This is BBC Laura Kunsberg Although it won a majority of 80 seats in the House of Commons, tonight the government still won the social welfare ceiling by a narrow margin:
Laura Kunsberg (@Bbclaurak)
More important than any front page, the majority of government seats fell to 26 years old-many Conservative parties did not vote-not angry enough to vote against the government, but disappointed enough to stay away-this makes the social care program may be in charge -The problem has not disappeared
The blog will be closed now, thank you for your attention and good night.
18:42
According to the British Financial Times, the Prime Minister seemed to think that the Peppa Pig lines in his earlier CBI speech were so pleasant that he repeated them in two other events a few hours later. Sebastian Payne:
Sebastian Payne (@SebastianEPayne)
Tonight at the Conservative Party Winter Party held at V&A, Boris Johnson Today, I will speak for the third time about Peppa Pig World-first at CBI and then at the CPS dinner in the city.
One donor said: “Much better-he has obviously practiced. Boris is in good shape tonight”
Former cabinet minister of the Conservative Party Damian Green, Who said he abstained in the key vote for social care reform, and said that it is not yet clear whether the change in the ceiling of care costs is fair.
He told the BBC News Night:
The party wants to see fair social care solutions across the country and all regions of the country.
And to be as polite as possible, it is not yet clear whether this solution will achieve this goal.
18:34
This is just from PA Richard Wheeler:
Richard Wheeler (@Richard_kaputt)
All we know is that the list of partitions is being updated-the name is not in the right place (no votes are recorded, not yes or no).
So the latest version shows that there are 19 Conservative Party MPs (not 18) who oppose the new provisions of the social welfare ceiling 49 …… pic.twitter.com/Y0XJA5gR9k
At NC49 tonight, 18 Conservative MPs voted against the government, including Esther McVeigh Congressman Tuton and the former Housing Minister, Mark Harper, The former Tory chief whip who said he would vote against the proposal before the vote, and Kevin Hollingrick Who challenged the Minister of Health and Social Care Edward Aga Earlier in the House of Commons a proposal on the government’s social care ceiling.
69 Conservative MPs abstained, includingTheresa May, Robert Buckland, The former Attorney General, Sir Ian Duncan Smith, David Davis, Jeremy Hunt, with Tom Tugendhat, Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee.
I am a celebrity host Ant McPartlin with Declan Donnelly laugh at Boris Johnson, Making fun of the prime minister’s critical speech to the Confederation of British Industry earlier.
McPartlin was broadcasting live at Gwrych Castle and asked his co-hosts where they bought the featured cakes from the recent challenge.
Donnelly flipped through the paper for more than 10 seconds and said “Forgive me!” until he found the correct page and exclaimed: “We found it in Poundland in Rhyl”.
Johnson stumbled upon part of the content in a speech to the CBI and said “forgive me” when he tried to find the right place in his notes.
17:56
This comes from Angela Reina:
Angela Reina (@AngelaRayner)
Tonight, Conservative MPs voted to break their promise that no one must sell their houses to pay for their social care, and voted to cut poorer pensions to protect millionaires in luxury homes.
This is an inheritance tax and scam in the north, not a social care program.
A sort of labor An amendment prohibiting private healthcare companies from being appointed to the NHS decision-making committee or the local comprehensive health committee has just been rejected. It’s 192, not 300.
17:39
The Conservative Party’s winter fundraising ball tonight caused some outrage, which auctioned time with cabinet members for donations.
This comes from Kevin Maguire, Associate Editor of “Daily Mirror”:
Kevin Maguire (@Kevin_Maguire)
Conservative MPs rushed back from the fundraising event for the Conservative Winter Ball, had dinner with Sunak for £35,000 and collected a total of £22,000 for karaoke with Truss to vote for poorer homeowners to sell their houses for social care after paying taxes. .
The ministers who attended the winter party fundraising ball tonight were strictly instructed to leave at 9.30 pm so that they could return in time to vote for the health and social care bill pic.twitter.com/Cr03nPJ0Ib
This is my colleague Jessica Elgort Summary of voting tonight:
17:31
This is from ITV Robert Peston:
Robert Peston (@佩斯顿)
The government won the vote to increase the cost of social care for the poorest people by only 26 votes (not compared with the status quo, but compared with expectations), far below its natural majority (approximately 80 people). Great rebellion.Another embarrassment @Boris Johnson On another bad day for him
This comes from Paul Waugh, The chief political commentator of ipaper:
Paul Waugh (@Paulwaugh)
The government passed its Social Care Amendment with 272 to 246 votes. The majority vote has been cut, but those who abstained from the Conservative Party will be worth a look.
This comes from the Shadow Environment Minister and labor & Plymouth Sutton and Devonport Cooperative Councillors, Luke Pollard:
Luke Pollard MP (@卢克波拉德)
🚨In the vote on social care in the House of Commons, the majority of the Tory Party fell to only 26 seats. A dispute with the House of Lords and the opportunity to turn the government back from their latest terrible idea. The other person who violates the promise will be the poorest — the opposite of escalation.