies and party activists will be spared the sleep-deprived tension and drama of an overnight count after next May’s Scottish parliament elections.
The electoral management board for Scotland, which sets the rules for carrying out elections, has announced the count for next year’s vote will be conducted during the day on Friday 8 May, starting at 9am sharp.
Malcolm Burr, the board’s convenor and the chief executive of Comhairle nan Eilean Siar (Western Isles council), said that would reduce costs, improve the process and allow more voters to follow the results. He said:

Counting during the day allows the use of well-rested staff with quick access to more resources, people and support facilities. Our counts are always accurate but working in the day removes some risks, reduces costs and lets us declare the results when more people are engaged.

He noted that for logistical reasons due to the remoteness and distances involved covering Scotland’s islands and rural wards, some counts (particularly involving the Western Isles) only took place the day after an election.
Delaying the count until Friday also prolongs the agony for political leaders too, particularly Keir Starmer. The prime minister faces a fateful week: the Welsh, Scottish and English local government elections on 7 May all threaten to produce deeply damaging defeats for Labour.
The EMB’s bulletin also said they learnt lessons from last year’s snap general election, which coincided with Scotland’s school holidays, causing chaos for some people who had postal votes or needed quickly to get one.

The experience of the administration of the UK parliamentary general election in 2024, particularly the challenges around print and postal vote administration, has informed the development of these directions. They are further intended to anticipate risks and challenges that may arise.

10.56am GMT

Darren Jones, the Cabinet Office minister, is sitting alongside Hermer. But, whenever he has been asked a question, he has essentially said that he has nothing to add to evidence given by others.

10.47am GMT
Hermer says claims that ministers intervened in China spy case 'disgraceful', in attack on senior Tories

Paul Boateng, the Labour peer and a former cabinet minister, goes next.
Q: Did you ever put it to the CPS that dropping the case would undermine public confidence in the justice system?
Hermer says it was not his job to overrule the CPS.
But he says no one would have left the meeting where was told that the case was being dropped without being aware of how disappointed he was about this.
He says he is concerned about the impact this case has had on faith in the justice system. But he says those who have made “baseless accusations” are to blame.

It’s also why I deprecate some of the baseless accusations that were levelled against the prime minister and against our national security adviser, [Jonathan] Powell, when this information, the decision of the prosecution was announced, that seeks to suggest that politicians had somehow improperly interfered in this case to stop the prosecution.
Effectively, allegations that they were perverting the course of justice against the national security interests of this country – now, those were disgraceful allegations to make without evidence. They were baseless, as the evidence of the DPP and the cabinet secretary have made plain.

Hermer does not name the people responsible for these “baseless accusations”, but he is referring to the Conservative party. Kemi Badenoch have repeatedly suggested that ministers and officials intervened to stop this prosecution going ahead, implying they leant on the CPS and withheld key evidence.

Updated at 11.05am GMT

10.36am GMT
Hermer says prosecution could have gone ahead under NSA, even though China not in enhanced tier under Firs rules

Emily Thornberry, the Labour chair of the foreign affairs committee (and a barrister), goes next.
Q: The CPS has revealed that the word enemy was in the original draft of the first witness statement from the DNSA, but not the final version. Shouldn’t that have flagged up a problem?
Hermer says the real problem was the gap between the statutory test of enemy in the Official Secrets Act, and government policy at the time.
Thornberry suggests that, given the extent of the evidence showing China does pose a threat, it would have been better to have put this to a jury.
Hermer says this discussion shows the Official Secrets Act “was not fit for purpose”. He says if the National Security Act the prosecution would have gone ahead, “I’ve absolutely no doubt about it”.
Someone (it is not clear who) puts it Hermer that, because China is not in the enhanced tier under Firs (the foreign influence registration scheme – a system requiring agents for foreign powers to register, with tighter requirments for hostile countries in the enhanced tier), even under the National Security Act it would have been hard to show that spying for China was illegal.
Hermer says he does not think that would have been an issue. China would have counted under the foreign powers provision, he says.

Updated at 10.38am GMT

10.18am GMT

Sarah Champion, the Labour chair of the international development committee, asks if the CPS could have brought other charges.
Hermer says those are really questions for the CPS. Prosecutors normally bring the strongest charges.
Q: Is it unusual not to have a backup plan for charges that could be brought?
It depends on the case, Hermer says.

10.16am GMT

Mike Martin (Lib Dem) goes next. He asks if it would have been better to get, say, a former head of MI5 or MI6 to give evidence about China being a national security threat, not the deputy national security adviser.
Hermer says he thinks Matthew Collins, the deputy national security adviser (DNSA), was an appropriate witness.

10.11am GMT
Hermer says, if spy case had gone to trial, Badenoch's quote saying China not a foe would have helped accused get off

Mark Sedwill, the former cabinet secretary and former national security adviser, goes next. He is now a peer, and a member of the committee.
He says the deputy national security adviser, Matthew Collins, thought there was enough evidence for the case to go ahead. But the CPS did not agree. Who was right?
Hermer says the jury would have to have been convinced that China was an enemy.
And the problem in this case was that the government was not neutral on whether China was an enemy. “The government’s position was that it was not,” he says.
He says, if the case had gone to court, the defence would have quoted ministers in office at the time saying China was not an enemy. He quotes examples of James Cleverly, the former foreign secretary, and Kemi Badenoch, the former business secretary who is now Tory leader, as saying that.
Badenoch said, when she was in cabinet, that China should not be called a foe.

10.03am GMT
Hermer says China spy prosecutions would have gone ahead if National Security Act had been passed ealier

Hermer says the Official Secrets Act was a “very significant” with this prosecution.
It was passed in 1911, and at the time there were concerns that it did not get enough parliamentary scrutiny. He goes on:

In 2017, the Law Commission flagged that the term enemy [in the legislation] was deeply problematic and it would give rise to difficulties in future prosecutions.
And I think what has played out, during this prosecution exemplifies and highlights the difficulties with that.
That is why Parliament was right to pass the National Security Act for 2023. It takes away the problems that were faced by the CPS in this case.

If the NSA had been in case when the offences were committed, this prosecution would have gone ahead, he says.

9.56am GMT
Lord Hermer says, once China prosecution originally approved, attorney general had no further role in CPS decisions

Matt Western, the committee chair, opens the questioning.
Q: How should this prosecution have been handled differently?
Lord Hermer says he will explain the context.
Prosecutors are governed by a code, and if they want to prosecute, the decision must pass the evidential test (there must be a reasonable chance of success) and it must pass a public interest test too.
He says those tests are for prosecutors.
With some offences, the attorney general (AG) must apply those tests too.
That happened in this case, he says. A previous AG approved this prosecution.
And that was the end of the law officers’ involvment, he says. He says politicians do not get involved in prosecutions.
He says a framework agreement betweent he AG’s office and the CPS confirmed that.
The framework says the AG must be notified if a prosecution approved by the AG is going to be dropped.
If it is being dropped on public interest grounds, the AG must be consulted.
But if it is being dropped on evidential grounds, the AG is just informed, after the decision has been taken.

Updated at 9.57am GMT

9.51am GMT

The government has published three witness statements submitted by the DNSA: the first from December 2023, the second from February 2025 (but dated 2024 by mistake) and the third from August 2025.
Parkinson and Wormald have both sent letters to the committee responding to their questions. Those letters, and others submitted as part of this inquiry, are here.

9.50am GMT

There is a live feed of the committee hearing here.

9.49am GMT
Lord Hermer, attorney general, gives evidence to committee on China spy case

Lord Hermer, the attorney general, is about to start giving evidence to the joint committee on the national security strategy about the China spy case. Darren Jones, the Cabinet Office minister, is also appearing.

9.40am GMT
Government suffers 5 defeats in Lords as 'ping pong' starts over employment rights bill

Peers have maintained their stand-off with the government over proposed workers’ rights reforms, including again rejecting giving new workers’ “day one” protection against unfair dismissal, PA Media reports. This was one of five defeats the government suffered on the bill in the Lords last night. PA says:

The House of Lords inflicted a further heavy defeat on the government in backing by 301 votes to 153, majority 148, a Tory measure which would instead reduce the existing qualifying period for the workplace safeguard from two years to six months.
The insistence by the unelected chamber on overturning a Labour election pledge in defiance of the Commons means a continuation of the parliamentary tussle over the employment rights bill known as “ping-pong”, when legislation is batted between the two Houses until agreement is reached.
Conservative shadow business minister Lord Sharpe of Epsom said: “Making unfair dismissal a day one right will inhibit hiring.”
Independent crossbencher Lord Vaux of Harrowden said: “The introduction of day one unfair dismissal rights is the most damaging element in this bill, in my opinion.”
He added: “Uniquely among the employment rights changes in the bill, there is little or no evidence that there is really a problem to solve or harm to be prevented here, but very real harms will arise as a result of this policy.
“The ability to claim unfair dismissal from day one will make it more difficult for employers to take a risk on new employees.”
However, former head of the Trades Union Congress and Labour peer Frances O’Grady said: “Under the employment rights bill, employers can still dismiss workers fairly – for example, as they can now if they are incompetent or there is misconduct or a redundancy situation.
“But without the day one protection proposed by the government, when workers move to a new job, they would continue to bear the risk that they can be sacked at whim.”
She added: “I am very conscious of the employer lobby that has mobilised in support of this amendment.
“But when I look back on employers’ opposition to the national minimum wage, to equal pay for women and to stronger health and safety rights, it is clear that business lobbies do not always know what is best for Britain.
“Labour’s manifesto commitment is clear – to deliver day-one rights in full.”
Deputy leader of the Lords and government minister Lord Collins of Highbury said: “We will consult fully with business groups, trade unions, employers, employees and civil society on how to put our plans into practice before legislation comes into effect, adopting a very sensible approach of proper consultation.”
The Labour front bench went on to suffer a further setback as the Lords pressed their demand to retain the 50% turnout threshold for an industrial action ballot of trade union members to be valid, backing the move by 240 votes to 143, majority 97.
Peers also again backed removing a provision in the bill to automatically sign up new trade union members to pay a political levy, voting by 249 to 142, majority 107, against the change.
The measure would overturn a cross-party compromise reached during the passage of previous legislation, requiring active opt-in to making contributions.
Trade unions can assist political parties and candidates through their political funds, with some of the largest organisations including Unite, Unison and GMB making donations to Labour campaigns.
As originally drafted, it would mean new members would routinely become contributors to the union’s political fund unless they give notice of their wish to opt out.
A planned crackdown on zero-hour contracts in the workplace was also delivered a further blow as the upper chamber supported by 302 votes to 159, majority 143, a Liberal Democrat provision to allow flexibility in the legal requirement for an employer to offer guaranteed hours, with employees able to refuse the arrangement.
Measures aimed at safeguarding seasonal work under the legislation, were again backed in the Lords by 267 votes to 153, majority 114.
The changes made by peers will now be sent back for further consideration by the elected chamber.

The bill has gone through the Commons and the Lords, and MPs have already one removed amendments to the bill passed by peers. Last night was the first chance peers had to put them back in. This process is called “ping pong”, and it will continue until the two sides agree. Almost always it ends with the Lords backing down.

9.28am GMT

The migrant who re-entered the UK after being deported under the returns deal with France is still in the country, Alex Norris, the border security minister, said this morning.
Norris was doing an interview round this morning. Asked about the migrant who returned from France, he said:

He’s wasting a lot of his own time. He’s come through, he was detected immediately at the front door, he was detained, and he will be removed from this country. He hasn’t gone yet but he will be removed.

Asked whether the case suggested the returns deal was not fit for purpose, Norris replied:

No, not at all.
The reality is people are always going to test your front door, test your boundaries. This person’s done that, and totally wasted their time in doing so.

9.22am GMT
Boris Johnson approved China’s London super-embassy proposal in 2018

Will Kemi Badenoch raise the China spy case again at PMQs? This story by Eleni Courea may make her think twice.

Related: Boris Johnson approved China’s London super-embassy proposal in 2018

In the Times Geraldine Scott also has a story, based on Freedom of Information disclosures, saying Badenoch “sent a delegation of senior officials to China during her tenure as business secretary, documents have revealed, despite claims she kept the country at arm’s length over security fears”.

9.07am GMT
Shabana Mahmood says Home Office not ready for all challenges, as it says illegal working arrests at record level

Good morning. The Home Office is under fire from government critics almost constantly at the moment, but this morning it is publicising what, by the department’s standards, counts as rare good news; it says arrests for illegal working have reached their highest level since records began.
Here is the PA Media write-up.

Immigration enforcement visits have reached their highest level since comparable data began in 2011, data shows.
Some 21,858 visits were recorded in the 12 months to September this year, according to Home Office figures.
This is up 38% from 15,894 in the previous 12-month period, and an increase of 56% on 13,990 visits that were carried out in the same period up to September 2012.
A previous peak of 20,989 was hit in the year to September 2015.
Enforcement visits from officers can be to businesses or home addresses to check on someone’s status, or on illegal working or other immigration crimes.
It comes as further figures show visits for illegal working totalled 11,052 up to September, a rise of 51% on the previous 12 months when 7,343 were carried out.
The drive comes as ministers are seeking to crack down on illegal working in the UK, as part of efforts to deter those coming to the country illegally.
Immigration enforcement was handed £5m to arrest, detain and remove migrants working illegally at sites such as takeaways, beauty salons and car washes.
Elsewhere, data shows there were 8,232 arrests of illegal workers in the year to September, up 63% on 5,043 in the previous 12 months.

But, in rather confusing messaging, Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary has also given an interview to the BBC where she confirmed that her department is still not functioning properly. In 2006 John Reid, another Labour cabinet minister appointed home secretary on the assumption that he would be more hardline than his predecessor, famously said the department was “not fit for purpose”. Almost 20 years on, the description still applies, Mahmood said.
She told the BBC:

I’ve already said the Home Office is not yet fit for purpose …
The most recent report [written by Tory MP Nick Timothy] was very familiar to me in the sense of what I’ve seen just in the few weeks I’ve been in this job. It’s obviously a department that has a range of problems, whether that’s procuring contracts, whether that is holding on to senior staff, it obviously deals with emergency and crises issues on a regular basis, and I think over a long period of time has been found not to be able to rise to the scale of the challenge of those crises.

Mahmood was referring to this report by Timothy, an adviser to Theresa May when she was home secretary, and her response to it.
Here is the agenda for the day.
9.45am: Lord Hermer, the attorney general, and Darren Jones, the Cabinet Office minister, give evidene to the joint committee on national security strategy on the China spy prosecution that collapsed.
10am: The Reform UK Lee Anderson and Zia Yusuf, the party’s head of policy, speak at a press conference. It is the third press conference the party has held this week.
10.45am: John Swinney, Scotland’s first minister, speaks at the IPPR Scotland conference. Anas Sarwar, the Scottish Labour leader, is speaking at 12.30pm.
Noon: Keir Starmer faces Kemi Badenoch at PMQs.
After 12.30pm: Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, is using the 10-minute rule procedure to propose a bill to take the UK out of the European convention on human rights. Another MP is likely to give a speech opposing the bill, and there is likely to be a vote.
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Updated at 9.23am GMT

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