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Retailers hope ‘panic weekend’ will bring Christmas cheer to UK sales

about 15 hours ago
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Retailers are hoping for a last-minute dash for the shops this weekend after a lacklustre run-up to Christmas, with UK households forecast to spend £3.4bn, up more than 12% on the same weekend in 2024.Almost 50m shopping trips will be made by last-minute Father Christmases over the weekend, according to research by analysts GlobalData for Vouchercodes.co.uk, the vast majority of which will be to retail destinations including high streets and shopping malls.

Retailers are hoping for a late rush for presents this year as Christmas Day falls on a Thursday, leaving three days after the weekend when many will take time off to stock up.Super Saturday (20 December) is set to be the busiest day, with 26.5 million people predicted to spend £1.75bn on festive purchases.Experts said it was likely that consumers had been holding off purchasing their Christmas items until they had a clearer picture of their own finances in light of the budget.

A later run also allows more time to save, with many people receiving their monthly pay packet over the next few days.After a muted Black Friday, shoppers have also been holding out for last-minute bargains in the annual game of chicken with retailers for whom Christmas is a vital part of their year when most – if not all – profits are made.After a relatively mild autumn and winter, clothing retailers, such as Primark, New Look and H&M, have already launched discounts in a bid to tempt out cautious shoppers, with retailers such as Currys suggesting last month’s budget has not improved consumer sentiment.On Friday, the toy specialist The Entertainer launched discounts of up to 60% on more than 950 toys and games in stores, also suggesting trade has not been booming.Zoe Morris, a savings expert at VoucherCodes.

co.uk, said: “No matter how organised you think you’ve been, there’s always a few Christmas essentials that catch you out and have you dashing to the shops.And this year, Brits are leaving their shopping to the very last second, with an extra 10 million people set to make a purchase this ‘panic weekend’ compared to last year (39.3m) – that’s 26.2% more shoppers.

”The later run is expected to benefit high street shops as concerns about online orders arriving on time increase closer to 25 December.Many retailers, such as Next and Currys, cut off next-day deliveries by 22 December, although some such as Marks & Spencer and John Lewis allow shoppers to leave online orders until 23 December if they pick up in stores.Some introduce additional charges for deliveries during this peak period further prompting a shift to high street shopping.This weekend also kicks off the battle for the festive dinner plate.Morrisons, Aldi and Lidl have cut the price of festive veg to just 5p while Sainsbury’s and Tesco were charging 15p.

Both Tesco and Morrisons are also giving out free carrots to children next week,The battle to offer the cheapest turkey is also intensifying,Tesco has cut the price of its small, medium and large whole turkeys to £2,50 a kilo for Clubcard members,This is cheaper than the supermarket’s equivalent offers both last year and the year before, with a small bird that serves six costing £7.

50.Lidl is matching this deal on its small turkeys.Retailers are hoping spending will come through after a pre-Christmas interest rate cut from the Bank of England on Thursday, despite low consumer confidence and signs that shoppers have been cutting back.More than a third of shoppers say they will be spending less as a result of the autumn budget, according to a recent survey by advisory firm RSM, with a similar amount saying they will spend the same and 27% expecting to spend more.Jacqui Baker, the head of consumer markets at RSM UK, said: “In the near to medium term caution is king.

The budget gave consumers little comfort over the outlook of the UK economy and appears to have exacerbated an already cautious consumer,Households are battening down the hatches on spending,”The advisory firm Accenture said its research suggested a slightly more positive mood with more than half of people in Britain set to keep the Christmas budget steady – turning to budget supermarkets or cutting back on presents to offset inflation,Some are also using AI chatbots to seek out bargains,Matt Jeffers, the retail strategy lead at Accenture’s UK business, said: “After several years of managing a high cost of living, our data suggests that this year we’re seeing some signs of cautious consumer confidence returning, but people are still hovering above the brakes, and fine-tuning their spending to make Christmas work on their terms.

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Long waits and ‘unacceptable’ lack of data at NHS gender clinics in England, review finds

Doctors treating vulnerable patients with gender dysphoria have no way of assessing whether the NHS treatment provided has worked because outcomes are not systematically recorded, a damning official inquiry into the clinics has found.Waiting times for a first appointment at NHS adult gender dysphoria clinics (GDCs) in England are projected to reach 15 years unless there are improvements, the review found. The number of people seeking treatment is rising significantly and on average patients are already waiting five years and seven months for a first assessment.The review conducted by Dr David Levy, an NHS medical director and cancer specialist, was commissioned after last year’s Cass report on gender care for children and young people.Levy, an NHS medical director and cancer specialist, took a team to nine NHS England clinics to assess the effectiveness and safety of each service, interviewing staff and patients

2 days ago
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Badenoch accused of making ‘deeply inaccurate’ claims about violence against women

Kemi Badenoch has been accused of weaponising violence against women and girls and using “dangerous” and “deeply inaccurate” claims in her response to the government’s plan to tackle the issue.In the House of Commons on Thursday, the safeguarding minister, Jess Phillips, introduced the government’s long-awaited strategy to tackle “the national emergency” of violence against women and girls, saying it did something “that none before it ever has” by making tackling it a priority across local and national government, the criminal justice system and the voluntary sector.Phillips told the Commons: “We are calling violence against women and girls the national emergency that it is. We are committing to halve these horrific crimes within a decade, and today we publish the strategy that sets us on that journey.”After the announcement of the strategy – which will focus on preventing radicalisation of young men, stopping abusers and supporting victims – the Conservative leader said plans to tackle misogyny in schools were being introduced only because “some people in Labour” watched the Netflix drama Adolescence, adding that the focus should be on “people, who come from cultures that don’t respect women, coming into our country”

2 days ago
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Council funding deal: who are the winners and losers – and will tax bills rise?

English councils have received a new three-year financial settlement. But is it fair? Who are the winners and losers? Will your council tax bill go up, and will it stop councils from declaring effective bankruptcy?The government announced a three-year funding settlement for English councils on Wednesday. This sets out each local authority’s core finance allocation, enabling them to set local council tax bills for next April and finalise an overall budget.For the first time, government funding for councils was distributed using a new Fair Funding formula that gives higher weighting (and thus a greater relative share of overall resources) to local authorities with high “deprivation” scores (relative deprivation is measured by factors such as income, employment, health, housing costs and crime).Middlesbrough, Manchester and Birmingham were among the most deprived local authority areas according to the latest indices of deprivation – and they will see some of the biggest increases in spending power from April

3 days ago
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Acas offers to help break deadlock in resident doctors’ strike

The conciliation service Acas has offered to help try to break the deadlock in the resident doctors’ strike in England.The Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service has made clear that it is willing to become involved in an effort to find a resolution to the long-running dispute, as medics remain on strike for the 14th time over pay and jobs.Acas’s intervention comes after NHS bosses and the Patients Association in recent days urged the government and the British Medical Association to agree to independent mediation to break the deadlock.“Acas is in contact with all the parties involved in the resident doctors’ dispute,” said Kevin Rowan, the body’s director of dispute resolution.However, Acas quickly clarified its position after Rowan’s statement led to speculation that it was already involved in trying to broker a deal

3 days ago
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Rights group challenges trans-inclusive swimming policy at Hampstead Heath

Rules permitting trans women to share female changing facilities and swim in a women-only pond are discriminatory and unlawful, the high court has heard.The City of London Corporation is breaching equality legislation by allowing trans people to use the single-sex ponds on Hampstead Heath, according to a claim brought by the rights group Sex Matters. It is seeking permission to challenge the admission regulations.Daniel Stilitz KC, for the City of London, said Sex Matters had “steamed in”, bringing a premature legal action at a time when its officials were actively consulting pond users on its entry rules.Public bodies are redrafting their policies on single-sex spaces in response to the supreme court’s ruling in April that the legal definition of a woman is based on biological sex

3 days ago
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Will resident doctors lose support over latest strike? | Letters

“Striking resident doctors are digging in. History suggests this will go on and on” says the headline on Denis Campbell’s analysis piece (16 December). As a retired public health research and policy adviser and the parent of a doctor currently in core training, I agree that it is likely to go on and on – but not because doctors are stubborn. It will persist because the numbers do not add up and too much of the response has been political posturing rather than workforce planning.This year, around 30,000 doctors competed for just 10,000 specialty training posts, leaving thousands unable to progress

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Donald Trump promised a new ‘golden age’ for the US economy. Where is it?

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Retailers hope ‘panic weekend’ will bring Christmas cheer to UK sales

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‘A black hole’: families and police say tech giants delay investigations in child abuse and drug cases

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The Com: the growing cybercrime network behind recent Pornhub hack

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Harry Brook’s moment of madness a fitting epitaph for England’s flawed cult of Baz | Barney Ronay

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