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Jeane Freeman obituary

Jeane Freeman, who has died aged 72, held two critical roles in the SNP government at Holyrood, leading the Scottish government’s response to the Covid pandemic alongside Nicola Sturgeon and establishing Scotland’s first devolved social security system.By no means a career politician but an instinctive campaigner from the outset, she entered elected politics a decade ago, and relatively late in life, after a varied career in nursing, criminal justice and the civil service. This followed a political journey from her family’s working-class, trade-unionist roots to the progressive nationalism of the 2014 independence referendum campaign, during which she championed women’s voices and famously took on the broadcaster Andrew Neil in a viral interview about whether the union benefited Scotland’s NHS.Freeman co-founded the cross-party group Women for Independence in 2012, determined to push women’s experience to the heart of the debate that was gripping the country. Her rubric was “there’s no such thing as a stupid question”

about 4 hours ago
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‘Jellyfish’ and ‘doormat’: why is Keir Starmer so deeply unpopular?

In yet another confusing and chaotic period for British politics there is one thing on which just about everyone can agree: Keir Starmer is unpopular. Very, very unpopular.His net favourability rating, the difference between those who have a generally positive or negative view of the prime minister has been, depending on the pollster, anything from -50 to -57, a nadir only beaten by Liz Truss. Recent focus group descriptions of Starmer include a “jellyfish” and a “doormat”.Perhaps most strikingly, the slightly plaintive chant of “Keir Starmer’s a wanker” to the inevitable tune of Seven Nation Army has been heard not just at football stadiums but January’s world darts championship

about 7 hours ago
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Vetting process for Mandelson needed more awkward questions, expert says

Downing Street cannot appoint politicians or business figures to senior diplomatic posts using the same security vetting it uses to check civil servants, a former national security adviser has said.Peter Ricketts said there had to be more “awkward questions” asked of a person such as Peter Mandelson than the system allows, given “all the baggage” of his three decades in politics and business.“For that person there must surely be an even more thorough process including detailed interviews with those who have known him/her well in their previous life. That will take time,” Lord Ricketts said.Other insiders familiar with the appointment process said Mandelson’s appointment was streamlined and the reality was that Downing Street “wanted Peter to be the answer”, with informal concerns brushed off

about 16 hours ago
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Former top civil servant warns ‘more due diligence’ to be done over replacement of Chris Wormald

A former top civil servant has urged No 10 to do “more due diligence” as it prepares to replace the cabinet secretary, Chris Wormald, with Antonia Romeo, the frontrunner for the role.Sir Simon McDonald, the former permanent secretary of the Foreign Office, said he had tried to warn No 10 the process needed to start from scratch and it was vital that the prime minister followed a thorough procedure given the importance of the role.He told Channel 4 News: “The due diligence needs to be thorough. If the candidate mentioned in the media is the one, in my view, the due diligence has some way still to go.”No 10 was preparing to confirm earlier on Wednesday that Wormald would depart his job as cabinet secretary after just a year in the job – but the announcement was delayed

about 23 hours ago
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Labour bill would stop ‘dodgy front companies’ making political donations

Labour will end the use of “dodgy front companies” that hide the source of dark money for political donations as part of its sweeping elections bill, which will give votes to 16-year-olds and pave the way for “opt-out” voter registration.Gifts and hospitality for politicians sponsored by foreign states or companies will also be severely curbed, the Guardian understands.The government also intends to put new restrictions on cryptocurrency donations and the size of foreign donations, a key concern of Labour MPs about money that may be funnelled to Reform UK.Elon Musk, the billionaire X owner, was once reported to have been interested in a multimillion pound donation to Nigel Farage’s party, though later said he had failed to be impressed by the Reform UK leader.The communities secretary Steve Reed told the Guardian the bill introduced to the Commons on Thursday would be “the biggest reset to our democratic system since the second world war”, adding potentially millions to the electoral roll and introducing tough new laws to stop foreign donations being hidden in shell companies

about 24 hours ago
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Aide linked to sex offender ‘did not give full account’ before he was given peerage, PM says

Keir Starmer’s former communications chief Matthew Doyle “did not give a full account of his actions” before being nominated for a peerage, the prime minister has told the Commons after it emerged Doyle had campaigned for a friend charged with possessing indecent images of children.Doyle, a longstanding Starmer aide who stepped down as the No 10 head of communications last March, was suspended on Monday from the Labour whip in his new role in the Lords after reports about his actions.In the first prime minister’s questions since Starmer faced a near-rebellion from his MPs over his decision to appoint Peter Mandelson as ambassador to Washington, Kemi Badenoch largely ignored the internal Labour dissent.Instead, the Conservative leader pressed the PM on the resignation over the weekend of Morgan McSweeney, his chief of staff, the expected departure of Chris Wormald, the cabinet secretary, and the peerage for Doyle.After Doyle was named as one of a tranche of new Labour peers in December, media reports set out that in 2016 he campaigned in a local election on behalf of Sean Morton, a former Labour councillor in Scotland who had been charged with possessing indecent images

1 day ago
cultureSee all
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Jon Stewart calls Maga backlash to Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl show ‘actually pathetic’

2 days ago
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Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind was never a love story. It was a warning

2 days ago
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Actor Catherine O’Hara died of a blood clot in her lungs, death certificate says

3 days ago
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‘We recorded it in a kitchen!’ How China Crisis made Black Man Ray

3 days ago
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Super Bowl: Bad Bunny, the ads and everything but the football – as it happened

4 days ago
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Perth festival 2026: Swan River bursts to life with a stunning trail of stories and light

4 days ago

UK GDP: Chancellor Rachel Reeves predicts ‘stronger growth this year’ after UK economy ends 2025 ‘in the slow lane’ – business live

about 7 hours ago
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Reaction to the news that the UK grew by just 0.1% in the final quarter of 2025 (see earlier post) is rolling in, and City experts aren’t impressed.Lindsay James, investment strategist at wealth managers Quilter, warns that the picture is ‘rather bleak at the moment’.“A long list of data revisions from the ONS has revealed the UK economy barely kept its head above water in the final quarter of last year, with GDP growth coming in at just 0.1% after downward revisions to the previous two data prints.

December saw a meagre uplift of 0.1%, which was in line with expectations, but November’s growth has been revised down to 0.2% from the 0.3% first reported.“The Christmas period was weak by historical standards, and that is laid bare in today’s data.

The services sector, which had previously been noted as the largest contributor, showed no growth and its impact was revised down from 0.2% to nothing in the three months to November too.Surprisingly, production output grew by 1.2%, having fallen by 0.1% in the three months to November, but it was outweighed by a fall of 2.

1% in the construction sector which followed a 0,9% fall previously,Scott Gardner, investment strategist at JP Morgan Personal Investing says the economy failed to hold onto the stronger growth seen in early 2025:“The UK economy ended 2025 firmly in the slow lane, undershooting expectations and remaining in a low gear in the final quarter of the year as businesses and consumers digested the Chancellor’s November Budget,This marks a clear reversal in fortunes for the economy after strong growth shown in the first half of the year failed to carry over into the rest of 2025,“Many will be hoping that the slow pace of economic expansion in the final quarter is only temporary after the Jaguar Land Rover shutdown stunted growth in the Autumn and led to a sharp fall in productivity.

Services performed well over December, but construction and industrial production activity declined.Consumer spending showed more promising signs and has bounced back as real wage growth has fed through into higher retail and online spending.The Unite union are calling for more investment to lift growth; their general secretary Sharon Graham says:“Today’s figures are further proof that the UK economy will not get the growth we were promised until we reverse our historic levels of underinvestment.“The figures also show that real household disposable income fell in 2025.Families up and down the country are getting poorer in real terms.

“We need to stop the rot and start delivering for everyday people.”Time to recap….The UK economy expanded by only 0.1% in the final three months of last year, according to official data, as falling business investment and weak consumer spending led to little momentum going into 2026.Figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show that the economy grew at the same rate of 0.

1% as the previous three months.This was less than a 0.2% rise that economists had been expecting.The economy grew by 1.3% in 2025, an improvement on growth of 1.

1% in 2024, although worse than official forecasts of 1,5%,The ONS said the economy also expanded by 0,1% on a monthly basis in December, slowing from 0,2% in November – a figure that was revised down from 0.

3%.The rise came despite there being no growth at all in the dominant services sector, which makes up about 80% of the economy.The small boost was instead driven by the production sector, up by 1.2%, while the construction industry shrank 2.1%, its worst performance in four years, the ONS said.

The data left the UK as the fastest growing European member of the G7 in 2025.Chancellor Rachel Reeves predicted that growth would be stronger in 2026, pointing to the government’s efforts to lift the economy.Economists warned, though, that the UK ended 2025 in the ‘slow lane’.There were calls for the Bank of England to cut interest rates at its next meeting, in March.The London stock market hit a fresh record high, over 10,500 points, before slipping back this afternoon.

Industrial action has the potential to slow economic growth, so the chancellor may be relieved that a strike at Diageo’s Guinness zero canning plant in Belfast has been cancelled.Following a eight-day strike in December, staff at the site have now secured a significant pay increase.The Unite union reports that workers’ pay will rise by 15.5% in a three-year deal, with the first year backdated to September 2024.Unite general secretary Sharon Graham says:“The Diageo workers have won an excellent pay increase through union strength in the workplace and their determination to take strike action.

Their strike in December shut down the plant and secured this significant win on pay.”The UK services sector makes up around three-quarters of the economy, so there’s concern that it stagnated in the last three months of 2025.Thomas Watts, portfolio manager at Julius Baer, says:“Amid intense speculation over tax rises and uncertainty following the Autumn Budget, it’s unsurprising that UK growth was revised lower in the final quarter of 2025.The data points to clear caution among businesses, with investment dropping 3% over the period.Headline growth was flattered by the rebound in automotive production as the sector continued recovering from Jaguar Land Rover’s September cyber attack, effectively propping up output.

More concerning is that the UK’s dominant services sector ended the year flat, a stark signal of softness at the core of the economy.”Today’s GDP report shows that eight of the 14 services subsectors contributed positively to services growth.The largest positive contributor to growth was the administrative and support services subsector, up by 1.2%, led by travel agency, tour operators and other reservation services and related activities.The next largest positive contributions were from public administration and defence, which increased by 0.

5%, information and communication, which increased by 0.4%, and human health and social work activities, up by 0.2%.The largest negative contributor to growth in Quarter 4 2025 was professional, scientific and technical activities, which fell by 1.1%.

Meanwhile in the US, the number of people losing their jobs appears to have dropped,There were 227,000 new ‘initial claims’ for unemployment benefit last week, which is 5,000 fewer than in the previous week,#Unemployment - Initial jobless claims fell to 227K for the week ending February 7, down from 232K, reinforcing signs of a stable but not overheating labor market,Claims remain well below long-term averages, supporting the Fed’s patience narrative and limiting near-term downside… pic,twitter.

com/wJNwJJLbofChancellor Rachel Reeves has predicted there will be stronger growth in the UK economy this year than in 2025.Speaking after this morning’s data showed annual growth rose to 1.3% last year, Reeves says the government is creating the “conditions for growth”.She cites the six cuts to interest rates since the 2024 election, inflation set to fall towards the 2% target, reductions on energy bills set for April, and the planning and infrastructure bill.Reeves says:We can’t turn things around overnight, but we have created the conditions now for the economy to grow and it is doing just that.

I’m confident that the decisions that we have made to return stability to the economy, to bring investment to our economy, and the changes we’re making around planning an regulation will help deliver stronger growth this year, building on the economic growth we’ve seen in 2025.'We can't turn things around overnight, but we have created the conditions now for the economy to grow and it is doing just that.' Chancellor Rachel Reeves reacts to the ONS figures that report a growth of 0.1% for the final quarter of 2025https://t.co/KZOBgYGFRC pic.

twitter.com/sCAP4z8Tg1The chancellor also spoke about GDP per capita accelerating last year – it did indeed rise by 1.0% annually in 2025, but actually shrank in the third and fourth quarters.Andrew Sentance, a former Bank of England policymaker, reckons the UK is on track for “the most dismal decade for growth in 100 years”.It may be a little early to be calling this race (we’re only halfway through the decade!), but Sentance has spotted that annual growth in the 2020s is below the historic average, and the weakest since the ‘roaring 20s’.

GDP up 0,1pc in the final quarter of last year - continuing the recent pattern of very weak growth,Economy grew by just 1,3pc in 2025 as a whole, with the 2020s on course for the worst UK growth performance since the 1920s - the most dismal decade for growth in 100 years! pic,twitter.

com/5TGYitvu4KBritish American Tobacco (BAT) is set to cut jobs and increase its use of AI as part of efforts to “simplify” its operations.BAT, which sells cigarettes, tobacco and other nicotine products, announced a new AI-driven productivity programme this morning.Interim finance chief, Javed Iqbal, said it will allow BAT to simplify and automate using data analytics and AI tools, adding it would affect staffing levels.He told a call:“It will have an impact on the size of the organisation.”The UK economy may shift out of the ‘slow lane’ in the current quarter, although it’s still unlikely to hit top gear.

NIESR, the economic research institute NIESR, has predicted that UK GDP is expected to grow by 0.3% in the first quarter of 2026.Fergus Jimenez-England, associate economist at NIESR, says:“Today’s GDP figures show that growth in 2025 was 1.3 per cent, coming in slightly below expectations.The fourth quarter only just scraped together a positive growth figure, with services disappointingly showing no growth.

That said, surveys point toward a recovery in business sentiment in the New Year after months of damaging speculation in the run up to the Autumn Budget.With the Spring Statement upcoming in March, the Chancellor should look to support this change in sentiment by avoiding a repeat of last year and refrain from further policy changes.”In a relief for struggling homeowners, the number of people falling into arrears on their mortgages – or having their property repossessed – has fallen.Industry body UK Finance has reported a 4% decrease in homeowner mortgages in arrears in the last quarter of 2025, while the number of buy-to-let (BTL) mortgages in arrears fell by nine per cent compared with the previous quarter.UK Finance says:In the fourth quarter of 2025, there were 80,490 homeowner mortgages in arrears of 2.

5 per cent or more of the outstanding balance.This was a four per cent decrease compared with Q2 2025.The overall proportion of mortgages in arrears remains low, at 0.92 per cent of homeowner mortgages and 0.5 per cent of BTL mortgages.

Within this total, 27,780 homeowner mortgages were in the lightest arrears band (representing between 2.5 and 5 per cent of the outstanding balance), four per cent fewer than in the previous quarter.The number of BTL mortgages in arrears also fell, down nine per cent compared with the previous quarter, to 9,520.Mary-Lou Press, president of the National Association of Estate Agents, comments:“We are starting to witness the positive impact of proactive lender engagement and the resilience shown by many borrowers despite ongoing cost-of-living pressures and higher interest rate environments over recent years.The fact that arrears levels are a fraction of those seen during the 2009 financial crisis offers important reassurance about the overall stability of the housing market