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Government considers sale of Brexit border checkpoint in Kent – reports

1 day ago
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The UK government is reportedly considering selling a post-Brexit border check facility in Kent that could fall out of use as a result of this week’s trade pact with the EU.The site, based in Sevington, Ashford, was erected in 2021 with capacity for 1,300 lorries that were expected to face extra checks on plants and animal goods, including dairy and meat, entering and leaving Britain after Brexit.However, the deal between the UK and EU struck earlier this week is expected to remove the need for routine health and veterinary certification on the import and export of farm products ranging from fresh meat and dairy products to vegetables, timber, wool and leather.The government is now looking for a company willing to buy or repurpose the Sevington border control point.Ministers are said to have approached Eurotunnel directly, according to the Financial Times.

The Port of Dover could also be in the running, having been in discussions with the government for years about the site.The Port of Dover chief executive, Doug Bannister, welcomed the UK government’s deal with the EU.“Clearly there is a lot of detail to work through on how that’s to be implemented and we’re keen to continue our discussions with government for what this means for the BCP [border control post] at Sevington,” he said.The new UK-EU deal could end up making 41 border control posts, built by British port operators after Brexit, redundant.The Guardian revealed on Wednesday that a separate £25m post-Brexit border control post in Portsmouth may have to be demolished as a result of the government’s deal with the EU.

The hi-tech facility at the UK’s second busiest cross-Channel terminal was one of more than 100 BCPs around the country built to government specifications to handle post-Brexit checks on imports subject to sanitary and phytosanitary checks.Boasting 14 lorry bays, Portsmouth’s 8,000 sq metre (86,000 sq ft) border site was designed to allow inspection of low- and high-risk goods in air-lock quarantine zones to prevent cross-contamination.However, it has been severely underused since it began operating in April last year, after the previous Conservative government’s changes to the post-Brexit import regime, which significantly reduced the number of tests required.Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionAn average of three checks have been carried out each day at Portsmouth’s control post in the 12 months since it began operating, compared with the 80 a day for which it was built.It is understood that a decision on whether to close border control posts will depend on the final details of the UK-EU deal.

Some checks, including on live animals, are expected to continue.A government spokesperson said: “This government committed in its manifesto to negotiate an agreement to prevent unnecessary border checks, remove red tape for businesses and help tackle the cost of food, which is what we have delivered on.”Eurotunnel declined to comment.
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Wildlife charities urge Labour to scrap ‘licence to kill nature’ in planning bill

Leading wildlife charities are calling on Labour to scrap a significant section of the planning bill that they say is a “licence to kill nature”, as new data reveals bats and newts are not the main reason planning is delayed in England.The RSPB and the Wildlife Trusts, whose membership is more than 2 million, said Labour had broken its promises on nature. They called for part three of the bill, which allows developers to avoid environmental laws at a site by paying into a national nature recovery fund to pay for environmental improvements elsewhere, to be ditched.Beccy Speight, CEO of the RSPB, said: “It’s now clear that the bill in its current form will rip the heart out of environmental protections and risks sending nature further into freefall.“The fate of our most important places for nature and the laws that protect them are all in the firing line

1 day ago
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UK politics: Starmer accused of being ‘beneath contempt’ for attack on Chagos deal critics – as it happened

James Cartlidge, the shadow defence secretary, is responding to Healey.He starts by saying that what Keir Starmer said at his press conference about opponents of the deal being on the side of Russia and China was “beneath contempt”.He says by opposing the Chagos Islands deal, the Tories would not be traitors, they would be patriots.The UK has signed a £3.4bn agreement to cede sovereignty over the Chagos Islands to Mauritius after an 11th-hour legal challenge failed

1 day ago
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Yeah but no but yeah but no but surrender. Life’s just one big betrayal for Kemi and co | John Crace

I fear for Kemi Badenoch’s sanity. She may need a little respite care. From herself. Little more than 24 hours after one of her by now customary car-crash outings at prime minister’s questions in which she didn’t appear to have noticed that Keir Starmer had U-turned on the winter fuel allowance, KemiKaze was emailing Tory party members to tell them the exciting news. She had had the prime minister on the rack and it was only down to her that Labour had done their reverse ferret

1 day ago
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Tories must ‘get moving’ on new policies or face crisis, says Robert Jenrick

The Conservative party needs to “get moving” with new policies or risk being cut adrift in a social media-informed world where people make up their minds quickly, Robert Jenrick has said.While the shadow justice secretary did not directly criticise Kemi Badenoch for the time she is taking to formulate policies, and said he accepted there was a need for reflection after a bad election defeat, he warned that without rapid action the Tories faced an “existential crisis”.Badenoch, who defeated Jenrick in the party leadership race last year, has attracted some criticism within the party for her insistence that the Conservatives should not rush into policies but instead spend the next couple of years working to rebuild voters’ trust.Asked about generating new polices at an event in London on Wednesday evening, Jenrick said: “I do think you’ve got to get moving. That’s not a criticism

1 day ago
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Talks to start on recognition of state of Palestine by western states

Talks will start on Friday at an official level about the possibility of recognising the state of Palestine.A senior Arab diplomat in London said:“If you asked me a fortnight ago if there will be wider recognition [of Palestine] by western states I would have said no, but now I am not so sure.”The UK foreign secretary, David Lammy, suspended trade talks with Israel on Tuesday and described its refusal to lift a blockade of aid into Gaza as “abominable”.Lammy spoke to the Israeli foreign minister, Gideon Sa’ar, on Wednesday about the barriers blocking aid. The French foreign minister, Jean-Noël Barrot, said this week: “We cannot leave the children of Gaza a legacy of violence and hatred

2 days ago
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Labour could review other benefit cuts after winter fuel U-turn, sources say

Keir Starmer has announced a partial U-turn that would make more pensioners eligible for winter fuel payments as government figures opened the door to more tweaks to controversial policies.After a major backlash against one of the most unpopular measures announced by the Labour government, the prime minister indicated he would look again at the £11,500 threshold over which pensioners are no longer eligible for the allowance.Downing Street said the change was a result of an improved economic landscape, with sources saying ministers could revisit policies including the two-child benefit cap or health and disability cuts if the economy continued to improve.“We’re open to adapting policy as the circumstances allow. So when there’s an opportunity to make people better off, which is our central purpose, then we’re going to take it,” a government source said

2 days ago
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M&S contractor ‘investigating whether it was gateway for cyber-attack’

about 11 hours ago
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Sunny spring drives biggest jump in retail sales in Great Britain in four years

about 12 hours ago
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UK private sector shrinking as firms cut jobs; pressure to raise taxes as government borrowing jumps – as it happened

1 day ago
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UK petrol prices poised to fall further as oil prices tumble

1 day ago
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Ministers said to be considering bill to wipe out British Steel’s debts

1 day ago
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Government considers sale of Brexit border checkpoint in Kent – reports

1 day ago