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Trump celebrates tax bill passing, Reeves must boost headroom to £30bn, says ex-Bank of England deputy – as it happened

1 day ago
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Time to recap…Donald Trump is preparing to send letters to trading partners, setting out tariff rates that countries will have to pay from the beginning of next month.The US president has said he will send out about “10 or 12” letters on Friday, with further letters over the next few days, as the 90-day pause on his “reciprocal tariffs” comes to an end.Trade tensions are bubbling at the second biggest economy in the world too.China announced new tariffs of up to 35% on brandy from the European Union, condemned as ‘unfair’ by an EU spokesperson.The Chinese tariffs will range from 27.

7% to 34.9% and will be effective from Saturday, lasting five years.The Chinese commerce ministry said the decision follows a probe launched last year, which linked European cognac imports to threats against its domestic brandy industry.However, the duties include exemptions for some major cognac makers, including Remy Cointreau, Pernod Ricard and LVMH’s Hennessy.The EU imposed tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles last year, and Beijing has launched similar anti-dumping probes into European dairy and pork.

The new tariffs could set a difficult tone for a China-EU summit that is scheduled to be held later this month in Beijing,Meanwhile in the UK, a former Bank of England deputy has said Rachel Reeves has to ‘neurotically fine tune taxes’ because of her decision to opt for fiscal rules that give her little wiggle room,Charlie Bean, who is also a former member of the OBR’s budget responsibility committee, told Radio 4’s Today programme:About £10 billion - that’s a very small number in the context of overall public spending,Government spending is about about one and a quarter trillion so £10 billion is a small number … and it is a small number in the context of typical forecasting errors,…She should aim to operate with a larger margin of headroom, so previous chancellors have typically operated with headroom of the order of £30 billion.

Because she has chosen about a third of that … it is very easy for numbers to go in the wrong direction and she finds she has to neurotically fine tune taxes to control the OBR forecast that is several years ahead,The original sin is that she should not have chosen to operate with such a tight margin of error,Tesla sales in the UK rebounded in June, according to the latest figures for monthly new car registrations, following the launch of its new Model Y,The company, which is led by the billionaire Elon Musk, sold 7,719 cars in the UK last month, up 14% compared with June last year,However registrations still remain 1.

3% lower in the year to date,Tesla has been struggling with weak sales in some of its international markets, as it has faced a consumer backlash against Musk’s politics, as well as stiff competition from Chinese rivals such as BYD,Overall the company delivered 384,122 vehicles in the second quarter, down 13,5% from 443,956 units a year ago,The end of a 90-day pause on Trump’s “reciprocal tariffs” looms next week on 9th July, with many countries racing to hammer out a deal before they are hit with the president’s levies.

Indonesia has offered to cut duties on key imports from the US to “near zero” and to buy $500m worth of American wheat, as part of its trade talks with Washington, its lead negotiator has said,Jakarta is facing a tariff rate of 32% in the US market if it does not reach an agreement,Chief economics minister Airlangga Hartarto said the Indonesian government has offered to cut tariffs on key American exports, including agricultural products, to near zero, compared with current rates that vary between 0% and 5%,He said:It will be near zero … but it will depend as well on how much the tariffs we get from the US,Airlangga also said that the state carrier Garuda Indonesia would buy more Boeing planes as part of a $34 billion deal with business partners to boost purchases from the US.

Elsewhere in the world of trade, tensions are simmering between the EU and China, after Beijing announced it would place new tariffs of up to 35% on brandy from the bloc,Olof Gill, a spokesperson for the EU, said:We believe that China’s measures are unfair,We believe they are unjustified,We believe they are inconsistent with the applicable international rules and are thus unfounded,The Chinese tariffs will range from 27.

7% to 34.9% and will be effective from Saturday, lasting five years.The Chinese commerce ministry said the decision follows a probe launched last year, which linked European cognac imports to threats against its domestic brandy industry.However, the duties include exemptions for some major cognac makers, including Remy Cointreau, Pernod Ricard and LVMH’s Hennessy.The EU imposed tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles last year, and Beijing has launched similar anti-dumping probes into European dairy and pork.

The announcement comes as the Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi tours Europe to discuss trade.Wang is set to meet his French counterpart, Jean-Noël Barrot, later today in Paris.A China-EU summit is planned to be held later this month in Beijing.The boss of Ryanair has said that he is hopeful that trade tariffs between the US and the European Union would not apply to commercial aircrafts, as it would disrupt complex supply chains.Ryanair chief executive Michael O’Leary told Ireland’s RTE radio:Commercial aircraft have always been exempt under previous tariffs.

..We think that’s likely to be restored even if there are tariffs applied.The comments come as investors await the EU to finalise a trade deal with the US ahead of Trump’s deadline on 9 July.The Stoxx Europe 600 index, which tracks the performance of some of the biggest companies on the continent, is down by 0.

65%.The EU and the US are closing in on a high-levle “framework” trade deal that would mean that the bloc could avert 50% tariffs on all its exports next Wednesday.The downturn in UK construction is starting to ease, according to new data released this morning.The S&P Global UK Construction Purchasing Managers’ Index rose to 48.8 from 47.

9 in May, reaching a six-month high.It is still below the 50 threshold which represents growth in the market.The survey painted a mixed picture across the industry, with housing activity expanding for the first time since September, but the commercial sector contracting at the fastest rate since mid 2020.Gareth Belsham, of Bloom Building Consultancy, said:Yes the overall contraction in industry workloads continues to ease, and housebuilders even saw output rise in June.That’s the good news.

But on the other side of the ledger, commercial sector workloads fell sharply, declining at their fastest level since May 2020 - a month when Britain was in the teeth of the Covid pandemic.Infrastructure and civil engineering work contracted even more rapidly.But the real cause for alarm is the continued decline in new orders - as they are the key to where the industry goes from here.Builders’ order books have got progressively thinner every single month in 2025 so far, and this is taking a severe toll on construction industry sentiment.The inability of Britain’s government to make cuts to its welfare sending has underscored the “formidable” challenge it faces in shoring up its finances, analysts at the credit rating agency S&P Global have said.

This week Sir Keir Starmer was forced to gut his controversial welfare bill following strong opposition from Labour MPs, abandoning approximately £5bn in potential savings for the government,Analysts at S&P wrote:We consider the inability to make modest cuts to welfare spending, which has ballooned in the UK since the 2020 pandemic, underscores the UK government’s very limited budgetary room for manoeuvre,Turning back to the UK, house builders are among the worst performers across the FTSE this morning,MJ Gleeson, which has been struggling with high costs and planning delays, said it now expects its pre-tax profit to be at or around £24,5m, at the lower end of what the market had been expecting.

The update has sent its shares down 5,4%,Rival Vistry has followed it down 3,1%, while in the FTSE 100 Berkeley and Barratt Redrow are both down by 2% and 1,7% respectively.

Trump’s flagship tax bill steals from the sick, elgerly and hungry, and gives to billionaires and jackboots, writes Moira Donegan,The budget reconciliation bill that passed the US House of Representatives on Thursday and was promptly to be signed into law by Donald Trump represents the particular perversity of national politics in America: seemingly no one wants it, everyone hates it, and it is widely agreed to be devastating for staggering numbers of Americans,And yet, the bill felt inevitable: it was a foregone conclusion that this massive, malignant measure was something that everyone dreaded and no one had the capacity to stop,They didn’t really even try,In the Senate, a few conservative Republicans made noise about the bill’s dramatic costs: the congressional budget office estimates that the bill will add $3.

3 tn to the deficit over the coming decade, and the senator Rand Paul, a budget hawk from Kentucky, declined to vote for it for this reason,But other Republicans, who used to style themselves as fiscally responsible guardians against excessive government spending, engaged in a bit of freelance creative accounting in order to produce an estimate that falsely claimed the cost of the bill would be lower,Most of them quickly found themselves on board,Elsewhere, the government has set out a roadmap for reviving the onshore wind industry in England, after Labour lifted the de facto ban last year which was put in place by the Conservatives,The Onshore Wind Industry Taskforce has set out more than 40 steps to help development in the sector, including planning reforms, re-powering old turbines and exploring plans to expand the clean industry bonus for onshore wind.

Energy secretary Ed Miliband said in a report:As one of the cheapest and fastest-to-build sources of power we have, onshore wind will play a critical role in boosting our energy independence with clean power by 2030,The reality is that every turbine we build helps protect families, businesses and the public finances from future fossil fuel shocks,The government is planning to almost double onshore wind across England by 2030, taking its capacity from 14,8GW to 27 to 29GW,It has claimed the strategy will support the creation of up to 45,000 skilled jobs by the end of the decade.

It is a rather weak open for stock markets in Europe this morning.In the UK, the blue chip FTSE 100 index has slipped 0.3% in early trading.The German Dax index slipped 0.5%, while the French Cac 40 index dropped by 0.

8%, as the European Union tries to finalise a new trade deal with the US.Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at the investment broker Hargreaves Lansdown, said that optimism is starting to evaporate at the end of the week as the US tariff deadline looms on 9 July.There’s a distinct lack of Friday fizz for the FTSE 100, as investors mull repercussions for the global economy.Investors are also assessing the implications of the passing of Trump’s big tax cut bill which will add to the mountain of US debt.Streeter added the US stock market has been riding high on signals that so far Trump’s trade policies have not weakened the economy.

The closely watched US jobs report for June signalled much more strength in the labour market than expected.Although it’s wiped out hopes of an interest rate cut this month, it didn’t hit sentiment, which appears more focused on the resilience of the world’s largest economy.Markets are closed for the July 4th holiday but more caution is set to creep into sentiment and show up when trading resumes on Monday.Rachel Reeves has not given herself enough fiscal headroom to manage public finances, Charlie Bean, the former deputy of the Bank of England has said, and has to “neurotically fine tune taxes”.Bean, who is also a former member of the OBR’s budget responsibility committee, told Radio 4’s Today programme the chancellor had chosen fiscal rules that give her a “very small margin” of headroom.

About £10 billion - that’s a very small number in the context of overall public spending.Government spending is about about one and a quarter trillion so £10 billion is a small number … and it is a small number in the context of typical forecasting errors.You can’t forecast the future perfectly both because you can’t forecast the economy and you can’t forecast all the elements of public finances ….the forecasts are imprecise and there is no way you can avoid that.That is a fact of life.

She should aim to operate with a larger margin of headroom, so previous chancellors have typically operated with headroom of the order of £30 billion.Because she has chosen about a third of that … it is very easy for numbers to go in the wrong direction and she finds she has to neurotically fine tune taxes to control the OBR forecast that is several years ahead.The original sin is that she should not have chosen to operate with such a tight margin of error.Reeves has been under intense public pressure, after the government’s concessions to Labour MPs over plans to change welfare payments have wiped out plans for £5bn savings a year.Oil futures have slipped after the Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araqchi said Tehran remains committed to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

Brent crude futures dropped by 0.51% to $68.45 a barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate crude dropped 0.37% to $66.75
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‘We promised change but people aren’t feeling it yet’: Labour rues poor first year

In a stiflingly hot room at a health centre in East London, as he announced the government’s 10-year plan for the NHS on Thursday, Keir Starmer was confronted with a brutal assessment of his first year in power.“You’ve U-turned on your reforms, your MPs don’t trust you, and markets worry that you’ve lost resolve on fiscal discipline. It’s the epitome, isn’t it, of sticking-plaster politics and chaos that you promised voters you would end?” a television journalist asked.Initially, Starmer avoided answering the question, but he eventually addressed the fall-out from his government’s chaotic handling of its welfare bill. “I’m not going to pretend the last few days have been easy: they’ve been tough,” he admitted

about 17 hours ago
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Reform councillor’s boast about removing ‘trans-ideological’ books from children’s library sections falls flat

A boast by a Reform UK councillor that he ensured the removal of “trans-ideological material and books” from the children’s section of his county’s libraries has fallen flat after it emerged that no such material ever existed there.Paul Webb, the cabinet member for communities at Kent council, whose portfolio covers libraries, posted a video to X in which he said he had been “recently contacted by a concerned member of the public who found trans-ideological material and books in the children’s section of one of our libraries”.He said: “I’ve looked into this and this was the case. I’ve today issued instructions for them all to be removed from the children’s section of any of our libraries.“They do not belong in the children’s section of our libraries

1 day ago
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Sultana’s alliance with Corbyn shows Starmer there is life in the Labour left yet

A year ago, many around Keir Starmer believed the Labour left had been sealed in a tomb. The suspension of Jeremy Corbyn, the disciplinary action against Labour MPs including Zarah Sultana and the push to the political centre were supposed to fracture the party’s leftwing.But this week’s drama, which included the prime minister narrowly avoiding defeat on the welfare bill after 49 Labour MPs rebelled, the chancellor’s tears during prime minister’s questions and Sultana announcing she was quitting the party to join Corbyn’s Independent Alliance, has shown that the forces are very much alive.It has also shown that the votes for a populist challenge remain there for the taking, if anyone can get organised enough to harness them.In the months after Starmer’s landslide win, figures excluded from Labour’s selection processes have been regrouping in the spaces he does not occupy: outside Westminster

1 day ago
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Ban on Palestine Action to take effect after legal challenge fails

Being a member of, or showing support for, Palestine Action will be a criminal offence from Saturday after a last-minute legal challenge to suspend the group’s proscription under anti-terrorism laws failed.A ban on Palestine Action, which uses direct action to mainly target Israeli weapons factories in the UK and their supply chain, was voted through by parliament this week but lawyers acting for its co-founder Huda Ammori had sought to prevent it taking effect.After a hearing at the high court on Friday, however, Mr Justice Chamberlain declined to grant her application for interim relief. Ammori said: “The home secretary is rushing through the implementation of the proscription at midnight tonight despite the fact that our legal challenge is ongoing and that she has been completely unclear about how it will be enforced, leaving the public in the dark about their rights to free speech and expression after midnight tonight when this proscription comes into effect.”Chamberlain said: “I have concluded that the harm which would ensue if interim relief is refused but the claim later succeeds is insufficient to outweigh the strong public interest in maintaining the order in force

1 day ago
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Jeremy Corbyn confirms talks about forming new party with Zarah Sultana

Jeremy Corbyn has confirmed he is in discussions about creating a new leftwing political party, hours after the MP Zarah Sultana announced she was quitting Labour to co-lead the project.Sultana, the MP for Coventry South who had the Labour whip suspended last year for voting against the government over the two-child limit on benefits, said on Thursday night she was quitting Labour and would “co-lead the founding of a new party” with Corbyn.Her announcement took some on the left of Labour by surprise and was seen as premature and potentially counterproductive.While Corbyn has long hinted at plans to establish a more organised platform for leftwing and pro-Palestinian campaigning, he has so far avoided confirming any formal structure or leadership arrangements.Corbyn, the MP for Islington North, is understood to be reluctant to take on the title of leader, as he has a preference for collective decision-making, and he believes imposing a hierarchy too soon could risk fragmenting the coalition of like-minded MPs he has spent months encouraging to work together

1 day ago
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Jeremy Corbyn says ‘discussions are ongoing’ after Zarah Sultana claimed she would ‘co-lead new party’ with him – as it happened

Jeremy Corbyn has said that “discussions are ongoing” after former Labour MP Zarah Sultana said that she would “co-lead the founding of a new party” with the ex-Labour leader.In a post on social media, the independent MP and former Labour leader said:Real change is coming.One year on from the election, this Labour government has refused to deliver the change people expected and deserved. Poverty, inequality and war are not inevitable. Our country needs to change direction, now

1 day ago
foodSee all
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How can I use leftover pickle brine in day-to-day cooking? | Kitchen aide

3 days ago
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How to turn veg scraps into a delicious dip – recipe | Waste not

3 days ago
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Frittata, ‘egg and chips’ and a bean feast: Sami Tamimi’s brunch recipes from Palestine

4 days ago
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Jam tarts and summer pudding cake: Nicola Lamb’s recipes for baking with mixed berries

4 days ago
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Georgina Hayden’s recipe for spiced crab egg fried rice

5 days ago
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Rukmini Iyer’s quick and easy recipe for courgette linguine with trout, lemon and dill | Quick and easy

5 days ago