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HomeBrasilStreeting admits Reform could be main opposition by next election – UK...

Streeting admits Reform could be main opposition by next election – UK politics live | Politics

Health secretary says Reform are ‘definitely a real threat’

The health secretary Wes Streeting has said that Reform is “definitely a real threat” for Labour and one they are taking seriously.

Speaking on Sky News on Sunday morning, Streeting said: “I think there’s clearly, on the right of British politics, a realignment taking place. It’s not yet clear at the next general election whether it will be Reform or the Conservatives that are Labour’s main challengers.”

In other developments:

  • Reform’s chairman, Zia Yusuf, has said his party would erect statues of “Great British figures” and “end all this woke nonsense” within the first few months of government if they were to win power. Speaking to the Sunday Times, Yusuf also criticised Keir Starmer’s decision not to visit Runcorn in the run-up to the Thursday byelection that Reform won. In contrast, he said Nigel Farage visited the constituency three or four times and walked “50,000 steps” knocking doors on polling day.

  • Donald Trump’s tariffs tsar has accused Britain of being a “compliant servant of communist China” at risk of having its “blood sucked” dry by Beijing. In comments to the Telegraph, Peter Navarro, the president’s trade adviser, said the Government must resist “string-laden gifts” from Beijing and avoid becoming a “dumping ground” for goods that China can no longer sell to the US.

  • Kemi Badenoch has apologised for the “bloodbath” of the local elections after the Tories lost 674 councillors. The Conservative leader will appear on the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg this morning alongside Streeting and Yusuf.

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Key events

Reform leader Nigel Farage is “trying to be all things to all men”, Conservative co-chairman Nigel Huddleston said.

Questioned on Sky News’s Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips programme about Reform’s success in the local elections, Huddleston suggested the party may not be able to deliver on their promises long-term.

He said: “The one thing about Nigel Farage is, and we’re seeing this again and again and again, he is a populist – he is increasingly saying everything that anybody wants to hear.

“Nigel Farage is saying everything to anybody in order to get their votes at the moment, and it’s an incredibly effective political strategy in the short term but you cannot be a party of going around the world trying to get right-wing votes, promising low tax, and then to other people saying you want nationalisations and high spending, that’s not correct long-term.”

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