London24NEWS

‘The Prime Minister must impose a tighter grip on choices taken in his identify’

‘Mr Starmer is right to be furious but it must be a moment of reckoning for the Prime Minister – he needs to toughen up and learn from this’

He needs a firmer grip

Keir Starmer admits he made a serious mistake making Peter Mandelson US ambassador. But what matters just as much is he was not given the full facts.

Being kept in the dark about security vetting concerns being raised and then overruled by the Foreign Office points to a troubling breakdown at the heart of government.

He is right to be furious. But it must be a moment of reckoning for the Prime Minister. Mr Starmer needs to learn from this, toughen up and impose a far tighter grip on how decisions are taken in his name.

No leader can afford to be shielded from critical information or left exposed by those around them. Authority must be asserted – clearly, consistently and without hesitation.

As global tensions flared during the Iran conflict, Britain saw the value of steady leadership. Mr Starmer refused to be dragged into war, demonstrating a calm, measured approach when it mattered most. Now he must bring that same steel to his own ranks.

Canine crisis

We cannot ignore the horror unfolding in Britain’s homes.

Three fatal dog attacks in a single week is no coincidence. It is a crisis unfolding before our eyes. Deaths tripled in a year, with thousands more injured. This is no longer rare; it is a serious and growing public safety threat.

Ministers must act. Tougher enforcement is not cruelty to animals, it is basic protection for people. Sympathy alone is not enough; reckless owners must face real consequences. Without decisive action, more families will suffer, and more warnings will come too late.

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Spiteful splash

A wedding day should be about brides in white dresses, not someone seeing red and turning them black. The paint attack on Gemma Monk by her sister-in-law was petty revenge at its ugliest.

Family feuds are one thing, but this crossed a line. No bride should have her big day splashed with spite.