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Reform UK accused of betraying election pledges after council tax rises

2 days ago
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Nigel Farage’s Reform UK has been accused of betraying election promises to cut council tax after several councils it controls said they planned to increase rates close to the maximum allowed.They include Kent county council – the party’s flagship local authority and one viewed by it as the “shop window” for what a Reform-led government would look like – which has proposed an increase of 3.99%.Four other county councils controlled by the party – Derbyshire, North Northamptonshire, West Northamptonshire and Leicestershire – have also all proposed 5% council tax rises, the maximum permitted by law.Derbyshire county council earlier this week confirmed the rise after predicting a £38m gap in its budget, with overspends in children’s social care and adult social care.

Councillors on the Reform-controlled Lincolnshire county council were told on Tuesday that a 4.99% increase was being considered.A public consultation would also examine alternative options, including a rise of 3.99% – although that increase would create a deficit of £4.1m.

Opposition councillors in Kent accused Reform of betraying voters who had last year received leaflets from the party pledging to freeze or cut council tax.The draft budget is to be voted on at a full meeting next month.Reform still holds a significant majority in Kent, despite a series of defections and ejections of its own councillors.Bitter divisions among Reform councillors were laid bare by footage leaked to the Guardian in October, which showed a chaotic internal meeting where members were told to “fucking suck it up” if they did not agree with decisions.Draft budget details – including the proposed increase – were published late on Thursday night after expectations they would come out earlier in the week.

Linden Kemkaran, the leader of Kent county council, said the proposed draft budget reflected what she described as the “progress” made since Reform took over the council after last year’s local elections.“When this administration took office, the council was facing a very serious financial situation.KCC was saddled with more than £700m of debt, around £84,000 was being spent every day on interest alone, and pressures on vital services were continuing to grow.“Since then, we are on track to deliver £100m of savings and income, we have reprofiled almost £40m of future spending, and we have reduced the council’s debt by £67m,” she said.Kemkaran said details of the draft budget proposed a council tax increase of 3.

99%, instead of the 5% figure anticipated when the current administration took office, and had been achieved while protecting frontline services,However, the opposition Liberal Democrat group on the council accused Reform of financial mismanagement and a “total betrayal” of election promises,“Despite campaigning on a platform of tax cuts, Reform’s budget will see the average Band D household pay roughly £67,47 more per year,” said the Liberal Democrat leader, Anthony Hook,“Reform stood for election promising to make savings and lower the burden on taxpayers.

Today, that promise has been utterly broken,They are boasting about a nearly 4% increase instead of 5%, a difference of just 33p per week for the average Kent family,It is a poor outcome given the hype and promises made at the election and for the last nine months,”Alister Brady, a Labour member of the council, said: “Reform will try to deflect and mislead but the facts are clear,During the election they said they would cut council tax but in their first budget they have put council tax up and they will need to do that for every year of their three-year budget because of their overspending.

They should be honest with the public.”There was also criticism from others who had originally been part of Kent’s ruling Reform group.Bill Barrett, one of a number who have set up as independents, said: “Kemkaran may be able to say she has kept council tax rises as low as possible, but that £10m less coming in from council tax means £10m of savings that have to now be found.“Alongside the fact we are drawing down on reserves again in this budget, I really do fear for services across Kent once we delve into the details of this draft budget.”Tony Travers, a visiting professor in the London School of Economics’ department of government, said: “Reform has been enduring a long and sharp learning experience in the last year about the realities of running council budgets that have been squeezed for the past 15 years.

”But he added: “Frankly I am surprised that few, if any, have managed to achieve a figure significantly below 5% because it would have provided Farage with impressive political ammunition given their hopes of making further gains in local elections next year.Given that most of them are coming out with the maximum allowed increase it will be evidence, lest we need it, that there is no efficient ‘Reform way’ of filling a pothole.”The best public interest journalism relies on first-hand accounts from people in the know.If you have something to share on this subject, you can contact us confidentially using the following methods.Secure Messaging in the Guardian appThe Guardian app has a tool to send tips about stories.

Messages are end to end encrypted and concealed within the routine activity that every Guardian mobile app performs,This prevents an observer from knowing that you are communicating with us at all, let alone what is being said,If you don't already have the Guardian app, download it (iOS/Android) and go to the menu,Select ‘Secure Messaging’,SecureDrop, instant messengers, email, telephone and postIf you can safely use the Tor network without being observed or monitored, you can send messages and documents to the Guardian via our SecureDrop platform.

Finally, our guide at theguardian,com/tips lists several ways to contact us securely, and discusses the pros and cons of each,
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Wessex Water bosses handed £50,000 in extra pay despite Labour government’s bonus ban

The bosses of Wessex Water received £50,000 in previously undisclosed extra pay from a parent company, in the same year that the utility was banned from paying bonuses, the Guardian can reveal.Chief executive Ruth Jefferson and chief financial officer Andy Pymer were paid £24,000 and £27,000 respectively in the year to June 2025, according to a spokesperson for Wessex Water’s owner, the Malaysian YTL group.The payments came from Wessex Water Ltd, which is the parent company of Wessex Water Services Ltd, the regulated water supplier for 2.9 million customers in south-west England. YTL said the payments were not bonuses

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US hiring held firm in December capping weakest year of growth since pandemic

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2 days ago
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Glencore and Rio Tinto are at it again – and it seems the markets smell action

Here we go again. A combination of Rio Tinto and Glencore has been talked about for years and the duo held aborted negotiations at the end of 2024. With the global mining industry in deal-making mode – frenzies come along every 15 years or so – the idea of RioGlen or GlenTinto was due another whirl. On Friday, the two FTSE 100 companies said they were in “preliminary discussions” about a “possible combination of some or all of their businesses”. A full-blown tie-up would be worth about $260bn (£120bn), including debt

2 days ago
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US economy added fewer jobs than forecast in December, but January interest rate cut very unlikely – as it happened

Newsflash: The US economy added fewer jobs than expected last month.America’s non-farm payroll rose by 50,000 in December, missing forecasts of a 60,000 rise.Employment continued to trend up in food services and drinking places, health care, and social assistance, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports, while retail trade lost jobs.That shows a hiring slowdown, compared with the previous month; the BLS now estimates that 56,000 jobs were created in November, 8,000 fewer than its first estimate of 64,000.Time to wrap up!Hiring held firm in the US last month, official data showed, amid uncertainty over the strength and direction of the world’s largest economy

2 days ago
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High costs, falling returns: what could go wrong for Trump’s Venezuela oil gamble?

Donald Trump has laid claim to billions of dollars’ worth of Venezuelan crude this week, which at a stroke has handed the world’s biggest consumer of oil up to 50m barrels – but his ambitions are far greater.The White House said Venezuela would be “turning over” the nearly $3bn (£2.3bn) of crude stranded in tankers and storage facilities before it is sold on the international market and after that the US plans to control all the country’s oil sales “indefinitely”.For the Trump administration, the seizure is the first move in taking control of Venezuela’s vast crude reserves, estimated to represent almost a fifth of the proven reserves on Earth, in a push to cut the oil price to $50 a barrel.But experts have been quick to point out that the crude cargo grab could be the last easy win for the president, with no quick or cheap fix to reignite the country’s oil production

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Charity watchdog opens inquiry into City & Guilds’ sale of business arm

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