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EU leaders pressure Starmer to join defence scheme built on debt
βEuropean leaders are using Sir Keir Starmerβs struggles to increase Britainβs defence spending to convince him to join a β¬500 billion (Β£420 billion) rearmament scheme funded by common debt. Poland, which holds the European Unionβs rotating presidency, is pushing the project in response to Donald Trumpβs criticism that European allies have piggybacked on US defence spending for too long. Donald Tusk, Polandβs prime minister, this week argued that βwe shouldnβt really care too much about what method we adopt to financeβ a boost in defence spending on the Continent. βThere is no alternative to this: Europe must start defending itself and so it must start spending European money on this as well,β he added in a speech to the European Parliament in Strasbourg.β β The Daily Telegraph
- New softer Brexit plan could be agreed in UK-EU talks β The I
- Ministers weigh signing up UK to Europe customs scheme β The Financial Times
- What the UK joining the European trade scheme would mean for Starmerβs Brexit reset β The I
Reeves to relax non-dom tax rule amid millionaire exodusβ¦
βThe government is to amend controversial changes to tax rules for non-domiciled residents that were announced in Octoberβs budget as record numbers of millionaires leave the UK. Asked at a fringe event at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos about the exodus of millionaires, chancellor Rachel Reeves revealed that the government would shortly table an amendment to the Finance Bill. βWe have been listening to the concerns that have been raised by the non-dom community,β she told Emma Tucker, editor of The Wall Street Journal. The government amendment will increase the generosity of the temporary repatriation facility, which enables non-doms to bring money instantly to the UK without paying significant taxes.β β The Times
- Non-dom tax tweak βnot enoughβ to stop rich leaving UK β The I
- βRight thinking but a difficult positionβ: global investorsβ verdict on Reeves at Davos β The Financial Times
- Are Reevesβs efforts to win business confidence βfiddling while Rome burnsβ? β The Guardian
- The Chancellorβs non-dom U-turn is too little, too late β Editorial, The Daily Telegraph
- Restless Reeves seeks cure for growing pains β Patrick Maguire, The Times
- Pressures at home and away add strain on UK finances β Stephen Bush, The Financial Times
β¦and she is to instruct national wealth fund to work with mayors to boost growthβ¦
βRachel Reeves will instruct bosses of the national wealth fund (NWF) and the new Office for Investment to work with regional mayors for the first time, as part of a package of initiatives to boost growth. After a meeting of combined authority mayors and civil servants in Rotherham on Thursday, the chancellor said a deeper relationship between Whitehall and regional leaders would enhance her push to enhance growth nationally. Reeves, who will give a speech about the governmentβs growth plans next week, said the scheme was aimed at bridging the gap between Whitehall and local leaders to avoid the previous top-down approach. Under the plan, newly formed taskforces will tailor growth strategies for each regionβ¦β β The Guardian
β¦and as visas for high-skilled workers are set to be relaxed
βVisas for high-skilled workers are set to be relaxed as part of government plans to kickstart growth, the Chancellor has said. Ministers will publish an immigration white paper later this year which includes a review of visa routes β particularly for those specialising in the AI and life sciences sectors. While Labour are committed to reducing overall migration amid spiralling numbers, the government have faced calls to encourage wealthy or high-skilled individuals to arrive on Britainβs shores. Rachel Reeves told an event at the World Economic Forum: βWe are going to look again at routes for the highest skilled peopleβ¦β Earlier this month, Sir Keir Starmer was urged to grant visas to βwealthy, high-skilled Americansβ who want to migrate to the UKβ¦β β The Daily Mail
I wonβt resign over Heathrow expansion, Miliband insists
βEd Miliband has refused to resign if the Government publicly backs a third runway at Heathrow, just days after he said the rise of net zero was βunstoppableβ. The Energy Secretary, who has previously argued that environmental principles must be backed up with actions, said the idea of him quitting the Cabinet over the expansion of Europeβs busiest airport was βridiculousβ. Mr Miliband moved to clarify his position amid speculation that the Chancellor will formalise the Governmentβs backing for a new runway in a speech next week, at which she is also expected to endorse applications for expanding Gatwick and Lutonβ¦ His comments sparked an immediate backlash from green campaigners, who accused him of hypocrisy.β β The Daily Telegraph
- Labour should hit the brake in dash to net zero β Emma Duncan, The Times
- Crash landing soon at a runway near you β a politicanβs career β Tom Peck, The Times
Ministers explore shelving stricter audit rules for private companies
βUK ministers are exploring scrapping promised stricter audit rules for private companies as the government seeks to dial back regulation in a bid to boost economic growth. Business secretary Jonathan Reynolds and employment minister Justin Madders have met large audit firms and big investors in recent months to discuss watering down or axing reforms that would designate about 600 companies βpublic interest entitiesβ, according to people familiar with the talks. The previous Conservative government pledged to reform the UKβs audit regimes after multiple high-profile corporate failures, such as outsourcer Carillion, retailer BHS and cafΓ© chain Patisserie Valerie. In 2021, ministers proposed classifying the largest private companiesβ¦β β The Financial Times
Labour blocks bee-harming insecticide β frustrating farmers
βThe government has blocked the use of a bee-harming insecticide, delighting conservationists and frustrating sugar beet growers. Several neonicotinoids, the most widely used insecticides in the world, were banned in the UK seven years ago after growing scientific evidence that they were contributing to pollinator declines. However, for four years in a row, applications by British Sugar for βemergency authorisationβ of one of those three banned neonicotinoids, thiamethoxam, which is sold as the product Cruiser SB, have been approved. Sir Keir Starmer made an election campaign pledge to protect bees and stop those emergency authorisations. On Thursday the government rejected an application by British Sugar and the National Farmers Unionβ¦β β The Times
Labour MPs βordered to sinkβ landmark climate and environment bill
βA landmark bill that would make the UKβs climate and environment targets legally binding seems doomed after government whips ordered Labour MPs to oppose it following a breakdown in negotiations. Supporters of the climate and nature bill, introduced by the Liberal Democrat MP Roz Savage, say Labour insisted on the removal of clauses that would require the UK to meet the targets it agreed to at Cop and other international summits. Although it is a private memberβs bill, more than 80 Labour MPs, including several ministers, had publicly signed up to support it. Some Labour MPs have been ordered to attend the billβs second reading on Friday morning and to prepare speeches, to deliberately make it run out of time and avoid a vote.β β The Guardian
>Yesterday:
Majority of Britainβs illegal migrants live in London, data shows
βThe majority of Britainβs illegal migrants live in London, according to the most recent research carried out by a public body in the UK. The study, commissioned by Sir Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, estimated there were 674,000 undocumented people in the UK, equal to 1 per cent of the population. Half of them were below the age of 25. Of all illegal migrants, an estimated 397,000 were in London β 60 per cent of the nationwide total. The research was published by the Greater London Authority (GLA) in 2020, having been commissioned by Khan and carried out by the University of Wolverhampton. It has re-emerged after revelations that Thames Water commissioned its own independent researchβ¦β β The Times
- Student visas βincreasingly used as back doorβ to work in UK β The Daily Telegraph
- We have no clue how many people live in Britain β and Starmer doesnβt care β David Frost, The Daily Telegraph
Cabinet Office chief blocks investigation into Attorney Generalβs βconflict of interestβ row
βThe Cabinet Office has rejected an investigation into the Attorney Generalβs potential conflicts of interest over his past clients, including Gerry Adams. Sir Chris Wormald, the Cabinet Secretary, has written to Robert Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary maintaining that arrangements to avoid any conflict of interest have been applied and properly followed since Lord Hermerβs appointment. Confirming the letter in a statement to the Commons, Lucy Rigby, the Solicitor General, said: βThe Attorney Generalβs Office has a rigorous system in place to ensure that a law officer would not be consulted on any matter that could give rise to a potential conflict of interest.β Mr Jenrick called for the investigation on Sundayβ¦β β The Daily Telegraph
- The Attorney General βconflict of interest rowβ becomes riper by the day β Quentin Letts, The Daily Mail
Farage demands apology over Southport fake news claim
βNigel Farage has called on Angela Rayner to apologise for accusing him of spreading βfake newsβ after the Southport murders. The Reform UK leader said he had faced βabuseβ from the deputy prime minister and other MPs, resulting in increased threats against him. He told The Times that he was βowed some apologiesβ from Rayner after the Southport killer, Axel Rudakubana, was sentenced to a minimum of 52 years in jail on Thursday. Farage wrote to Rayner citing Rudakubanaβs guilty plea to 16 charges, including possession of a military study of an al-Qaeda training manual, which is an offence under the Terrorism Act. Farage argued that it vindicated his suggestion in July that the attack could be linked to terrorism.β β The Times
- Bring back the dealth penalty for monsters like Southport killer, blast furious MPs β The Sun
- Rayner owes Farage an apology over Southport attack β Jawad Iqbal, The Times
>Today:
News in Brief:
- How Poilievre led Canadaβs Conservatives back from the wilderness β James Heale, The SpectatorΒ
- Can Trump make McKinley great again? β Michael Lind, UnHerd
- Make Britain grow again β Ross Clark, The Critic
- By voting to leave the EU, we escaped a terrible fate β Jon Moynihan, CapX
- Trump can stay popular β Ben Walker, The New Statesman
The post Newslinks for Friday 24th January 2025 appeared first on Conservative Home.
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