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Ban corporate donations to UK political parties to protect elections, says thinktank

about 19 hours ago
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Political donations by companies should be banned to protect UK elections from foreign interference, a thinktank has warned.In the first big overhaul of election funding in 26 years, ministers have pledged to “keep British democracy safe” by closing a loophole that allows individuals not eligible to vote in Britain to donate to political parties through UK-registered companies.The representation of the people bill, being debated in parliament, will oblige corporate donors to show they are controlled by UK electors or citizens.However, in a report published today, the Centre for the Analysis of Taxation (CenTax) claims the new legislation will not solve the problem.Sebastian Gazmuri-Barker, a senior legal analyst at CenTax, said the bill’s proposed tests “contain loopholes that are easily exploitable”.

“Parliament should either ban corporate donations outright or significantly strengthen the approach,” he said,By matching the name of companies declared as donors to ownership records, researchers at the thinktank found that between 2001 and 2024, over 4000 companies had donated £293m, with big surges ahead of general elections,Almost £1 in every £10 came from corporations controlled by individuals who would not have been eligible to donate directly,CenTax found their donations were on average almost twice as large as those from companies with UK-eligible owners,The estimates are likely to be conservative, since the true extent of foreign interference is obscured by opaque corporate structures.

The researchers found a quarter of the money was not traceable because the owner of the company could not be identified.“The bill’s reforms are easy to dodge,” the report states.Details of company ownership are kept at Companies House, where data has been criticised as unreliable and incomplete.CenTax is critical of the fact that the new legislation will continue to rely on Companies House data rather than obliging the Electoral Commission to collect the information.In the absence of a ban on corporate donors, CenTax is calling for all but the smallest donors – both individuals and companies – to be required to register with the Electoral Commission before they can give any money, and says disclosure of the ultimate controllers of companies should be mandatory.

Introducing the bill last month, Steve Reed, the secretary of state for housing, communities and local government, said: “Growing threats from abroad mean we must make changes to keep our elections secure,We won’t let hostile foreign states use dirty money to buy our elections,We are keeping British democracy safe for British people,”The legislation requires companies to be majority owned or controlled by UK citizens and registered electors, headquartered in the UK, and have enough income to fund donations,The reforms were given new impetus after reports that Elon Musk was considering donating to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party.

“Around a quarter of money donated by companies is completely untraceable, and at least one pound in 10 comes from individuals who could not donate directly,” said the CenTax director, Arun Advani.“The bill is a welcome opportunity to fix this, but its current provisions won’t do so and risk providing a false sense of security.”
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Sadiq Khan urges Labour to campaign on rejoining EU at next election

Labour should go into the next general election promising to rejoin the EU, Sadiq Khan has said.The mayor of London has repeatedly made the case for joining the customs union and single market, but went much further on Wednesday night by suggesting the party should promise full membership at next ballot.“We should, as a Labour party, fight the next general election with a clear manifesto commitment, a vote for Labour means we would rejoin the European Union. I think it’s inevitable,” he told the Italian publication La Repubblica.Khan cited the time that had passed since the referendum and the economic instability caused by Donald Trump since Labour was elected in July 2024 as reasons why it would be desirable

about 20 hours ago
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Angela Rayner’s allies say HMRC inquiry set to be resolved before May elections

For months there has been an apparently insurmountable obstacle to Angela Rayner going for the Labour leadership, should Keir Starmer find himself facing a contest.The investigation by HMRC into the former deputy prime minister’s tax affairs has hung heavily over her since she was forced to resign last September over underpayment of stamp duty on her seaside flat.But now Rayner’s allies are increasingly confident that the inquiry will be resolved before the May local elections – a moment of high peril for the prime minister – paving her way for a full return to frontline politics.The Guardian understands that outstanding legal issues over the tax investigation are being ironed out by lawyers and the HMRC process is now approaching its conclusion.Rayner is also on course to make about £100,000 from speaking engagements since she left government and her memoir, meaning she has earned enough to pay off her outstanding tax bill

about 23 hours ago
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Starmer plans to ease impact of immigration policy changes after backlash from Labour MPs

Keir Starmer is hoping to soften the impact of his government’s changes to the immigration system after a backlash from Labour MPs and a dramatic intervention from his former deputy Angela Rayner.The prime minister is considering exempting large numbers of people from the proposed changes, which would make it harder to achieve settled status in the UK, as he attempts to keep his restive party onboard.Under the plans, most people would have to wait 10 years to qualify for settled status, rather than the existing five-year period. But proposals included in a government consultation could involve migrants working in the public sector excluded from the changes, as well as those who are on the verge of being settled.Ministers are now debating how far they want to extend those exemptions but Downing Street said on Wednesday they would not cover everyone who had already arrived in the country, as demanded by Rayner and others

about 23 hours ago
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Gerry Adams tells high court he was stunned by 1996 Docklands bombing

Gerry Adams has told the high court he was stunned by the 1996 Docklands bombing as he denied being at the nerve centre of the IRA’s operations.The former Sinn Féin leader also denied having any prior knowledge of the bombing of the commercial district of east London, which shattered a 17-month-old ceasefire.Adams, 77, is accused in the civil trial of being a member of the IRA, having sat on its army council and being culpable for the Docklands bombing, the Manchester bombing in the same year and the 1973 bombing of the Old Bailey in central London.On Adams’s second day on the witness stand, Max Hill KC, acting for men who were injured in the three bombings, suggested to the defendant that he had been behind the Docklands bombing as a way to bolster Sinn Féin’s political strategy.“You shared the frustrations you described others holding and the need, in light of those frustrations, to perpetuate the armed struggle to bring the British government to the table,” he said

about 24 hours ago
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Reeves speech had a giant hole: the sky-high cost of energy for industry | Nils Pratley

We’ll have closer trade relations with the EU, be the fastest adopters of AI in the G7, shift some tax revenues to the regions and squash the nimbys if they stand in the way of growth “corridors”. It’s a plan. Or, at least, it’s a sketch of a plan since the EU will surely have its own ideas on what it wants from trade renegotiations. Still, Rachel Reeves’ big resetting speech this week set a direction.But then one comes to the elephant in the room: the sky-high cost of energy for UK industry

1 day ago
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Memory loss strikes down Starmer and Badenoch at an infuriating PMQs | John Crace

There’s something weird going on in Westminster. A mutant pathogen in the water maybe. Whatever it is, Keir Starmer and Kemi Badenoch appear to have been struck down by it.Both have had parts of their memory wiped. At times they now sound like the living dead

1 day ago
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Prolonged high oil prices could ‘crimp’ AI boom, WTO warns

about 5 hours ago
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Europe’s biggest airlines say fuel price spike caused by Iran war will drive up fares

about 6 hours ago
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‘Alright mate?’: Amazon pins UK hopes on AI upgrade of Alexa

about 13 hours ago
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Inside China’s robotics revolution

about 14 hours ago
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March Madness 2026 women’s predictions: can anyone thwart a UConn repeat?

about 10 hours ago
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‘The only thing left for me was death’: meet the meth-addict long jumper who has been to hell and back

about 11 hours ago