Badenoch says she expects Lib Dem motion demanding release of Andrew trade envoy documents to pass without need for vote
Q: Are you going to back the Lib Dem motion calling for the release of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor documents?
Badenoch says she does not think there will be a vote, because she thinks all MPs agree with this.
But she goes on to criticise the second Lib Dem opposition day motion today, which is the one saying on Monday 9 March the Lib Dems should have control of the parliamentary timetable so they can pass a bill an online services (age restrictions) bill. She says there is no need for this because there is a live bill going through parliament (the one Laura Trott was talking about a moment ago) with a social media ban for under-16s amendment in it.
She says:
I think that this is there’s a lot of messing around that’s happening. There is already an amendment for a live bill. It’s important that we get all parties to work together rather than everybody trying to own the win. This is not about owning the win. This is really about getting this issue sorted.
(This is a bit rich; only a few minutes ago, Badenoch was demaning a U-turn from Keir Starmer on a social media ban for under-16s. She is trying to own the win just as much as anyone.)
Key events
Kemi Badenoch is now taking questions.
The first reporter, from GB News, asks if Badenoch agrees it is time to table a vote of no confidence in Keir Starmer. In her reply, Badenoch ignores this point, but she says is hoping to get him to agree to a social media ban.
At the Tory press conference, Laura Trott, the shadow education secretary, is speaking now. She says there will be a vote in the Commons in the next two weeks on the Tory proposal for a ban on under-16s accessing social media.
She says it is hard to police the content of social media posts, but it is possible to police the age at which people access it.
Trott was referring to a Commons vote on the amendment passed in the Lords.
She did not mention the fact that the Liberal Democrats are holding a vote on this issue this afternoon.
Keir Starmer is taking part in a coalition of the willing video call to discuss Ukraine. There is a live feed of his public contribution here.
Badenoch revives call for under-16s social media ban at event with families who have lost childen after online abuse
Kemi Badenoch is holding a press conference now. She is appearing with the relatives of children who she says have died as a result of social media – either because they took their own lives, or because it led to them being attacked. She says she wants to give them a platform to tell their stories.
She says there should be a ban on social media for under-16s.
She says she is inviting the six relatives to speak. The first speaker, George, says he lost his beautiful son, Christopher, who was given 50 challenges to complete by predators who targeted him online. They told him they would kill his family if he did not comply.
NFU president Tom Bradshaw calls for farm inheritance tax to be abolished in full

Helena Horton
Helena Horton is a Guardian environment reporter.
Emma Reynolds, the environment secretary, is speaking at the National Farmers’ Union conference at the ICC in Birmingham this afternoon, at 3pm. She will be announcing a £345m fund for farming productivity. This is not new money; it comes out of the existing farming budget and is mostly an extension of an existing capital grants scheme.
But Tom Bradshaw, the NFU president, has been speaking this morning. He revealed that Keir Starmer U-turned on farming inheritance tax by more than doubling the threshold at which it is paid after Treasury minister Dan Tomlinson went to meet farmers in Northumberland in November last year and heard the struggles they were facing and the fears they had for the future if they could not pay the tax.
Experts from across the political spectrum had criticised Reeves for setting the threshold for inheritance tax at £1m for farms, as this would impact small and medium sized farms, rather than the super wealthy she was trying to target. In December, Starmer announced this would be changed to a £2.5m threshold, with couples able to pool their allowances, meaning a married couple would be able to have a farm worth £5m without those they pass it on to having to pay inheritance tax.
Bradshaw said he will be asking Reform, the Liberal Democrats and the Tories to commit to scrapping the new inheritance tax introduced by Rachel Reeves in the 2024 budget, in its entirety, in their general election manifestos.
He said:
Just to be crystal clear, to the prime minister, Treasury and secretary of state for environment we still believe the IHT policy is fundamentally flawed. It jeopardises some of our more productive farming businesses.
Of the opposition parties promising to scrap the tax, he said:
At the next general election we will be demanding those public promises are turned into manifesto commitments, to scrap the family farm tax.
He said production of most major foods in the UK is down, after the sector has been hit with extreme weather including drought and flood, rising inflation and input costs, as well as higher taxes. He added:
We cannot rely on other countries to feed us. We need a food strategy that sets clear ambitions sector by sector, something we can measure, something we can hold ourselves accountable for.
The years of declining food production must end now.
Starmer tells cabinet ‘we must defeat falsehood Russia is winning’, as he pays tribute to Ukraine’s ‘incredible resilience’
Keir Starmer has paid tribute to the “the incredible resilience of the Ukrainians” and urged people to “defeat the falsehood that Russia is winning” the war it started four years ago.
Addressing cabinet this morning, he said:
I wanted also to pay tribute to the incredible resilience of the Ukrainians, and it is incredible resilience.
When this conflict broke out four years ago, it was assumed it would be a matter of weeks before Putin took the whole of Ukraine. That’s what everybody believed.
Four years later, the Ukrainians are holding out against that aggression, holding out on the frontline where the circumstances are extremely challenging, but also holding out in civilian life where every day Ukrainians get up and go to work as a sign of resilience and defiance.
And we must defeat the falsehood that Russia is winning.
Because if you look at the last year alone, Russia took 0.8% of land in Ukraine at a terrible cost to themselves, half a million losses.
Starmer also spoke about some of his most seering memories of the suffering the Urkainians have endured. He said three images stuck in his mind.
He said he went to Bucha near Kyiv in the early days of the war, where he saw “the roads and the ditches in which Ukrainian civilians were handcuffed with their hands behind their back, blindfolded and shot in the head, the bodies left in the road”.
He went on:
The second etched in my memory was last year when I went to one of the busiest hospitals in Kyiv and saw for myself the incredibly awful burns on some of those who had returned from the frontline. Burns the like of which I’d never seen in my life before.
And at the same time, I went to a primary school and these children who were five, six, seven years old, had lost both their parents to the conflict.
Reform mayor courted US oil and gas executive about fracking in UK
Lincolnshire’s Reform party mayor, Dame Andrea Jenkyns, has courted the head of an American oil and gas dynasty in the hope of bringing fracking to the county, Hajar Meddah reports.
The Conservatives have said they would cut interest rates on plan 2 student loans. In her LBC phone-in this morning, Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, said she understood why students were angry about the interest charged on student loans, but she suggsted the Tory proposal was wrong. She said:
Part of the challenge with reforming the student finance system is that whilst it can often seem superficially attractive to do things like changing the interest rate, it doesn’t always have the desired effect in terms of making the system fairer, particularly for less well-off students.
It’s a really complex system. It’s evolved over time. It’s not a system that I would have put in place, but we are where we are. We are going to look at if there’s anything that we can do on this, of course we keep it open and under review.
Keir Starmer and his wife, Victoria, took their two teenage children to Poland during the half-term break “to find the house where her grandparents once lived before fleeing to England prior to the first world war, as antisemitism surged”, Lee Harpin reports in a story for Jewish News. He says:
Jewish News understands the prime minister was determined to travel with his children to the small village just outside Warsaw to help them fully appreciate the roots of their mother’s Jewish heritage.
None of Lady Victoria’s extended family who remained in Poland survived the Nazis, making the visit particularly poignant and emotional.
Here is our updated story about the arrest of Peter Mandelson, saying he arrived home at about 2am this morning after being released by the police on bail following questioning.
In a phone-in on LBC this morning, Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, confirmed that the government will be complying with the humble address saying information relating to Mandelson’s time as US ambassador must be published. (See 8.38am.) But she said nothing would be published that might compromise the police inquiry into him.
Ed Davey apologises for praising Andrew’s ‘excellent’ work as trade envoy in Commons debate 15 years ago
Ed Davey, the Lib Dem leader, has been giving interviews this morning. On the Today programme, he explained why the Lib Dem motion goes back to when Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was appointed a trade envoy, in 2001. But Davey faced embarrassment when Nick Robinson, the presenter, read out extracts from a speech that Davey gave in 2011, when he was a trade minister in the coalition government and he was responding to a debate tabled by the late Labour MP Paul Flynn.
Flynn, a republican, used the debate to criticise the fact that, under parliamentary rules, he could not say anything critical of Prince Andrew, as he was at the time. Davey was replying on behalf of the government and, as Robinson reminded him, he said that Andrew had been a success in the role.
Davey said at the time:
I, for one, believe that the Duke of York does an excellent job as the UK’s special representative for international trade and investment …. During [his time as trade envoy] he has been a long-standing success in the role, representing a continued interest on the part of the royal family in supporting British business and international trade and investment … Many who have worked with the duke have found that he is a real asset for our country in supporting UK business.
When Flynn put it to Davey that human rights groups were concerned about the work Andrew was doing in countries that were not democratic, Davey dismissed the criticism as “innuendo”.
When Robinson quoted these extracts from the debate, Davey said he was responding on behalf of another minister who could not be there. He said:
Can I apologise to all those victims of [Jeffrey] Epstein who may have read those words and been upset by them. I really regret them.
And he said no one in the debate had mentioned Jeffrey Epstein – which he said highlighted the way that parliament, at the time, was not holding Andrew to account.
When Robinson reminded Davey that he criticised Flynn for holding a debate about Andrew four days after the wedding of Prince William and Kate, saying that was “particularly inappropriate”, Davey replied:
Well, I didn’t know what we now know back then.
And it’s interesting to note that the prime minister [David Cameron] at the time got rid of, or ensured that Prince Andrew stood down from the role, two months later. So clearly someone in government did know that there were huge problems with the way he was conducting his role.
Davey said that he was “pretty angry” about the fact that he had been put in the position where he had to defend Andrew. He said the parliamentary rules that prevent MPs from criticising members of the royal family needed to change. The 2011 debate showed the need for “greater transparency and greater accountability”, he said.
Minister signals No 10 won’t stop MPs voting to publish Andrew trade envoy papers – provided police probe not jeopardised
Good morning. Spare a thought for Cabinet Office officials. They are already embarked on a massive exercise to collate, and vet, thousands of documents relating to Peter Mandelson’s appointment as ambassador to the US, and his communications with government while he was in the job. That is so they can be published to comply with a humble address passed by MPs. Now it seems they are going to have to do a similar exercise for the paperwork relating to Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s appointment as a trade envoy in 2001.
The Liberal Democrats have an opposition day in parliament, meaning they can choose the motion for debate, and they have tabled their own humble address. it says:
That an humble address be presented to His Majesty, that he will be graciously pleased to give directions to require the government to lay before this house all papers relating to the creation of the role of special representative for trade and investment and Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s appointment to that role, including but not confined to any documents held by UK Trade and Investment, British Trade International (BTI) and its successors, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, the Cabinet Office and the prime minister’s office containing or relating to advice from, or provided to, the Group Chief Executive of BTI, Peter Mandelson, the Cabinet Office and the prime minister regarding the suitability of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor for the appointment, due diligence and vetting conducted in relation to the appointment, and minutes of meetings and electronic communications regarding the due diligence and vetting.
Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, has been giving interviews this morning, and she indicated that the government would not be blocking the motion. She told the Today programme:
We’re in favour of the principle of there being transparency around this. We think that’s important. Of course, the public have a right to see material that is relevant.
But she also repeatedly stressed that it would be wrong to publish anything that might prejudice the police investigation into Mountbatten-Windsor. She said:
We will look at what the Lib Dems have set out [and we] will address the position later on in parliament when we come to that debate.
But we do just need to be careful here because, as in the Peter Mandelson case, we have got a live police investigation here and none of us would want to do anything that would jeopardise it.
This suggests the Commons is likely to end up passing a version of the motion, with an amendment saying publication will only happen when the police inquiry is over.
Here is the agenda for the day.
9.30am: Keir Starmer chairs cabinet, with Antonia Romeo taking the notes for the first time as cabinet secretary.
11am: Kemi Badenoch and Laura Trott, the shadow education secretary, hold a press conference with parents to discuss the case for a ban on teenagers accessing social media.
11am: Starmer takes part in a virtual coalition of the willing meeting on the fourth anniversary of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
11am: Richard Tice, the Reform UK business spokesperson, gives a speech in the West Midlands.
11.45am: David Lammy, the deputy PM and justice secretary, gives a speech on reforming the courts system. He will announce he is lifting the cap on court sitting days.
Noon: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.
Noon: The high court issues its judgement on Rupert Lowe MP’s bid to temporarily block the independent complaints and grievance scheme.
After 12.30pm: MPs will start debating the Lib Dem humble address motion saying documents relating to the appointment of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor as a trade envoy when Labour was last in office should be published. The vote is due at about 4pm, although it seems likely it will be approved without a division.
2.30pm: Liam Byrne, the chair of the Commons business committee, is expeced to announce whether or not his committee will be launching an inquiry into trade envoys at the start of a hearing.
After 4pm: MPs debate a Lib Dem motion saying on Monday 9 March the Lib Dems should have control of the parliamentary timetable so they can pass a bill an online services (age restrictions) bill. The motion is certain to be voted down.
I’m afraid we are not able to open comments today. I’m sorry about that.
If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use social media. You can reach me on Bluesky at @andrewsparrowgdn.bsky.social. The Guardian has given up posting from its official accounts on X, but individual Guardian journalists are there, I still have my account, and if you message me there at @AndrewSparrow, I will see it and respond if necessary.
I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos. No error is too small to correct. And I find your questions very interesting too. I can’t promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog.


