by Jessica Elgot Deputy political editor on (#64PQP)
Reversing key plank of her leadership pitch would be far bigger humiliation for Liz Truss than 45p rate U-turnThe clamour among Conservative MPs for a third U-turn by Liz Truss started the same as the others: one MP begins as an outrider, backed by some party veterans or ex-cabinet ministers, and the question catches alight across broadcasters who ask every MP they see. Soon enough, it is received wisdom.Most MPs who are squeamish about deposing their third prime minister had hoped that they would see change in the markets and contrition from No 10 and 11 after the U-turn on the 45p rate. Over the course of the past week, it has been clear to them that will not happen. Continue reading...
With speculation mounting of another mini-budget U-turn, we look at what the PM and her allies said about her policyLiz Truss put adherence to principle at the heart of her bid for the leadership of the Conservative party, often using her support for cutting corporation tax to illustrate a wider preference for letting people and businesses keep more of their own money.However, now the policy has been mooted as one of those that could be chopped to help fill a £65bn black hole of unfunded revenue loss in the mini-budget. Continue reading...
German chancellor’s language hardens after Russian strikes on major Ukrainian cities• Russia-Ukraine war: latest updatesThe German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, has accused Vladimir Putin of waging “a crusade against our way of life”, in a shift of rhetoric days after heavy Russian missile strikes hit major Ukrainian cities.“They consider their war against Ukraine to be part of a larger crusade,” Scholz said in a video address to a summit of European socialist, liberal and green politicians and thinkers in Berlin. Continue reading...
Latest data shows health service coming under increased pressure even before winter beginsThe number of people waiting for an appointment with the NHS in England has topped 7 million for the first time in August.Other unwelcome records were recorded elsewhere, with 56.9% of patients attending major A&Es in September were seen within four hours, a record low. Continue reading...
by Harriet Sherwood Arts and culture correspondent on (#64P18)
Eliza Doolittle’s sparkling dress is one of 100 items that celebrate ‘transformative power’ of musicalsWeighed down by diamante, rhinestones, pearls, crystal beads, sequins and long, pale gold bullion fringe, it is a miracle that Julie Andrews ever managed to navigate the stairs she descended at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane while singing I Could Have Danced All Night.The dress she wore when playing Eliza Doolittle in the 1958 production of My Fair Lady won acclaim for its designer, the legendary Cecil Beaton. The show ran in London for five and a half years, and was thought to be the most expensive then staged in the West End. Continue reading...
Energy watchdog will urge households to save energy ‘where possible’The UK’s energy regulator will advise households to reduce their gas and electricity use “where possible” after the government blocked a state-led information campaign amid fears over potential blackouts this winter.Ofgem’s chief executive, Jonathan Brearley, is expected to announce the regulator’s public information campaign on Thursday, when he will tell the Energy UK conference “this isn’t the time for complacency” as energy costs continue to rise. Continue reading...
Under-fire prime minister has awkward exchange with monarch at first weekly audienceLiz Truss could be forgiven for assuming her first weekly audience with King Charles would offer respite from a week of political disaster and economic ruin. It did not play out that way.It took just 15 seconds of video from the meeting at Buckingham Palace on Wednesday night for the monarch to make things worse. Continue reading...
by Lisa O'Carroll Brexit correspondent on (#64NY7)
Experts take a forensic look at the PM’s promise to axe to up to 2,400 laws on British statute booksLiz Truss has promised to “consign to history” all EU red tape within the next year, axing to up to 2,400 laws on British statute books.It was not just party conference rhetoric. Her government is planning to pass legislation to give itself the power to simply switch off 40 years of EU harmonisation legislation at the stroke of midnight 31 December 2023. No list of laws targeted has been published. Continue reading...
Government says authorities will refer children under 12 and their families to parenting and behavioural change programs to break the cycle of offending
by Sally Weale Education correspondent on (#64NXB)
State school pupils twice as likely to feel they have fallen behind than peers in private schools, landmark study findsFour out of five teenagers say their academic progress has suffered as a result of the pandemic, with state school pupils twice as likely to feel they have fallen behind than their peers in private schools, according to initial findings from a landmark study.Half of the 16- and 17-year-olds questioned said the Covid disruption had left them less motivated to study, while 45% felt they have not been able to catch up with lost learning.There was a lot of chaos in my life at the time and then we went into lockdown quite unprepared. There was a lot of confusion about schooling. I didn’t really have access to technology. I didn’t have online lessons, things like that. There was work that went on every week, but I couldn’t access it because I didn’t have the internet. I remember talking to one of my friends and they were like, ‘Oh have you seen the work that’s been put for English’, and I was like, ‘We have work?’It was only in the September when we came back I finally got more support. I got a laptop and I got better access. A lot of people in my school had issues like me. A lot of people didn’t have technology or they didn’t have structured lessons, so we’ve had a lot to try to catch up on. A lot of the lessons have been quite content-heavy because it felt like we were trying to do two years in one, so that was quite stressful. And I felt like I had to work harder to do my GCSEs. I felt I had to do more to recover to my peers’ level. Continue reading...
Kim Jong-un says tests are a warning to Pyongyang’s enemies and its nuclear combat forces were at ‘full preparedness for actual war’Kim Jong-un supervised the launch of two long-range cruise missiles, North Korean state media said, adding that the weapons were equipped to carry tactical nukes and had already been deployed to some army units.Pyongyang has conducted a blitz of ballistic missile tests recently, which it described as tactical nuclear drills that simulated taking out airports and military facilities across South Korea. Continue reading...
Influential National party figure said he had never voted ‘anything other than right’, but that some on the right were ‘getting pretty crazy’Former New Zealand prime minister Sir John Key has suggested he would have voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 US election, and far-right president Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil’s 2022 elections, had he been eligible to do so.Key, who served three terms as prime minister from 2008 to 2016, revealed his preferences in a quick-fire round of 20 questions that featured at the end of a new online series called Both Sides Now, hosted by members of the Labour and National youth wings. Continue reading...
Exclusive: Donation is believed to be the largest single donation towards helping solve the problem of uncorrected blurry visionMacKenzie Scott, the billionaire philanthropist and former wife of the Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, has donated $15m (£13.5m) to a social enterprise that helps provide glasses to farmers in developing countries.Scott’s donation to VisionSpring is believed to be the largest single private donation towards helping solve the problem of uncorrected blurry vision which leaves hundreds of millions of people in poverty. Continue reading...
by Peter Walker Political correspondent on (#64NP0)
Below-inflation rise would save exchequer tenth of £40bn to be given out through tax cuts, says thinktankIf the government raises benefits in line with earnings rather than inflation next year, it would drastically cut the incomes of poorer working-age families, while saving less than a tenth of the cost of recent tax cuts, a leading economic thinktank has calculated.Such a change, which would mean a significant real-terms cut given that wages are rising at 5.5% with inflation close to 10%, could see the effective income of some families reduced by up to £1,000 a year, the Resolution Foundation said. Continue reading...
Settlement was down from £41.7bn, reflecting payments already made to cover UK obligationsThe UK’s Brexit “divorce bill” stood at €41.8bn (£36.7bn) in 2021, according to the EU’s official auditors.The European court of auditors’ annual report revealed that the UK was expected to make €10.9bn in payments to the EU during 2022. Continue reading...
by Jessica Elgot, Peter Walker and Pippa Crerar on (#64NF3)
PM accused of ‘trashing’ Conservative values and a PMQs performance that was ‘just appalling’Liz Truss’ leadership was in fresh peril on Wednesday with calls growing among senior Conservatives to reverse more proposed tax cuts and MPs accusing her of “trashing” Conservative values.As the cost of government borrowing soared further, Truss used her second PMQs appearance to “absolutely” rule out further spending cuts, instead allowing borrowing to rise over the next few years. Continue reading...
Rob made 20 jumps strapped into a special harness, including one into Nazi-held Italy with the SASBravery medals awarded to a collie called Rob that made 20 parachute jumps during the second world war and is credited with frequently saving his human colleagues have sold at auction for a record £140,000.Rob was strapped into a special harness and calmly followed infantry troops into north Africa and parachuted into Nazi-held Italy with the SAS, one of his jobs to stand guard and alert his human comrades of danger by licking their faces. Continue reading...
DJ and presenter will take over the reality TV show returns for ninth series early next yearMaya Jama is to succeed Laura Whitmore as the host of Love Island, it has been announced.ITV said Jama would take over when the reality TV show returns for its ninth series early next year. Continue reading...
by Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent on (#64MYC)
MPs question union leader and Network Rail negotiator over progress on resolving disputeTalks to resolve the rail dispute have yet to start discussing pay, according to union leader Mick Lynch, dampening hopes of a breakthrough before more strikes are called.The RMT’s general secretary said the union was still negotiating to avoid redundancies and cuts to maintenance work before they would tackle pay. Continue reading...
Analysis of ONS data shows black African women earn 26% less than men; Bangladeshi women 28% and Pakistani women 31%Most UK women from ethnic minority backgrounds have already stopped earning two months before Equal Pay Day, a new analysis by the Labour party shows, renewing calls for the government to introduce mandatory ethnicity pay gap reports.Last year, 18 November was marked by Fawcett Society as Equal Pay Day, the last day in the year where the average woman stopped earning relative to the average male worker because of the gender pay gap. Continue reading...
Retailer to open 104 Simply Food outlets as high street chain speeds up turnaround plan amid rising costsMarks & Spencer is planning to close 25% of its bigger stores selling clothing and homeware while opening more than 100 new Simply Food outlets, as it speeds up its turnaround plan in the face of a “difficult economic backdrop” and rising costs.The retailer told investors it aims to have 180 “full-line” shops – selling its full range of food, clothing and homeware products – by early 2028, down from 247 at present, and said it would get rid of “lower productivity” outlets. Continue reading...
BDO understood to have told club it won’t do work on its accounts, which sources say is related to Farhad Moshiri’s ownershipEverton football club’s auditor is considering walking away from its role signing off the club’s accounts, raising questions over its financing and ownership, according to sources.The Guardian understands that the accounting firm BDO has told Everton it will not be conducting the work, a decision which sources said was related to Farhad Moshiri’s ownership of the Premier League team. The firm had audited the club’s financial accounts for the previous two years, but the Merseyside club is now believed to be searching for a replacement. Continue reading...
by Libby Brooks Scotland correspondent on (#64MTX)
Campaigners say emergency response to fuel poverty risks shifting focus away from government responsibilityScotland’s leading anti-poverty campaigners are urging councils and communities “not to repeat past mistakes” by allowing “warm banks” – for those unable to afford heating their homes over the winter months – to become as entrenched as food banks.The plea was made in a joint statement from the Poverty Alliance, Trussell Trust Scotland and the Cyrenians that cautions that emergency responses to escalating fuel poverty, however well-intentioned, risk shifting the focus away from government responsibility to ensure all citizens are able to heat their homes. Continue reading...
Shares slide after developer warns of ‘less certain’ outlook as housing market hit by jump in borrowing costsBarratt Developments has reported a slump in reservations of new homes in recent weeks, as the housing market is hit by economic uncertainty and rising mortgage rates.Shares in Britain’s largest housebuilder tumbled by as much as 8% in early trading on Wednesday, the biggest faller on the FTSE 100, and dragged down the share prices of its housebuilding rivals after it warned of a “less certain” outlook. Continue reading...
Committee report says government approach on guiding people in tackling climate crisis is muddled and inadequateA third of the UK’s emissions reductions must come from people’s behaviour changing, a House of Lords committee has said.A report published on Wednesday by the upper house’s environment and climate change committee urged ministers to lead a public campaign and use regulations and taxation to guide public behaviour change in order to stop the decline of nature and reach legally binding net zero targets. Continue reading...
The money saving expert has teamed up with the UK’s library and information association to offer tips and guidanceMoney saving expert Martin Lewis has teamed up with the UK’s library and information association to offer advice to libraries considering becoming “warm banks”.Warm banks or warm spaces are places where vulnerable people and those hit hard by the cost of living can spend time. Continue reading...
by Nina Lakhani, Climate justice reporter on (#64MQ8)
High temperatures, rain and mosquitos make life unbearable for those still affected by the longest blackout in US historyAlexis Robles has slept a mere three hours a night since Hurricane Fiona hit Puerto Rico on 18 September, causing a total blackout across the Caribbean island.Robles, 52, a systems analyst in the seaside town of Cabo Rojo in south-west Puerto Rico, has been living without power for 24 days. Continue reading...
Move comes only days after manufacturer reportedly asked government for financial supportBritish Steel’s auditor has resigned, days after the manufacturer reportedly asked the government for financial support to save its operations, including the Scunthorpe steelworks.The accounting firm Mazars said the troubled Chinese-owned steelmaker had balked at the fees it quoted to sign off the company’s books for this year and was refusing to compensate it for difficulties with the previous year’s audit. Continue reading...
Exclusive: Company owned by Hinduja family refuses to offer workers inflation-matching pay riseThe UK’s richest family has been accused of “playing Scrooge” after allegations that they refused to pay all UK workers the “real living wage” while their own personal wealth swelled by £11.5bn in a single year.A company majority-owned by the Hinduja family, which was named by the Sunday Times earlier this year as the wealthiest people in Britain, is refusing to offer its workers – who help run a crucial government service – an inflation-matching pay rise. Continue reading...