Keir Starmer and Kemi Badenoch clash after Tulip Siddiq's resignation and inflation fall - PM faces questions over Tulip Siddiq’s resignation as Treasury minister
When the anti-corruption minister is accused of corruption by a foreign government and has no prospect of being able to shut the story down any time soon, it is perfectly obvious that her position
This is a tale of two ex-ministers: the first ministerial casualties of Sir Keir Starmer's government, after just six months in power. Spot the difference. Louise Haigh, the crimson-haired left-wing former transport secretary, was thrown under the bus within hours of Sky News revealing a mobile phone fraud.
Tulip Siddiq has resigned as the government’s anti-corruption minister. In a fresh blow for Keir Starmer, she said she did not want to be a “distraction from the work of the government”. She was alleged to have been involved in brokering a deal in 2013 with Russia for a nuclear power plant in Bangladesh.
The Prime Minister has lost one of his best friends in Government, his judgement is in question and Kemi Badenoch has gained a 'scalp'
Recommended Rachel Reeves is safe – but she’ll have Keir Starmer breathing down her neck Under-fire Tulip Siddiq should stand down to save her career Rachel Reeves is heading for the brick ...
Tulip Siddiq gives Sir Keir Starmer a hug after General Election victory speech. The Labour politician has now resigned as an MP, amid a sleaze row, claiming she 'would not like to distract from government'.
UK Opposition leader Kemi Badenoch called upon the Starmer government to sack Siddiq. Mounting an attack on Starmer, Badenoch said that the Prime Minister appointed his "personal friend" an anti-corruption minister who herself is accused of corruption.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer faced fresh pressure Monday to sack his anti-corruption minister Tulip Siddiq, amid accusations over her family ties to Bangladesh's toppled premier.
This is a tale of two ex-ministers: the first ministerial casualties of Sir Keir Starmer's government ... revealing a mobile phone fraud. Yet Tulip Siddiq, the anti-corruption minister accused ...
Sheikh Hasina Wazed’s niece, Tulip Siddiq, resigned on Tuesday as a minister in Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour government after weeks of damaging headlines about how she had allegedly benefitted financially from her links to her aunt’s Awami League.
Torsten Bell is said to have been behind the much-mocked "Ed Stone" which was carved with Ed Miliband's election pledges.