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Give thanks Priti Patel isn’t foreign sec – she’d already be at war with Iran | John Crace

1 day ago
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Be thankful for small mercies.If it was up to Priti Patel, the UK would already be at war with Iran.In a former life as international development secretary, Priti got herself fired for freelancing foreign policy on Israel.Now, as shadow foreign secretary, she’s at it again.Old habits die hard.

Out and about on the morning media round, Priti was volunteering to personally fly the US stealth bombers deep into Iran,To ride the Massive Ordnance Penetrator – the Americans are nothing if not relentlessly macho – bombs deep into the nuclear facility at Fordow,Her very own last-chance power drive,In her defence, you have to remember Priti Vacant has no memory of what happened yesterday, let alone 22 years ago,If she did, she might be aware of what can happen when a UK government tries to hedge its bets on legal advice before going to war in the Middle East.

That didn’t work out so well for anyone.Arguably, we’re all still paying the price of that George Bush-Tony Blair joint venture.Likewise, she has no insight into likely outcomes in the future.She has less imagination than a tardigrade.She is only capable of living entirely in the present.

And a very limited present at that.Unaware that you can’t bomb knowledge.Unaware that even if the bunker-busting bombs did penetrate 80 metres of reinforced concrete and rock, the destruction would only make Iran more likely to develop a nuclear capability in the future.So it’s probably just as well for all of us that we’ve got someone like Keir Starmer as prime minister.A man whose natural instincts are set towards diplomacy and de-escalation.

A lawyer who is likely to take the advice of Richard Hermer, the attorney general, seriously,Who understands that extending a war between Israel and Iran to one that includes the US and the UK is in no one’s best interests,No easy task when you’re dealing with a US president who seems to think he is starring in his own first-person shooter video game,Donald Trump and Priti Vacant have a disturbing amount in common,It’s customary for the prime minister to update the Commons on the meeting of the G7 – or in this case, the G6 and a half – as soon as possible after returning home.

But this time Keir thought better of it.Decided he had better things to do than face awkward questions from MPs of all parties on just how close the UK is to getting dragged into another war, and whether we intend to let the Americans use Diego Garcia as a base from which to bomb Iran.To avoid being asked what The Donald might do next.As if anyone had any idea.Even Trump doesn’t know what Trump will do next.

So in the absence of a statement from the prime minister, we got one from chief secretary to the Treasury, Darren Jones, on the government’s 10-year infrastructure strategy.This felt like a rare outbreak of optimism.A cause for national celebration.At a time when many of us can’t be sure we’ll still be alive this time next week with the west on the brink of yet another war, we had Darren to hold our hands.Everything was going to be OK.

Even if the world was to turn to rubble, Labour had a plan to put things back together.We might not be around to see it, but everything would be OK eventually.On a practical level, this did have an air of hope over experience.After all, when was the last time the UK completed an infrastructure project on time and on budget? Only on Wednesday, the transport secretary, Heidi Alexander, had given yet another update on the fiasco that is HS2.A rail line that is already billions of pounds over budget, does nothing to increase connectivity to the north and won’t be ready until 10 years’ time at the earliest.

The French managed to complete a high-speed railway the same length as HS2 in five years.We are still building tunnels through former Conservative constituencies.HS2 is this country’s own Ionesco study of the absurd.Still, nothing ventured, nothing gained and Darren was eager to share his Brave New World with us.And here was the thing.

The 10 years had already started,Things were already far, far better than they had been,To be fair, they were for Dazza,No one enjoys being in government more than Darren,He’s been walking around with a rictus permagrin since last July.

This is his time.If only we could all be a bit more like Dazza, the better it would be.Darren opened our eyes to £725bn of new infrastructure spending.What glories! Treasures the like of which had not been seen since Howard Carter opened Tutankhamun’s tomb.Hospitals, prisons, schools.

Railways.Lucky Wales was to get £445m, the same amount as was being given to refurbish Leeds station.All would be rebuilt in Dazza’s own image.And they really would be built.This wasn’t a 10-year plan like so many other 10-year plans that barely survive contact with reality.

This was to be a 10-year plan that would last for 100 years,Permanent secretaries might feel like temporary secretaries,Minister may come and go,Governments could fall,But the 10-year plan would remain.

As would Darren.Because there would be a new quango.The National Infrastructure and Service Transformational Authority had been born to save us all.There was little argument from the Conservatives’ Richard Fuller about any of this.Then, there was hardly likely to be.

He didn’t want to suggest this was all a pipe dream by drawing attention to the fact that the Tories had achieved next to nothing in 14 years.So he just asked which of the projects that the Tories had failed to deliver were being scrapped by Labour.Dazza had no idea.Everything was going to be great.There would be a new level of skills and coordination that didn’t currently exist.

“I’m confident in my abilities,” he smirked,That goes down as one of life’s understatements,Darren has yet to find something he doesn’t do better than anyone else,We may have to hold our breath to see what The Donald does next, but Darren was there to reassure us that the future belonged to him,
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Paris airshow in subdued mood after deadly Air India crash

Every second summer more than 100,000 aviation industry professionals gather in Paris for an airshow – a flying display crossed with a vast conference. The mood at the latest gathering this week was more subdued than usual, after the deadly crash a week ago of a London-bound Air India flight in Ahmedabad.Investigators have recovered the black box from the plane to try to work out the cause of the disaster. The aircraft maker Boeing, and GE Aerospace, which made the 787 Dreamliner’s engines, both cancelled many of their media-facing events out of respect for the families of the 241 passengers and crew who died, as well as at least 30 more people on the ground who were killed.At an event that presents a mix of civil and military aircraft and weaponry, the war between Israel and Iran further overshadowed proceedings

about 22 hours ago
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UK consumer confidence up but fragile amid tariff and Middle East concerns

Confidence among UK consumers has improved but remains fragile in the face of expected petrol price rises amid escalating conflict in the Middle East, according to a leading index.The latest snapshot from the data company GfK says sentiment improved by two points in June but remained in negative territory at -18, well below the -12 of a year ago. A reading above zero indicates optimism; below indicates pessimism.The last time the headline index, which is closely watched by the government and the Bank of England, was positive was in January 2016, when it was at 4. It has had double-digit negative readings since September 2021 when Britain was in the grip of Covid-19

1 day ago
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UK manufacturing set for a funding boost to reduce energy costs

UK manufacturing is expected to receive support to ease energy costs and boost skills, the Guardian understands, as part of a long-awaited industrial strategy due to be unveiled next week.Energy-intensive industries have long complained that they pay too much for electricity compared with competitors in the EU, while the wider industrial sector has struggled to recruit skilled staff.As Nigel Farage’s Reform party targets support in Britain’s industrial heartlands, ministers are poised to pour funds into boosting the manufacturing workforce with proposals similar to a £600m package for the construction sector announced earlier this year, which underpins plans to build 1.5m homes.Ministers have drawn up plans to take aim at energy costs through two policies, one targeted at businesses that use the most electricity – such as steel and aluminium – and another designed to support manufacturing more broadly

1 day ago
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Thames Water renationalisation plans being stepped up, says minister

The environment secretary, Steve Reed, has said the government is stepping up preparations for temporary nationalisation of Thames Water, indicating it will reject pleas from the company’s creditors for leniency from fines and penalties.Thames Water’s largest creditors control the utility and have made a bid to cut some of its debts and provide £5.3bn in new funding to try to turn it around.However, the creditors have said their plan needs considerable leniency from the water regulators Ofwat and the Environment Agency over fines for environmental failings.The Guardian this month revealed that the creditors had asked for immunity from prosecution for serious environmental crimes in return for taking on the company

1 day ago
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Ministers set out plans to spend £725bn on UK infrastructure over 10 years

Ministers have pledged to spend £9bn a year on fixing crumbling schools, hospitals, courts and prisons over the next decade as part of the government’s infrastructure strategy.Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the Treasury, set out plans on Thursday to spend a minimum of £725bn over 10 years to boost UK-wide infrastructure and achieve a “national renewal”.Jones announced that £6bn a year would go to repairing hospitals in England, £3bn to fixing and upgrading schools and colleges in England and £600m to courts and prisons in England and Wales.The money will fund building improvements including removing crumbling reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (Raac) in hospitals and strengthening safety and security in prisons.Jones told MPs: “Done properly it will result in tangible improvements to the fabric of our country, our local roads and high streets renewed so communities are even better places to live

1 day ago
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Bank of England warns of ‘elevated’ global uncertainty after leaving interest rates on hold – as it happened

Newsflash: The Bank of England has left UK interest rates on hold at 4.25%.The decision, which matches City expectations, comes as the Bank weighs up the risks to the UK economy from US trade wars and the conflict in the Middle East, which has pushed oil prices higher in the last week.But it’s a split decision – with six of the nine policymaker’s voting to hold, and three voting for a cut.Details and reaction to follow

1 day ago
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Garmin Forerunner 970 review: the new benchmark for running watches

2 days ago
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Israel-linked group hacks Iranian cryptocurrency exchange in $90m heist

2 days ago
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OpenAI boss accuses Meta of trying to poach staff with $100m sign-on bonuses

3 days ago
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‘It’s terrifying’: WhatsApp AI helper mistakenly shares user’s number

3 days ago
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Amazon boss tells staff AI means their jobs are at risk in coming years

3 days ago
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Up to 70% of streams of AI-generated music on Deezer are fraudulent, says report

3 days ago