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Starmer urged to apologise to Epstein victims over Mandelson appointment — as it happened

about 11 hours ago
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Davey says MPs should consider the victims of Epstein.He asks what they would have felt about Donald Trump, a close friend of Epstein, becoming president of the US.Referring to his decision to boycott the Trump state banquet, he says even if he had gone he would not have had a chance to speak to Trump about this.But Keir Starmer will get the chance.Davey says Starmer should ask Trump about his relationship with Epstein.

And he says Starmer should apologise to Epstein’s victims for the Mandelson appoinment.Donald Trump has hailed the “great honour” of being hosted by his “friend” King Charles at “the ultimate” Windsor Castle for his second state visit, and hinted at possible tariff relief for UK steel.(See 3.01pm.) Speaking to reporters before his departure, Trump said:I’m there also on trade.

They want to see if they can refine the trade deal a little bit.We’ve made a deal, and it’s a great deal, and I’m into helping them.Our country is doing very well.We’ve never done this well.We’re having trillions of dollars come in because of the tariffs.

They’d like to see if they could get a little bit better deal.So, we’ll talk to them.Keir Starmer’s standing on the world stage has been “diminished”, parliament has heard, as MPs scrutinised the prime minister’s decision to appoint Peter Mandelson.As PA Media reports, Kemi Badenoch accused Starmer of “hiding from parliament” because he was not present for the emergency debate on the former US ambassador’s dismissal and his relationship with paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.Conservative former minister David Davis argued there are double standards applied to those of “Labour royalty”, with Mandelson retaining the Labour whip.

Downing Street has denied that the government’s returns deal with France is in chaos after plans to forcibly remove from the UK people arriving in small boats were abandoned for a second day.The UK faces “the fight of our times” against the division exemplified by the Tommy Robinson-led far-right march in London on Saturday, Keir Starmer has told his cabinet in a robust if arguably belated response to the scenes in the capital.Wes Streeting has called it “laughable” that rising racism and homophobia is a sign of free speech in a strongly worded intervention suggesting Labour needed to step up its defence of minorities.Maria Caulfield, a former Tory health minister, has defected to Reform UK, with the former health minister Maria Caulfield saying she signed up to Nigel Farage’s party a month ago.Google has said it will invest £5bn in the UK in the next two years to help meet growing demand for artificial intelligence services, in a boost for the government.

For a full list of all the stories covered on the blog today, do scroll through the list of key event headlines near the top of the blog,The public has paid almost £200bn to the shareholders who own key British industries since they were privatised, a report from the Common Wealth thinktank says,Matthew Taylor and Sandra Laville have the story,The Scottish government has said that it is asking the UK government to increase pressure on Israel to change its policy towards Gaza following the publication of a UN commission of inquiry report saying genocide is occuring there,John Swinney, the Scottish first minister, said:Today’s findings by a UN commission of inquiry represent further deeply concerning evidence that a genocide is being committed by Prime Minister Netanyahu’s government.

Coupled with the intensification of the Israeli government’s assault on Gaza City, the situation is becoming ever more horrific and the international community cannot ignore our obligations to act in light of what we are seeing.Silence – and inaction – is not an option.Too many innocent Palestinians have already died, and more will follow unless we see serious and urgent action from the international community to put an end to this horror.The case for imposing sanctions on the members of the government of Israel who are responsible is now unanswerable.External affairs secretary Angus Robertson will today write to the UK government to again insist that it shoulders its unique historic responsibility to pressurise the Israeli government to change course and ensure a peaceful resolution.

Donald Trump has hinted that he will agree to changes to the US-UK trade deal during the state visit.Speaking to reporters before his departure, he said the British “want to see if they can refine the trade deal”, and he said he was “into helping them”.Kemi Badenoch has accused Reform UK of helping Keir Starmer by announcing the defection of Danny Kruger on Monday.She has claimed that this helped Keir Starmer because it distracted from the pressure he was under over Peter Mandelson.In an interview with The House magazine, she said:I thought it was very interesting that Reform chose [Monday] to make this announcement when the Labour government was on the ropes.

They’re changing the news agenda.That actually helps Labour.Reform is helping Labour.And this is what the PM’s spokesperson told journalists about Keir Starmer’s comments at cabinet about the Hillsborough law.The prime minister then turned to the introduction of the Hillsborough Law today.

He said he had an emotional meeting with families this morning, including Margaret Aspinall.He said he wanted to meet her at the door to show the people of Liverpool are as important as any international leader.He said he had known her for 15 years and knows first-hand the injustice that the families have carried, both in terms of the grief of their loss and the injustice piled on injustice since.He said the lesson of Hillsborough speaks to the experience of families affected by other scandals from Horizon to Windrush and Grenfell, and that each of these has one thing in common – which is ordinary people not listened to because they were not respected.He said righting that wrong is important to who we are as a government.

The cabinet discussed that the bill is as important as any that a government has brought in, and the deputy prime minister [David Lammy] said there were parallels with the women who campaigned for equal pay in Dagenham and those who campaigned for race equality in Bristol, in that it is about tipping the balance back in the favour of working people and the government being insurgents against injustice.Starmer first met Aspinall, chair of the Hillsborough Families Support Group, when he was director of public prosecutions.“I made a promise to her that I would act so no other parent would suffer like she had,” he says.The UK faces “the fight of our times” against the division exemplified by the Tommy Robinson-led far-right march in London on Saturday, Keir Starmer has told his cabinet in a robust if arguably belated response to the scenes in the capital, Peter Walker reports.This is what the PM’s spokesperson told reporters in the cabinet readabout about Starmer’s comments.

The prime minister opened cabinet by saying this government will remain relentlessly focused on what matters to working people around the country.He said that some of the scenes of police officers being attacked on Saturday, and a march led by a convicted criminal, were not just shocking but sent a chill through the spines of people around the country, and particularly many ethnic minority Britons.He said we are in the fight of our times between patriotic national renewal and decline and toxic division.He said the government must heed the patriotic call of national renewal, and that this was a fight that has to be won.He said national renewal means thousands of jobs being delivered across Hartlepool, Nottinghamshire, and Essex with the Civil Nuclear Partnership being announced this week as part of the state visit, and that the visit would deliver further significant investment and jobs to be announced.

The Ministry of Justice has now published the public office (accountability) bill.The full text, and the accompanying documents, are here.David Davis is winding up now.He says Keir Starmer should apologise to the victims.And he says he has found it difficult to reconcile what he has been told about the vetting in this case with what he knows about how the process works.

He suggests ministers should have been given an assessment of the risk factors associated with the appointment.All the documents should be released, he says.There is no security risk, he says.And he restates his call for ministers and officials to give evidence to the relevant select committees.If necessary, they could even give evidence in private.

He says, if ministers try to cover this up, that will make the situation worse.Doughty was sent here as the minister without answers, he says.MPs will return to this matter, he says.He says, when the Commons debates the public office (accountablity) bill that has been published today, he will push to ensure it covers ministers.And he ends by suggesting that, once it becomes law, it could be applied in this case.

Doughty says opposition MPs have claimed the full depth of Mandelson’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein was known he would not have been considered for chancellor of Oxford University.And he would not have been given a slot on Times Radio.Kemi Badenoch has been trying to intervene, but Doughty is not accepting her intervention.Desmond Swayne (Con) raises a point of order.He says there is a convention in the Commons that, when the leader of the opposition tries to intervene, it should be accepted.

Doughty does not immediately accept her intervention,But soon afterwards he does take the intervention,Badenoch says the PM should have been here to speak himself,She asks if the minister will respond to her written questions,And she again demands an apology.

Doughty says he has already expressed the government’s horror at the revelations.Richard Tice, Reform UK’s deputy leader, asks if Doughty has confidence in national security vetting.Of course, says Doughty.Alec Shelbrooke (Con) intervenes.He says he accepts Doughty’s point about not being able to give details of an individual vetting case.

But he asks if being associated with a known paedophile would, in normal circumstances, be enough for someone to fail the process.Doughty says he cannot say any more about the process because it is confidential.Doughty is talking about vetting.He says the process is confidential.So he will not disclose information about vetting in this case, he says.

Stephen Doughty, the Foreign Office minister, is winding up for the government now in the Mandleson debate.He says the government will consider calls from the foreign affairs committee for it to be involved in pre-appointment scrutiny in cases like this.He says Peter Mandelson talked about the “torture” that Jeffrey Epstein was experiencing.But the only people who experienced torture were Epstein’s victims, he says.He says Keir Starmer took “decisive” action when he withdrew Mandelson.

Quoting what Starmer said yesterday, he says Starmer would not have appointed Mandleson if he had known at the time what he knows now.Luke Evans (Con) asks why the PM is not here to answer these questions.Doughty says he is minister for north America, and Starmer has important business today.A reader asks:I occurs to me this could be a leadership pitch from Davis.What do you think? Faced with Jenrick and defections, some of the old guard may think something drastic must be done to steady the ship (remains of).

I think that is unlikely.David Davis last ran for Tory leader 20 years ago, and he was not seen as a great success as Brexit secretary.
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Australia’s Jess Hull takes 1500m bronze after brave race against Kenyan legend Faith Kipyegon

Jess Hull took it to middle-distance legend Faith Kipyegon in the women’s 1500m final at the World Championships on Tuesday night, pushing the triple Olympic champion in the final lap in a brave run before showing grit to hold on for a bronze medal in a desperate finish.The Australian finished third between two other Kenyans – silver medallist Dorcus Ewoi and fourth place Nelly Chepchirchir – to record her country’s second medal in Tokyo and its first world championship podium in the 1500m.Hull said she was “really proud” of the bronze. “It’s been a funky year for me, a little bit less consistent than I normally am, and I’ve had to try some new things and some new racing styles in a way to level up as an athlete,” she said.Though Hull had shown her versatility in escaping from a slow semi-final intact, the final saw Kipyegon lead from the front and hit the accelerator to secure her fourth world championship gold in the event and her third in succession

about 11 hours ago
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World Athletics Championships 2025: Kipyegon wins fourth 1500m title, Tinch storms to 110m hurdles gold – as it happened

The reports are coming in:Kenya’s peerless Faith Kipyegon underlined her status as one of the greatest athletes of all time when she convincingly claimed a fourth 1,500 metres world title on Tuesday to go with her three Olympic golds. Kipyegon delivered a gun-to-tape run that destroyed the field as she came home clear in 3 minutes 52.15 seconds. The world record holder matches Hicham El Guerrouj (1997-2003) by claiming four world 1,500m golds and she will also go for a second world 5,000m title later this week. Fellow Kenyan Dorcus Ewoi ran a personal best 3:54

about 12 hours ago
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AFL finals: where the Collingwood v Brisbane preliminary final will be won and lost | Martin Pegan

The time is now for Collingwood as they again cross paths with Brisbane at the pointy end of the season, just two years after the powerhouse clubs played out an all-time classic grand final. The past two AFL premiers meet a week earlier this time with a spot in the 2025 decider on the line.The Magpies are all in on a premiership this year as they back a cast of high-performing veterans who have helped lift them to preliminary final week in three of their four seasons under coach Craig McRae. The Pies built up a strong record against the Lions since breaking their hearts to clinch the 2023 flag with three more victories, including a comprehensive 52-point win in round six this year. Brisbane finally turned the tables on Collingwood when they pulled away to a 27-point triumph during the run home to make a pre-finals statement at the MCG

about 12 hours ago
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Oblique Seville backs current sprint crop to get down to 9.6sec but says Bolt will always be best

On Sunday night, Oblique Seville became the first Jamaican to win the men’s 100m world title since Usain Bolt. But it turns out the 24-year-old’s mind is just as quick as his blistering leg speed.In an interview to celebrate his victory, Seville was asked if he were to design a sprinter what would he look like. The questioner expected a long answer. Perhaps Justin Gatlin’s start, Michael Johnson’s mentality, and Bolt’s leg speed

about 12 hours ago
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Time comes for Gout Gout to prove himself against sprinting’s best emerging talent | Jack Snape

Australian teenager Gout Gout must first prove himself against sprinting’s emerging talent on Wednesday if he is to secure a match-up against the running royalty tipped to dominate the men’s 200m at the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo.Gout’s 200m heat pits him against five semi-final contenders aged 23 or under, including three that have run quicker than him. In the traditional knockout format, only first, second and third are guaranteed a place in the next round, requiring Gout to be at or near his best to make sure his senior major debut lasts more than one race.The field is led by Bryan Levell, who last month recorded the third quickest 200m time in the rich history of Jamaican sprinting, behind only Usain Bolt and Yohan Blake. His 19

about 12 hours ago
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‘I still have homework to do’: USA’s 16-year-old 800m star Cooper Lutkenhaus misses world semi-final

Cooper Lutkenhaus must have the best excuse for missing class of any high school junior, given he has been in Japan these past two weeks preparing to compete for Team USA at the World Athletics Championship.But the 16-year-old’s dream of reaching the 800m final ended in the opening round on Tuesday as he could only finish seventh in the sweating heat of Tokyo.“It was definitely tough,” Lutkenhaus from Northwest High School in Justin, Texas, admitted afterwards. “It’s not your day every time. It’s like you fail a math test occasionally, but you come back

about 14 hours ago
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Sky puts 900 roles at risk in shake-up to compete with US streaming services

about 14 hours ago
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How an engineering student turned red Solo cups into stylish sweaters: ‘A lot of trial and error’

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

about 20 hours ago
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Big pharma firms have paused nearly £2bn in UK investments 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

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

1 day ago