Chief political correspondent

On Wednesday, Sir Kir Stmper insisted that he would plow with the government’s proposed welfare reforms.
For Labor MPs, which made only things worse.
Today’s work for the Prime Minister and his team: improve things.
The clear change of tone from the beginning of the day was the first sign of that change.
It was reinforced by Sir Keir in the Commons, who said that he was “eager” to improve the “broken” welfare system to MPs of all parties.
“We want to see the improving implemented with labor values and impartiality,” he said.
He said that the talks with the labor rebels will continue in “the days to”, further by the prescribed vote on the law to give the proposals.
The bill harasses the eligibility requirements for individual freedom payment (PIPS), affects elements related to universal credit (UC), and UC increases standard allowance. The purpose of these reforms is to save £ 5BN in a year by 2030.
The two areas where the negotiations will focus on the negotiations, there are eligibility criteria for PIPS, and the proposed deduction for the UC’s health related elements.
These are sensitive matters in the heart of welfare package. But the government needs to find a way to vote and go through it on Tuesday.
Take back one step, and it is an apocalypse region for a government that won a huge landslide less than a year ago.
Talking to Labor MPs and officials is quite shocking to spend the week. Everywhere is being sprayed.
At the center of this rebellion, the labor party is uncomfortable, which spreads correctly in all groups and no one, cuts in the generosity of the welfare state.
For so many labor MPs, that security traps, and an emotional commitment for it, create their reducible core.

No one frustrated with no 10
But the rebellion also has no doubt that fuel, catalyzed and increased by other latent frustrations among the labor MPs.
One of them is the scene that the Downing Street Operation of Starmer does not listen to them.
Disappointment over the political handling of the welfare row is being directed with Morgan McSwini, the Chief of Staff of the Prime Minister, as well as his political secretary, Claire Renailed.
Of course, Mcsweney number 10 is the second Chief of Staff of Starmer.
His predecessor, Suu Gray, was removed after only three months.
The first Downing Street is the Chief of Staff Jonathan Powell, who played a role for Sir Tony Blair for a decade. He is now back as the National Security Advisor to the starrer.
But a labor insider suggested that anger in the Downing Street Operation was displacement activity for the real criminal.
“He can make Jonathan Powell the head of his employees, and it will not be for the fact that it is the Prime Minister who does not have enough political seats.”
And perhaps there is something more fundamental in playing here in our political culture.
Boris Johnson won a vast majority – 80 – in 2019, and we assumed that he could meet for five years.
This was not the case, at least to say.
In 2024, the Sir Kir Stmper won most of the double – and here he is in a serious crisis.
I asked a government minister how things came so fast at this point.
His Answer: “This is the new reality of our unstable politics.”