At Twickenham for the mass vaccination for all over 18s.
Huge appetite among young people to get jabbed. Truly inspiring event and superb NHS/Hounslow Council organisation.
Last time I was here was to see England beat Australia. Today, England is doing its best to beat Covid.
Best thing of all was seeing the queues of young people totally ignoring the loons like Piers Corbyn, armed with their megaphones and fakery. They were treated like the irritating midges they are.
I know they can't do this kind of mass over18s event every day, but it seems the 2 limiting factors are: having enough supply of doses; and *publicity*.
Queues grew rapidly as soon as people knew about it.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
BREAKING "The state has an obligation to examine its actions as rigorously as possible." @BorisJohnson confirms there will be a full statutory inquiry into Covid.
"I can confirm today that the government will establish an independent public inquiry on a statutory basis with all powers under the Inquiries Act of 2005, including the ability to compel the production of all relevant material".
PM confirms the inquiry will start "in spring 2022".
Story alert: @BorisJohnson says he will establish Covid inquiry "within this session" of parliament.
First time he's put a timing on it.
A session is undefined but the convention is it runs for about a year.
So his answer to @EdwardJDavey feels like the PM's first commitment to set one up before May 2022.
.@Keir_Starmer told his new shadow cabinet this am that @AngelaRayner "has a big, new role, taking the fight to the Tories, more public facing"
Added "Thursday mornings will be box office" with Thangham Debonnaire taking on Jacob Rees-Mogg.
On Hartlepool and wider losses, Starmer said: "To be clear, I take responsibility. nobody else. I lead the Labour party and it is entirely on me."
Starmer heaped praise on Welsh Labour: 'the number of people on the doorsteps or on the street who acknowledge what Mark Drakeford and Welsh labour do is remarkable'
Added @AnasSarwar "ran great, focused campaign" and played "impt role preventing SNP majority".
What's always been striking in #indyref2 debate is just how much pro-independence voices *sound* like Brexiteers: national self-determination is ultimately the priority.
Most Brexiteers + pro-indy supporters both vehemently hate the comparison - but do some concede it is valid?
This isn't a comment on the merits of Brexit or Scottish independence. Just that despite the obvious cultural/political differences between the SNP + Tories, they share a central philosophy: self-determination.
And yes, one clear motivator for Scots independence is as a route to regaining EU membership and therefore *sharing* national sovereignty, ie a complex/subtle sense of nationhood. The counter case is you can pool sovereignty within the UK via devolution not independence.
One thing about the @AngelaRayner 'sacking': tensions between her and @Keir_Starmer have until now been under the radar and conducted by proxies for both sides.
Will be interesting to see what both say publicly in coming hours. And whether it's plausible.
Gaya Sriskanthan, Momentum co-chair, responds to the news that Angela Rayner is to be sacked as party chair:
"Angela Rayner's sacking is blatant scapegoating."
One ex-Corbyn era Labour staffer: "This Angela decision is probably one of the stupidest political decisions a leaders office has made in a very long time. And that includes putting Richard Burgon on the front bench."