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Former Tory chancellor Sajid Javid knighted in new year honours

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https://www.theguardian.com/politic...weigh-up-dominic-raab-challenge-for-tv-debate

Sajid Javid has become the latest Conservative to declare he is standing for the party leadership, telling members: “First and foremost, we must deliver Brexit.”

The home secretary made his announcement on Monday in a video posted on Twitter. He said: “As last night’s results made all too clear, we must get on and deliver Brexit,” adding it was important to “restore trust, bring unity, and create new opportunities across the UK”.

Javid, 49, is the latest entrant in a crowded field of nine candidates so far. Born in Rochdale, the son of a bus driver, he is the first person of Asian origin to stand to become leader of the Tories and ultimately prime minister.

A long-term supporter for leaving the EU, opponents say he could still struggle to win over Brexiters because he voted to remain in the EU referendum.

His announcement came after another candidate, Dominic Raab, challenged his rivals to take part in a televised debate. Raab’s challenge immediately raised concerns that such a debate would further expose gaping divisions across the party.

Two of Raab’s leadership rivals, Andrea Leadsom and the foreign secretary, Jeremy Hunt, have welcomed his TV debate proposal. Boris Johnson, the favourite to succeed Theresa May, has been asked for a response.

Raab officially joined the party’s leadership race on Sunday, but has been signing up MPs as supporters for several weeks.

He and Javid join Hunt, the international development secretary, Rory Stewart; the health secretary, Matt Hancock; the environment secretary, Michael Gove; and former work and pensions secretary Esther McVey, who are all vying for the leadership.

In a statement meant to increase pressure upon his competitors, Raab said: “I hope that the other candidates take me up on my suggestion of holding a televised debate so that we can test each other’s plans on Brexit.”

Other rivals are mulling over the suggestion, conscious that Johnson has previously struggled when pressurised by fellow Tories.

During ITV’s referendum debate in 2016, Amber Rudd, then the energy secretary, memorably described Johnson as the “life and soul of the party but not the man you want driving you home at the end of the evening”.

One aide to a leadership candidate said a debate could, without careful management, permanently damage the party. “We have to decide if we are going to expose ourselves to an all-out bunfight on the EU. It could turn out to be a race to the bottom,” the aide said.

There are fears among Tory moderates that many of the eight declared leadership candidates will adopt hardline Brexit positions to win over 160,000 party members. They will choose who is to be the next prime minister from a shortlist of two candidates whittled down by MPs.

On Monday, after the EU election results, Johnson warned his party that it would face a fresh drubbing if it did not deliver Brexit “properly”.

“The message from these results is clear,” he wrote in his column for the Daily Telegraph. “If we go on like this, we will be fired: dismissed from the job of running the country.

“The only way to avert that outcome is to honour the result of the 2016 referendum, and come out of the EU; and that means doing it properly – not with some frail simulacrum of Brexit, but clearly and sensibly, so that we are able to join every other independent country in being able to set our own tariffs and make our own laws.”

Leadsom issued a statement on Monday describing the results as “truly terrible”.

“It is now vital we now find a way to decisively leave the EU … I have a three-step plan for how we deliver Brexit which I look forward to discussing further during the leadership campaign,” she said.

McVey said the UK should leave the EU in five months’ time with a “clean break” and should not appease those who voted for a second referendum.

“People saying we need a Brexit policy to bring people together are misreading the situation. That is clearly not possible.

“We need to deliver on the referendum result with a clean break and then we bring people together by how we govern the country outside the EU,” she said.
 
I highly doubt the Tory party will elect a brown guy as their leader, even though Javid has done more than enough brown nosing.

We need a general election, the public should elect a new prime minister after the fiasco of this government.
 
I like Sajid and I think most white people do like him too. To add icing, even the jewish community supports him.

Eventually he will be the PM.
 
Imagine a pakistani becoming the PM of the England, the white community won't like it at all.
 
A lot of victim mentality on this thread, from both sides. He's either a 'brown noser' or the oh so racist white people won't like him because he's brown.

Not really sure what to make of him. I'm not much of a Tory fan, but I guess anyone is better than Boris Johnson.
 
A lot of victim mentality on this thread, from both sides. He's either a 'brown noser' or the oh so racist white people won't like him because he's brown.

Not really sure what to make of him. I'm not much of a Tory fan, but I guess anyone is better than Boris Johnson.

If you don't agree with the claim that white people won't like him because he's Brown then you're in denial. Obviously they won't like him because he's Brown. But he's not going to get selected any way so not point in arguing.
 
If you don't agree with the claim that white people won't like him because he's Brown then you're in denial. Obviously they won't like him because he's Brown. But he's not going to get selected any way so not point in arguing.

The UK is one of the most fair and equal countries when it comes to race. Sure, there are racists, but you're grossly misrepresenting it. it's also pretty racist to suggest that all white people are racist.
 
If 200 years ago you would have told a white Britisher that in 2019 there might be a chance of a "brown uncultured slave" being the prime minister of England he would have had a heart attack :))
 
The UK is one of the most fair and equal countries when it comes to race. Sure, there are racists, but you're grossly misrepresenting it. it's also pretty racist to suggest that all white people are racist.

Where did i say all whites are racist??
Not all are racists but a good no. of them are.
 
Where did i say all whites are racist??
Not all are racists but a good no. of them are.

It would be similar to Obama in the US - in that the majority of people would not judge Javid on his culture, his born religion or his race and would only be interested in his policy platform, however a prejudiced minority would be gunning for him straight away. (see the Birther movement.)


Personally I do not think this is the right timing for Javid, because he has very similar politics to Theresa May and anything associated with her will be perceived as toxic for a good while yet. Nonetheless there is every chance of him becoming the PM in the future.
 
I like Sajid and I think most white people do like him too. To add icing, even the jewish community supports him.

Eventually he will be the PM.

I don’t, not after he revoked Begum’s citizenship.
 
If 200 years ago you would have told a white Britisher that in 2019 there might be a chance of a "brown uncultured slave" being the prime minister of England he would have had a heart attack :))

Why? We had a black Queen fifty years before that.
 
It would be similar to Obama in the US - in that the majority of people would not judge Javid on his culture, his born religion or his race and would only be interested in his policy platform, however a prejudiced minority would be gunning for him straight away. (see the Birther movement.)


Personally I do not think this is the right timing for Javid, because he has very similar politics to Theresa May and anything associated with her will be perceived as toxic for a good while yet. Nonetheless there is every chance of him becoming the PM in the future.

The difference is, Obama was a highly impressive figure who most colour blind people could respect. Sajid has mostly been trotted out by the Tories to address the problematic Muslim/Pakistan community issues. Hence the tag Uncle Tom being thrown around which let's be honest, is not far from the truth.

He's not going to get many Muslim votes as a result, and while he might have pleased indigenous Brits with his comments, that's not the same as getting respect. I just don't see who he would appeal to in numbers, whereas Obama was a figure you could admire even if you didn't like his politics.
 
Javid has given up everything, including his religion but still won't be party leader. Sorry mate.
 
If 200 years ago you would have told a white Britisher that in 2019 there might be a chance of a "brown uncultured slave" being the prime minister of England he would have had a heart attack :))

It might be seen as a landmark but the guy is P4P the biggest coconut in the UK, it's very unlikely though in any situation; would be surprised to see him win.
 
I hope Sajid Javed gets no where near the PM seat. If he becomes PM now (unlikely); he will get blamed for the Brexit mess no matter what. Ultimately, Asians/ Muslims may be targeted as a result.
 
I hope Sajid Javed gets no where near the PM seat. If he becomes PM now (unlikely); he will get blamed for the Brexit mess no matter what. Ultimately, Asians/ Muslims may be targeted as a result.

Why would muslims get targeted?
He ain't even muslim. He himself says muslims are the reason for the terrorist attacks which happen.
 
Why would muslims get targeted?
He ain't even muslim. He himself says muslims are the reason for the terrorist attacks which happen.

EDL lot have no logic; they just blame everything onto muslims without thinking. Their support has grown in recent years and Britain has become more racist #MyOpinion. Brexit is a mess; I rather Sajid stays away.
 
I hope this ****** never becomes UK PM. He is a murderer because of him that “Jihadi” girls son died. He ignorantly revoked her citizenship and killed the baby when the baby did nothing wrong. If she was brought back then trialled here in UK then the baby could’ve survived. But instead this fool thought her land of origin/root will take her in, as if she was born there and has citizenship over there. They’ll hang her to death more like.

She’s your issue. Deal with her. Jail, or whatever. But the innocent baby didn’t have to die like that.
 
he sold his soul when he threw in his lot with the remainers. would have been the clear favourite if he had sat on brexit side, but went remain for political expediency.

rinsed the whole thatcher picture in my room stuff. would be surprised if he even got in the top three for the job.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">I got into politics because I wanted to give back to our country, which has given me so many opportunities. I'm proud to be able to share my story with you. Check out my campaign video and join me at <a href="https://t.co/idVRwMVc79">https://t.co/idVRwMVc79</a> <a href="https://t.co/L7cypOHNmA">pic.twitter.com/L7cypOHNmA</a></p>— Sajid Javid (@sajidjavid) <a href="https://twitter.com/sajidjavid/status/1138357421183852545?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 11, 2019</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
I hope this ****** never becomes UK PM. He is a murderer because of him that “Jihadi” girls son died. He ignorantly revoked her citizenship and killed the baby when the baby did nothing wrong. If she was brought back then trialled here in UK then the baby could’ve survived. But instead this fool thought her land of origin/root will take her in, as if she was born there and has citizenship over there. They’ll hang her to death more like.

She’s your issue. Deal with her. Jail, or whatever. But the innocent baby didn’t have to die like that.

I have no sympathy for her, why should the tax payer fund the return of Shamima, who is a wife of a terrorist? She left by choice and without informing her family, but I don't see no outrage from you. According to your logic it's all because of this tory that baby died, which couldn't be any further from the truth. She is responsible along with her ISIS husband. A baby is one life but she was a potential threat to multiple British civilians, if she was allowed back in.

Saj Javid did the right thing and he should do it again.
 
I like Sajid and I think most white people do like him too. To add icing, even the jewish community supports him.
Well he has previously stated that if he had to choose to live in another country other than Bitain, that country would be Israel.

Eventually he will be the PM.
House of Commons Tory MP's voting rounds whittle the leadership candidates down to two remaining, after which the rest of the Conservative Party members around the country (roughly 100,000) choose a winner via postal voting. (When Theresa May became PM, and it came down to the last two, the other remaining candidate Andrea Leadsom withdrew, leaving Theresa May as the only candidate left, so there was no need for a nationwide Conservative Party membership vote).

The average age of the approx. 100,000 Conservative Party membership is said to be male, around 62 years old, retired, and from the middle or upper middle classes. There's no way on earth this group will choose an ex-Muslim, brown faced individual of Pakistani heritage to be their leader and Prime Minister.

So even if he makes it to the last two (from the MP's votes), there's zilch chance that he'll become the chosen one.
 
I have no sympathy for her, why should the tax payer fund the return of Shamima, who is a wife of a terrorist? She left by choice and without informing her family, but I don't see no outrage from you. According to your logic it's all because of this tory that baby died, which couldn't be any further from the truth. She is responsible along with her ISIS husband. A baby is one life but she was a potential threat to multiple British civilians, if she was allowed back in.

Saj Javid did the right thing and he should do it again.
International law forbids a person to be made stateless. Sajid Javid took away her citizenship on the basis that because her mother is of Bangladeshi origin, Shamima could apply for and obtain a Bangladeshi passport and citizenship. Hence she would not be 'stateless'.

However, Bangladesh has stated that since Shamima was born in the UK, raised in the UK, was a UK citizen, and had never been to Bangladesh, she would not be granted a Bangladeshi passport or Bangladeshi citizenship even if she applied.

Therefore going by that, Sajid Javid has made her 'stateless', which is against international law. The UK is not the USA, and the UK up until now abides by international law.

So this is not a question of whether or not you have 'no sympathy for her', but about the UK not breaking international law.
 
Dominic Cummings, former Chief Strategy Adviser to the British Prime Minister, was seen carrying his belongings in a cardboard box as he left 10 Downing Street on Friday, following his resignation.

Replacing him, The Daily Telegraph reports, could be former chancellor Sajid Javed, who would take over as chief of staff.

In January early this year, Cummings had blogged about the need for reforms within the civil service, noting it lacked people with “deep expertise in specific fields”. In it, he said he wanted ot make himself “largely redundant” within a year.

Cummings made headlines in March for breaking lockdown rules by driving 260 miles form his home to Durham, ignoring guidelines to stay at home despite not serving his quarantine period following being symptomatic.

There were resounding calls for him to step down or be sacked but he instead hosted a press conference to deny allegations of wrongdoing.

"He'll be missed... But advisers come and go," UK Transport Secretary Grant Shapps told Sky News.

“In any government, you require people who are going to shake things up and come up with ideas, and he's actually been that person," he said.

However, according to sources being quoted across the UK media, the exit of one of his own close allies in Downing Street—Lee Cain as the No. 10 Director of Communications—had precipitated his exit plans.

Commings and Cain both worked with Johnson as part of the Vote Leave campaign during the 2016 European Union (EU) referendum and are seen as instrumental to the Brexit outcome.

They are widely regarded to have since led a Vote Leave faction of colleagues in Number 10 and other parts of government.

Cain, 29, had announced he would step down as Johnson's top media aide on Wednesday night after ministers and advisers, including Johnson’s fiancee Carrie Symonds, are said to have protested over his planned promotion to Chief of Staff. Symonds, a former head of communications for the ruling Conservative Party, is believed to be unhappy with the influence of some of her husband-to-be's closest aides.

The high-profile departures from Johnson’s top team follow the appointment of former BBC journalist Allegra Stratton as Downing Street's new TV spokesperson who will be hosting White House style briefings from the New Year. Symonds is said to be close to and more aligned with Stratton’s way of working.

Johnson is looking to fill the post of Chief of Staff as part of a wider reorganisation at the very top of his government structure

However, several members of Parliament from within the Conservative Party have expressed dismay at the internal wrangling of No. 10 spilling out into the public domain.

It comes at a time of growing unease on the Tory benches at the government's handling of the pandemic and the economic damage being caused by the current lockdown in England.

But Johnson’s official spokesperson, James Slack, who will replace Cain when he departs in the New Year, tried to diminish the reports of any bitter power struggles behind closed doors.

"You've seen from the Prime Minister this week that he's absolutely focused on taking all the steps that are required to equip the country to beat coronavirus," he said.

https://www.theweek.in/news/world/2...gs-resigns-sajid-javid-could-replace-him.html
 
We all laughed at Sajid Javed for being a coconut but at least he was a man of principle and resigned rather than accept terms he found unacceptable. I think the British public would back him ahead of Rishi Sunak any day in a brown leader face off, but I wouldn't back either since I believe in social welfare.
 
would be a strange appointment given boris's history with saj, having said that stranger things have happened before, and johnson would pbly want saj on the inside rather than the outside in the event his hold on power weakens.
 
Boris isn't going to be around for very long. I think he has lost a lot of support from within the party and the general public. The original Cummins affair was quite damaging and then he has u-turned every couple of weeks on a major issue.

Saj should turn down the offer ( if there is one) and position himself as a principled person outside of Johnsons camp to secure a top position (perhaps the main position) when Boris is gone in a few years.
 
We all laughed at Sajid Javed for being a coconut but at least he was a man of principle and resigned rather than accept terms he found unacceptable. I think the British public would back him ahead of Rishi Sunak any day in a brown leader face off, but I wouldn't back either since I believe in social welfare.

Do you really think so? Not that I agree with either of them, but Sunak seems the only one in government who's stock has risen during this crisis. He's a lot more charismatic and seemingly intelligent than Javid in my opinion, Sajid is almost as uninspiring as Miliband. Sadly those things play a big role in elections.
 
Do you really think so? Not that I agree with either of them, but Sunak seems the only one in government who's stock has risen during this crisis. He's a lot more charismatic and seemingly intelligent than Javid in my opinion, Sajid is almost as uninspiring as Miliband. Sadly those things play a big role in elections.

Rishi must come across as a yes man, that is after all why he was brought in to replace Sajid who resigned rather than compromise his principles. At least that is the vibe I'm getting from news columnists that I read, the initial enthusiasm for Rishi seems to have worn off and we are starting to see a few more questions being asked.

Charisma and intelligence are good qualities but trust is more important, not sure anyone really trusts someone who is always trying to come across as Mr Popular.
 
Rishi must come across as a yes man, that is after all why he was brought in to replace Sajid who resigned rather than compromise his principles. At least that is the vibe I'm getting from news columnists that I read, the initial enthusiasm for Rishi seems to have worn off and we are starting to see a few more questions being asked.

Charisma and intelligence are good qualities but trust is more important, not sure anyone really trusts someone who is always trying to come across as Mr Popular.

Rishi really capitalised on the situation and used the whole Eat Out to Help Out scheme to build himself into a bit of a brand. His boyish good looks and charisma ("Dishy Rishi") has also got him a following with the uni-going and millenial crowd. He is arguably the second most recognisable active politician in the country after Johnson and probably at par with Hancock (who is known for all the wrong reasons atm due to his shambolic handling of the virus). He is definitely a future PM candidate.

On the other hand, a lot of people don't know who Sajid Javid is. His stock was rising fast a few years ago but following his departure as Chancellor he pretty much disappeared from public view.
 
Rishi really capitalised on the situation and used the whole Eat Out to Help Out scheme to build himself into a bit of a brand. His boyish good looks and charisma ("Dishy Rishi") has also got him a following with the uni-going and millenial crowd. He is arguably the second most recognisable active politician in the country after Johnson and probably at par with Hancock (who is known for all the wrong reasons atm due to his shambolic handling of the virus). He is definitely a future PM candidate.

On the other hand, a lot of people don't know who Sajid Javid is. His stock was rising fast a few years ago but following his departure as Chancellor he pretty much disappeared from public view.

Also, while noble, any sort of public recognition as a strong-willed man of principles, which Sajid would have been hoping for following his resignation, did not really materialise.

There should have been a bigger public reaction against the Chancellor being ousted by a non-elected member of the PM's staff but tbh the backlash was minimal and quickly forgotten and a lot of it was due to the public's acceptance and approval of Rishi as the new Chancellor.
 
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Also, while noble, any sort of public recognition as a strong-willed man of principles, which Sajid would have been hoping for following his resignation, did not really materialise.

There should have been a bigger public reaction against the Chancellor being ousted by a non-elected member of the PM's staff but tbh the backlash was minimal and quickly forgotten and a lot of it was due to the public's acceptance and approval of Rishi as the new Chancellor.

Then why is there suddenly talk of him making a comeback?
 
Didn't realise this was a bumped thread, anyway the information you are looking for is in post #30

Johnson is looking to fill the post of Chief of Staff as part of a wider reorganisation at the very top of his government structure
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Imagine living in London while terrorists indiscriminately fire 1000s of rockets at your family’s neighbourhood.<br><br>You’d expect the government to do everything in its power to find and target those attackers.</p>— Sajid Javid (@sajidjavid) <a href="https://twitter.com/sajidjavid/status/1392443856478736385?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 12, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Health Secretary Sajid Javid says on Twitter "This morning I tested positive for Covid" adding "I’m waiting for my PCR result, but thankfully I have had my jabs and symptoms are mild"
 
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-57961870

Health Secretary Sajid Javid has apologised after saying people should no longer "cower" from coronavirus.

He made the comments in a tweet announcing he had made a "full recovery" from Covid, a week after testing positive.

Labour accused him of denigrating those who followed the rules, while the founder of a victims' group said his comments were "deeply insensitive".

Mr Javid said: "It was a poor choice of word and I sincerely apologise."

"I was expressing gratitude that the vaccines help us fight back as a society," he said.

In a new tweet, the health secretary also said he had deleted his earlier post, adding: "Like many, I have lost loved ones to this awful virus and would never minimise its impact."

Cower is defined by the Cambridge Dictionary as meaning to bend down or move backward with your head down because you are frightened. The tweet on Saturday said: "Full recovery from Covid a week after testing positive. Symptoms were very mild, thanks to amazing vaccines.

"Please - if you haven't yet - get your jab, as we learn to live with, rather than cower from, this virus."

Nearly 70% of UK adults are now fully vaccinated, and 88% have had their first jab, according to the latest figures.

Every adult in the UK has now been offered a vaccine. But, amid a spike in cases caused by the Delta variant, the government has launched a series of appeals in recent weeks to encourage people who have not yet come forward to have their jab.

Mr Javid replaced Mr Hancock as health secretary last month after his predecessor stood down.

He tested positive for Covid on 17 July and spent the last week in self-isolation. The prime minister and chancellor also began self-isolating after they had come into contact with him.

The Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice group said Mr Javid was right to apologise.

The group's co-founder, Jo Goodman, said earlier that the "flippancy and carelessness" of Mr Javid's comment had "caused deep hurt and further muddied the waters of the government's dangerously mixed messaging".

Shadow justice secretary David Lammy also questioned his use of the word, saying: "Don't denigrate people for trying to keep themselves and their families safe."

Lib Dem health spokeswoman Munira Wilson said Mr Javid's tweet was "outrageous" and his "careless words have insulted every man, woman and child who has followed the rules and stayed at home to protect others".
 
Former Tory chancellor Sajid Javid knighted in new year honours

Senior Conservative Sajid Javid has been knighted in the new year honours list as he prepares to stand down at the general election.

The former chancellor has been given the top gong despite The Independent’s revelation that he used a tax loophole to benefit from “non-dom” perks while working at the Treasury.

He joins several politicians receiving honours, including Labour’s Dame Margaret Beckett, who is awarded the Dame Grand Cross.

And leading Brexiteer Tim Martin – the Wetherspoon boss who remains outspoken on politics and the UK’s relationship with the EU – has been knighted.

Mr Javid is the biggest political name to be recognised in the annual new year’s list, with Liz Truss’s controversial resignation honours to follow.

The senior Tory, who is to stand down as the MP for Bromsgrove at the next general election, served in six cabinet roles and became the first British Asian to hold one of the great offices of state.

Taking on the roles of home secretary, chancellor and health secretary during his extensive government career after entering parliament in 2010, he also put himself forward for the Tory leadership twice.

It was his sensational resignation from Boris Johnson’s cabinet in July 2022, on the same morning as Rishi Sunak, that spelled the beginning of the end for the former PM’s premiership.

Mr Javid had previously left his chancellor role abruptly in 2020 after being told by Mr Johnson that he must sack all his advisers if he wished to keep his job.

He recently revealed the full details of his extraordinary row with the former prime minister and former No 10 adviser Dominic Cummings. The then chancellor told Mr Johnson at a showdown meeting: “It’s either me or Cummings.”

Mr Javid revealed in April that he had claimed non-domicile tax status for six years, when he was working as a banker, until 2009.

But The Independent revealed last July – when Mr Javid was running for the Tory leadership – that he had preserved some non-dom tax benefits through an offshore trust until 2012, a year after he joined the Treasury as a ministerial aide.

Among other politicians awarded honours this year are Mark Garnier, the Conservative MP for Wyre Forest and a former trade minister, who has been made an OBE, and the Tory MP for Erewash, Maggie Throup, who served as vaccines minister between 2021 and 2022 and also becomes an OBE.

Labour’s Ms Beckett, who was the first woman to serve as foreign secretary, will become a Dame Grand Cross after already being made a Dame Commander in 2013.

First elected in Lincoln in 1974, the now 80-year-old served as acting leader of the Labour Party in 1994 after the sudden death of John Smith. That year she ran for election to lead the party full-time, but lost to Tony Blair.

Labour’s Siobhain McDonagh, a party stalwart who has been an MP since 1997, will be made Dame Commander. Fellow Labour MP Yvonne Fovargue, the member for Makerfield, becomes a CBE. And their Labour colleague, mayor of Bristol Marvin Rees, is to be made an OBE.

Mr Martin, the outspoken founder of Wetherspoon pubs, has been knighted in the new year’s list – an award that was reportedly pushed for by a fellow Brexiteer in government, Kemi Badenoch.

According to reports in the Daily Mail, the business secretary argued behind the scenes that Brexit-supporting entrepreneurs should not be overlooked.

The businessman, a vocal Brexit supporter during the 2016 referendum, has been recognised for his services to hospitality and culture. He is reported to have donated £200,000 to the Vote Leave campaign.

“Everyone had a vote, everyone had a view, and I suppose I did more campaigning than most,” Mr Martin said. “I’d like to think that [the knighthood] is not for my rarely disclosed political views – I hope it is for what it says on the tin.”

Elsewhere, a British-born key witness at Donald Trump’s first impeachment hearing is also among those recognised in the new year honours.

Fiona Hill – a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington DC, who attracted attention as a witness at the former US president’s first impeachment trial – is appointed Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George.

Professor John Edmunds, an epidemiologist who helped to advise the Boris Johnson government on handling the outbreak of Covid, has been honoured with a knighthood.

The expert at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine said he was “amazed” but “a little bit embarrassed” by news of the honour. He said: “I’m just a normal bloke, it’s not the sort of thing that happens to someone like me.”

Erin Pizzey, a controversial feminist turned men’s rights activist, said she was “flabbergasted” to be included in the new year honours list as a CBE.

Having set up the first refuge for women fleeing domestic violence in 1971, she argued that women were more likely to commit domestic violence than men, which prompted a backlash from the feminist community.

Travis Frain, a survivor of the Westminster Bridge attack who has been made an OBE for his work to combat radicalism, said more support is needed to help victims of terror incidents.

Mr Frain, who was hit by a car driven by Khalid Masood during the attack in March 2017, said: “My only hope is that, with this honour, I am able to continue to drive home that message to get changes that are needed.”

Rishi Sunak congratulated all those who had made the list, saying they had “shown the highest commitment to selflessness and compassion” and were “an inspiration to us all”.

 
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