Louise Haigh says government should quit X because child sexual abuse imagery making its use ‘unconscionable’

Peter Walker

Peter Walker

Peter Walker is the Guardian’s senior political correspondent.

Louise Haigh, the Labour MP former transport secretary, is calling for the government and her party to quit X in the wake of a wave of digitally altered images on the site showing women and children with their clothes removed.

In a message given to the Guardian, and to be posted on social media, Haigh says she has not personally used X for some time. She goes on:

It was already an unpleasant place prior to its takeover by Elon Musk but since his acceptance of hate speech and anonymous online abusers, it has become utterly unusable.

I continued to maintain an account and occasionally post because a critical mass of people, including the government and journalists who we need to communicate with as MPs, remained on the site.

However, the revelations around the enablement, if not encouragement, of child sexual abuse mean it is unconscionable to use the site for another minute.

I call on my party and my government to remove themselves entirely from X and communicate with the public where they actually participate online and can be protected from such illegality.

Ministers are under pressure to defend why the government still uses X as a main source of communications, although Downing Street has said it will fully back an ongoing Ofcom investigation into the site.

Yesterday the Commons women and equalities committee said it has decided to stop using X.

X has said it takes action against illegal content, including child sexual abuse material, “by removing it, permanently suspending accounts, and working with local governments and law enforcement as necessary”.

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Key events

Ministers ‘poised to announce climbdown on rise in business rates faced by pubs’, report says

Ministers are “poised to announce a climbdown on forthcoming increases to the business rates bill faced by pubs”, Simon Jack, the BBC’s business editor, is reporting. Jack says:

Treasury officials say they have recognised the financial difficulties facing many pubs after sharp rises in the rateable value of their premises.

The move follows pressure from landlords and industry groups that included more than 1,000 pubs banning Labour MPs from their premises.

The government is expected to reduce the “multiplier” – the percentage of a pub’s rateable value used to calculate business rates bills.

On Monday Keir Starmer said the government was looking at measures to help the hospitality sector deal with the impact of the business rates increase. In her budget speech in November, Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, highlighted changes that would reduce the headline rate of business rates paid by firms in the hospitality sector. But the impact of this “gain” has beem more than wiped out by the reduction of Covid-era exemptions, and by a property revaluation that has led to the rateable value of premises rising.

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