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UK retail sales growth cools amid fears over budget tax rises

about 17 hours ago
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UK retail sales growth cooled last month as concerns over inflation and looming tax increases in Rachel Reeves’s autumn budget weighed on British consumers.In a snapshot before the chancellor’s tax and spending event next month, the British Retail Consortium (BRC) said total sales rose more slowly in September than in recent months.Separate figures from Barclays showed card spending fell 0.7% year-on-year in September.The bank said almost half of consumers in a survey of 2,000 individuals were making changes to their personal finances in anticipation of Reeves’s 26 November budget, with one in three building a savings buffer.

Helen Dickinson, the chief executive of the BRC, said the looming budget had affected spending alongside milder weather, while growth in the value of food sales was mostly down to rising grocery prices.“Rising inflation and a potentially taxing budget are weighing on the minds of many households planning their Christmas spending,” she said.The BRC said UK total retail sales increased by 2.3% year on year in September, compared with a growth rate of 3.1% the previous month.

That was below the latest Office for National Statistics reading for inflation across the board, August’s 3.8% annual rate.Food sales increased by a stronger 4.3% year on year, albeit as grocery inflation accelerates amid a fresh squeeze on living standards.Non-food spending rose by 0.

7% year on year, below a 12-month average of 0,9%, as milder temperatures across the UK deterred shoppers from refreshing their autumn and winter wardrobes,Sales were propped up by spending on electrical goods, after the launch of Apple’s latest iPhone and smartwatch,Linda Ellett, the UK head of consumer, retail and leisure at the accountancy firm KPMG said non-food sales were growing by a meagre 1,2% on average.

“Spending continues to be very targeted as consumers remain cautious,” she said.Reeves is widely expected to raise taxes in her autumn budget.However, business leaders have warned higher costs for companies would be passed on to consumers in the form of price rises, hurting household finances and the economy at large.In an intervention published late on Tuesday, the British Chambers of Commerce called on the chancellor to rule out business tax increases because companies had been left drained by higher levies she introduced in last year’s autumn budget.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 promotionShevaun Haviland, the director general of the BCC, said the November budget was a “make-or-break” moment for the UK economy.

“Right now, many firms feel drained.They cannot plan ahead as they expect further tax demands to be laid at their feet.”The 0.7% annual decline in consumer card spending recorded by Barclays in September, came after 0.5% year-on-year growth in August.

Essential spending fell 2.6%, while growth in discretionary spending slowed to 0.2%.Despite growing concerns over the chancellor’s budget, the bank said consumer confidence in households’ ability to live within their means had reached a four-year high of 78%, while confidence in personal finances remained resilient.However, it warned households remained cautious amid the prospect of higher inflation, tax increases and broader economic uncertainty.

Karen Johnson, the head of retail at Barclays, said: “We’re continuing to see cautious spending, and shoppers are consistently seeking out areas they can cut back on,However, multiple retail categories have proved to be resilient in recent months, with furniture, clothing and beauty all remaining in growth since February of this year,”
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Farage criticises ‘disgraceful’ rhetoric after alleged attack on Reform council leader

The Reform UK leader, Nigel Farage, has criticised “disgraceful” rhetoric from the Labour and Green parties after the UK’s youngest council leader was allegedly assaulted.George Finch, 19, the Reform leader of Warwickshire county council,said he was called a “racist” and a “fascist” before being allegedly assaulted on Friday.The alleged attacker “was wound up and sent into battle by the dangerous rhetoric of Labour and the Greens”, Finch told the Daily Mail. He said the attack didn’t cause any lasting injury.Farage said he was “deeply upset” about the incident and “the words used against him echo the prime minister’s disgraceful attack on Reform during Labour conference week and wholly irresponsible comments from the leader of the Green party”

about 22 hours ago
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Government made ‘every effort’ to support China spying trial, says minister

The government made “every effort” to support the trial of two men accused of spying for China, a minister has said, as he accused the Tories of claiming the case was deliberately abandoned “without a shred of evidence”.Dan Jarvis, the security minister, issued a robust defence of Jonathan Powell in the Commons after reports that Keir Starmer’s national security adviser played a role in the collapse of the case.His intervention prolongs an extraordinary blame game between ministers and prosecutors over the abandonment of charges against two men, including a former parliamentary researcher, who were accused of spying for Beijing.Charges were dropped against Christopher Cash and Christopher Berry, who had always maintained their innocence, last month after the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said it could no longer meet the evidential threshold needed to proceed.Jarvis said that since the charges against Cash and Berry were brought in April 2024, the deputy national security adviser, Matthew Collins, provided three witness statements to support the trial in December 2023, February 2025 and July 2025

about 22 hours ago
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Badenoch accuses Labour of prioritising economic ties with China over national security – as it happened

At the Downing Street lobby briefing this morning the PM’s spokesperson took questions for about 45 minutes on the collapse of the China spying prosecution. The briefing did not provide answers to all the questions raised by Kemi Badenoch (see 10.20am) and others, but it did move things on a bit. Here are the main points.The PM’s spokesperson said it was “entirely false” to claim the government played a role in getting the CPS to drop the prosection

about 23 hours ago
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Why Britain’s climate and defence strategies need to be better integrated | Letter

Your article (National security threatened by climate crisis, UK intelligence chiefs due to warn, 8 October) exposed the dangerous disconnect between climate policy and defence. It raises vital questions about Britain’s – and the world’s – readiness to face the security threats posed by the climate crisis, none of which can be met if leaders keep treating climate and defence as separate issues.This summer, wildfires linked to climate change brought Europe to its knees, wreaking economic havoc, overwhelming health systems and draining military resources. All over the world, climate breakdown is fuelling instability, conflict and displacement. The EU’s failure to break free from Moscow’s pipelines is jeopardising its energy sovereignty

about 24 hours ago
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Swinney says Scottish government will sponsor visas for foreign care workers

John Swinney has said the Scottish government will help hundreds of overseas care workers stay in the UK, as he attacked Westminster for its rising hostility to immigrants.The first minister said it was unfair Scotland’s older people had to “pay the price for Westminster’s prejudice”, and that his devolved government would sponsor visa applications for workers needed to staff care homes, at a cost of about £500,000.Swinney described the UK government’s decision to greatly restrict access to visas for those jobs, in an effort to respond to rising tensions over mass migration, as deeply damaging.“Thousands of care workers here in the UK entirely legally have been left high and dry, unable to work, while care homes are crying out for staff,” he told the Scottish National party’s annual conference in Aberdeen. “In what world does that make any sense?”Swinney told delegates the measure was further evidence Scotland’s interests were being damaged by continued membership of the UK, as he confirmed he would make a fresh push for independence central to Scottish parliament elections next year

about 24 hours ago
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Families of David Amess and Jo Cox voice concern at rise in violent political rhetoric

The families of the murdered MPs David Amess and Jo Cox have voiced concern about a recent surge in violent political rhetoric in Britain.While the fatal attack on a synagogue in Manchester and targeting of Muslims have placed a renewed spotlight on violent antisemitism and Islamophobia, there are also concerns over an increasing normalisation of language calling for political figures to be killed.Examples include the suspension of a Reform UK councillor linked to a social media account calling for Keir Starmer to be shot and the arrest of a man allegedly captured on film at major far-right rally last month in London threatening to kill the prime minister. At the same rally, Elon Musk made comments that later drew condemnation from Downing Street when he told the crowd that “violence is coming”.The language comes after a summer of anti-immigration protests, culture war flashpoints and a surge in podcasts and YouTube videos predicting civil war

1 day ago
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My cultural awakening: ‘Kate Bush helped me come out as a trans woman’

3 days ago
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From Tron: Ares to Riot Women: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

3 days ago
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The Guide #212: The Taylor Swift backlash has me asking: how much good music can one artist really produce?

4 days ago
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Seth Meyers on Trump: ‘deeply unhinged, detached from reality’

4 days ago
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Spitting Image comics decry lawsuit over depiction of Paddington Bear

4 days ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump’s national guard deployments: ‘Incredibly dangerous and unnecessary’

5 days ago