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Maria Caulfield becomes latest senior Tory to defect to Reform UK

about 15 hours ago
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Another senior Conservative has defected to Reform UK, with the former health minister Maria Caulfield saying she signed up to Nigel Farage’s party a month ago.Although Caulfield is no longer an MP after losing her Lewes seat to the Liberal Democrats last year, it is another blow for the Tories, a day after Danny Kruger, a sitting Tory MP and the shadow work and pensions minister, announced he had moved to Reform.A series of senior Conservatives have shifted over in recent months, although Kruger is so far the only one still in parliament.Caulfield, who was an MP for nine years and served as a junior health minister, as well as a junior minister for women and a Tory party vice-chair, told GB News: “If you are Conservative right-minded, then the future is Reform.The country is going to change a lot.

“The same people who thought that Brexit would not happen think that Reform will not happen.They are in for a shock.”She said: “I have joined.My husband joined a few months ago and I joined a month ago.“I am sad for the Conservative party.

I could see that I have not changed but the party has become less and less what I believe in.We let people down over what Brexit meant on laws, money and borders.We took back control but we did not do anything about it.“Reform is about changing the system – they won’t change unless they do it differently.”Caulfield said it was possible she could seek to return as an MP with Reform, adding: “I will see what happens.

”Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative party leader, told GB News that “every leader regrets losing people to another party”.She added that others could leave “because they don’t like the new policies”, such as her emphasis on “no more lavish spending” and cutting welfare, and agreed that her party faced a difficult period.She said: “When a party has just had a historic defeat, we will have a very tough and bumpy time before we come back up again.”While Reform is wary of accepting too many former Conservatives, as it could be portrayed as a retirement home for ejected MPs, Farage’s party is aware it lacks any experience of government, and former ministers would provide this.Kruger, whose defection was announced at a press conference on Monday, has been appointed Reform’s head of “preparing for government”.

The MP for East Wiltshire, who previously served as a political secretary to Boris Johnson, said: “The Conservative party is over,Over as a national party, over as the principal opposition to the left,”Speaking to GB News about his defection, Kruger was at pains not to criticise Badenoch, saying she had “done an admirable job in very difficult circumstances”,He said: “On a personal level, I think she’s shown real courage and resilience doing the hardest job in politics,So I’m not going to attack her personally.

I think any leader of the opposition would have had a tough time over the last year, but I do disagree with the strategy.“I think what she and we should have done is a much more bold assertion of Conservative principles and policies over the last year.But here we are.I’m not just rejecting the Conservatives, I’m actually enthusiastically backing Nigel Farage and the Reform party, who I think have shown over the last year, and I hope with my appointment, this is demonstrated too, they have become a real, serious party of opposition.”
businessSee all
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Sky puts 900 roles at risk in shake-up to compete with US streaming services

Sky has put 900 roles at risk as the broadcaster continues to reshape its business in the streaming era.The company, which employs about 23,000 staff in the UK, expects the consultation process to result in about 600 roles being cut, with 300 redeployed.The latest round of cuts – the third in a little over 18 months – follows a series of product launches including the second iteration of the Sky Glass smart TV and budget-friendly Sky Glass Air.The Comcast-owned broadcaster is focused on improving existing services, and the cuts will hit Sky’s technology and product teams and related corporate functions.Sky has cut almost 3,500 roles since the beginning of last year as the broadcaster looks to move away from traditional satellite pay-TV to streaming-based services in the fight against US giants such as Netflix

about 13 hours ago
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How an engineering student turned red Solo cups into stylish sweaters: ‘A lot of trial and error’

Lauren Choi wanted to give plastic a second life. Her experiment turned into The New Norm, a sustainable textile startupIf you’ve been on a college campus in the last 30 years, you’ve likely come across red party cups. Made by brands like Solo and Hefty, the iconic cups are beloved by frats, crucial to drinking games like beer pong – and very difficult to recycle because of the type of plastic they’re made from.But Lauren Choi, an engineering student at Johns Hopkins University, saw an opportunity: she wanted to turn these problematic cups into fabric. In 2019, during her senior year, she led a team that built an extruder machine that could spin plastic waste into textile filaments

about 14 hours ago
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UK pay growth stays high – but Britons are feeling the pinch

Tuesday’s latest snapshot of the UK jobs market shows what is becoming a familiar pattern: a gradual slowdown in hiring, rising unemployment, yet with wage growth still uncomfortably high for policymakers.Whether because of Rachel Reeves’s £25bn national insurance increase, uncertainty over her upcoming budget, AI-related disruption or Donald Trump’s tariffs – or perhaps all four – companies seem to be cautious about taking on staff.In the July to August period, the number of vacancies in the economy was down by 119,000 on a year earlier.The unemployment data only runs to July – but it shows 2.3 unemployed people for each vacancy, up from 2

about 19 hours ago
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Big pharma firms have paused nearly £2bn in UK investments this year

Big pharmaceutical companies have ditched or paused nearly £2bn in planned UK investments so far this year, causing “suffering” to patients, as ministers gear up for discussions with Donald Trump amid a row over drug pricing.The government’s plan for the life science sector, a key pillar of the economy, has been thrown into disarray, after US drugmaker MSD’s shock announcement last Wednesday that it would scrap its £1bn London research centre. Two days later, AstraZeneca decided to halt a planned £200m expansion of its research facilities in Cambridge.Combined with a scrapped project by AstraZeneca in Liverpool and a shelved Eli Lilly lab in London, four projects worth more than £1.8bn have been pulled or paused this year

about 22 hours ago
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Healthy, safe and getting along with each other: Australia attempts to look beyond GDP to measure what matters

Too often economists reduce important issues, like prosperity, to a narrow set of indicators such as gross domestic product to measure national progress.Anything that boosts GDP is good, right?Well, no, of course not. Growing the size of the economy while wrecking the environment or making people miserable is no step forward.So a number of countries around the world – including the UK, Canada and New Zealand – have introduced alternative ways to measure wellbeing that goes “beyond GDP”.Sign up: AU Breaking News emailTreasury, under the direction of Jim Chalmers, established the “Measuring What Matters” framework in 2023 to track our progress towards “a more healthy, secure, sustainable, cohesive and prosperous Australia”

1 day ago
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Trump official confirmed to Fed board but court rejects Lisa Cook removal bid

Senate Republicans voted on Monday to confirm a senior Trump official to the Federal Reserve’s board of governors as the White House raced to strengthen the US president’s control over the central bank ahead of its latest meeting.Hours before Fed policymakers convene for their September decision on interest rates, the Senate voted 48 to 47 to confirm Stephen Miran – already chair of Donald Trump’s council of economic advisers – as a governor.The vote concluded just as a US appeals court declined the Trump administration’s request to fire Lisa Cook, a governor appointed by Joe Biden, before the two-day policy meeting begins on Tuesday. The ruling from the US court of appeals for the District of Columbia circuit means Cook may remain in her position during the policy meeting where the Fed is expected to cut interest rates.Miran’s appointment marks the first time in the history of the modern Federal Reserve, which stretches back almost a century, that a sitting member of the executive branch would also work at the highest levels of the central bank

1 day ago
foodSee all
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Chetna Makan’s recipes for corn on the cob curry and coriander mint chutney butter corn

2 days ago
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Tillingham, Peasmarsh, East Sussex: ‘Not much cooking was going on’ – restaurant review

3 days ago
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Vegan burgers are losing the US culture war over meat: ‘It’s not our moment’

5 days ago
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6 days ago