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    Starmer warned British jobs at risk without better trade deal from Trump

    Keir Starmer has been warned that UK jobs are at risk without a better trade deal with Donald Trump that removes tariffs from the beleaguered steel industry. President Trump and the PM finally signed off a US-UK agreement to slash trade barriers on goods when they met at the G7 in Canada on Monday.But missing from the deal was the steel industry, which still faces levies of a whopping 25 per cent on goods entering the US. Industry experts and unions have now called for these to be scrapped as soon as possible, amid warnings they are a threat to jobs and livelihoods. But there are fears negotiations could drag on into the autumn after the transport secretary said work to get tariffs removed will continue in the coming “days, weeks and months”. Alasdair McDiarmid, assistant general secretary of the Community union, said it was “absolutely vital” to secure a deal on steel as quickly as possible.“Our steel producers and their US customers need an end to the current state of uncertainty to allow normal business to resume,” he said.“Crucially, we must see a full exemption for all UK steel exports to the US – without that guarantee some of our leading steel businesses could be left behind, with a threat to jobs and livelihoods.”Gareth Stace, Director-General, UK Steel said the sector should also benefit “imminently… from a tariff rate cut similar to that which the automotive and aerospace industries will enjoy in seven days.” The government said the two leaders had pledged to “make progress towards 0% tariffs on core steel products”, but the Chinese ownership of British Steel could be a sticking point, as an executive order signed by Mr Trump suggests the US wants assurances that the metal originates in the UK.President Trump left the summit earlier than expectedAfter signing it, the US President was asked whether steel tariffs would be eliminated, to which he replied: “We’re gonna let you have that information in a little while.”In April, parliament gave the government emergency powers to take control of British Steel and continue production after Chinese owners Jingye proposed shutting the Scunthorpe site’s two blast furnaces and other key steelmaking operations.But its future is still uncertain.The uncertainty comes as a £500 million five-year deal has been struck between Network Rail and British Steel, which Ms Alexander said was a “vote of confidence”.Workers at the British Steel site in Scunthorpe will make rail tracks (Danny Lawson/PA)British Steel is to supply 337,000 tonnes of rail track, with a further 80-90,000 tonnes to be provided by other European manufacturers.The Network Rail contract will start on July 1 and is set to provide the company with 80 per cent of its rail needs.Jingye, which bought British Steel in 2020, launched a consultation in March which it said would affect between 2,000 and 2,700 jobs, despite months of negotiations and a £500 million co-investment offer from the Government.The Scunthorpe plant has been producing steel for Britain’s railways since 1865.The Network Rail agreement is the first major public procurement since the Government’s emergency legislation was passed.Network Rail’s group director for railway business services Clive Berrington said: “We are committed to buying British where it makes economic sense to do so and British Steel remain extremely competitive in the provision of rail and will remain our main supplier in the years ahead.”Charlotte Brumpton-Childs, national officer at the GMB union, said it was a “crucial first step in securing the future of our steel industry” and urged ministers to make sure British Steel has a “constant flow of orders” from other infrastructure projects.No 10 said it wanted to implement a further deal to remove tariffs on steel “as soon as possible”. More

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    Failure to collect ethnicity data on grooming gangs has been a ‘bloody disaster’, Baroness Casey fumes

    The failure of officials to collect ethnicity data on grooming gangs which abused children has been a “bloody disaster”, the author of a damning report into the scandal has said. Baroness Casey told MPs that information on perpetrators is “incomplete and unreliable”, as she hit out at what she described as a “public irresponsibility”. Statistics had been “half” collected, she told members of the Commons Home Affairs committee, adding: “That’s a bloody disaster, frankly.” Baroness Louise Casey appeared before MPs More

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    Starmer tightens screws on Putin as he announces raft of fresh sanctions against Russia

    Sir Keir Starmer has promised to keep “tightening the screws” on Vladimir Putin as he announced a raft of fresh sanctions on dozens of new Russian finance, military and energy targets. The prime minister is piling fresh pressure on the Russian war machine and seeking to win further backing from G7 leaders at a key summit in Canada. After repeated refusals from Putin to engage in peace talks, and fresh Russian strikes on Kyiv on Tuesday, the PM said his sanctions will “choke off his ability to continue his barbaric war” in Ukraine. Sir Keir Starmer spoke to reporters while travelling to Canada for the G7 summit (PA) More

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    Trump finally signed a UK-US trade deal – but there’s a sting in the tail

    President Trump brandished his trade deal with the UK at the G7 meeting in Canada, announcing he had finally signed it after weeks of wrangling – then promptly dropped it on the ground.Keir Starmer was quick to respond to the US president’s clumsiness, bending down to pick up the precious agreement, set to protect auto industry jobs in Britain.The whole thing could be seen as a metaphor for how the Republican sees these kinds of deals – and continues to treat them.Because there is a sting in the tail to what the two men signed in Alberta. Whopping tariffs of 25 per cent remain on British steel – one of the industries that can least afford them. And the prime minister now faces a race against time to try to get rid of them, before they cripple an already beleaguered industry. The US president sent shockwaves through the global economy when he announced his steel tariffs – and then, a few weeks ago, plans to double them. US President Donald Trump (left) shakes hands with Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer More

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    Grooming gangs report author says word ‘Pakistani’ was ‘tippexed out’ of a child’s file

    The author of a damning report into grooming gangs has revealed she found the word ‘Pakistani’ “tippexed out” in archive files about child victims. Louise Casey, whose national audit on grooming gangs was published on Monday, said “do-gooders” had covered up information on race and ethnicity believing that otherwise “all the racists are going to be more racist”. Speaking to Sky News after the publication of her report, she said: “I was following through on a children’s file in archive and found the word ‘Pakistani’ tippexed out.Baroness Casey’s report was described as ‘damning’ More

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    Trump and Starmer finally finalise the ‘big and beautiful’ UK-US trade deal

    Sir Keir Starmer landed an important diplomatic victory when Donald Trump finally confirmed the implementation of the UK-US trade deal.After “shaking hands” on the deal in a virtual meeting broadcast to the world last month, there had been concerns that Sir Keir still had not got the deal with the US in place.Mr Trump confirmed the deal was “done” at a brief press conference outdoors at the G7 summit in Canada after the two met. The deal will now be in place by the end of the month and will mean zero tariffs on aerospace. However, the aim of getting zero tariffs on steel from the UK is “still a work in progress”.Asked if the UK could be hit by future tariffs, the president said: “The UK is very well protected. You know why? Because I like them. The prime minister has done a really good job. He has done what other people have been talking about for six years and he has done it.” Starmer and Trump at the G7 More

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    Fears Trump will veto G7 joint statement on Russia sanctions and Israel

    Efforts by the world’s biggest democracies to toughen sanctions against Russia and hold a joint position on the Middle East crisis look set to be thrown into chaos by Donald Trump.The US President, who landed in Alberta, Canada late on Sunday night, opened off his remarks at the G7 summit by suggesting it had been a “mistake” to boot Russia out of the former G8.It had already been reported by CBS News that Trump does not intend to sign a G7 statement related to Israel and Iran, citing unnamed U.S. officials.President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney on the sidelines of the G7 Summit, Monday, June 16, 2025, in Kananaskis, Canada. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein) More

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    Keir Starmer tells councils to pick up the bill for Labour’s spending commitments

    Keir Starmer has handed councils the bill for paying for the black hole in UK finances amid warnings of the biggest rises in local taxation in two decades.The prime minister told journalists on a trip to the G7 summit in Canada that it is up to councils if they want to charge the full 5 per cent increase amid concerns that he has unleashed a series of massive tax rises.As a result of last week’s spending review councils can increase the council tax by up to 5 per cent while the police have also been given the powers to use a similar rise in their precept to raise extra funds. The Institute of Fiscal Studies (IFS) has already warned of the biggest rise in council tax for two decades.Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer More