The first Lions match is about laying down a marker – but Pumas bring range of threats | Ugo Monye
Keir Starmer’s AI tsar to step down after six months in role
Keir Starmer’s artificial intelligence tsar, a key figure in steering the government’s approach to artificial intelligence, is stepping down after six months in the role.Matt Clifford, the author of the government’s AI opportunities action plan, said he would leave his post next month for personal reasons.He described his work on drafting and implementing the 50-point plan as a “privilege”, adding he was “hugely optimistic about the UK’s potential to be an AI superpower”.“For family reasons, I will step back from my role as the prime minister’s adviser on AI opportunities at the end of July, but I’m delighted that this important work will continue across government.”A government spokesperson said Starmer had thanked Clifford, who was appointed in January, for his “dedicated work” on AI policy
Whip’s resignation over disability benefit cuts not a sign of major rebellion, Nandy says
Downing Street will not suffer a major rebellion when MPs vote next month on cuts to disability benefits, Lisa Nandy has insisted, despite the resignation of a government whip on Thursday.The culture secretary said Vicky Foxcroft, who resigned from the government saying she could not vote for the controversial measures, was the only frontbench MP she knew of who had been thinking of quitting.Despite 170 Labour MPs having expressed concerns about the bill, which will make it harder for disabled people to claim personal independence payments (Pips), Nandy said the government was not expecting many other Labour MPs to defy the whip.Asked on Friday whether she was detecting signs of a major rebellion, Nandy told BBC Breakfast: “I’m not. It would be wrong to say that, when you bring forward big reforms there aren’t concerns and there aren’t dissenting voices, of course there are
£5bn UK overseas aid cuts cannot be challenged in court, say government lawyers
Cuts of £5bn to the UK overseas aid budget cannot be challenged in the courts, government lawyers have said, even though ministers have no plan to return spending to the legal commitment of 0.7 % of UK gross national income (GNI).The assertion by Treasury solicitors that ministers are immune from legal challenge over aid cuts comes in preliminary exchanges with the aid advocacy group One Campaign. It is the first step in what could prove a highly embarrassing judicial review.In the spring statement in March the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, said she was slashing aid from 0
Labour MP resigns as government whip in protest at benefit cuts
The Labour MP Vicky Foxcroft has resigned as a whip in protest at the government’s welfare plans, saying she will not be able to vote for the cuts to disability payments.The government is braced for a major rebellion on the welfare bill, which includes significant changes to personal independence payments for disabled people.Foxcroft, the MP for Lewisham North who was shadow disability minister before the general election, said she was unable to do her job as a whip because she disagreed with the changes and did not believe that cuts were part of the solution to rising inactivity.In a letter to the prime minister, Foxcroft said the benefits system was “in desperate need of reform” but her experience as shadow disability minister had showed her that the struggles of disabled people and organisations were “even tougher than I had imagined”.She said: “The last Conservative government left many in poverty and living life in fear of losing their support, not getting access to the right medical care, not having suitable housing and not being able to participate fully in society
Give thanks Priti Patel isn’t foreign sec – she’d already be at war with Iran | John Crace
Be thankful for small mercies. If it was up to Priti Patel, the UK would already be at war with Iran. In a former life as international development secretary, Priti got herself fired for freelancing foreign policy on Israel. Now, as shadow foreign secretary, she’s at it again. Old habits die hard
Grooming gang survivors tell MPs to stop ‘tug-of-war with vulnerable women’ – as it happened
The political “tug-of-war with vulnerable women” abused by grooming gangs must stop ahead of a new national inquiry into the crimes, survivors have told the Guardian.Holly Archer and Scarlett Jones, two survivors who played a key role in a “gold-standard” local inquiry into the crime in Telford, have urged politicians and those without experience of abuse to allow women to shape the investigation.“We have to put politics aside when it comes to child sexual exploitation, we have to stop this tug-of-war with vulnerable women,” said Archer, author of I Never Gave My Consent: A Schoolgirl’s Life Inside the Telford Sex Ring.“There are so many voices that need to be heard. There’s some voices, though, that need to step away,” she said
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