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Northern Ireland protocol — live: Boris Johnson heads to Belfast for emergency talks

Brussels won’t give in to blackmail over Northern Ireland protocol, warns EU

Boris Johnson was booed by protesters as his car arrived for Brexit protocol talks with political leaders at Hillsborough Castle in Northern Ireland.

Demonstrators held placards reading “Back of Boris! Protect the protocol” as the prime minister’s motorcade swept into the official government residence.

Mr Johnson is meeting with the leaders of the five main parties to discuss potential changes to the post-Brexit trading arrangements.

Earlier, business leaders urged him to pull back from radical unilateral action to ditch protocol checks.

Mr Johnson has said the UK will have a “necessity to act” if the EU is unwilling to drop checks on goods coming from Britain into Northern Ireland.

Ministers are reportedly ready to table legislation as early as this week to override the protocol – despite EU warnings that such a move would violate the Brexit treaty and could spark a trade war.

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I’m too worried about money to care about politics – and it’s my job

This is the first time I am experiencing inflation as an adult and I am struck by the sense of sheer powerlessness that comes with it, writes Marie Le Conte.

Read Marie’s full piece below:

Matt Mathers16 May 2022 15:30
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Boris Johnson booed as he arrives for talks in NI

Some protesters, including anti-Brexit activists, booed Boris Johnson as his car arrived at the gates of Hillsborough Castle just outside Belfast for talks with political leaders.

Activists held banners which read: “Back off Boris. Protect The Protocol”.

Mr Johnson is in Northern Ireland for talks aimed at solving issues around the post-Brexit trading arrangments.

Matt Mathers16 May 2022 14:56
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Priti Patel set to give herself more powers to ‘intervene’ in policing

Priti Patel is attempting to give herself more powers to “intervene” in policing and ensure local forces are delivering the “government’s policing commitments”.

Planned changes to the Policing Protocol Order, which governs the relationship between the home secretary, chief constables, elected police commissioners and scrutiny panels, have sparked alarm.

Our home affairs editor Lizzie Dearden reports:

Matt Mathers16 May 2022 14:47
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No 10 defends minister’s ‘get a better paid job’ comments

No 10 has defended Home Office minister Rachel Maclean after she suggested people struggling with the rising cost of living should consider taking on more hours at work or moving to a better-paid job

The prime minister’s official spokesman said: “The minister was clear in what she said, people’s individual circumstances will vary.

“That’s why we have a range of measures available to people, some are quite broad, changes to income tax, there’s also more tailored support like the doubling of the household support fund.

“So it will vary, the minister was clear, she said it was not going to work for people already working in three jobs, and that’s why we have the other measures we are putting in place.”

The spokesman added: “People’s individual circumstances will vary, there is no one-size-fits-all approach.

“This is a global issue caused by things like the pandemic and war in Ukraine. So individual circumstances will vary, there is a range of support for individuals depending on their circumstances.”

Matt Mathers16 May 2022 14:30
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Tory MP decides he wants benefits raised immediately after visit to food bank

Conservative MP Michael Fabricant has called on chancellor Rishi Sunak to immediately raise benefits in line with inflation after he paid a visit to his local food bank.

Our politics reporter Adam Forrest has the story:

Matt Mathers16 May 2022 14:15
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Starmer repeats pledge to quit if fined by police over ‘Beergate’

Sir Keir Starmer has been quizzed on ‘Beergate’ in an appearance on ITV’s This Morning, repeating his pledge to resign if Durham Police find he had broken Covid laws.

“I will do the right thing and step down – I’ve put everything on the line because i think that’s the right thing to do. That’s the complete opposite of the prime minister,” he said.

Pressed on his call for Boris Johnson to resign [when Metropolitan Police first launched an investigation in January], he said: “By then we already knew there was industrial scale rule-breaking in Downing Street. We’d had so many examples, including the suitcase of booze coming in on the eve of Prince Philip’s funeral.”

“I haven’t broken the rules. My instinct as soon as I knew that Durham had decided they were going to reopen its investigation, in my heart I knew what I was going to say, which is if I’m wrong, and they find I have broken the law, then I’ll do the right thing and step down.

The Labour leader added :”I hope that isn’t going to happen, I don’t think it’s going to happen, but I’m trying to make a bigger point here… trust in politics. The number of times I hear you’re all the same – you won’t do the right thing. I think trust is everything in politics.

“In the event I’m wrong and the police say I have done something wrong, then I will step down and do the honourable thing. I think it’s very important to me to say that and I have said that.”

Matt Mathers16 May 2022 14:00
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Tories ‘thrashing’ UK reputation as development ‘superpower’

The Liberal Democrats have accused the government of “trashing Britain’s reputation as a development superpower” following the publication of the new international development strategy.

Layla Moran, the party’s foreign affairs spokesperson, said: “The Conservative government is trying to run and hide from the devastating impact of their aid cuts.

“The callous decision to slash aid spending is so scarcely mentioned in the strategy it’s like they’re pretending it doesn’t exist.

“The foreign secretary won’t even appear before parliament to announce this new strategy, because she knows that she will face difficult questions on how this broken Conservative promise is harming the most vulnerable around the world.”

Ms Moran added: “Development has been relegated from the cabinet table, the aid budget has been slashed, and the UK’s proud reputation as a development superpower has been comprehensively trashed.”

Matt Mathers16 May 2022 13:45
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No 10: Rwanda plan will work as deterrent once ‘fully established’

The government’s plans to send migrants to Rwanda will deter Channel crossings when the policy is “fully established”, Downing Street has claimed.

“Short-term, we will continue to see these crossings take place until this policy is fully established,” the prime minister’s official spokesman said.

The spokesman’s comments came after figures showed more than 8,000 asylum seekers and migrants have arrived in the UK after crossing the English Channel this year.

This is more than double the number recorded for the same period in 2021 (3,112) and more than six times the amount recorded at this point in 2020 (1,340).

Asked if it was hoped to be a deterrent, the spokesman added: “We want to establish the policy in full and we believe that once fully established it will be successful in reversing some of this growing trend we have seen.”

Matt Mathers16 May 2022 13:20
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Britons struggling with cost of living should get ‘better job’, says minister

Britons struggling with cost of living should get ‘better job’, says minister
Joe Middleton16 May 2022 13:15
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‘Foolish’ PM heading for ‘full on collision’ with EU, says Sinn Fein

Sinn Fein president Mary Lou McDonald condemned Boris Johnson over threats of unilateral action on the protocol and warned of a “full on collision” with the EU.

“It is very, very foolish of him, and reckless of him to pursue again the threat of unilateral action, to break international law and create a full on collision with the European institutions, with the government in Dublin and with the US administration,” she told the BBC.

The Sinn Fein leader also accused the UK government of choreography with the DUP over the latest crisis at Stormont.

“We believe strongly that the prime minister has given cover to Jeffrey Donaldson and his party and their antics of holding everything back, and we’ll be saying to him very clearly that that needs to stop,” she said.

Joe Middleton16 May 2022 13:00


Source: UK Politics - www.independent.co.uk


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Johnson says UK will act on N. Ireland rules if EU won't