
Keir Starmer and Eluned Morgan give speeches at Welsh Labour conference
Update:
Date: 09:52 BST
Title: Watch Eluned Morgan and Sir Keir Starmer live
Content: You can watch Welsh First Minister Eluned Morgan and Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer address their party members using the stream above.
Both speeches are taking place at Welsh Labour conference on Saturday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
9 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Tens of thousands defy Hungary's ban on Pride in protest against Orbán
Tens of thousands of people have taken to the streets of Budapest in defiance of the Hungarian government's ban on Pride, heeding a call by the city's mayor to 'come calmly and boldly to stand together for freedom, dignity and equal rights'. Jubilant crowds packed into the city's streets on Saturday, waving Pride flags and signs that mocked the country's prime minister, Viktor Orbán, as their peaceful procession inched forward at a snail's pace. Organisers estimated that a record number of people turned up, far outstripping the expected turnout of 35,000-40,000 people. 'We believe there are 180,000 to 200,000 people attending,' the president of Pride, Viktória Radványi told AFP. 'It is hard to estimate because there have never been so many people at Budapest Pride.' The mass demonstration against the government was a bittersweet marking of Budapest Pride's 30th anniversary; while the turnout on Saturday was expected to reach record levels, it had come after the government had doubled down on its targeting of the country's LGBTQ+ community. 'We came because they tried to ban it,' said Timi, 49. The Hungarian national was marching with her daughter, Zsófi, 23, who had travelled from her home in Barcelona to join the rally. After the ruling Fidesz party, led by the rightwing populist Orbán, fast-tracked a law that made it an offence to hold or attend events that involve the 'depiction or promotion' of homosexuality to minors, many Hungarians vowed to show their disapproval by attending Pride for the first time. Viki Márton was among those who had made good on the promise, turning up with her nine-year-old daughter. The pair had come equipped with hats, water spray, and a swimsuit, more worried about heat than rightwing protesters. 'I want her to see the reality,' said Márton. 'And I'm so excited to be here!' Earlier this month, police announced they would follow the government's orders and ban the march. The progressive mayor of Budapest, Gergely Karácsony, was swift to respond, saying that the march would instead go ahead as a separate municipal event, with Karácsony describing it as a way to circumvent the need for official authorisation. On Saturday, the mayor reiterated why the city had decided to host the event, hinting at how the march had become a symbol of discontent against a government that has long faced criticism for weakening democratic institutions and gradually undermining the rule of law. 'The government is always fighting against an enemy against which they have to protect Hungarian people,' said Karácsony. 'This time, it is sexual minorities that are the target … we believe there should be no first and second class citizens, so we decided to stand by this event.' Akos Horvath, 18, who had travelled two hours from his city in southern Hungary to take part in the march, described it as an event of 'symbolic importance'. Speaking to news agency AFP, he added: 'It's not just about representing gay people, but about standing up for the rights of the Hungarian people.' The sentiment was echoed by fellow marcher Eszter Rein-Bódi. 'This is about much more, not just about homosexuality,' Rein-Bódi told Reuters 'This is the last moment to stand up for our rights.' Tens of thousands of Hungarians, including senior citizens and parents with their children, plus politicians and campaigners from 30 countries, took to the streets on Saturday, despite Orbán's warning on Friday that those who attend or organise the march will face 'legal consequences'. The Hungarian prime minister sought to minimise concerns over violence, however, saying that Hungary was a 'civilised country' and police would not 'break it up … It cannot reach the level of physical abuse'. Still, in a video posted to social media this week, the country's justice minister, Bence Tuzson, warned the Budapest mayor that organising a banned event or encouraging people to attend is punishable by up to a year in prison. Sign up to This is Europe The most pressing stories and debates for Europeans – from identity to economics to the environment after newsletter promotion Speaking to reporters on Friday, the mayor brushed off the threat and downplayed concerns that police would later impose heavy fines on attende s. 'Police have only one task tomorrow: to guarantee the safety and security of those gathered at the event,' said Karácsony. The potential for violence had been amplified after three groups with ties to the extreme right said they were planning counter-marches. As the Pride march got under way, local news site Telex reported that the route of the march had to be changed after one of these groups blocked off a bridge. Analysts had described the government's bid to crackdown on Pride as part of a wider effort to curb democratic freedoms ahead of a hotly contested national election next year. Orbán is facing an unprecedented challenge from a former member of the Fidesz party's elite, Péter Magyar, leading Pride organisers to suggest they are being scapegoated as Orbán scrambles to shore up support among conservative voters. Orbán's government had also prompted concerns across Hungary and beyond after it said it would use facial recognition software to identify people attending any banned events, potentially fining them up to €500 (£425). Ahead of the march, as campaigners scrambled for clarity on whether or how this technology would be used, AFP reported that newly installed cameras had appeared on the lamp-posts that dotted the planned route. The threat had been enough to rattle some. Elton, 30, a Brazilian living in Hungary wore a hat and sunglasses as he took part on Saturday, explaining that he had been worried about jeopardising his job and immigration status, but that his Hungarian boyfriend had persuaded him to attend. 'This is my second time at Pride, but the first time I feel insecure about it,' he said. Mici, a 21-year-old Budapest resident, said she had attended Pride marches in the past but this time had weighed whether to join in after she was spooked by reports of the facial recognition system. 'At first, I was scared to come out because of the news, but I feel safe with so many people.' She hoped that the massive turnout for the march would be enough to push the Orbán government to change its stance. 'I think the crowd that has come from across Europe, the record numbers, will make Hungarian people see that this cause is well-supported.'


Telegraph
25 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Middle class youngsters chanting for death shows how sick Britain now is
The spectacle of massed crowds calling for the blood of Jews is more associated with Islamist dictatorships than our own democracies. On October 7, however, something foul awoke in the West. Less than two years later, we find thousands of white youngsters from the leafy suburbs of Middle England chanting 'death, death to the IDF' at the Glastonbury Festival of a Saturday afternoon. Would that be the same IDF that delivered us from the spectre of a nuclear-armed Iran with remarkably few civilian casualties? Which rescued us from the regime described by the head of MI5 as 'the state actor which most frequently crosses into terrorism' on our shores? Why, yes. Yes it would. Your average Glasto fan, it seems, would have no objection if Tehran's thugs brought the 'intifada' over here, perhaps with a nuclear bomb on London, so long as they brought death to Israel first. Such is the way with brainless trends, even when the fashion is for bloodlust. What Jewish festival-goers must have felt amidst that display of depravity is enough to make you ashamed of our country. Don't forget, this gory chapter began with a massacre of revellers at the Nova music festival; in a sane world, you'd have expected Glastonbury to fly the Israeli flag in solidarity and chant for the demise of Hamas. The cleanness of the Iran campaign shows how the IDF can operate when its enemy does not push civilians into harm's way for the benefit of the international media. Clearly, Israel is not trying to kill the innocent. Has that thought occurred to any of the Glasto cultists? Of course not. As transparent as it may be, Hamas propaganda is a roaring success when people get their kicks out of believing it. Depressingly, this has become the new normal. There literally is no evil so dark that it cannot find enthusiastic support on the Western Left, so long as that evil first wishes death upon the Jews. Astonishingly, that principle holds even if the evil happens to wish death upon us second. It's true what they say: antisemitism is a sickness and at bottom it is a hatred of ourselves. Whether Bob Vylan, the dreadlocked rapper who led Saturday's version of Orwell's Two Minutes Hate, was breaking the law is beside the point. Legislation is limited when the culture moves beyond it. Even the BBC's attempts at decorum – they had refused to broadcast the performance by Kneecap, the Irish band which has supported Hamas and Hezbollah and demanded that people kill their local Tory MPs – collapsed when put to the test. Shamefully, the 'death to the IDF' chant was beamed out by our national broadcaster into millions of homes. On Thursday, Sir Michael Eavis, the founder of Glastonbury, defiantly insisted that people should 'go somewhere else' if they did not like the politics of his festival. By Saturday, we saw what those politics meant: a carnival of bloodthirsty radicalism that would have been unrecognisable in the Britain of our parents. Jeremy Corbyn may have epitomised the vacuity of the Gaza Left by praising a banner saying 'build bridges not walls' that was literally pinned to a wall, but the joke is wearing thin. In May, a Palestine activist murdered two Israeli diplomats in Washington DC. Last week, Palestine activists sabotaged RAF aircraft vital to our national security. Yet still the simpering BBC fawns over the Eavis clan. For years, sensible people have scratched their heads at how the Left can have come to support jihadis. At the Glastonbury festival of narcissism, however, it has become difficult to tell them apart.


The Sun
25 minutes ago
- The Sun
Taxpayer cash spent on studying whiteness and helping women called ‘witches'
TAXPAYERS' cash is being blown on studying whiteness in South America and helping women called 'witches' to sing, a dossier reveals. An investigation found £16.5 million is being spent on 21 'woke' research projects at UK unis. They include almost £85k on a Newcastle University project called 'Combating Witchcraft-Related Violence through Song'. It looks at how singing helps elderly women in South Africa abused for being a 'witch' due to their ageing features. Over £1million has been earmarked for a University of Nottingham project 'decolonising' photos from British Malaya. A further £246k has been put aside for Sheffield University to develop a city tour app exploring 'whiteness' in statues and monuments in Chile. Nearly £783k is being spent by Queen Mary University of London on a scheme looking at 'Military Decarbonisation'. And £379k is going towards a Birkbeck College programme on children's crafting in West Africa. Cash was handed out by quango UK Research and Innovation. They were uncovered by founder of Doge UK Charlotte Gill, who said taxpayers will be 'fuming' to see where their cash goes. She said: 'Unfortunately this is just the tip of the iceberg, with thousands of similar taxpayer-funded grants being awarded under the UKRI - never mind the vast sums spent on the rest of the public sector.' A UKRI spokesperson said: 'International research collaboration is vital to help us tackle global challenges in a complex and interconnected world, improving security and prosperity in the UK and internationally. "Projects are prioritised for funding through independent expert peer review, as set out in the Higher Education and Research Act.'