Farage’s deportation plans and ‘Taylor to wed Travis’







































A RIGGING row has erupted after Labour rebuffed Nigel Farage’s demand for Reform representation in the House of Lords.
The Brexiteer has no peers in the upper chamber and asked Sir Keir Starmer to grant some.
He sent a letter to the PM — who has ultimate say over appointments — arguing the “seismic shifts” in British politics merits some Reform seats.
Although they have just four MPs, Mr Farage’s party is leading national opinion polls.
He has in the past called for the Lords to be replaced with an elected chamber akin to that in the US.
Mr Farage said: “Whilst Reform UK believes in a reformed House of Lords, the time has come to address the democratic disparity there.”
But Defence Secretary John Healey told LBC: “This is the same Nigel Farage that called for the abolition of the House of Lords and now wants to fill it with his cronies.
“I’m not sure Parliament is going to benefit from more Putin apologists like Farage.”
While PMs technically have the final say on House of Lords appointments, they grant opposition parties some peers.
When Sir Keir nominated 30 Labour lords in December, he allowed six Tories to be elevated to the upper legislature.
Hitting back at Mr Healey’s remarks, Reform deputy Richard Tice last night accused Labour of not playing fair.
Denying they were “Putin apologists”, he told The Sun: “It’s a democratic outrage and another old-fashioned establishment stitch-up. They are essentially rigging the system against the new party, changing the rules of the game.”
In his letter, Mr Farage noted Lib Dems have 76 peers but received 600,000 fewer votes than Reform last year.
Sir Keir previously pledged to abolish the Lords but he is not expected to carry out plans before the next election.
Reform UK has said it will fully reinstate winter fuel payments to pensioners and scrap the two-child benefit cap, if the party gets into government.
The commitments – to be unveiled at a press conference next week – come after Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer faced pressure from Labour MPs to change his approach to both policies.
By the time of the next general election there may be no need to reverse either policy.
Sir Keir has already announced plans to ease cuts to winter fuel payments – without saying when or how.
And ministers say he has privately indicated he would like if possible to find a way to scrap the two-child benefit cap – although a formal decision may be many months away.
The intervention by Nigel Farage – first reported in the Sunday Telegraph – will highlight and magnify the increasingly awkward divisions over policy within Labour.
Reform UK said they would pay for their new polices by cutting net zero projects and scrapping hotels for asylum seekers.
A source told the paper it was “already outflanking Labour” on both issues.
Downing Street has been contacted for comment.
More than 10 million pensioners lost out on winter fuel payments, worth up to £300, when the pension top-up became restricted to only people receiving pension credit last year.
But Sir Keir has announced plans to ease the cuts in a U-turn following mounting political pressure in recent weeks.
The prime minster said the policy would be changed at the autumn Budget, adding ministers would only “make decisions we can afford”. He did not lay out exactly what this would entail.
The winter fuel payment is a lump sum of £200 a year for households with a pensioner under 80, or £300 for households with a pensioner over 80.
On the two-child benefit cap, the Observer reported Sir Keir had privately backed plans to scrap it.
The paper’s report that the PM was asking the Treasury to find ways to pay for it came alongside growing unrest and threats of rebellion among backbench Labour MPs.
The policy – which prevents most families from claiming means-tested benefits for any third or additional children born after April 2017 – was introduced in 2017 by the then-Conservative government and is estimated to affect 1.5 million families.
But the government’s child poverty strategy, which had been due for publication in the spring, has been delayed as it is still being worked on and measures including scrapping the cap are being considered.
Labour MPs have long been calling for it to be axed, with seven of them suspended from the parliamentary party for voting against the government on an amendment to do so.
Four were readmitted in February but the remainder continue to sit as independent MPs.
Pressure to remove the limit has remained on the government from senior Labour figures, including former Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who said it was “condemning children to poverty”.