Labour MP Vicky Foxcroft has resigned as a whip over the government’s plans to cut disability benefits.
In a letter to the prime minister, Foxcroft said she understood the need to address “the ever-increasing welfare bill” but said cuts to personal independence payments and universal credit should “not be part of the solution”.
She said she had “wrestled with whether I should resign or remain in the government and fight for changes from within. Sadly it now seems that we are not going to get the changes I desperately wanted to see.”
Responding to her letter, a government spokesman said it was fixing a “broken welfare system” that was failing the sick and vulnerable.
“Our principled reforms will ensure those who can work should, that those who want to work are properly supported, and that those with the most severe disabilities and health conditions are protected.”
Earlier this week, the government published its bill, which tightens the criteria people have to meet in order to get personal independence payments (Pips) and cuts the sickness-related element of universal credit.
More than 100 Labour MPs have expressed concern about the bill and the government could face a large rebellion from its own backbenchers when it comes to a vote in a fortnight’s time.
On Wednesday, Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall told the BBC her “door was always open” to colleagues worried about the bill but that ministers were “firm in our convictions”.
Under the current system too many people were being “written off” instead of being given support to find work, she said.
She also argued that claimant levels are rising to unsustainable levels, and figures released this Tuesday found the number of people on Pips had reached a record high of 3.7m.
On Wednesday, impact assessments produced by the government estimated that 370,000 existing Pips claimants in England, Wales and Northern Ireland would lose out under the proposed changes, saving £1.7bn by 2029/30.
A further £1.89bn could be saved from a predicted 430,000 drop in the number of potential future claimants.
Another impact assessment, published in March suggested 250,000 people could be pushed into poverty by the cuts – but ministers said the figure didn’t take account of the £1bn it would spend to help the long-term sick and disabled find work.
As a government whip, Foxcroft would have been expected to persuade reluctant Labour MPs to back the proposed legislation.
The Lewisham North MP said she was quitting because she knew she would “not be able to do the job that is required of me and whip – or indeed vote – for reforms which include cuts to disabled people’s finances”.
She added that she was “incredibly proud to have served as part of the first Labour government in 14 years and hope that ministers will revisit these reforms so that I can continue to support the government in delivering for the people of this country”.
Foxcroft was first elected to her south London constituency in May 2015.
JUST 18 months ago she was flashing her diamond engagement ring on a sun-soaked holiday in Mauritius, toasting a future with the man she called her ‘King’.
But today Lioness Millie Bright is sporting a very different ring on her finger, with her life having seemingly been upended in the space of a week.
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Millie Bright has pulled out of the Euro 2025 tournamentCredit: PA
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She has also split from her fiance Levi CrewCredit: Instagram
It began with her shock withdrawal from the Euro 2025 squad due to not being able to “give 100 per cent mentally or physically” – a decision she admitted was “one of the hardest I’ve ever had to make”.
She’s also been spotted with a new diamond ring on her little finger – though there’s no suggestion it’s an engagement ring.
Meanwhile all mentions of Levi have been swiftly deleted from Chelsea captain Millie’s social media accounts, including that Christmas Day engagement post.
But people who know Millie, 31, are not remotely surprised by this single-minded determination to do what’s right for her.
“Millie is not the type of woman to be troubled by self doubt or regret,” said a source, adding that she makes tough decisions, and sticks to them.
An onlooker said: “Millie’s had a chaotic few weeks with news of her split and pulling out of the England squad. But she’s as tough in real life as she is on the pitch.”
It’s arguably this ruthless, resilient mentality that has got Millie so far in life – going from earning £25 a week in a Yorkshire pit village to a historic victory in the 2022 Euros, leading the women’s national team to the 2023 World Cup final, winning 19 trophies with Chelsea and living in a Surrey mansion worthy of glossy magazine spreads.
Up until recently she shared this immaculate home with Levi, whom she was so devoted to that she proudly displayed a tattoo of his eye on her left arm, along with a tiger because “he gave her core strength through thick and thin”.
England footie ace Millie Bright’s hunky new personal trainer lover revealed as kickboxer dad of SEVEN
She raved about her “perfect kitchen” after it was fitted by high end designers Howdens to include a bespoke pet space under the breakfast bar for her beloved French bulldogs Zeus and Hera, named after Greek gods.
And the garden boasts an Explore ice bath which she uses for her post game ritual.
Millie is thought to have met heavily inked former pro kickboxer and martial arts enthusiast Dave in February.
She joined 21st Century Combat, the gym he co-owns with his wife Katie close to her Surrey mansion, and signed up to his gruelling exercise classes.
There is no suggestion that Millie or Dave cheated on their partners.
Eyes on the prize
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Millie and Levi got engaged on Christmas Day in 2023Credit: Instagram
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Millie’s new love is former pro kickboxer and martial arts enthusiast Dave Zetolofsky, 39Credit: Facebook
From an early age, Millie always had her eyes firmly fixed on the prize.
Growing up among the Derbyshire collieries, little Millie’s childhood was quite idyllic.
She first sat on a horse when she was one, and was riding by the age of three – insisting that horses were her “life rather than a hobby”.
Determined and dedicated, Millie would rise early and be out working in her family’s stable yard by 6am most mornings before school, rain or shine.
She competed every weekend, and the owl Millie has tattooed on her arm is a likeness of the one that flew back to her parents barn every year.
But suddenly, at the age of nine, she decided to sacrifice it all after stumbling across football by accident.
Millie’s had a chaotic few weeks with news of her split and pulling out of the England squad. But she’s as tough in real life as she is on the pitch
Source
Bored while watching a friend train one morning at her local club, Killamarsh Dynamos, she decided to join in the session.
That was the moment everything changed, and from then on Millie’s life revolved around the Dynamos.
Millie was such a key player that the club would later name their pitches after her.
Inevitably she outgrew the Dynamos and a few years later – dressed as one of the mustachioed runners from the 118 118 directory enquiries service for a charity run – she seized the opportunity to introduce herself to Paul Green, then manager of Doncaster Belles.
He recalled that her handshake was so strong that day it took him aback.
Unable to refuse her, her contract was quickly a done deal.
‘Diamond in the rough’
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Millie has won 19 trophies with Chelsea F.C. WomenCredit: Alamy
Another former Doncaster manager, John Buckley, remembers Millie as a diamond in the rough.
“From the minute she came in she was totally involved, a cracking girl,” he said.
Back then women’s football was not the big business it is today, and her wages were just £25 a week.
Undeterred, Millie juggled two part time jobs – working as a fitness instructor and a horse groom at Esberger’s Yard in Todwick – to supplement her meagre income.
In 2019 she recalled in an interview with the BBC how an ankle injury at that time not only robbed her of her earnings from football, but left her claiming benefits because she could not work her two other jobs either.
From the minute she came in she was totally involved, a cracking girl
John BuckleyDoncaster manager
Ever supportive, her parents Nicola and Steve forked out for private surgery and the club paid for her rehabilitation.
“She was always so driven and eventually, she knew what she wanted to do – which was to play professional football,” said Sheila Edmunds, the president of the Doncaster Rovers Belles.
A family friend added: “It was always blood, sweat and tears with Millie, she would play until her entire body hurt.”
As her football career grew more demanding in her teens, Millie was forced to make another tough choice.
She had to abandon the stables for good – and now Millie is barred from horse riding at all by her insurers.
After that of course Millie soared to greater heights and spells in midfield meant she was a direct opponent of England legend Jill Scott, then at Everton.
In one press conference Scott said: “The girl I played against tonight, that young girl – she’s the most aggressive player I’ve ever played against.”
Millie’s mum and dad were in the stands at every game, along with her no-nonsense grandparents Margaret and Arthur.
Arthur Bramall, a tough former coal miner who spent his career at the Rossington colliery in Doncaster, is the person Millie relies on the most for honest feedback about her performance on the pitch.
Bitter blow
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Millie’s England teammates have flocked to support herCredit: PA
Her decision to withdraw from the Euro 2025 squad as they began preparations for the tournament in Switzerland next month was a bitter blow for fans.
Millie admitted: “The demands of it are incredibly high and I would see it as a little bit selfish to take up an opportunity in a position from somebody else when I’m not 100 per cent there.
“It wasn’t an easy decision. I gave it a lot of thought.
“But ultimately, I thought this was the best decision for the team, but also for myself and using this summer to really just zone into mentally, physically, getting myself back in tip-top condition and just happy again, all round, just feeling like myself. It’s obviously hard.”
Fans have rallied to support Millie on social media, as have her teammates, with Arsenal striker Chloe Kelly writing: “Proud of you always”.
Aston Villa‘s Rachel Daly posted: “Couldn’t be more proud. With you through everything my girl,” and a message on the official Lionesses account read: “We’re all with you, Millie.”
England manager Sarina Wiegman said: “She has to take care of herself. We will stay in contact and I hope she feels better soon.”
While she’ll no doubt find it difficult watching her team play on without her, Millie’s new love certainly provides a big shoulder to cry on.
Zia Yusuf, a self-described ‘British Muslim patriot’, leaves a party accused of fuelling Islamophobia after 11 months.
The Muslim chairman of the United Kingdom’s radical right-wing Reform UK party has quit after denouncing a call from within party ranks to ban the burqa as “dumb”.
“I no longer believe working to get a Reform government elected is a good use of my time, and hereby resign the office,” Zia Yusuf announced on X on Thursday, hours after hitting out at Reform UK lawmaker Sarah Pochin for asking Prime Minister Keir Starmer whether his government would consider banning the burqa.
Pochin won her seat in a by-election last month that saw the anti-immigration party, some of whose members have been accused of Islamophobia, make significant gains in a political landscape traditionally dominated by the governing Labour Party and the opposition Conservatives.
The new lawmaker had urged Labour’s Starmer during her debut appearance at Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday if he would consider the move “in the interests of public safety”, according to the BBC.
“I do think it’s dumb for a party to ask the PM if they would do something the party itself wouldn’t do,” Yusuf said on X amid an ensuing flare-up over whether banning the burqa should be party policy.
Yusuf, a former banker and self-described “proud British Muslim patriot”, became Reform UK chairman after last year’s general election, having jumped ship from the Conservative Party.
Reform UK, led by Brexit campaigner Nigel Farage, won four parliamentary seats in a breakthrough result last year, going on to gain a fifth parliamentary seat, its first mayoralty and a number of council seats in local elections last month.
It currently leads national opinion polls, ahead of the Labour Party.
Farage said on X that Yusuf was “a huge factor in our success on May 1st and is an enormously talented person”.
Divisions in the party’s upper ranks have been made public before.
In March, Reform referred one of its lawmakers, Rupert Lowe, to police over a number of allegations, including threats of physical violence against Yusuf.
Prosecutors later said they would not bring charges against Lowe, who was suspended by the party.
REFORM was plunged into a chaotic civil war last night after its chairman Zia Yusuf announced he’s quitting the party.
Mr Yusuf announced on social media that after 11 months in the job “I no longer believe working to get a Reform government elected is a good use of my time”.
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Reform chairman Zia Yusuf announced he’s quitting the partyCredit: PA
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Mr Yusuf was seen as a rising star in the party and close ally of Nigel FarageCredit: Shutterstock Editorial
Insiders said that the chairman had felt “shafted” into running the party’s DOGE efficiency unit, aimed at slashing waste in local authorities.
He also earlier on Thursday clashed with Reform’s newest MP, Sarah Pochin, over the idea of a burqa ban.
Mr Yusuf said: “Eleven months ago I became Chairman of Reform.
“I’ve worked full time as a volunteer to take the party from 14 to 30 per cent, quadrupled its membership and delivered historic electoral results.
“I no longer believe working to get a Reform government elected is a good use of my time, and hereby resign the office.”
Mr Yusuf was seen as a rising star in the party and close ally of Nigel Farage.
While not an MP, the entrepreneur fronted several of the parties press conferences.
He worked as chairman in a voluntary capacity.
Cracks in Mr Yusuf’s relationship with the wider Reform party started show months ago – but a major row over banning face coverings brought simmering tensions to boiling point.
Responding to Ms Pochin’s demand for a burqa ban, Mr Yusuf blasted: “Nothing to do with me.
Watch moment Nigel Farage makes back door exit as Reform UK leader dodges protesters in Scotland
“I do think it’s dumb for a party to ask the PM if they would do something party itself wouldn’t do.”
The comment contradicted strong statements in favour of a ban from Deputy Leader Richard Tice and whip Lee Anderson.
Earlier this year, a brutal row saw MP Rupert Lowe suspended after Mr Yusuf reported him to police for alleged threats and bullying – claims later dropped by prosecutors.
Mr Lowe denied everything, accused party bosses of smearing him with “vexatious” claims, and said Mr Farage had stabbed him in the back for daring to push internal reforms.
Ben Habib, former deputy leader, backed him and blasted Mr Yusuf’s handling of the row, accusing Mr Farage of running Reform like a dictatorship.
The chairman’s resignation is just the latest bust-up in a long line of power struggles under Mr Farage’s watch, echoing the UKIP years when infighting over Islam, immigration and leadership led to splinter groups and walkouts.
This comes after Farage earlier this week blasted “net stupid zero” for obliterating the UK’s oil industry, ahead of a showdown Scottish by-election on tomorrow.
The Reform chief drew battle lines against the SNP as he warned Scotland is “literally de-industrialising before our eyes”.
In Aberdeen Mr Farage slammed the nats, led by First Minister John Swinney, for sacrificing an entire industry and thousands of jobs at the alter of green diktats.
He claimed neighbouring Norway is “laughing” as it watches ministers import Scandinavian fossil fuels while dismantling local industry.
Against the shouts of protesters, at a posh fish and chips restaurant the Reform leader said: “We can con ourselves as much as we like.
“There will be more coal burned this year than ever before in the history of human kind. The same applies to oil and gas.
“Even the most adren proponent of net zero has to accept the world will still be using oil and gas up until 2050 and beyond.
“And yet we’ve decided to sacrifice this industry as a consensus around Net Zero has emerged.”
Mr Farage added that the fight to save oil and gas is “almost the next Brexit“.
He said: “Believe me, the scales are falling from the eyes of the public when it comes to Net Zero.
“They realise we are putting upon ourselves a massive cost, let alone the opportunity cost of what we’re missing…
“When we closed down refineries.. and steelworks… all we’re doing is exporting the emissions of CO2 with the goods then being shipped back to us.
“The public are waking up to this.”
It comes ahead of a Hoylrood by-election in Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse on Thursday, described by Reform Deputy Leader Richard Tice as an “absolute cat fight” with the SNP and Labour.
Mr Farage acknowledged it would be an “earthquake” level shock if Reform’s candidate wins the seat.
But activists have reported being surprised at levels of support on the doorstep.
Mr Farage insisted the Reform “can replicate success in Scotland”.
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He said: “I no longer believe working to get a Reform government elected is a good use of my time”Credit: AFP
More to follow… For the latest news on this story keep checking back at The Sun Online
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PVV leader Geert Wilders, seen here in June 2024, announced Tuesday that his party was leaving the four-party coalition government. File Photo by Remko de Waal/EPA-EFE
June 3 (UPI) — The Netherlands was thrown into a political turmoil Tuesday morning when the far-right Party for Freedom quit the Dutch coalition government as it tries to implement an extreme immigration policy.
“No signature for our asylum plans. No amendment to the Outline Agreement, PVV leaves the coalition,” Geert Wilders, chairman of the PVV, said in a statement on X.
The announcement comes two days after Wilders threatened the collapse of the government on Sunday if the coalition did not adopt a majority of the PVV’s 10-point asylum plan, which includes military border enforcement, a halt to asylum, a ban on family reunification and deportation orders for Syrians, among others.
The announcement follows Wilders, an anti-Islam populist, and his party ousting then-Prime Minister Mark Rutte in the 2023 election.
However, Dick Schoof was named prime minister by the country’s four major parties after they formed a fragile a coalition government.
The Voice UK is back but with a major change as a new judge has been added to the line up alongside will.i.am, Sir Tom Jones, Tom Fletcher and Danny Jones
A TV presenter has surprisingly announced he’s leaving Sky News next week.
The former LBC and BBC Newsnight broadcaster announced he’s quit the job after a 12-year career in journalism.
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Sky News journalist Matthew Thompson has quit
Matthew Thompson said he’s leaving London for family reasons and is moving into a different industry entirely.
He wrote on X: “Some personal news. In a couple of weeks, I am leaving Sky News. And indeed, leaving London, and journalism altogether.
“It’s not a decision I’ve taken lightly, but it’s one that’s best for me and my family. I’ll be moving to Edinburgh, and into the world of finance.
“I won’t subject you all to a self-indulgent run through of my career highlights. But suffice to say it has been the privilege of my life to spend these last 12 years or so as a journalist.
“To work with some of the best in the business, and to talk to all of you.
“Thank you to all the people who made it possible, and to all the people who let me tell their stories along the way. I’ve always tried to make it about you, rather than me.
“I hope I managed that, and that I did the privilege justice. As for next steps… I can say more soon.”
Most recently, Matthew worked as Sky News‘ Home & Political Correspondent.
He continued: “I hope this isn’t goodbye. It may be possible to keep some level of engagement on here in my new gig.
“For now, thank you. I’ve learned so much from reading and speaking with you all over the years.
“It’s made me a better journalist, and a better person. I’ll miss it terribly.”
As Bolivia hurtles towards a hotly contested August 17 presidential election, two major shake-ups may shape the outcome of the race.
On Wednesday, incumbent President Luis Arce announced he would abandon his bid for re-election after a five-year term defined by turmoil.
“Today I firmly inform the Bolivian people of my decision to decline my candidacy for presidential re-election in the elections next August,” he wrote on social media.
“I do so with the clearest conviction that I will not be a factor in dividing the popular vote, much less facilitate the making of a fascist right-wing project that seeks to destroy the plurinational state.”
That same day, Bolivia’s constitutional court also ruled that Arce’s former political mentor, now rival, Evo Morales, could not run for another term as president, upholding a two-term limit.
But the left-wing Morales, the embattled former president who previously served three terms in office and attempted to claim a fourth, remained defiant on social media afterwards.
“Only the people can ask me to decline my candidacy,” Morales wrote. “We will obey the mandate of the people to save Bolivia, once again.”
The two announcements on Wednesday have added further uncertainty to an already tumultuous presidential race, where no clear frontrunner has emerged so far.
Bolivian President Luis Arce gives a news conference at the presidential palace in La Paz, Bolivia, on April 7, [Juan Karita/AP Photo]
Arce’s decline
Since his election in 2020, Arce has led Bolivia, following a political crisis that saw Morales flee the country and a right-wing president briefly take his place.
But Arce’s tenure has been similarly mired in upheaval, as his relationship with Morales fractured and his government saw its popularity slip.
Both men are associated with a left-wing political party known as the Movement for Socialism (MAS), which Morales helped to found. Since its establishment three decades ago, the group has become one of the most prominent forces in Bolivian politics.
Still, in the lead-up to August’s election, Arce saw his poll numbers decline. Bolivia’s inflation over the past year has ballooned to its highest level in a decade, and the value of its currency has plummeted.
The country’s central bank has run low on its reserves of hard currency, and a black market has emerged where the value of the Bolivian currency is half its official exchange rate. And where once the country was an exporter of natural gas, it now relies on imports to address energy shortages.
While experts say some of these issues predate Arce’s term in office, public sentiment has nevertheless turned against his administration. That, in turn, has led some to speculate that Bolivia could be in store for a political shift this election year.
Arce himself has had to deal with the power of a rising right-wing movement in Bolivia. In 2022, for instance, his government’s decision to delay a countrywide census sparked deadly protests in areas like Santa Cruz, where some Christian conservative activists expected surveys to show growth.
That population increase was expected to lead to more government funds, and potentially boost the number of legislative seats assigned to the department.
Arce also faced opposition from within his own coalition, most notably from Morales, his former boss. He had previously served as an economy and finance minister under Morales.
The division between the two leaders translated into a schism in the MAS membership, with some identifying as Morales loyalists and others backing Arce.
That split came to a head in June 2024, when Arce’s hand-picked army general, Juan Jose Zuniga, led an unsuccessful coup d’etat against him. Zuniga publicly blamed Arce for Bolivia’s impoverishment, as well as mismanagement in the government.
Morales has seized upon the popular discontent to advance his own ambitions of seeking a fourth term as president. After the coup, he launched a protest march against his former political ally and tried to set an ultimatum to force changes.
After dropping out of the 2025 presidential race on Wednesday, Arce called for “the broadest unity” in Bolivia’s left-wing political movement. He said a show of strength behind a single candidate was necessary for “defeating the plunderers of Bolivia”.
“Only the united struggle of the people ensures the best future for Bolivia. Our vote will be united against the threat of the right and fascism,” he wrote on social media.
Former President Evo Morales attends a rally with supporters in the Chapare region of Bolivia on November 10, 2024 [Juan Karita/AP Photo]
Morales continues to fight term limits
But a wild card remains on the left of Bolivia’s political spectrum: Morales himself.
Considered Bolivia’s first Indigenous president, Morales remains a relatively popular figure, though recent scandals have dented his broad appeal.
First elected as president in 2005, Morales was re-elected twice. But his attempts to remain in office culminated with the 2019 election and subsequent political crisis, which saw Morales resign and flee abroad amid accusations that his victory was the result of electoral fraud.
Morales has long sought a fourth term as president. In 2016, a referendum was put to Bolivia’s voters that would have scrapped presidential term limits, but it was rejected. Still, Morales appealed to Bolivia’s Constitutional Court, and in 2019, it allowed him to seek a fourth term.
That led to accusations that Morales had overturned the will of the voters in an anti-democratic power grab.
But the court has since walked back that precedent, reversing its decision four years later in 2023. It has since upheld that decision on term limits multiple times, most recently on Wednesday, effectively barring Morales from the upcoming August race.
Separately, last October, Morales faced charges of statutory rape for allegedly fathering a child with a 15-year-old girl while president. Morales has denied any wrongdoing and has sought to evade warrants issued for his arrest.
Media reports indicate he is holed up with supporters in the rural department of Cochabamba in the north of Bolivia.
Still, in February, Morales announced his bid for re-election. And on Wednesday, he denounced the Constitutional Court’s latest ruling upholding Bolivia’s two-term limit as a violation of his human rights. He also framed it as part of a broader pattern of foreign interference.
“It is a political and partisan ruling that obeys the orders of the eternal enemy of the people: the US empire,” he wrote on social media.