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Ministers to enshrine UK charities’ right to peaceful protest in new ‘covenant’

about 23 hours ago
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The right to engage in political activity and protest peacefully is to be enshrined in a new agreement between the government and UK charities and campaigners aimed in part at ending years of damaging “culture wars”.The agreement is intended to reset relations between government and the voluntary sector after years of mutual distrust during which Conservative ministers limited public rights to protest, froze out campaigners, and targeted “woke” charities.The so-called “civil society covenant” will also commit ministers to giving charities and campaign groups a formal partnership role in helping design and fulfil the government’s missions to achieve economic growth and tackle social problems.Keir Starmer will announce the covenant on Thursday in what is seen as the most serious government engagement with the voluntary sector since David Cameron’s ill-fated attempt to co-opt charities into his “big society” vision in 2010.The prime minister is expected to say: “This is about rebalancing power and responsibility.

Not the top-down approach of the state working alone.Not the transactional approach of markets left to their own devices.But a new way forward – where government and civil society work side by side to deliver real change.”The government has highlighted the covenant as a way of putting charities and social enterprises at the centre of plans to provide publicly funded grassroots services in areas such as domestic abuse, youth services and employment programmes.But the covenant is expected to addresses more fundamental principles of civil society independence and rights, and commits the government and charities to continue to engage respectfully even where they disagree on policy.

A key passage in the covenant is expected to say the government respects the independence and legitimacy of civil society organisations to advocate and campaign, will protect their right to engage in peaceful protest, and hold the government to account,The commitment was welcomed by civil society leaders,Jane Ide, the chief executive of the Association of Chief Executives of Voluntary Organisations, said: “This is an essential part of a healthy democracy and speaking truth to power is central to the role of civil society,”There is widespread optimism in the voluntary sector that the covenant, which was negotiated in recent months, signals a genuine attempt by the government to embrace civil society groups and draw on their expertise to drive social change,One senior voluntary sector figure said: “This is something everyone has wanted to see for some time.

It is easy to be cynical about words on the page but it is a massive opportunity to do things in a different way.”There is broad relief the covenant appears to signal that the tide of aggressive criticism of charities from rightwing politicians in recent years, seen as an attempt to undermine charities’ legal rights and restrict their role in public debate, has receded.Sign up to First EditionOur morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it mattersafter newsletter promotionThese have included hostile “culture war” attacks on charities including the National Trust, the RNLI and Barnardo’s by politicians and media over so-called “woke” issues such as race, immigration, the UK’s colonial legacy and the climate crisis.Charities that provide public services have also railed against “gagging clauses” inserted into delivery contracts preventing them from speaking out on behalf of beneficiaries, and many will hope the covenant will end such practices.But there is also scepticism about the covenant in some quarters, given the government’s recent banning of the Palestine Action protest group, and amid fears that police handling of some peaceful pro-Palestine marches risks criminalising legitimate protest.

Some charity figures contrasted the commitment of the covenant to “coproduce” policy with campaigners with the failures of ministers in recent months to consult civil society over unpopular cuts to disability benefits and the winter fuel allowance.There is also concern that the financial difficulties faced by many charities, often as a result of cuts to local authority and NHS board funding, will severely limit the ability of many civil society organisations to engage in partnership.
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UK payrolls down by 178,000 over last year; Bundesbank chief defends central bank independence after Trump’s attacks on Powell – as it happened

Today’s jobs report shows that there has been a steady drop in the number of payrolled employees in the UK this year.Company payrolls peaked in July 2024, the month of the general election, at 30.451m.But they have fallen in most months since; by last month, payrolls had dropped to an estimated 30.265m

about 5 hours ago
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Southern Water nearly doubles CEO pay to £1.4m despite bonus ban

Southern Water has nearly doubled its chief executive’s annual pay package to £1.4m despite financial difficulties and a government ban on it awarding bonuses.Lawrence Gosden was awarded £691,000 under a “two-year long-term incentive plan” (LTIP), on top of fixed pay of £687,000 in its last financial year, according to the company’s annual report published this week.In the previous financial year he was awarded total pay of £764,000 including a bonus of £184,000.Water companies have been under intense scrutiny in recent years amid outrage over sewage leaks into Britain’s rivers and seas

about 6 hours ago
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Jaguar Land Rover to axe 500 UK management jobs as Trump tariffs fallout dents sales

Jaguar Land Rover has said it will axe up to 500 management jobs in the UK after reporting a plunge in sales linked to Donald Trump’s tariffs.The British luxury carmaker said about 1.5% of its staff in the UK would be affected by the cuts as part of a voluntary redundancy round for managers. JLR, which is owned by India’s Tata Motors, employs 33,000 people in the UK.The car manufacturer reported a 15

about 6 hours ago
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London-Berlin trains on the drawing board for UK-German rail taskforce

Plans for possible direct trains from London to Berlin will be drawn up by a joint UK-German taskforce, reigniting hopes for better rail connections across Europe.The partnership, announced as part of the bilateral treaty to be signed by the British prime minister, Keir Starmer, and his German counterpart, Friedrich Merz, could eventually lead to direct rail services between the two countries after previous plans for London-Frankfurt trains hit the buffers.The Department for Transport described the agreement as a “significant step forward”, with direct trains the most eye-catching part of a commitment to collaborate in enhancing sustainable transport links and mobility.Germany has also agreed to allow some arriving UK airline passengers to use passport e-gates at its airports by the end of August, the Cabinet Office said.Since Brexit, UK travellers have needed to queue to have their passports manually stamped, rather than use automated gates, at EU airports

about 7 hours ago
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UK unemployment rises and wage growth slows as jobs market ‘weakens’

Unemployment climbed and wage growth slowed in the three months to May, according to official figures that will pressure the Bank of England to cut interest rates next month.Data from the Office for National Statistics, released on Thursday, showed that Britain’s official unemployment rate rose to 4.7% in the three months to May, up 0.1% from April to reach the highest level since June 2021.Pay growth slipped from 5

about 9 hours ago
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Frasers Group sales fall amid ‘challenging’ luxury market and retreat from gaming

A “challenging” luxury market and retreat from gaming have prompted a fall in sales and profits at Mike Ashley’s Frasers.The group, which is majority owned by the billionaire former Newcastle United owner, said sales fell by 7.4% to £4.7bn and pre-tax profits slid by 24% to £379.5m as it closed some of its House of Fraser department stores and Game video game shops

about 10 hours ago
sportSee all
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Tour de France 2025: Pogacar blows field away on stage 12 summit finish in Pyrenees – as it happened

about 4 hours ago
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Tour de France: Pogacar demolishes rivals with devastating stage 12 win in Pyrenees

about 4 hours ago
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Twelve-year-old Chinese swimmer takes stunning times to world championships

about 4 hours ago
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Welsh wipeout in Lions squad for first time since 1896 reflects sorry decline

about 4 hours ago
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Victorian regulator weighs unprecedented intervention in AFL’s fight with bookmakers over gambling revenue

about 5 hours ago
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Lions still on red alert despite gaping holes in Australia’s team sheet | Robert Kitson

about 8 hours ago