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    Home»Politics»Tories say Starmer has a ‘disconnect from reality’ over housing asylum seekers – UK politics live | Politics
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    Tories say Starmer has a ‘disconnect from reality’ over housing asylum seekers – UK politics live | Politics

    By Liam PorterJuly 23, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
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    Tories say Starmer has a ‘disconnect from reality’ over housing asylum seekers – UK politics live | Politics
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    Key events

    James Cleverly has said Angela Rayner’s comment about social cohesion “rings a bit hollow” because of her participation in Black Lives Matter (BLM) protests.

    The deputy prime minister said in a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday that immigration, time spent online and economic insecurity were having a “profound impact on society”.

    The shadow housing secretary told Sky News: “I think she makes a very good point, and I think she’s echoed things that Conservatives have said for a while. I think it rings a bit hollow when she was one of the people that took the knee during the BLM protest.

    “She, the Labour party, the prime minister, have jumped on every bandwagon that’s come along, and they have spent so much time seeming to be on the side of the people who don’t play by the rules, who jump the queue, who abuse the system.

    “And now that they’re in government, she is saying, ‘Oh, well, I think you know, society is fracturing’, seemingly blind to the role the Labour party have played in driving wedges between communities.”

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    Rajeev Syal

    Len McCluskey, the former head of Unite, accepted private jet flights and football tickets arranged by the company building a multimillion pound hotel for the union, according to an internal dossier.

    The Flanagan Group, which is run by friends of McCluskey, overcharged Unite by at least £30m for the Birmingham hotel and conference centre project, the interim report said.

    It also found that McCluskey “overruled” advice from staff and the union’s lawyers in signing the construction contract with the Flanagan Group.

    Unite’s report said the flights and tickets were “consistently organised and paid for by” the company and there was “no indication” that McCluskey later reimbursed them.

    He denied he had overruled staff or lawyers. The Flanagan Group did not respond to requests from the BBC and the Guardian for comment.

    McCluskey, who was Unite’s general secretary between 2010 and 2021, was a key player in the labour movement and the leading financial backer of Jeremy Corbyn when Corbyn was Labour leader.

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    Meanwhile, James Cleverly has said he will not shadow Angela Rayner in her role as deputy prime minister.

    He told ITV’s Good Morning Britain:

    I’m the shadow housing secretary. In opposition, structures are different and requirements are different.

    And in terms of deputy prime minister, I think that’s a job title, rather than a job – an excuse to have an even more bloated Civil Service hierarchy at the centre of Westminster.

    And I think that is a reflection on how Angela Rayner has very successfully outmanoeuvred Keir Starmer at every turn, and has accumulated authority and power at the heart of government.

    And I don’t, I don’t feel the need to shadow that cumbersome bureaucracy.

    My job is about highlighting her failure and the Labour government’s failure to deliver on their promise to the British people, which is to build homes that British people can live in.

    He called Rayner “formidable” and said he looks forward to “sparring with her”.

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    Cleverly says Starmer has a ‘disconnect from reality’ over housing asylum seekers

    Hello and welcome to the UK politics live blog.

    Newly-appointed shadow housing secretary James Cleverly has criticised the prime minister for a “disconnect from reality” when it comes to housing asylum seekers.

    The Tory MP and former home secretary said asylum hotels are being reopened and that more asylum seekers are likely to be sent to an accommodation centre in his own constituency of Braintree.

    “The government has lost control,” he told LBC.

    “And to add insult to injury, we saw the prime minister at the Liaison Committee just this week blithely saying, oh, there are plenty of houses for asylum seekers, when there are people all over the country struggling to get on the housing ladder, and that complete disconnect from reality, I think, is driving a lot of frustrations.

    “There is never an excuse for rioting, and I’ll make that absolutely clear, but the government really is making a difficult situation significantly worse.”

    He said that people who live close to facilities housing asylum seekers are “typically well behaved” but that there are “agitators, both of the left and the right, imposing themselves on local communities to try and play out a political agenda, and local people are caught in the crossfire”.

    The government should be seen to be “on the side of the people who play by the rules, rather than on the side of the people who abuse the system, jump the queue and try and exploit our hospitality,” he said.

    In other news:

    • Angela Rayner urged the government to acknowledge people’s “real concerns” and flagged high levels of deprivation where the worst riots erupted last summer nearly a year on from the disorder. The deputy prime minister told Cabinet colleagues that immigration and increasing time spent online are having a “profound impact on society”.

    • Edward Argar has stepped down as shadow health secretary, which he said was on the advice of his doctors after a “health scare” earlier this summer. He will be replaced by Stuart Andrew, a former minister who has been shadow culture minister.

    • Kevin Hollinrake, who had been shadow housing and communities secretary, will become party chair. He takes over from Nigel Huddleston, who will be the new shadow culture secretary.

    • Conservative Senedd member Laura Anne Jones has joined Reform UK, becoming the party’s first Member of the Senedd (MS).

    • The UK government borrowed more than expected in June amid speculation the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, will need to raise taxes at the autumn budget to repair the public finances. Figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed public sector net borrowing rose to £20.7bn, up by £6.6bn from the same month a year earlier to reach the second-highest June borrowing figure since monthly records began in 1993.

    • Artificial intelligence technology will be trialled to assess disputed ages of asylum seekers who say they are children, the Home Office has said. Ministers hope to roll out facial age estimation for migrants arriving by small boats and lorries over 2026, subject to further testing of the technology to go ahead this year.

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    Liam Porter
    • Website

    Liam Porter is a seasoned news writer at Core Bulletin, specializing in breaking news, technology, and business insights. With a background in investigative journalism, Liam brings clarity and depth to every piece he writes.

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