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Starmer says ‘every lever’ will be explored to ease rising costs of living from Iran conflict

about 12 hours ago
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Keir Starmer has promised to look at using “every lever that’s available to the government” to help people cope with the impact on the cost of living of the US-Israel war against Iran, as he prepares for an emergency meeting with senior ministers.The prime minister will chair a meeting of the Cobra committee to discuss possible contingency measures on Monday afternoon, joining Andrew Bailey, the governor of the Bank of England, Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, Ed Miliband, the energy secretary, and Yvette Cooper, the foreign secretary.Speaking to reporters during a visit to a school in London, Starmer said he wanted to reassure Britons that everything was being done to mitigate the economic effects of the conflict, which has resulted in energy prices soaring and the cost of government borrowing also rising.“Cobra is the opportunity at the highest level to bring people together on matters of real, significant national importance,” Starmer said.“Obviously, Cobras are usually used for military considerations, consular considerations, but I think with the Iran war, most people are very concerned now, not only what they’re seeing on their screens in relation to the conflict itself, but also that question of ‘How is it going to affect me and my family?’“And so today we’re looking at the economic impact, and I am asking for every lever that’s available to the government to deal with the cost of living to be discussed at Cobra.

Hence we’ve got the Bank of England and others there,“But I want to make sure that when it comes to the cost of living, we’re doing everything we possibly can at a very difficult period like this,”Downing Street, however, downplayed suggestions that Reeves would announce financial support for struggling households after the meeting,Instead, discussions were expected to focus on assessing the economic impact of the conflict, preventing shortages – including fuel – and pressing regulators and business to stamp out profiteering,“Obviously for many people, when they watch the conflict on their TV screens, they question how it’s going to affect themselves and their family, and that’s why we’re convening this meeting to look at the economic impact,” the prime minister’s spokesperson said.

Economists and energy experts have warned that the effect of the conflict, begun by the US and Israel launching air and missile strikes on Iran, could be similar or greater to the 1970s oil price shocks and the effect of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.In response to the attacks, Iran has aimed missiles and drones at military and infrastructure targets in the Middle East and beyond, and effectively blocked the strait of Hormuz, a key route for oil and gas heading to Europe, for most shipping.In what appeared to be a significant de-escalation on Monday, the US president, Donald Trump, extended by five days his deadline to strike Iran’s power stations and energy infrastructure if Tehran did not allow shipping to move freely, claiming the US and Iran had held “very good and productive conversations” on an end to the conflict.No 10 welcomed the prospect of any breakthrough, with Starmer’s spokesperson adding: “We’ve always said that swift resolution to the war is in global interests, and the strait of Hormuz specifically needs to be reopened.” Starmer spoke with Trump on Sunday night in a 20-minute call Downing Street described as constructive, while giving few details.

“What we need here is de-escalation and that’s why we had a statement from a number of countries last week about what we need to do about the strait of Hormuz, which obviously needs careful co-ordination and a viable plan, but it’s very important, we defend our interests, we defend British lives, but without getting dragged into the war,” Starmer said on Monday morning.Starmer has distanced the UK from a conflict which, polling shows, is generally very unpopular with the domestic public.He refused the US permission to use UK air bases for the initial attack, and has since only allowed this for strikes on Iranian missile bases, not other targets.This has annoyed the US president, who has repeatedly criticised Starmer and mocked him for lacking decisiveness.Before the pair spoke, Trump posted a video on his Truth Social site of a sketch from the new UK version of Saturday Night Live, which portrayed Starmer as being scared of talking to the president.

Downing Street did not say whether Starmer had seen the clip.“The prime minister is entirely focused on the job at hand.He obviously had a good conversation with the president, where they discussed the conflict and reopening the strait of Hormuz,” the spokesperson said.No 10 also played down the prospect of long-range missile attacks on UK soil, after reports at the weekend that followed an Iranian attempt to hit the British base at Diego Garcia.“There is no assessment that Iran is trying to target Europe with missiles.

But even if they did, we have the military capability we need to keep the UK safe,” they added.
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Dow Jones Industrial Average posts best day since early February as hopes of Middle East de-escalation lift markets – as it happened

Wall Street has joined the global relief rally after Donald Trump postponed attacks on Iran’s power plants, sending a surge of optimism though trading floors.In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average has jumped by 2% or 928 points to 46,505 points.Construction equipment firm Caterpillar (+4.4%), manufacturing conglomerate 3M (+3.7%) and DIY chain Home Depot (+3

about 6 hours ago
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The UK sleepwalked into this energy price shock | Nils Pratley

“Because of the choices we made before the conflict in the Middle East began, we are better prepared for a more volatile world”, the chief secretary to the Treasury, James Murray, claimed last week. That statement – surprise, surprise – failed to calm the bond vigilantes who had pushed the yield on 10-year government debt to a punishing 5% before Monday’s modest retreat.Murray seemed to be referring to tax increases and the chancellor’s decision to shift £150 of green levies from energy bills into general taxation. Count those if you wish but, come on, they are minor entries. The UK’s vulnerability to energy price shocks flows from bigger forces, such as our large and growing dependency on imports

about 6 hours ago
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MPs urge UK government to halt contract giving Palantir FCA data access

MPs have urged the government to halt its latest contract with Palantir after the Guardian revealed that the US spy-tech company is to gain access to a trove of highly sensitive UK financial regulation data.The Financial Conduct Authority, the watchdog for thousands of financial bodies from banks to hedge funds, has hired Palantir to apply its AI systems to two years’ worth of internal intelligence data to help it tackle financial crime.But the Liberal Democrats on Monday called for a government investigation into the contract, which the party said could be “a huge error of judgment”, while the Green party said it should be blocked over Palantir’s links to Donald Trump.Questioned on whether the UK was becoming “dangerously overreliant” on US tech companies including Palantir, Keir Starmer told parliament he would prefer to have more domestic capability but added: “I don’t think we’re overreliant.”Palantir was founded by the Trump-backing billionaire Peter Thiel and it supports the US and Israeli militaries and the ICE immigration crackdown

about 8 hours ago
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AI boom risks widening wealth divide, says BlackRock’s Larry Fink

The boom in artificial intelligence risks widening inequality, with only a handful of companies and investors likely to reap its financial rewards, the BlackRock chief executive, Larry Fink, has said.The boss of the $14tn (£10.4tn) asset manager used his annual letter to investors on Monday to highlight potential hazards around the exponential growth in AI, which has attracted rapid investment and become, he said, “central to strategic competition” between global powers such as the US and China.“The massive wealth created over the past several generations flowed mostly to people who already owned financial assets,” Fink said. “And now AI threatens to repeat that pattern at an even larger scale

about 9 hours ago
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Victoria Mboko and Mirra Andreeva lead new generation of friendly rivals

Victoria Mboko and Mirra Andreeva, the two highest-ranked teenagers in the world, prepared for their marquee Miami Open fourth-round match in an unusual manner. Aside from being the two protagonists of the freshest rivalry in women’s tennis, they are also great friends, and so they spent the afternoon before their big match against each other competing on the same side of the net in doubles.This was an opportunity to giggle, relax and enjoy themselves on one of the smaller courts in Miami, but Mboko and Andreeva are ranked No 9 and No 10 in the world for a reason. Two fiercely competitive beings determined to win every time on the court, they fought desperately and emerged with an impressive result. After trailing 0-5 against the eighth seeds, Demi Schuurs and Ellen Perez, in the opening set and facing eight set points scattered across the set, they somehow emerged from the match with a straight-sets win

about 4 hours ago
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ECB has taken a risk keeping McCullum and Key – who must now placate the public | Ali Martin

Having endorsed Brendon McCullum’s continuation as men’s head coach after an Ashes defeat riddled with self‑owns and kept Rob Key above him as team director, the England and Wales Cricket Board could in one sense be viewed as having taken the path of least resistance.McCullum’s contract runs to the end of 2027 and it would cost a pretty penny to cut him loose. The players enjoy the pair’s methods and tend to call the shots in the modern era. There may not be an all-format candidate for head coach out there. Besides, look over there: the Hundred returns in July, ready to overload your eyeballs with multicoloured content

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