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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Léonie Chao-Fong (now) and Jamie Grierson (earlier)

Boris Johnson backs call for P&O Ferries boss to resign over mass sackings – as it happened

Two P&O ferries moored at the Port of Dover this week.
Two P&O ferries moored at the Port of Dover this week. Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

Summary

  • Asked if the prime minister supported a call by the transport secretary, Grant Shapps, for P&O Ferries chief executive, Peter Hebblethwaite, to resign, a No 10 spokesperson replied: “Yes.” Shapps called for Hebblethwaite to quit over the sacking of 800 workers, although it later emerged he had met the DP World boss Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem last November and told him that he was “aware of the issues at P&O Ferries”.
  • In a 50-minute call today, Boris Johnson had a “frank and candid discussion” with the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, about a “range of issues of mutual interest” including the situation in Ukraine, Downing Street said. The two leaders “agreed to speak again soon”, it added.
  • The number of coronavirus infections across the UK rose by an estimated 1m cases compared with the previous week, data from the Office for National Statistics has revealed. An estimated 9% of the population in Scotland had Covid in the week ending 20 March, the highest recorded by the survey since it began looking at the situation in Scotland in October 2020.
  • More survivors of rape and modern-day slavery in England and Wales will be able to give video evidence pre-recorded outside a live trial. Under the measure known as section 28, survivors can apply to the court to be cross-examined in front of a limited number of people. It will then be played during the live trial, removing the need for them to attend in person.
  • Labour’s shadow home secretary, Yvette Cooper, criticised the government over delays in processing visas for Ukrainians fleeing conflict. She called on the government to “urgently publish” more information to show the progress of the visa scheme.
  • Leaked emails suggest that the Conservative peer Michelle Mone lobbied a health minister on behalf of a company seeking Covid contracts – five months after the point at which her lawyers said she had stopped doing anything for the firm.

Labour’s shadow home secretary, Yvette Cooper, criticised the government over delays in processing visas for Ukrainians fleeing conflict.

Calling on the government to “urgently publish” more information to show the progress of the visa scheme, Cooper said:

A month after Putin’s invasion began, the continuing delays and problems with the Home Office visa processes for Ukrainian families are just shameful.

The British people have shown huge generosity in wanting to support Ukrainians fleeing Putin’s invasion but the design of this scheme is causing real problems with continuing delays, huge confusion about how to make it work and safeguarding concerns.

She added:

Warm words from ministers about helping Ukrainian families just aren’t good enough if their system just isn’t working.

Weekly Covid cases in UK increase by 1m, figures show

The number of coronavirus infections across the UK rose by an estimated 1m cases compared with the previous week, with figures in Scotland at a record high, data from the Office for National Statistics has revealed.

According to the latest information from the ONS, based on swabs collected from randomly selected households, an estimated 9% of the population in Scotland had Covid in the week ending 20 March – about one in 11 people. The figure is the highest recorded by the survey since it began looking at the situation in Scotland in October 2020.

Infection levels also increased in England and Wales, although they decreased slightly in Northern Ireland, with data revealing that about one in 16 people in England had Covid in the most recent week, compared with one in 20 the week before, a rise from about 2,653,200 to 3,485,700 people.

The national Covid memorial wall on London’s South Bank
The national Covid memorial wall on London’s South Bank Photograph: Tolga Akmen/AFP/Getty Images

The figure is just shy of the all-time high for England, when about 1 in 15 were estimated to have Covid in the week between Christmas and New Year’s Eve last year, at the height of the Omicron wave.

Experts have suggested that the recent surge in infection levels in the UK is due to a number of factors, including the lifting of Covid restrictions to various degrees across the UK, changes in behaviour, waning immunity after the booster programme, and – crucially – the rise of the BA.2 variant, which appears to be more transmissible than the earlier form of Omicron.

“The percentage of people with infections compatible with the Omicron BA.2 variant increased in England, Wales and Scotland and decreased in Northern Ireland,” the ONS report states.

Conservative leaders insist they are on track for strong results in local elections across England, predicting they will seize control of one of Labour’s longest-held councils, despite many admitting more should be done to ease the “nightmare” of soaring bills.

More than a million people are expected to be pushed into absolute poverty after Rishi Sunak’s mini-budget, which has attracted heavy criticism from experts and Tory backbenchers.

However, Tory leaders outside London said they did not believe the party would be punished at the polls on 5 May, when local elections take place in England, Wales and Scotland. Elections for the Northern Ireland assembly will take place on the same day.

Tory strategists have set their sights on taking control of Sunderland city council for the first time in its 48-year history, in what would represent a headline-grabbing victory for Boris Johnson and a serious blow for Keir Starmer.

Antony Mullen, the leader of the Conservatives in Sunderland, said it was “probably likely” that Labour would lose control of the council in six weeks, despite conceding that the chancellor could have done more to protect voters from the cost of living crisis.

“One area where it would be good to have seen more would be an increase to universal credit,” he said.

Any intervention he does make will have to be targeted at those who need it most, but when that category of people is widening considerably it becomes an almost unmanageable problem. I wouldn’t be surprised if in April there is more intervention.

Patrick Harley, the Conservative leader of Dudley council, said he was confident the party would make gains, with 24 seats up for grabs in the former “red wall” stronghold.

Officials from the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT) met with P&O this afternoon to discuss the sacking of 800 British crew.

In a statement, RMT said from “the outset the full obnoxiousness and hostility of the company” towards their staff and union officials was “on display”.

It said:

P&O were not prepared to listen to any scenario or develop any idea that would provide a means to create a solution to the current disastrous situation.

The meeting “broke up inside 20 minutes” as the company was “simply unprepared to change their course” from the illegal dismissal of 800 seafarers, it said.

RMT will continue to press the government for an immediate intervention by whatever means necessary to make P&O perform a U-turn and get our members reinstated, as per Transport Secretary Grant Shapps’ statement on BBC this morning.

We also call on the entire labour movement, the public, the freight & logistics sector and the political community to support an immediate and total boycott of all P&O services.

The people of the UK need to pull P&O to account and make sure that the law in the workplace is upheld, that British workers can have job security and decent pay, and that P&O workers get workplace justice.

The UK transport secretary, Grant Shapps, met the DP World boss Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem last November and told him that he was “aware of the issues at P&O Ferries” but recognised “you will need to make commercial decisions”, according to official minutes of the meeting.

The revelation raises further questions about whether Shapps could have acted to head off the mass sackings last week at the Dubai-owned ferry operator.

On Monday, Shapps told the Commons that “the first I heard about it was at 8.30 in the [Wednesday] evening, not through the memo, which I did not see, but instead through communication with my private office to indicate that P&O would be making redundancies the next day”.

Shapps said he expected P&O Ferries to consult on more redundancies rather than instigate mass sackings.

The Department for Transport minutes show Bin Sulayem welcomed Shapps to DP World’s pavilion at the Dubai Expo on 22 November. During the face-to-face encounter, the sultan warned Shapps:

In respect of our ferry business, there’s a new low-cost competitor from Irish Ferries. This poses challenges in respect of P&O’s operations. We kept ferries operating during the height of the pandemic to support movement of people and goods.

Shapps thanked Bin Sulayem and told him:

I’m aware of the issues relating to P&O. I recognise you will need to make commercial decisions, but please do keep us informed.

Johnson and Xi have 'frank and candid discussion' about Ukraine crisis

Following on from an earlier confirmation by Downing Street that Boris Johnson held a 50-minute call with the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, we now have a readout from No 10.

Johnson had a “frank and candid discussion” with Xi about a “range of issues of mutual interest” including the situation in Ukraine, it said.

Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, U.S. President Joe Biden, Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz, and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson
Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, U.S. President Joe Biden, Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz, and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson pose for a G7 leaders’ family photo during a Nato summit on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, during which Nato leaders urged Beijing to “abstain” from supporting Russia’s war effort Photograph: Henry Nicholls/Reuters
Russian President Vladimir Putin meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing, China February 4, 2022.
Russian President Vladimir Putin meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing, China February 4, 2022. Photograph: SPUTNIK/Reuters

Here’s the readout in full:

The Prime Minister spoke to China’s President Xi Jinping earlier today.

The Prime Minister expressed again his sympathy with the victims of the flight that crashed in China last week.

President Xi asked the Prime Minister to convey his best wishes to Her Majesty the Queen on her Jubilee.

The leaders discussed a range of issues of mutual interest – including the situation in the Ukraine.

It was a frank and candid conversation lasting almost an hour. They agreed to speak again soon.

More rape survivors allowed to pre-record evidence in England and Wales

More survivors of rape and modern-day slavery in England and Wales will be able to give video evidence pre-recorded outside a live trial in a step ministers hope will boost confidence in the criminal justice system.

Under the measure known as section 28, survivors can apply to the court to be cross-examined in front of a limited number of people, to reduce the stress of giving evidence. It will then be played during the live trial, removing the need for them to attend in person.

On Friday, the government announced that the provision, already available in a limited number of crown courts, would be expanded to north-east England with the intention of introducing it countrywide as soon as practicable.

Dame Vera Baird QC, the victims’ commissioner for England and Wales, said: “The rollout of section 28 to more courts is a positive move that will help to reduce unnecessary stress and trauma for more victims, and I’m pleased to see this work gather momentum.”

The failure to secure more convictions in rape cases has led to accusations that the offence has effectively been decriminalised. Office for National Statistics figures published in January showed that in the 12 months to September 2021, only 1.3% of the 63,136 rape offences recorded by police resulted in a suspect being charged.

The section 28 provision is already available at Liverpool, Leeds, Kingston upon Thames, Harrow, Isleworth, Wood Green and Durham crown courts. The government said it would be extended to York, Grimsby, Hull, Bradford and Teesside in the coming weeks.

Wednesday’s spring statement “does nothing” to support the incomes for low-earning and out-of-work people in Britain, the Resolution Foundation said.

It listed three case studies of how the mini-budget would affect a single parent working 20 hours a week, a couple working full-time at median wage and a single out-of-work person – all examples of people who would “lose out”, it said.

The chancellor had promised to support families through the cost of living crisis, the Resolution Foundation said.

But his failure to deliver means absolute poverty is expected to rise by 1.3 million people next year - including 500,000 children.

It said typical household incomes are forecast to fall by 2% across the parliament as a whole, making this parliament “the worst on record for living standards”.

Updated

Following on from the last post, the Department for Transport has said that in a meeting with the chief executive of DP World in November, Grant Shapps was not told about any planned redundancies.

Following the release of the minutes by the Commons Transport Committee, a DfT spokesperson said: “DP World did not mention to the Transport Secretary any changes it would be making to P&O Ferries and there was no indication of the completely unacceptable changes it has subsequently made.”

The chief executive of DP World – the parent company of P&O Ferries – warned the Transport Secretary about a new “low-cost competitor” that would pose a challenge to the business in a meeting in November, newly-published minutes have revealed.

The minutes of a meeting between Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem and Grant Shapps have been published by the Commons Transport Committee, PA Media reports.

In the record of the meeting, the DP World boss told Shapps that Irish Ferries had emerged as a “new low-cost competitor” and added: “This poses challenges in respect of P&O’s operations.”

He said the company was making “a significant amount of income from the passenger side of our business”, but “the margins are so tight on the cargo side”.

Shapps is reported to have said: “I’m aware of the issues relating to P&O. I recognise you will need to make commercial decisions, but please do keep us informed.”

Updated

Anoosheh Ashoori ‘angry’ at government over detention

Anoosheh Ashoori, one of the British-Iranian detainees released by Tehran last week, accused Boris Johnson of “opportunism” and of ignoring his wife’s pleas to meet about his case while he was foreign secretary.

Ashoori, 68, from south London, was arrested in August 2017 while visiting his elderly mother in Tehran and jailed for 10 years on charges of spying for Israel.

Speaking to Sky News in an interview broadcast last night, Ashoori said Johnson, who was foreign secretary when he was detained, ignored his wife’s pleas to meet about his case.

She made many attempts and all of them were unsuccessful.

Johnson had now sent them a letter and was “eager to see us”, he said. “I think that it’s a bit of opportunism,” he said.

Ashoori revealed that he had sent a voice message to the PM while he was detained.

I was blaming those who had captured us, I was blaming the British government, why don’t you do anything about it?

I was really angry and that’s why I decided to send that voice message hoping that it would make a change.

Updated

The government has revised its Russian sanctions guidance to make clear that British entities cannot help Moscow sell off its gold reserves in an attempt to evade the punitive measures.

The online guidance was updated today, with the following summary:

Guidance updated to clarify that the prohibition on providing financial services for the purposes of foreign exchange reserve and asset management also applies to transactions involving gold.

It is prohibited to provide financial services to carry out transactions with the Central Bank of the Russian Federation involving its gold.

From Reuters’ William James:

Updated

Covid rates still increasing in most of UK, ONS says

According to the Office for National Statistics, Covid rates were continuing to increase in England, Scotland and Wales last week. Rates have decreased in Northern Ireland, however.

The ONS coronavirus infection survey, which is regarded as the most reliable guide to the prevalence of Covid, because it involves testing people randomly, regardless of whether or not they have symptoms, has published these estimates for the spread of coronavirus in the four nations last week.

England: One person in 16 (equivalent to around 3,485,700 people)

Wales: One person in 16 (equivalent to around 192,900 people)

Northern Ireland: One person in 17 (equivalent to around 108,700 people)

Scotland: One person in 11 (equivalent to around 473,800 people)

PM backs calls for P&O Ferries boss to resign over mass sackings

Asked if the prime minister supported a call by the transport secretary, Grant Shapps, for P&O Ferries chief executive, Peter Hebblethwaite, to resign, a No 10 spokesperson replied: “Yes.”

P&O Ferries chief Peter Hebblethwaite answering questions in front of the Transport Committee and Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Select Committee in the House of Commmons on Thursday.
P&O Ferries chief Peter Hebblethwaite answering questions in front of the Transport Committee and Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Select Committee in the House of Commmons on Thursday. Photograph: House of Commons/PA

Shapps has called for Hebblethwaite to quit over the sacking of 800 workers, describing his performance in front of MPs on Thursday as “brazen, breathtaking, and showed incredible arrogance”.

Updated

Downing Street has confirmed that Boris Johnson spoke with the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, this morning to discuss the war in Ukraine.

The call lasted around 50 minutes, a spokesperson for the PM said, adding:

Obviously, the Prime Minister has been talking with a lot of world leaders and quite regularly throughout the course of what has happened in Ukraine.

This is part of the Prime Minister’s wider engagement with world leaders so he can set out our position on where we think the current situation is.

Paul Kissack, chief executive of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, writes for us today that the UK’s poorest people have been utterly abandoned by Rishi Sunak:

I can’t recall a worse fiscal event than Wednesday’s spring statement.

It had nothing meaningful to say on the big strategic challenges our economy faces. According to the prime minister, levelling up is the defining mission of this government. The chancellor couldn’t bring himself to even mention it. There was similarly nothing to learn about net zero or the UK’s productivity challenge.

It was fiscally incoherent. Even the mild-mannered Institute for Fiscal Studies was left shouting “Oh for goodness sake” at the news that Sunak is raising national insurance while cutting income tax, increasing taxes on people who work to protect the incomes of those who often don’t, including landlords and wealthy pensioners.

As a set-piece event, it unravelled within hours. Sunak woke on Thursday to a full spread of hostile front pages. During media interviews that morning, he became increasingly rattled and tetchy. He seemed taken aback that so many of the questions put to him focused on those who will struggle most to bear the cost of living crisis.

This should not have come as a surprise. The rising cost of essentials affects us all, but not equally. People on the lowest incomes are at greatest risk, because unavoidable spending on energy and food takes up a higher proportion of their budget than any other group. Already they have nothing to cut back on.

Faced with the greatest threat to living standards for generations, it is impossible to justify the decision to leave almost everyone at the sharp end of the crisis out in the cold. Rather than strengthen the support available, he chose to cut benefits in real terms, leaving households in poverty £445 out of pocket for the year ahead; 600,000 more people will be pulled into poverty by this decision. Around a quarter of them are children.

Read more here:

‘Sunak woke on Thursday to a full spread of hostile front pages. During media interviews that morning, he became increasingly rattled and tetchy.’
‘Sunak woke on Thursday to a full spread of hostile front pages. During media interviews that morning, he became increasingly rattled and tetchy.’ Photograph: Simon Walker Hm Treasury

YouGov has published the latest results from its Westminster voting intention poll.

The latest figures show a two-point gap between Labour and the Conservatives, with Labour now holding 37% of the vote (+1 from their previous survey on 22 - 23 March) to the Conservatives’ 35% share.

Elsewhere, the Liberal Democrats have 10% of the vote (+1), while the Greens have 7% (-1) and Reform UK have 4% of the vote (-1).

The former head of the Civil Service and ex-national security adviser, Lord Sedwill, has called for the dismantling of Russia’s covert intelligence networks across Nato countries.

Lord Sedwill told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme:

Personally I would like to see the sanctions continue to toughen.

We’ve seen more action on economic sanctions announced over the past couple of days, but after the Salisbury attack here for example, we completely dismantled the Russian covert intelligence capability in the UK, others did diplomatic expulsions, but I think across the Alliance we could do that.

Countries should expel undeclared Russian intelligence officers “masquerading as diplomats or businesspeople” who were preparing cyber attacks, trying to “subvert our systems” or break the sanctions imposed on Russia, he added.

On BBC Question Time last night, an audience member expressed her “disappointment” in the government for knowing “the cost of everything and value of nothing”.

The audience member, who said she had voted for the government, said:

I can’t tell you how disappointed I am with your government. I just, I really can’t express in words, the mess you’ve made.

I sat through the pandemic and I watched money being haemorrhaged away. Money that we could well do with now.

The government was “out of touch”, she continued.

You’re dealing in millions and millions and trillions of pounds. You know the cost of everything and the value of nothing.

I don’t know what to say to you other than just a lot of you, just go. Just go.

And this is from someone that voted for you. What a disappointment you are.

Boris Johnson has suggested Vladimir Putin could be defeated in Russia’s war against Ukraine.

Speaking in a rare interview with BBC Newsnight, the PM praised Ukraine’s “Churchillian” leader, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, and said: “I think Ukraine can certainly win.”

There’s a sense in which Putin has already failed or lost because I think that he had literally no idea that the Ukrainians were going to mount the resistance that they are, and he totally misunderstood what Ukraine is.

And far from extinguishing Ukraine as a nation, he is solidifying it.

Asked what it meant that his position had been saved by the invasion, Johnson said he “of course” welcomes tough questions over his involvement in the partygate saga as he said such probing would not be allowed in Putin’s Russia.

I think what it says is that we’re very lucky to live in a country where journalists can quite properly go hard on this sort of question, this sort of issue, because I can tell you, Nick, that is not what happens in Vladimir Putin’s Russia, and it’s certainly something that we want to make sure continues to happen in Ukraine.

Asked if he would therefore welcome tough questions about partygate, where numerous parties were allegedly held across Whitehall during Covid restrictions, he replied:

Yes, of course. That is what it’s all about. And it’s about...and I mean it quite seriously.

Updated

Tory peer lobbied for PPE firm months after lawyers said she had stopped, leaked emails suggest

Leaked emails suggest that the Conservative peer Michelle Mone lobbied a health minister on behalf of a company seeking Covid contracts – five months after the point at which her lawyers said she had stopped doing anything for the firm.

The documents add to questions surrounding Lady Mone’s account of her involvement in PPE Medpro, which was awarded government contracts worth more than £200m to supply personal protective equipment early in the pandemic.

Several months later, according to the leaked emails, Mone was trying to help PPE Medpro secure a lucrative contract to supply the government with Covid-19 antigen tests.

Mone has repeatedly sought to distance herself from PPE Medpro, whose business she first recommended to the government in early May 2020. When Mone’s referral of May 2020 became public, she said her involvement in the company went no further than a single recommendation to the then Cabinet Office minister Theodore Agnew.

However, emails seen by the Guardian from October 2020 suggest that Mone was by that point still promoting the company, which was selling Covid tests.

My colleague David Conn has the story.

On the subject of Ukraine, the latest Ministry of Defence intelligence update says Ukrainian forces have reoccupied towns and defensive positions up to 35 kilometres east of the capital, Kyiv.

The intelligence update, published this morning, continues:

Ukrainian Forces are likely to continue to attempt to push Russian Forces back along the north-western axis from Kyiv towards Hostomel Airfield.

In the south of Ukraine Russian Forces are still attempting to circumvent Mykolaiv as they look to drive west towards Odesa with their progress being slowed by logistic issues and Ukrainian resistance.

The Home Office says 20,100 visas have been issued under the Ukraine family scheme as of 5pm on Thursday.

So far 35,500 applications have been submitted, according to provisional data published on the department’s website, PA news agency reports.

The UK’s resettlement scheme for those fleeing Ukraine has been branded a “disgrace” by one Briton working in Lviv helping applicants through the process.

Andrew Murray, a technology worker from north-east Scotland, said ministers’ claims about the success of the visa programme that is meant to allow charities, businesses or companies to sponsor a refugee “does not match the reality on the ground”.

Murray said:

The rhetoric stops at the border of Ukraine and does not penetrate where it’s needed.

Speaking from Lviv, Murray said Ukrainians were “very grateful” for all the military equipment supplied by Britain to help fend off Russian forces.

But he added:

They’re under no illusion that the UK has made it artificially difficult to seek sanctuary there.

My colleague Aubrey Allegretti has the story.

People who fled the war in Ukraine rest inside an indoor sports stadium being used as a refugee center, in the village of Medyka, a border crossing between Poland and Ukraine.
People who fled the war in Ukraine rest inside an indoor sports stadium being used as a refugee center, in the village of Medyka, a border crossing between Poland and Ukraine. Photograph: Petros Giannakouris/AP

Here’s more from the former Labour prime minister, Gordon Brown, speaking to BBC Breakfast about Wednesday’s spring statement.

Brown accused Rishi Sunak of missing out millions of people who are “facing real hardship” in his budget statement.

He said:

Any comparing and compassionate chancellor would want to do something about this level of fuel poverty.

There was a blank page in his budget statement this week and it missed out millions of people who are facing real hardship.

The former PM said parents in Fife are battling to keep their children warm at night.

I’ve seen poverty when we’ve had unemployment and I’ve seen poverty when I was growing up in a mining town, and I haven’t seen anything as bad as this, and therefore there’s an urgency about the chancellor acting.

This is something that he cannot turn his back away from.

Updated

Gordon Brown says rising cost of living is 'an emergency'

The former Labour prime minister, Gordon Brown, has warned that families will face a cost of living crisis that “no chancellor, no government should be prepared to accept”.

Speaking to BBC Breakfast, Brown said:

This is an emergency. It’s a cost of living crisis. You cannot ignore the needs of people who are having to choose between putting the heating up and feeding the meter and feeding the children.

That is simply not an acceptable situation.

He added:

We cannot allow this. We’ve got food banks, we’ve now got baby banks, we got clothes banks, and now what we’ve got in Fife here is effectively a bedding bank.

MPs accuse DfE of failing to control academy leaders’ excessive salaries

The government has failed to get a handle on excessive salaries paid to academy trust leaders, according to parliament’s spending watchdog.

According to a report by the Commons public accounts committee, the number of academy trusts paying at least one senior staff member more than £100,000 went up from 1,875 in 2019-20 to 2,245 the following year.

The committee criticised the use of tens of millions of pounds in public money to “prop up” poorly managed trusts in its report on the sector, which was published on Friday just days before the DfE is expected to unveil plans to extend its academies programme to eventually include all schools in England.

MPs on the committee said the sector’s lack of financial transparency undermined parents’ capacity to hold school leaders and the DfE to account, both for their use of public funds and the education they provide.

They also accused the DfE of not yet having a sufficient handle on excessive pay within the sector, which meant the department could not assess whether public funds were being well spent. The committee said using public money to prop up academy trusts in difficulty failed to address poor financial management within trusts.

The report said:

We are concerned that there is a risk that a trust becomes too big to fail and could therefore see large sums of public funds being pumped into it to keep it afloat.

At the other end of the scale, there were fears that small schools in rural areas – which may be less attractive to trusts – could become “orphaned”.

My colleague Sally Weale has the story.

The DfE is expected to extend its academies programme to eventually include all schools in England.
The DfE is expected to extend its academies programme to eventually include all schools in England. Photograph: Ben Birchall/PA

Grant Shapps says P&O Ferries boss should quit after ‘brazen’ mass sackings

Good morning. The transport secretary, Grant Shapps, has called for the chief executive of P&O Ferries to resign over the sacking of 800 workers and pledged to force the ferry company to reverse the move and pay its crew the minimum wage.

On Thursday, Peter Hebblethwaite admitted to MPs that his company broke the law by sacking the 800 workers without consultation, a performance Shapps described as “brazen, breathtaking, and showed incredible arrogance”.

Speaking to Sky News, Shapps said:

I cannot believe that he can stay in that role having admitted to deliberately going out and using a loophole – well, break the law – but also use a loophole.

They flagged their ships through Cyprus [which meant they] avoided having to tell anybody about this, or they felt they did. And even though they know they’ve broken the law, what they’ve done is to pay people off in such a way to try and buy their silence. It’s unacceptable.

My colleague Matthew Weaver has the story here.

Shapps also accused P&O Ferries of attempting to “buy silence” from its staff over the mass sackings, telling BBC Radio 4’s Today programme:

What they’ve done is paid off - or attempted to pay off - their staff with higher redundancy payments... and therefore buy their silence.

We cannot have a situation where laws are being creatively used, or abused in this case, in order to get around what Parliament has very clearly intended to do. We have a (National) Minimum Wage Act.

Shapps pledged new legislation next week that will force the company to pay workers minimum wage, adding that he had spoken to shadow transport secretary Louise Haigh and believed there was “very, very broad parliamentary agreement” that new legislation was needed.

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