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Angela Rayner’s allies say HMRC inquiry set to be resolved before May elections

about 22 hours ago
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For months there has been an apparently insurmountable obstacle to Angela Rayner going for the Labour leadership, should Keir Starmer find himself facing a contest.The investigation by HMRC into the former deputy prime minister’s tax affairs has hung heavily over her since she was forced to resign last September over underpayment of stamp duty on her seaside flat.But now Rayner’s allies are increasingly confident that the inquiry will be resolved before the May local elections – a moment of high peril for the prime minister – paving her way for a full return to frontline politics.The Guardian understands that outstanding legal issues over the tax investigation are being ironed out by lawyers and the HMRC process is now approaching its conclusion.Rayner is also on course to make about £100,000 from speaking engagements since she left government and her memoir, meaning she has earned enough to pay off her outstanding tax bill.

It is, as yet, unclear whether she will also have to pay a penalty.The Labour MP can now turn to the future of her party – and what role she might play in it.In a major intervention on Tuesday night, at the campaign group Mainstream’s spring reception, she warned her audience that “the very survival of the Labour party is at stake”.Since her departure from frontline politics, Rayner has mostly restricted herself to public interventions on policy – leasehold reform, workers rights and trial by jury – where she believes she can nudge ministers in the right direction.Another was added to the list on Tuesday when she described Starmer’s plan to make it harder for legal migrants to gain permanent residency in the UK as “un-British”.

But it was her criticism of the prime minister – her staunchest since returning to the backbenches – that caught the most attention.She warned that his government was “running out of time” to show it could deliver the change people needed and must not just “go through the motions in the face of decline”.As far as those in the room were concerned, the starting gun on a contest had been fired.Some of Rayner’s colleagues were bemused by her delivering such a punchy speech just seven weeks before the local elections, but allies defended her decision.The Mainstream event was originally scheduled for the week of the Gorton and Denton byelection, but Rayner felt that it would be unhelpful to deliver her message just days before voters went to the polls, and anyway she was out campaigning.

Now, she appears to be preparing for what many Labour MPs now feel is inevitable: a challenge to Starmer’s leadership after a devastating set of results in May.“If we lose Wales, lose in Scotland, lose in London and all across the country then the response can’t just be to say ‘give us more time’.At that point, the party is going to act,” one senior Labour MP said.Rayner’s allies stress that – although she is both the bookies favourite and popular with the Labour membership – she has no plans to engineer a scenario to directly challenge Starmer.Instead, she would weigh up political and personal considerations – and the breadth of her support across the party – before deciding whether to run.

Allies of Wes Streeting, also expected to be a contender, insisted he has no plans to trigger a contest, so it is unclear how one would then come about,Some MPs say there could be 81 MPs – the number required under party rules – prepared to call for the prime minister’s resignation,Others insist there would have to be a stalking horse candidate willing to go over the top first,The possibility of a group of cabinet ministers urging him to go has also been discussed,But Starmer has repeatedly made clear he would fight any contest, which Downing Street sources claim he would win.

“Keir won a big personal mandate for change at the last election and he intends to deliver on it, however hard that may be,” one said,The prime minister’s supporters believe there are enough MPs who don’t back any of his putative rivals to protect him from a contest and ensure that he stays in No 10,They also argue that many MPs are spooked by looking just like the Tories by ousting another prime minister,Until recently, Rayner – publicly at least – agreed,She rallied round when Anas Sarwar called for Starmer to go last month, posting that Starmer had her “full support” and urging the Labour party to come together.

With her intervention, any prospect of a coup was over.But despite the public display of loyalty, allies suggest that Rayner has, over time, been losing faith in Starmer and his Downing Street operation – and thinks the party must now take a different direction.Her early frustrations with some of the people around Starmer – who she is understood to have felt pushed him into poor political decisions – began to settle on the prime minister himself.“Angela couldn’t defend him any more,” one friend said.His decision to make Peter Mandelson the UK’s ambassador to Washington was a turning point.

The Guardian understands that Rayner had privately warned Starmer against going ahead because of Mandelson’s links with Jeffrey Epstein.Across the Labour party, Rayner’s remarks on Tuesday night were interpreted as a rallying call to MPs.But she has also been engaging with the City in recent months, in an attempt to reassure that she would not lurch leftwards – instead sticking to Labour’s election manifesto and, crucially, Rachel Reeves’s fiscal rules.“She talked about evolution, not revolution, and repeatedly mentioned how important stability was to her,” an attender at one event told the Guardian.Rayner has also started to build up what some Labour MPs believe is a war chest for any leadership contest – receiving £72,500 in donations from Martin Littler, Trevor Chinn, Richard Greer and Refrigeration House since December, according to her register of interest.

The resolution of the HMRC investigation would remove the final impediment to her running – should a leadership contest take place,Many MPs feel the precariousness of Starmer’s position makes that all but inevitable,Sarwar told Sky News on Wednesday that he had not changed his mind about Starmer needing to go,Back in February, Labour MPs peered into the abyss, didn’t like what they saw, and stepped back from the precipice,Whether they do so a second time remains to be seen.

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‘We don’t tell the car what it should do’: my ride in a self-driving taxi

Driverless ‘robotaxis’ will be accepting fares in Britain’s biggest city by the end of next year. Can they deal with London’s medieval roads, hordes of pedestrians and errant ebikers? I got in the passenger seat to find out‘I’m really excited to show you this,” says Alex Kendall, the CEO of Wayve, as he gets behind the wheel of one of the company’s electric Ford Mustangs. Then he does … nothing. The car pulls up to a junction at a busy road in King’s Cross, London, all by itself. “You can see that it’s going to control the speed, steering, brake, indicators,” he says to me – I’m in the passenger seat

about 13 hours ago
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Actors, musicians and writers welcome UK U-turn on AI use of copyrighted work

Actors, musicians and writers have welcomed the UK government’s decision to backtrack on plans to let AI firms use copyright-protected work without permission.Technology secretary Liz Kendall said it no longer had a “preferred option” on copyright reform, having previously supported a proposal allowing tech companies to take copyrighted work – unless rights holders opted out of the process.“We have listened,” said Kendall on Wednesday, “we have engaged extensively with creatives, AI firms, industry bodies, unions, academics and AI adopters, and that engagement has shaped our approach. This is why we can confirm today that the government no longer has a preferred option.”The proposal had triggered a backlash from Elton John, who called the government “absolute losers” over the plans

about 24 hours ago
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How AI is actually changing day-to-day work

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery, chuffed about One Battle After Another’s big win at the Oscars. This week, we’re examining how artificial intelligence is changing the everyday reality of white-collar work in the US, the roots of the current appetite for AI in war, and the United Kingdom’s phantom datacenters.As part of the Guardian’s Reworked series on AI’s effect on modern work, we published two stories this week on how specific jobs are changing: those of university professors and Amazon’s technical employees. Both groups are wrestling with profound shifts

1 day ago
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Inside the fiery, deadly crashes involving the Tesla Cybertruck

Cybertrucks have locked passengers inside and burned so hot they’ve disintegrated drivers’ bones. Victims’ families blame what they say is the faulty design of a truck Elon Musk calls ‘apocalypse-proof’When sheriff deputies arrived at the scene of a late-night crash off a desolate Texas road in August 2024, they could see a giant pyre through heavy smoke.According to police reports detailing the events of that night, the officers tried to approach the vehicle, but the fire burned too intensely. They saw it was a Tesla Cybertruck and couldn’t see anyone inside. So they combed the surrounding area for the driver

1 day ago
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Instagram to remove end-to-end encryption for private messages in May

Instagram will stop encrypting private messages between users from May, after enduring years of criticism from law enforcement and child safety groups over the feature.Meta quietly announced this month on its help page for Instagram and in an updated 2022 news post that end-to-end encryption would no longer be available on direct messages between users on Instagram from 8 May 2026.It means Meta will be able to see the contents of messages between all users – which so far it only could for those who did not enable encryption.The feature already appeared deactivated for Australian users, when Guardian Australia tested on Wednesday.A spokesperson for Meta said the decision to abandon encryption was due to low uptake

1 day ago
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Subnautica 2 publisher’s CEO used ChatGPT in failed bid to avoid paying US$250m bonus to own studio head, court hears

A South Korean gaming publisher who hatched a plan using ChatGPT to remove the heads of one of its own game studios in a bid to avoid paying US$250m has been ordered by a US court to reverse the removal.The dispute stems from South Korean game developer Krafton’s acquisition of Unknown Worlds Entertainment, makers of the Subnautica video game, for $500m in 2021.Krafton agreed the studio would remain independent and that its leadership would retain operational control and could only be fired for cause, according to the ruling by vice-chancellor Lori Will of the court of chancery in Delaware.If Unknown Worlds met certain targets, Krafton would pay the studio what is known as an earnout worth up to $250m.As the studio was last year ramping up to release Subnautica 2, internal projections showed it would trigger the earnout, according to the ruling

1 day ago
politicsSee all
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Sadiq Khan urges Labour to campaign on rejoining EU at next election

about 19 hours ago
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Angela Rayner’s allies say HMRC inquiry set to be resolved before May elections

about 22 hours ago
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Starmer plans to ease impact of immigration policy changes after backlash from Labour MPs

about 22 hours ago
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Gerry Adams tells high court he was stunned by 1996 Docklands bombing

about 23 hours ago
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Reeves speech had a giant hole: the sky-high cost of energy for industry | Nils Pratley

about 24 hours ago
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Memory loss strikes down Starmer and Badenoch at an infuriating PMQs | John Crace

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