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Ministers on lobbying blitz to avoid Labour rebellion over Send changes

about 22 hours ago
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Ministers have “learned the lesson” of botched welfare changes and are on a sustained lobbying blitz of Labour MPs over an overhaul of special educational needs, Labour MPs have said, as they warned they would not back measures aimed at saving money.The changes will raise the bar at which children in England qualify for an education, health and care plan (EHCP), which legally entitles children with special educational needs and disabilities (Send) to get support.Plans will be reserved for children with the most severe and complex needs, according to sources familiar with the proposals.The expected move has sparked concerns among parents and campaigners who have warned that limiting legal rights could have catastrophic implications for children and families, and among MPs who say Send is the issue they are most contacted about.Weakening the Send legal framework would put at risk decades of progress towards inclusion, said Madeleine Cassidy, the chief executive of IPSEA, a charity providing legal advice that is part of the Save Our Children’s Rights campaign.

“These rights are not optional – they are essential safeguards that enable families to secure the support their children need to access education and thrive,” she said,Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, has been leading a year-long lobbying offensive of hundreds of MPs to convince them that the changes are not aimed at saving money and will make schools more inclusive,But despite intensive engagement with the parliamentary Labour party, some in government are worried that Labour MPs could vote the plans down in the next parliamentary session, saying that such an event could hasten the end of Keir Starmer’s premiership,“Everyone knows this is the most high-stakes political reform they’ve taken on since welfare,” said one Labour MP,Alongside official debates and a consultation, ministers have also been meeting with parents and campaigners and running special listening exercises with MPs who have children with special needs, while MPs have also been given guidance packs on running Send roundtables.

Another MP said there was a stark contrast in preparation of the overhauls.“We have had a masterclass in how not to do engagement with the PLP [parliamentary Labour party] in recent months with the welfare bill,” they said.“And now we’re seeing a masterclass in how to do it.”Jen Craft, an MP and member of the all-party parliamentary group (APPG) on Send, said she would oppose plans to restrict EHCPs if a properly funded replacement system was not in place.“That would be a real issue,” she said.

Phillipson has told MPs that the overhaul of the system, in which funding for high-needs provision has increased by more than 50% to £11bn a year, is not a cost-cutting exercise.She told the PLP it was “morally wrong” to put children in independent special schools that often failed them at “enormous cost” to them and the taxpayer.A spokesperson for the Department for Education said it had already invested £3bn in specialist Send units in local state schools and £200m to train teachers in Send.They said: “Our priority is – and has always been – improving outcomes for children and young people with Send.We will restore parents’ trust by fixing what isn’t working in the system and strengthening support for those who need it – shaped directly by the views and experiences of those who know the system best.

”Meg Hillier, the MP who is chair of the Treasury select committee, who led the Labour backbench rebellion against the welfare reform bill, said this “downpayment” was key to building trust.“Bridget knows its important to get it as right as possible first time, you don’t get to take a shot at this,” she said.“And she’s working hard to bring the PLP and stakeholders with her.”But the government will have to save money.Spiralling Send costs have put local authorities into £6bn of debt.

The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, said in last year’s budget that she would take over full responsibility for the costs.Avnee Morjaria, lead author of an influential report from the Institute for Public Policy Research, said: “A reform of this scale will eventually need a serious rebalancing of funding from individuals to the school system so that children can access the support they need sooner and more efficiently.That will have implications for the funding available for EHCPs in the future.”Helen Hayes, the chair of the education select committee, said the government should retain existing legal rights and the new system had to be properly funded and fully accountable.The proportion of children on EHCPs has grown from 3% in 2018 to more than 5%, with the number of assessments increasing by 250% between 2013 and 2024.

“Parents rely on the part of the system – the EHCP – that has statutory accountability, because there is almost no accountability in any other part of the system,” Hayes said,The MP Antonia Bance said rebuilding trust with parents was an uphill battle “because few people believe that things can actually get better,But there is an absolute consensus that the current system is broken,We have to do something,”
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A little more than one week ago, TikTok stepped on to US shores as a naturalized citizen. Ever since, the video app has been fighting for its life.TikTok’s calamitous emigration began on 22 January when its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, finalized a deal to sell the app to a group of US investors, among them the business software giant Oracle. The app’s time under Chinese ownership had been marked by a meteoric ascent to more than a billion users, which left incumbents such as Instagram looking like the next Myspace. But TikTok’s short new life in the US has been less than auspicious

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US authorities reportedly investigate claims that Meta can read encrypted WhatsApp messages

US authorities have reportedly investigated claims that Meta can read users’ encrypted chats on the WhatsApp messaging platform, which it owns.The reports follow a lawsuit filed last week, which claimed Meta “can access virtually all of WhatsApp users’ purportedly ‘private’ communications”.Meta has denied the allegation, reported by Bloomberg, calling the lawsuit’s claim “categorically false and absurd”. It suggested the claim was a tactic to support the NSO Group, an Israeli firm that develops spyware used against activists and journalists, and which recently lost a lawsuit brought by WhatsApp.The firm that filed last week’s lawsuit against Meta, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, attributes the allegation to unnamed “courageous” whistleblowers from Australia, Brazil, India, Mexico and South Africa

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We have lost so much of ourselves to smartphones: can we get it back?

In 2003, the Stanford social scientist BJ Fogg published an extraordinarily prescient book. Persuasive Technology: Using Computers to Change What We Think and Do predicted a future in which a student “sits in a college library and removes an electronic device from her purse”. It serves as her “mobile phone, information portal, entertainment platform, and personal organiser. She takes this device almost everywhere and feels lost without it.”Such devices, Fogg argued, would be “persuasive technology systems … the device can suggest, encourage, and reward

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Elon Musk had more extensive ties to Epstein than previously known, emails show

Elon Musk had more extensive – and more friendly – communications with the financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein than previously publicly known, according to documents released on Friday by the Department of Justice. Emails in the files appear to show the two cordially messaging each other on two separate occasions to make plans for Musk to visit Epstein’s island.The documents include Musk and Epstein emailing in both 2012 and 2013 to determine when Musk should make the trip to Little St James. Neither exchanges appear to have resulted in Musk visiting the island, due to logistical issues.“Will be in the BVI/St Bart’s area over the holidays

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What good is a social media ban when screens are rife in classrooms? | Letters

Your recent coverage of children’s screen use (How screen time affects toddlers: ‘We’re losing a big part of being human’, 22 January) highlights an issue that still receives remarkably little attention: the amount of screen time built into the school day. While politicians debate bans on social media for under‑16s, and teachers report children trying to swipe the pages of books, it is puzzling that the question of screen time in schools is left out of discussions.Every morning, most primary school children are greeted by an electronic whiteboard glowing in the classroom, often left on all day. Lessons are delivered as slides, tablets are used for activities, and many schools require homework to be completed online.When it rains, “wet play” means more screen‑based entertainment

3 days ago
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AI-generated news should carry ‘nutrition’ labels, thinktank says

AI-generated news should carry “nutrition” labels and tech companies must pay publishers for the content they use, according to a left-of-centre thinktank, amid rising use of the technology as a source for current affairs.The Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) said AI firms were rapidly emerging as the new “gatekeepers” of the internet and intervention was needed to create a healthy AI news environment.It recommended standardised labels for AI-generated news, showing what information had been used to create those answers, including peer-reviewed studies and articles from professional news organisations. It also urged the establishment of a licensing regime in the UK allowing publishers to negotiate with tech companies over the use of their content in AI news.“If AI companies are going to profit from journalism and shape what the public sees, they must be required to pay fairly for the news they use and operate under clear rules that protect plurality, trust and the long-term future of independent journalism,” said Roa Powell, senior research fellow at IPPR and the report’s co-author

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