Govt 'shadowy' to reveal Rayner warning about social cohesion in 'readout', Harriet Harman says

It was "shadowy" of the government to reveal Angela Rayner warned about the threat to social cohesion in a "readout", Harriet Harman has said.
On Wednesday, Downing Street released a "cabinet readout" saying the deputy prime minister told ministers the government "had to show it had a plan to address people's concerns" to defuse community tensions.
She said immigration was having a "profound impact on society" and noted 17 out of 18 places where protests broke out last summer after kicking off in Southport were the most deprived areas in Britain.
This was widely interpreted as a warning that riots could happen this summer.
But Baroness Harman told Beth Rigby on the Electoral Dysfunction podcast that announcing it in a "readout" - given to journalists after a cabinet meeting - was not the way to do things.
"These are quite huge issues - the potential for disorder, social integration, the public mood, and ahead of summer," the Labour peer said.
"I don't know whether I'm just a bit old-fashioned about this, but I think it's better when government are making statements like that they give people an opportunity to ask questions rather than this kind of sort of rather shadowy way of doing it."
Read more: Essex Police say Farage claims about migrant hotel protest are 'categorically wrong'
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The former minister added that cabinet meetings are supposed to be secret so that everybody around the table can speak and say "anything they want because there is this protected thing".
"You don't say what's happening at cabinet," she added.
"And if anybody asks in the House of Commons or anywhere else, what happened in cabinet, the automatic response is 'we don't talk about what's happened in cabinet, it's private'. And they've sort of slightly breached that now.
"So is it now a situation where anybody can be asked, what did somebody say in cabinet?
"Or is it only that the prime minister can say what happened in cabinet?
"It's a bit puzzling."
Baroness Harman's comments came after protests in Epping last week outside a hotel housing asylum seekers turned violent.
More than 1,000 people gathered outside The Bell Hotel in protests over two nights after an asylum seeker was arrested and charged on suspicion of alleged sexual assault of a 14-year-old girl in the town.
Counter-protesters joined, and this week Reform UK leader Nigel Farage accused Essex Police of bussing them in, which the force said was "categorically wrong".
Sky News