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Peter Kyle, the ‘tech bro’ minister charged with kickstarting UK growth

about 14 hours ago
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When Peter Kyle begins a 7,000-mile flight from Washington to Beijing this week, Britain’s new business secretary could reflect on how far he has already come,Kyle struggled at school due to dyslexia and left, in his own words, “without any usable” qualifications,He made it to university in his 20s after several failed attempts,Now, days after accepting his second ministerial brief in the reshuffle triggered by Angela Rayner’s resignation, Kyle is leading talks with White House officials about the US-UK technology partnership,With no time to celebrate his 55th birthday on Tuesday, the business secretary will then jet off for tentative and delicate discussions with China about deeper economic cooperation.

The missions to the world’s two largest economies are intended to help kickstart what Kyle told business leaders last week would be a “relentless” pursuit of the growth that has so far eluded Labour.Those who have worked with Kyle, who was elected in 2015 as the MP for Hove in East Sussex, near where he grew up, say he will bring a sharp intellect and strong worth ethic to the role.“He’s a very well-liked and hard-working guy,” said Theo Bertram, director of the Social Market Foundation thinktank and a former adviser to Tony Blair.Bertram met Kyle when he was a special adviser (spad) in the Cabinet Office in the New Labour administration – a department that was led by Hilary Armstrong and included current Labour frontbenchers Ed Miliband and Pat McFadden.He said: “Spads can have quite an ego and Pete never did.

He was very approachable and he’s still that same person now.He always did the work and he’s quite decisive.”But in the year Kyle has spent as the minister for science and innovation, he has faced questions about whether he is far too close to big tech, in particular in the burgeoning artificial intelligence industry.In the 1980s and 1990s, Kyle was mentored by the late Anita Roddick when he worked in the head office of her Body Shop empire.These days, he turns for advice not to a human mentor but to AI, a technology he has said is just a few years from matching – and even outstripping – human capability.

Earlier this year, a freedom of information request by the New Scientist found that Kyle had asked ChatGPT for its views on a range of work-related issues, including what podcasts he should appear on and the definitions of scientific terms such as “antimatter” and “quantum”.Soon after, the Guardian found that he had met people close to or representing the tech sector 28 times in a six-month period, holding talks with Google, Amazon, Apple and Meta.At the time, his opposite number in the Liberal Democrats, Victoria Collins, said he had developed a reputation for being unable to “defy his friends at Meta and X when it comes to standing up for our kids’ online safety or the rights of British creatives”.Kyle, who has been ribbed for dressing in the “tech bro” uniform of T-shirts, jeans and trainers, doubled down, telling an industry audience that the proliferation of meetings was a sign of ministerial zeal.“To this crime, I plead guilty,” he said.

The relationship with tech pre-dates his time in government,Last year, the OpenDemocracy media platform revealed that Varun Chandra, an adviser to Keir Starmer, the prime minister, held stakes in AI companies via a division of Hakluyt,Kyle declared to parliamentary authorities that the corporate intelligence company had paid for his transport during a tour of Silicon Valley the year before but not that he had attended a dinner organised by the company,Labour sources speculated, rightly as it turned out, that Kyle’s apparent affinity with tech had gone too far and would see him moved on in the next reshuffle,They did not predict that his next brief would involve deep engagement with AI and tech.

But the business and trade job will also require devotion to more traditional industries, including some that are battling decline but remain economically or strategically crucial, such as hospitality and steel.He inherits weighty challenges from his predecessor Jonathan Reynolds, such as the effect of Trump’s tariffs on an already sluggish economy, or widespread concern that an increase in company national insurance contributions is costing jobs.Speaking to business leaders last week, Kyle said he wanted business to take more risks and voiced his desire for Britain to host its first $1tn company, a watermark reached by just 11 companies in history, mostly the American tech companies that Kyle has been accused of being in thrall to.One fellow MP said that Kyle, who spent years in the charity sector before entering politics, would not be shy about promoting businesses he thought merited help.“He’s a sharp mind who will use the heft of DBT [his ministry] to boost the industrial nature of tech, not just innovation but commercial industrial deployment,” added the MP.

Such an approach could ruffle feathers among those who innovate for innovation’s sake.Last week, Jean Innes, the chief executive of the Alan Turing Institute, Britain’s AI agency, resigned after Kyle demanded the centre change its focus to defence or lose its vital state funding, triggering mass unrest among staff.In his new brief, overseeing dozens of multibillion-pound sectors, all with competing and conflicting agendas, there will be ample opportunity for noses to be put out of joint.
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Anglo American agrees mining mega merger; Londoners face commuting struggles as tube strike enters second day – as it happened

The London-listed miner Anglo American has agreed to merge with its Canadian rival Teck Resources, in a deal that will create a $53bn (£39bn) global copper group after both companies saw off takeover attempts.The merger to form one of the biggest copper producers in the world is expected to bring hundreds of job losses at Anglo’s London office as the company prepares to move its headquarters to Vancouver, Canada.The new company will retain Anglo’s primary listing on the London Stock Exchange – held since 1999 - with secondary listings in Johannesburg, Vancouver and New York. But Anglo Teck’s senior leadership team will be based in Vancouver after sweeping efforts by the Canadian government to protect the country’s minerals sector.In London, the tube network was brought to a standstill for a second day as RMT workers went on strike, in a dispute over pay and conditions

about 3 hours ago
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Slashing migration would actually lead to higher house prices in Australia. Here’s why

Think closing our borders would fix the housing crisis? Think again.Eliminating migration for the coming decade would actually leave property prices 2.3% higher by the mid-2030s, according to economic modelling by KPMG; and there are other negative economic consequences too.The temporary post-lockdown surge in net migration is now on the wane, but it appears to have left behind a heightened level of national sensitivity to the issue.For example, a survey by JWS Research from November last year suggested 78% of Australians thought housing access and affordability was now a “national crisis”

about 3 hours ago
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Apple to debut new, thinner iPhone at ‘awe-dropping’ annual product event

Expect Apple’s latest iPhone to look slimmer when it debuts on Tuesday. The company is slated to unveil its thinnest iPhone yet at its annual product showcase, promoted with the title “awe-dropping”. The event will take place at its Cupertino headquarters in the Steve Jobs Theater at 10am PT.Apple’s iPhone 17 lineup is expected to include standard, Pro, and Pro Max editions, along with a newcomer to the family, the iPhone Air. This newest edition of the iPhone is christened to be Apple’s lightest flagship phone to date in the lineage of its line of slim MacBook laptops, observers have predicted

about 11 hours ago
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Meta hid harms to children from VR products, whistleblowers allege

A group of six whistleblowers have come forward with allegations of a cover-up of harm to children on Meta’s virtual reality devices and apps. They say the social media company, which owns Facebook and Instagram, and offers a line of VR headsets and games, deleted or doctored internal safety research that showed children being exposed to grooming, sexual harassment and violence in its 3D realms.“Meta knew that underage children were using its products, but figured, ‘Hey, kids drive engagement,’ and it was making them cash,” Jason Sattizahn, one of the whistleblowers who worked on the company’s VR research, said in a statement. “Meta has compromised their internal teams to manipulate research and straight-up erase data that they don’t like.”Sattizahn and the other whistleblowers, all current or former Meta employees, have disclosed these findings and a trove of documents to Congress, according to the Washington Post, which first reported the allegations

about 18 hours ago
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Raising the bar: Duplantis leads the stars aiming to break world records in Tokyo

From the pole vaulter in a class of his own to Kipyegon and Warholm, the world championships in Japan offer tantalising chances for new global marksArmand Duplantis is in a class of his own with a 17-foot pole in his hands. The Swede has broken the world record 13 times, including three times this year. His clearance of 6.28m at June’s Diamond League on home soil in Stockholm was particularly special: “This was one of my biggest goals and dreams, to set a world record here at Stadion. It’s magic

about 4 hours ago
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’Bigger than a bow’: Women’s Rugby World Cup organisers take aim at online hate

Women’s Rugby World Cup organisers have said there is no room for online hate in the game after Wales back-row Georgia Evans was sent abuse for wearing a bow in her hair.Yvonne Nolan, the competition director of England 2025, also hailed the sport’s community response after Evans released a statement last week saying she had been labelled “childish” for her regular gameday look and told it was not one “of a rugby player”.It sparked fan support during Wales’s loss to Fiji on Saturday with volunteers setting up a ribbon-making station and 1,200 worn by supporters during the final pool game.Nolan pointed towards the formal process the tournament has in place which sees a partnership with the Signify Group using technology to remove abusive comments.“We do have a social media monitoring protection tool and that is action based,” Nolan said

about 6 hours ago
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How Keir Starmer’s polling became one of the worst in the west – in charts

about 13 hours ago
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Peter Kyle, the ‘tech bro’ minister charged with kickstarting UK growth

about 14 hours ago
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Several senior female Labour MPs drop out of party deputy leader contention

about 21 hours ago
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Labour must do more to tackle populist right as party’s support leaks to Reform, say unions

about 23 hours ago
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New home secretary Shabana Mahmood says she will not run for deputy leader after Labour accused of ‘stitch-up’ over contest – UK politics live

1 day ago
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Crisis? What crisis? Starmer has a delivery plan – so chill out | John Crace

1 day ago