Keir Starmer accused of dragging King Charles into party-political row
Keir Starmer accused of dragging King Charles into party-political row
EXCLUSIVE: Swipe at Tory austerity was removed from King's Speech for lack of impartiality
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Sir Keir Starmer has been accused of dragging the King into a party-political row over the monarch's flagship speech, the Daily Express can reveal.
The outgoing Prime Minister used a briefing document attached to the speech to attack his political rivals.
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Mandarins were forced to strip a swipe at the Tories from the official paperwork after Conservative MPs staged a protest.
The politicised line was not in the speech His Majesty delivered to Parliament, but buried in Sir Keir's foreword, which took aim at "Tory austerity".
That reference has now been formally branded a "party political" statement and removed, in an embarrassing climbdown for the resigning Prime Minister.
Critics said it was a constitutional outrage that the monarchy's most important parliamentary occasion had been tainted by political point-scoring.
Such briefings are longstanding official publications produced by the Civil Service, not the governing party.
They are meant to lay out the Government's legislative agenda free of political bias.
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Shadow Cabinet Office minister Mike Wood wrote to the Cabinet Office's top mandarin to complain the dig breached strict impartiality rules.
In his letter, Mr Wood said the comment broke the Civil Service Code, the Ministerial Code and official guidance for government communicators.
That guidance states that communications must be "objective and explanatory, not biased or polemical".
In a reply seen by the Daily Express, permanent secretary Catherine Little confirmed officials had pulled the offending content.
She wrote: "Officials have removed the party political content from the Prime Minister's foreword, and reviewed the rest of the document to ensure there are no further party political references."
Ms Little added that the Cabinet Office would "review and update" its internal guidance "to ensure that this does not happen again in future".
Mr Wood seized on the rebuke, branding it "the final humiliation for Starmer's beleaguered Government".
He said: "When he came to office, he promised the Civil Service that 'you have my confidence, my support and, importantly, my respect'."

Mr Wood added: "The fact that the Civil Service has now rebuked Starmer for including party-political content in the King's Speech documents shows just how little respect he has for the Civil Service – and, even worse, for the King."
He said: "Despite promising a government of ethics and integrity, Starmer's administration has consistently tried to politicise the Civil Service to compensate for his failure of political strategy and political communications."
Mr Wood warned there could "be no repeat of such behaviour under the former Labour special adviser turned next prime minister" – a pointed swipe at leadership frontrunner Andy Burnham.
The blunder caps a humiliating end to Sir Keir's premiership, with the Prime Minister having resigned amid mounting calls from his own MPs to leave office.
A government spokesperson said it was "standard practice for political content to be removed from government-published documents".
Is France the Best Team at This World Cup or Is It Yet to Be Properly Tested?
Is France the Best Team at This World Cup or Is It Yet to Be Properly Tested?
France has blown opponents away at this tournament, becoming the first team to score three or more goals in five straight World Cup matches.Conor Orr|
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Truly the stuff of fever dreams over here in section 225 along the stadium’s north side. Pass the man in the tight striped shirt wearing a red beret and holding a fake plastic baguette and you turn the corner to find a pair of men dressed as mimes. They are waving a French flag to fan a young supporter of Les Bleus who has overheated and is slumped down in a chair as security forms a wall around him to cool down.
Around the corner comes Max, an athletically built male of about 5’10” who is dripping sweat beneath what looks like a heavy, non-breathable blonde wig decorated in a kind of braided pigtail. He’s wearing a traditional Swedish dress for Midsommar atop shin guards, soccer socks and tennis shoes. Follow him through the concourse and onto the patio, and you’ve arrived at Camp Sweden.
The fan section of Swedish football—which also cleverly featured fans wearing yellow shirts with the word IKEA written on them—was paltry in size to the overwhelming number of French supporters here among the 83,000 attendants in New Jersey, but for the first 40 minutes, the chants of ‘Allez, Allez, Allez’ (‘Onward Sweden’) did not relent.
Max said Swedish fans took pride in their FIFA ranking for kindness, but when informed that France were heavy favorites, his eyes narrowed and he assumed a joking fighter’s posture. When asked if he believed, as Sweden seemed to escape one piercing attempt on goal after another (including a 19th-minute goal by Kylian Mbappe that was called back upon review) by the blistering French attack over the course of the first 40 minutes, he smiled.
“Of course I do,” he says. “I f—- flew here.”
France and Kylian Mbappé Take Charge

Of course, in rapid succession just before halftime, just after halftime and a third time at the 73rd minute, France eventually honed its eye for the goal and obliterated any chance of a stunning upset. Gone were the scattershot follows, the moments where Les Bleus’ incredible strikers were slapping their heads in frustration.
Kylian Mbappé sliced between two defenders and pounded the ball in the far side of the net. Bradley Barcola slipped between a pair of Swedish defenders, took a quick touch and scored again. Then Mbappé, one last time, punched the ball to the far corner of the net, just off the outstretched hand of Sweden's keeper, Jacob Widell Zetterström. After the last one Mbappé found an open swath of space and skied into the air, a bit like a toddler pretending he was a rocket ship blasting off to the moon.
Outside of the confidence that momentarily reverberated from Camp Sweden, though, the eventual 3-0 result was heavily expected. France became the first team in World Cup history to score three or more goals in five straight matches, though those matches were against some of the Cup’s lowliest opponents: A lukewarm Senegal, Iraq and a second-string Norway, none of which are in the FIFA top 15 World Rankings (Iraq hovers in the mid 60s). Sweden was in organizational tatters leading into the World Cup as well.
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Just How Good is This France Team?

It brings up the important question, as France advances to play Paraguay (another team outside of the Top 30 in FIFA World Rankings, though riding high after a stunning upset over Germany in the opening round) in the second stage of the knockout tournament: Are we responsible for believing what our eyes tell us to believe? Or, is it merely another victory over a small, bright-eyed, understaffed army like we saw in Camp Sweden?
“We knew we had to be perfect,” Graham Potter, Sweden’s manager said afterward, noting that, even if Sweden was perfect, it may not have been enough. “We needed a couple of miracles.”
When asked if he thought any team could beat France, he said: “Of course, it’s football, anything is possible, but I haven’t personally seen a better team.”
As Mbappé was subbed off in the 86th minute, France manager Didier Deschamps stretched out his arms and bowed several times, welcoming the 27-year-old star to the bench. Mbappé has now played in 18 World Cup games and has scored 18 goals. He is now the lone record holder, passing Ronaldo and Leonidas, for the most goals ever scored in the knockout stage of the World Cup (10).
What France Does to Opponents

French soccer, at this very moment, is the picture of versatility, with an amoebic attack that is grounded in a concept that is simple theoretically but almost impossible to achieve in real time: Make yourselves fluid enough to empower your goalscorers. France has dominated by mastering width, drawing double teams at both ends of the pitch and thinning out defenses that still cannot manage to bracket the team’s fleet of strikers. Even with quarterly hydration breaks, the tiring effect this has on defenders is debilitating.
They are also appropriately dominant. Before Mbappé’s first goal, he made a backward no-look pass to Ousmane Dembélé that looked more like a dance step (the pair have more mutual assists for one another than any tandem dating back more than 50 years). Every part of his facial expression suggested that he planned for the moment to go viral. France possessed the ball more than 60% of the game and had a shot advantage of 12-3.
Les Bleus appear comfortable enough, then, to sidestep the question of opponent quality. Deschamps admitted that “for us, it wasn’t that difficult” to reach the round of 16 but cautioned a reporter who mentioned the cementing confidence among French fans and journalists.
“Slow down, please,” he said. “There are issues, there’s always room for improvement.”
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Published 2 hours ago | Modified 17 minutes ago
CONOR ORRConor Orr is a Senior Writer for Sports Illustrated with more than 15 years of experience covering the NFL. His work has been cited in Best American Sportswriting and has won a PFWAA award. Prior to Sports Illustrated, he covered both the Giants and Jets for The Star-Ledger. Conor lives in New Jersey with his amazing wife and three children.
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