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UK politics: Trump suggests Starmer use army to tackle migration and says Putin ‘really let me down’ over Ukraine – as it happened

about 23 hours ago
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Q: [From Jack Elsom from the Sun] To Trump, have you any advice for Starmer on immigration?Trump says he has got illegal immigration into the US down to zero.This was one of the issues that made him run for president.He says he told Starmer to stop it.They could use the military, he suggests.But it does not matter how – you have to stop it.

Starmer says this is a problem across Europe.There have been 35,000 returns now – the highest number for years.Today a flight went off at 6.15am taking the first person back to France under the new returns deal.He says this is “proof of concept”, showing this can work.

UPDATE: Trump said:I think your situation [with illegal migration] is very similar …I told the prime minister I would stop it, and it doesn’t matter if you call out the military, it doesn’t matter what means you use, but … it destroys countries from within,Donald Trump has accused Vladimir Putin of letting him down in a joint press conference with Keir Starmer during which the US president piled criticism on his Russian counterpart,As Kiran Stacey and Pippa Crerar report, Trump said that he had hoped to broker a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine soon after entering office, but that Putin’s actions had prevented him from doing so,His comments came during an hour-long press conference alongside Starmer which marked the culmination of a two-day state visit during which the president has largely steered clear of several points of tension between the two leaders,Trump largely avoided criticising the prime minister over Palestinian statehood or attacking Britain on free speech, though he caused awkwardness when he suggested Starmer could bring in the army to deal with irregular migration.

An extraordinary split has opened between Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana in the formation of their new leftwing party, with the former Labour leader suggesting he will take legal action over an unauthorised membership portal promoted by his co-leader.The first Channel migrant has been deported to France under the controversial one in, one out deal, the Home Office has confirmed.UK taxpayers have lost £400m following the collapse of hundreds of startups backed by a heavily criticised Covid-era investment fund launched by Rishi Sunak when he was chancellor.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.Daniel Boffey has a good piece here on who sat next to whom at the state banquet last night.

I have beefed up the post at 3,36pm, where Donald Trump was urging the UK to drill for more oil and gas from the North Sea, to include the full quote,You may need to refresh the page to get it to appear,Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative party leader, says she is not surprised by Trump’s answer,She posted this on social media.

Not surprised Trump was so emphatic,It’s all we spoke about last night,We have to get our oil and gas out of the North Sea,I’m serious about energy security cutting energy bills,We have to make the most of our natural resources.

It’s mad to leave billions of £ in there.And she included this picture.This is from Shawn McCreesh from the New York Times’s blog.It’s worth noting that President Trump hardly took any questions from American reporters who aren’t friendly to him.He gave two to Brian Glenn, the rightwing influencer who was seated with the president’s staff in the front row.

Brian Glenn was the reporter who asked about antifa terrorism (see 3.45pm), and the autopen non-scandal (see 3.47pm).He is also the reporter who famously berated Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the White House earlier this year for not wearing a suit.For Starmer, taking questions only from reporters who are friendly to him is not really an option.

No 10 tends to prioritise broadcast journalists at press conferences, and they tend to be neutral or right-leaning (GB News).The main national newspapers are disproportionately rightwing too.Severin Carrell is the Guardian’s Scotland editor.The Scotch whisky industry wants an urgent meeting with the government after Trump and Starmer failed to do a deal to lift the 10% tariff on Scottish whisky imports into the US.There had been growing optimism Trump would lighten or lift the tariff after he met John Swinney, the Scottish first minister, in the Oval Office earlier this month.

The US bought more than £970m worth of Scotch and single malt whisky last year and Swinney was amongst the guests at the state visit banquet at Windsor castle on Wednesday evening, where he again lobbied Trump over the tariffs.During their 50-minute meeting at the White House, attended by Peter Mandelson, the then British ambassador to Washington, Swinney had briefed the president the tariff was costing the sector nearly £20m a month in lost exports to the US and hundreds of jobs.Distillers such as Isle of Harris have suspended production, laying off staff, in part because they expect a sharp fall in sales in the US due to adding the cost of the tariffs to their products.It was also directly hitting jobs and exports from the US bourbon and whiskey industry: Scottish whisky distillers buy around $200m worth of barrels from the US each year to mature Scotch and single malt whiskies in.Mark Kent, chief executive of the Scotch Whisky Association, said:While we are grateful for the efforts from both sides to secure a positive outcome, no deal has been announced on whisky tariffs.

The Scotch whisky and American whiskey industries have both benefited from zero-tariff trade over the past three decades and we urge governments to reach a zero-for-zero deal as soon as possible – an outcome which will benefit industries and communities on both sides of the Atlantic.In the meantime, it is essential that distillers be supported in our home market by the UK government.In the upcoming autumn budget, it is critical that no further harm is done to the industry and that the domestic tax burden on the industry falls, in the wake of mounting international tariff pressures.This is what Keir Starmer said at the press conference when he was asked by Beverley Turner from GB News if Britain was still a Christian country.He replied:Look, I was christened.

That is my church, has been all my life.That is wired into our informal constitution.Of course we celebrate many other faiths as well, and I’m really proud we are able to do so.Starmer has described previously being brought up in the Church of England.In an interview when he was opposition leader, Starmer said he was atheist.

He said:I am not of faith, I don’t believe in god, but I can see the power of faith and the way it brings people together.Raphael Boyd is a Guardian reporter.Peter Mandelson has lost another job.The former ambassador to the US has now been stripped of his title as the high steward of Kingston upon Hull, as anger over his past ties to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein continue to grow.Hull City councillors passed an emergency motion today to strip Mandelson of the honour – a ceremonial title bestowed by Hull council.

Mandelson was made high steward in 2013, with the position having been vacant for almost four decades prior,The title had previously been held by his grandfather, Herbert Morrison, who was a prominent Labour during the war and in the subsequent Attlee government,Following the Epstein revelations, which led to Mandelson being sacked as ambassador last week, Manchester Metropolitan University, of which he was the chancellor between 2016 and 2024, rescinding his honorary doctorate and commemorative medal following public pressure,There is a lot of talk these days about the need for people in politics to be able to “disagree agreeably”, to use a phrase popularised by Alastair Campbell, describing the approach he adopts with Rory Stewart in their Rest is Politics podcast,Since Campbell and Stewart are centrists, they don’t have a lot to disagree on anyway, but it’s a noble idea, and a good phrase.

And now it turns out that Donald Trump seems to have adopted it too.When Theresa May was PM, she had an excruciating press conference with Trump at Chequers when he half-heartedly played down an interview he had given to the Sun implying she he did not rate her much.The lack of repect was obvious.There was none of that today.The president did not try undermine Keir Starmer in any way, and although he acknowledged that they have a different view on Israel and Gaza, it was cordial and rational.

Other potential disagreements did not arise, or were glossed over,Trump, unusually, was diplomatic,This meant the news quotient was on the low side,On Russia, Trump dropped hints about a new initiative against Russia, but it was hard to tell how serious it was,His analysis of the conflict backed up what his friend Christopher Ruddy was telling the Today programme this morning.

(See 10,11am,) There were no big announcements here,The declaration that Trump wants to buy or lease Bagram airbase from the Taliban was certainly novel,(See 4.

28pm.) But is that much more than fantasy? Perhaps he’s just floating this potential territorial acquisition because he has finally accepted that his plans to annex Canada and Greenland aren’t going anywhere.Trump may have been at his most diplomatic, but that did not mean he had given up on shameless half-truths.His “Peter who?” response to the question about Mandelson will have caused much amusement at Westminster, and in the US his suggestion that Jimmy Kimmel was just fired for his ratings will be dismissed as a lie.Starmer’s answers on most topics were predictable, but his declaration that the Church of England has been “my church … all my life” was not something I think he has said publicly before.

He is an athiest, and his election last year even promoted a debate in religious circles about whether having an athiest PM was a problem.Half a day with a Maga president, and is Starmer finding his faith? Probably not.But it was interesting anwyay.I will post the full words shortly.(If non-British readers find this confusing, it is worth pointing out that atheism and a loose allegiance to the Church of England are not at all incompatible.

)During the press conference Donald Trump said that the US is going to try to regain control of the Bagram air base in Afghanistan.In response to a question about Ukraine, he said the US departure from Afghanistan under Joe Biden was a “total disaster”.He went on:[We were] going to leave Afghanistan, but we were going to leave it with strength and dignity, and we were going to keep Bagram, the big air base, one of the biggest air bases in the world.We gave it to them [the Taliban] for nothing.We’re trying to get it back, by the way.

That could be a little breaking news.We’re trying to get it back, because they need things from us.We want that base back.One of the reasons we want the base is, as you know, it’s an hour away from where China makes its nuclear weapons.
technologySee all
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Temu’s UK operation doubles revenues and pre-tax profits

The UK operation of the Chinese online marketplace Temu doubled revenues and pre-tax profits last year, as British consumers snapped up products offered by the super-budget retailer.Temu UK reported revenues of $63.3m (£46.4m) last year, almost double the $32m in 2023, while pre-tax profits similarly surged from $2m to $3.9m, accounts show

2 days ago
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Memes and nihilistic in-jokes: the online world of Charlie Kirk’s alleged killer

On the day that 22-year-old Tyler Robinson shot and the killed rightwing activist Charlie Kirk, prosecutors say, he texted his roommate to confess what he had done. While appearing to admit to the murder and describe how he was planning to retrieve his gun, he pivoted to mention why he had carved messages into the ammunition.“Remember how I was engraving bullets? The fuckin messages are mostly a big meme,” Robinson texted, according to authorities.Robinson’s shooting of Kirk has put the spotlight on the intersection of political violence and an increasingly nihilistic online world that promotes misinformation and extremism. It’s a confluence that raises fundamental questions about how internet culture influences both extremist attacks and how we understand them, at a time when some of the biggest online spaces are increasingly more divisive and less moderated

2 days ago
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ChatGPT developing age-verification system to identify under-18 users after teen death

OpenAI will restrict how ChatGPT responds to a user it suspects is under 18, unless that user passes the company’s age estimation technology or provides ID, after legal action from the family of a 16-year-old who killed himself in April after months of conversations with the chatbot.OpenAI was prioritising “safety ahead of privacy and freedom for teens”, chief executive Sam Altman said in a blog post on Tuesday, stating “minors need significant protection”.The company said that the way ChatGPT responds to a 15-year-old should look different to the way it responds to an adult.Altman said OpenAI plans to build an age-prediction system to estimate age based on how people use ChatGPT, and if there is doubt, the system will default to the under-18 experience. He said some users “in some cases or countries” may also be asked to provide ID to verify their age

2 days ago
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How memes, gaming and internet culture all relate to the Charlie Kirk shooting

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. Dara Kerr here, filling in for Blake Montgomery, who promises he’ll come back from vacation. Meanwhile, I’m looking at the memes, gaming and internet culture behind the shooting of Charlie Kirk.The bullet that killed conservative activist was inscribed with a message: “Notices bulge OwO whats this?” The online world quickly recognized the reference. It’s a phrase used in internet culture to troll people in online role-play communities, specifically furries (a subculture that cosplays as anthropomorphic animal characters)

3 days ago
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How AI is undermining learning and teaching in universities | Letter

In discussing generative artificial intelligence (‘It’s going to be a life skill’: educators discuss the impact of AI on university education, 13 September) you appear to underestimate the challenges that large language model (LLM) tools such as ChatGPT present to higher education. The argument that mastering AI is a life skill that students need in preparation for the labour market is unconvincing. Our experience is that generative AI undermines teaching and learning, bypasses reflection and criticality, and deflects students from reading original material.Student misuse of generative AI is widespread. Claims that AI helps preparation or research is simply cover for students taking shortcuts that do not develop their learning skills

3 days ago
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Top UK artists urge Starmer to protect their work on eve of Trump visit

Leading British artists including Mick Jagger, Kate Bush and Paul McCartney have urged Keir Starmer to stand up for creators’ human rights and protect their work ahead of a UK-US tech deal during Donald Trump’s visit.In a letter to the prime minister, they argued Labour had failed to defend artists’ basic rights by blocking attempts to force artificial intelligence firms to reveal what copyrighted material they have used in their systems.Senior figures in US tech are accompanying the US president on his state visit, where an announcement is expected on a UK-US tech pact covering areas including AI.Elton John, one of the letter’s signatories, said government proposals to let AI companies train their systems on copyright-protected work without permission “leaves the door wide open for an artist’s life work to be stolen”.“We will not accept this,” he added

3 days ago
businessSee all
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UK borrowing hits five-year high for August at £18bn

about 7 hours ago
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Retail sales rise in Great Britain as warm weather boosts clothing purchases

about 8 hours ago
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Nvidia to invest $5bn in Intel after Trump administration’s 10% stake

about 20 hours ago
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What is quantitative tightening and how has it affected UK finances?

about 22 hours ago
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Bank’s interest rate vote and bond plans are little help to Reeves before budget

about 23 hours ago
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Bank of England governor says UK ‘not out of the woods’ on inflation, after leaving interest rates on hold – as it happened

1 day ago