Ed Davey says Badenoch ‘doing more to defend Vance than US doing to defend Ukraine’
Ed Davey, the Lib Dem leader, has attacked Kemi Badenoch for her defence of JD Vance. He posted this on Bluesky.
Right now, Kemi Badenoch is doing more to defend JD Vance than the US is doing to defend Ukraine.
Davey made a very similar point yesterday.
In the Economist this week Bagehot argues that being leader of the Liberal Democrats has become the easiest job in British politics and he argues that in part this is because the Tories keep defending a deeply unpopular Trump administration. The Badenoch/JD Vance comments are just the latest example. Bagehot says:
When it comes to international affairs, the Lib Dems can take the easy, popular and right option. Donald Trump is reviled in Britain. Labour MPs are hemmed in by diplomatic niceties of government. Conservativism has evolved into brain-dead contrarianism to the point where Elon Musk, one of Mr Trump’s wingmen, calling for Sir Keir Starmer to be jailed over his handling of grooming gangs attracted little condemnation from the party’s MPs. Sir Ed [Davey] was one of the few British politicians able to say that a megalomaniac billionaire demanding the prime minister be sent to jail was, in fact, not on.
Key events
-
Andy Burnham says ‘snobbery in education’ persists, at launch of report about relative outcomes for boys worsening
-
Ed Davey says Badenoch ‘doing more to defend Vance than US doing to defend Ukraine’
-
John Swinney says he is ‘troubled’ by reports saying Reeves will cut billions from welfare budget
-
Starmer confirms government committed to Cornish national minority status
-
Badenoch does not approve of ‘Twitter pile-ons’ against Vance, her spokesperson says
-
PMQs – snap verdict
-
Starmer tells MPs 642 Britons died fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, in implicit rebuke to JD Vance
-
Starmer faces Badenoch at PMQs
-
Rishi Sunak says it’s ‘ridiculous’ to say he isn’t, or can’t be, English
-
Liberal Democrats call for vote on motion that could force government to publish its assessment of aid cuts
-
Starmer may return to Washington with Macron and Zelenskyy to meet Trump, French government says
-
Intelligence sharing with US could become ‘more difficult’ because of views of people in Trump administration, peers told
-
Nicholas Soames says Trump team ‘despise Europe’ and he fears ‘things are going to go dreadfully wrong’
-
Shadow business secretary Andrew Griffith praises Trump and Elon Musk for their ‘dynamism’
-
Under Trump UK now has to think what would happen if US left Nato, or stopped nuclear cooperation, ex-ambassador tells peers
-
Former ambassadors to Washington give evidence to peers about relations with US
-
Mahmood says court backlog will ‘still go up’ even though more sitting days announced
-
Robert Jenrick dismisses crime bill as ‘gimmick’ after analysis says it will only lead to small rise in prison population
-
‘Stop the boats’ slogan was ‘too stark’, admits Rishi Sunak
-
Shabana Mahmood says welfare budget ‘unsustainable’ amid reports Reeves planning benefit cuts worth billions
Andy Burnham says ‘snobbery in education’ persists, at launch of report about relative outcomes for boys worsening

Jessica Murray
Jessica Murray is a Guardian social affairs correspondent.
Andy Burnham said there’s “a snobbery in education” that prioritises academia over technical skills, and is contributing to a crisis among Britain’s young boys who are experiencing soaring unemployment rates and a drop in earnings.
At the launch of a new report by the Centre for Social Justice which found the gender pay gap has been reversed for young men, who now earn less than their female counterparts, Burnham, the Greater Manchester mayor, called for an overhaul of the education system. He said:
We need an education system that’s built on true parity between academic and technical, with a radically reformed curriculum which is very much about the modern world. We haven’t believed that in this country there’s been a snobbery in education for as long as I’ve been alive, that some things are seen as better than others.
The Lost Boys report found that since the pandemic, the number of males aged 16-24 not in education, employment or training (NEET) has increased by 40%, compared to 7% for females.
Burnham said the education system’s failure to promote and encourage technical skills has meant boys are being left behind, and is having “disastrous consequences”.
He cited the large numbers of males being excluded from schools and placed in pupil referral units. “We shouldn’t be surprised at some of the outcomes that we are seeing,’” he said.
The IPPR (Institute for Public Policy Research), a leftwing thinktank, is urging the government not to adopt a “cuts first” approach to organising the public finances. Responding to the reports today saying Rachel Reeves is going to cut billions from welfare spending in the spring statement (see 9.23am), the IPPR issued this statement from Avnee Morjaria, its associate director for public services.
The world has changed fundamentally since the government took office, and its approach to fiscal policy and the spending review will need to reflect that. Defence spending may yet have to rise further and faster, and the radical policy changes now coming from countries like Germany show the scale of the challenge.
The UK needs a fiscal strategy fit for the volatile world we now find ourselves in. While cuts and savings can fill some immediate gaps in the chancellor’s budget this isn’t a viable strategy for the future.
The cuts that are being trailed today would come with significant risks. Some public services are already in crisis, and further cuts could undermine government commitments on health, education, crime and more. Waiting lists in the NHS are stubbornly high, councils are on the verge of bankruptcy, backlogs in the criminal courts are at record levels and prisons are at bursting point.
Welfare changes could deliver real savings over time by supporting people into work, but a ‘cuts first’ approach is likely to undermine efforts to reform the system and worsen child poverty just as the government sets out its new child poverty strategy. We know that the government will be judged on public services and whether families feel better off – cuts will make both more difficult to achieve.
Here are some of the pictures of PMQs today taken by the Commons’ official photographer.
Ed Davey says Badenoch ‘doing more to defend Vance than US doing to defend Ukraine’
Ed Davey, the Lib Dem leader, has attacked Kemi Badenoch for her defence of JD Vance. He posted this on Bluesky.
Right now, Kemi Badenoch is doing more to defend JD Vance than the US is doing to defend Ukraine.
Davey made a very similar point yesterday.
In the Economist this week Bagehot argues that being leader of the Liberal Democrats has become the easiest job in British politics and he argues that in part this is because the Tories keep defending a deeply unpopular Trump administration. The Badenoch/JD Vance comments are just the latest example. Bagehot says:
When it comes to international affairs, the Lib Dems can take the easy, popular and right option. Donald Trump is reviled in Britain. Labour MPs are hemmed in by diplomatic niceties of government. Conservativism has evolved into brain-dead contrarianism to the point where Elon Musk, one of Mr Trump’s wingmen, calling for Sir Keir Starmer to be jailed over his handling of grooming gangs attracted little condemnation from the party’s MPs. Sir Ed [Davey] was one of the few British politicians able to say that a megalomaniac billionaire demanding the prime minister be sent to jail was, in fact, not on.
Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies thinktank, told the World at One that welfare cuts (see 9.23am) would have to be “radical” to have a significant impact on the public finances.
He said spending on health-related benefits has increased to an “absolutely extraordinary degree” over recent years. He went on:
The potential savings are quite large, because, of course, we’re looking at savings relative to what’s currently projected, and current projections are for continued, fast increases in the amount we’re spending.
But you’re only going to achieve significant or noticeable savings, you’re only going to persuade the OBR [Office for Budget Responsibility], if you’re going to do something really quite radical.
Like, for example, simply making people with certain types of conditions or certain levels of illness not eligible for these benefits. Certainly tinkering with them is not going to do the job.
John Swinney says he is ‘troubled’ by reports saying Reeves will cut billions from welfare budget
John Swinney, Scotland’s first minister, has said he is “troubled” by reports there could be a benefits cut announced by the chancellor later this month. (See 9.23am.)
Speaking to PA Media, Swinney said:
I’m troubled by the reports that are coming out of the UK government about reductions in welfare spending, because I think that will inevitably add to the challenges that are faced by individuals facing vulnerability in our society.
My top priority is to eradicate child poverty and I can’t imagine that will be helped if the UK government is reducing welfare spending into the bargain.
Swinney also called for “an honest debate about public expenditure and taxation”. He said:
I tried to have that during the election campaign, where I pointed out the pressures on the public finances and on our public services, and I have to say neither the Labour or Conservative party were particularly interested in having that honest debate during the election campaign.
But if we want to have a society that’s got good public services, that supports people who face difficulty and a society that can protect itself in the difficult international times that we face just now, we’ve got to have an honest debate about taxation.
Starmer confirms government committed to Cornish national minority status
Keir Starmer told MPs that the government remains committed to national minority status for Cornwall during a St Piran’s Day PMQs
St Piran’s Day, or the Feast of Saint Piran, is the national day of Cornwall, held on 5 March every year.
As PA Media reports, the Cornish people were first recognised as a national minority group in 2014. It means they are classified under the European Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities, the same as the UK’s other Celtic people – the Scots, the Welsh and the Irish.
Perran Moon, Labour MP for Camborne and Redruth, told Starmer that “hundreds of thousands of people in Cornwall and around the world” were today celebrating St Piran’s Day. He went on:
Will the prime minister confirm our government’s commitment to national minority status for Cornwall and will he join me in wishing Cornish folk the world over a very happy St Piran’s Day?
Starmer replied:
Let me wish him, his constituents and everyone in Cornwall a very happy St Piran’s Day.
We do recognise Cornish national minority status, not just the proud language, the history and the culture of Cornwall, but its bright future, and I know that he and Cornish colleagues will continue to be powerful voices for Cornwall.
As PA reports, neither St Piran’s Day nor St David’s Day on 1 March are bank holidays. St George’s Day, celebrated in England on 23 April, is also not a bank holiday.
But people in Northern Ireland and Scotland receive bank holidays to mark patron saints’ feast days – St Patrick’s Day on 17 March and St Andrew’s Day on 30 November.
UPDATE: St Andrew’s Day is more of an optional bank holiday in Scotland, according to this note from the Scottish government.
Badenoch does not approve of ‘Twitter pile-ons’ against Vance, her spokesperson says

Peter Walker
Peter Walker is a senior Guardian political correspondent.
Kemi Badenoch is maintaining her position of seemingly being the only person in UK politics who did not think JD Vance was referring to the UK or France when he disparaged a planned European peace deployment to Ukraine as “20,000 troops from some random country that has not fought a war in 30 or 40 years”.
The US vice president’s comments provoked outrage and criticism from many British politicians, even Nigel Farage, but Badenoch said she believed Vance’s subsequent tweets saying he did not mean either country – although he did not specify which other nations he was referring to.
Speaking after PMQs, the Badenoch’s spokesperson said she did not believe in “inciting Twitter pile-ons on the vice president”. He said: “
The fact is that he didn’t say Britain or France in his original answer, and then when he saw that it was being alleged that he had, he came out and clarified that he wasn’t talking about Britain and France.
Asked who Badenoch thought was being referred to, he replied: “That’s for JD Vance to answer.”
The spokesman confirmed that after the Tory defence spokesman, James Cartlidge, joined the criticism of Vance, the party’s chief whip had told MPs “that views don’t necessarily need to be aired on Twitter”.
He added:
She wants to deal with facts. And what she would say is that when there is a very heightened international diplomacy going on, a sort of Twitter pile-on, on the vice president of our closest ally, is not helping to bring about a peace in Ukraine, which is what we should all be focused on.

Diane Taylor
A majority of British people think government should use money from frozen Russian assets to fund the rebuilding of Ukraine, according to new polling. Three in five Britons (58%) back this approach.
Over 70% of Labour, Conservative and Liberal Democrat voters back this approach, along with 48% of Reform voters.
The polling, conducted by More in Common, on behalf of the research and campaigning organisation Future Advocacy earlier this month, surveyed 2,000 people for their views on how the UK government should finance humanitarian assistance to Ukraine. This follows chancellor Rachel Reeves’ decision to loan more than £2bn of the UK’s approximately £18bn in frozen Russian assets to fund weapons in Ukraine.
Support for using Russian funds to finance humanitarian aid follows the government’s roll-back on international aid last week, which saw the UK’s aid budget slashed to support increased defence spending.
More in Common UK associate director Conleth Burns said:
This polling shows clear public support for using frozen Russian assets to support the UK’s commitments on humanitarian aid to help with the rebuilding of Ukraine. Even after last week’s cut to the aid budget, the public are open to alternative funding avenues for Britain to deliver on its humanitarian commitments to the people of Ukraine.
At the post-PMQs lobby briefing, the PM’s spokesperson would not confirm the Reuters report saying there is a plan for Keir Starmer, President Macron and President Zelenskyy to visit Washington again, together, for talks with President Trump. (See 11.28am.)
Asked about this, the spokesperson said:
What you’ve heard from the prime minister is that we’re actually progressing discussions. We’re working and putting all efforts into progressing a peace deal.
Asked if Starmer might present this to Trump in person, the spokesperson said:
I’m not going to get ahead of that. We’ve said that we will progress these discussions, that includes progressing discussions with the United States – the precise format and choreography of that, I’ll leave to a future date.
PMQs – snap verdict
A united House of Commons is good for a government engaged in a complicated foreign policy negotiation, but bad for parliamentary sketchwriters, political reporters, partisan keyboard warriors and anyone else who thrives on a bit of conflict. For us, that PMQs was largely a quiet affair. The most memorable moment came right at the start, when Keir Starmer took a swipe at JD Vance. (See 12.04pm – I have updated the post with the full quote, but you may need to fresh the page to get the update to appear.) It was very skillfully done. Sometimes effective communication requires saying things bluntly and clearly and sometimes – for example, in dealings with foreign governments that are both powerful and over-sensitive – it is best to convey your message subtly, by implication. That is what Starmer did today. He did not say anything that will rile the vice president. But anyone listening will got the point (from the tone as much as the words) that, in terms of what he thinks about Vance’s comment yesterday, Starmer is on the exactly same page as the glorious Western Australian premier Roger Cook.
Kemi Badenoch used five of her six questions to ask soft questions about Ukraine that were mostly supportive of the government’s position. Starmer completely ignored the most interesting question (which Ed Davey asked too), which is whether or not it’s true that Washington has banned the UK from sharing intelligence with Ukraine. In other respects, what he said did not go much beyond what he told MPs about Ukraine on Monday. At one point he sort of implied that trade talks with the US were about to start (“we did discuss an economic deal and agreed that our teams would indeed sit down rapidly to talk through an economic deal”), but this sounded more like a routine generality than an announcement about 10 negotiators being about to jump on a plane.
There were moments, though, when Badenoch seemed to be suggesting that her support for Starmer’s Ukraine strategy was conditional, and that at some point she might flip. The first came when she asked about the dangers of a “blank cheque” approach.
As the opposition, we support efforts to resolve this conflict, but we cannot write a blank cheque. If British peacekeeping troops in Ukraine were attacked, whether directly or via proxies, we could be drawn into conflict with Russia. Can the prime minister reassure all those who are concerned about the UK being drawn into war?
And the second came when she said she was opposed to Europe going it alone.
We need to make sure that America does not disengage. There are some in this house who argue Europe should go it alone. But does he agree with me that without this country’s greatest ally, any peace agreement would place a terrible burden on Britain and our taxpayers?
Starmer insisted that he, too, did not want to see the UK drawn into war with Russia, and he said he agreed “wholeheartedly” that Europe and the US needed to work together, and so today there was no actual disagreement between the two positions. But was Badenoch hinting that at some point in the future the two parties might disengage? Or is is just that her combative manner means she is incapable of framing questions that don’t sound like disagreement?
We can’t tell at this point, and perhaps she does not know either. No one sensible would be confident predicting how this crisis is going to unfold.
Keir Starmer said 642 Britons died fighting for their country in Afghanistan and Iraq, not 643 as I reported early. I’m sorry for the mistake.
Richard Holden (Con) asks if the government will back his private member’s bill to ban first cousin marriages on Friday, and stop blocking it.
Starmer just says the government has taken its position on the bill.
And that’s the end of PMQs.
Seamus Logan (SNP) asks if Starmer agrees the rights of the fishing industry must be protected in future talks with the EU.
Starmer says he recognises the importance of the fishing industry. He wants to make it ‘more secure, sustainable and economically successful”, he says.
Mike Tapp (Lab) asks Starmer if he agrees a unite Commons will help the government secure peace in Northern Ireland.
Starmer says he is pleased that the Commons has been united, and speaking with one voice.
There was a commotion in the chamber earlier when the Speaker asked an MP to withdraw a comment shouted at Keir Starmer. Jason Groves from the Mail says the offender was Victoria Atkins.
Tory frontbencher Victoria Atkins rapped on the knuckles at #PMQs for shouting ‘that is a lie’ at Starmer when he claimed the Tories are not interested in state education
David Davis (Con) says a coroner found that members of the SAS unlawfully killed four IRA terrorists in Northern Ireland in 1992. But he says he has read the evidence and found nothing to back up this verdict. He says inquests like this do not take evidence from the terrorist leaders.
Starmer says he has not looked at the detail of this case. But he defends the government getting rid of the Legacy Act, saying it was not supported in Northern Ireland.
Richard Foord (Lib Dem) says JD Vance should have more respect for British servicemen who died fighting.
Starmer says we should remember the sacrifice made by members of the armed forces.
Marie Tidball (Lab) asks if the government will stop the presumption that abusive parents should continue to have contact with their children.
Starmer says the family courts should never be used as a tool by abusers. He praises Tidball for her campaigning on this.