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    Rupert Lowe slams ‘viper’ Farage as inquiry into alleged threats against Reform party chair is dropped

    Former Reform UK MP Rupert Lowe has branded Nigel Farage a “coward and a viper” after an inquiry into allegations he made “verbal threats” against the party’s chair was dropped. The Crown Prosecution Service said it would not charge Rupert Lowe after reviewing the evidence handed over by the party. The Great Yarmouth MP was suspended from Mr Farage’s party this year amid a civil war and allegations about his conduct, which he denies.Responding to the news he would face no action, Mr Lowe said he was ashamed to have represented the party and launched an extraordinary attack on its leader.“Nigel Farage must never be prime minister,” he said in a statement.“I am ashamed to have shared a parliamentary platform with them. Ashamed to have trusted them. Ashamed to have called them friends. Farage is no leader – he is a coward and a viper. I feel deeply embarrassed that I ever thought he was the man to lead,” Mr Lowe added. Rupert Lowe consistently denied the allegations More

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    New Reform UK councillor was sacked from police for calling in sick before travelling to Spain

    A newly elected Reform UK councillor was sacked from his previous job as a police officer after reporting illness before travelling to Spain to sell a luxury sports car.Andrew Hamilton-Gray shaded victory over Labour on 2 May, receiving nearly 40 per cent of the vote to win a seat in Loughborough at the Leicestershire County Council elections in a glorious night for Nigel Farage’s party.But it has since emerged he was sacked as a Leicestershire Police officer after he called in sick hours before taking a ferry to Spain.He was dismissed from the force in January 2024 for breaching professional standards on “honesty and integrity, discreditable conduct, orders and instructions, and duties and responsibilities”.A flyer encouraging people to vote for Mr Hamilton-Gray in Loughborough More

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    NatWest faces 100 million cyber attacks every month, MSPs told

    NatWest faces 100 million cyber attacks attempting to breach its defences every month, MSPs have been told, as experts set out the “staggering” scale of digital crime.The bank also blocks around a third of emails coming into its system, Holyrood’s Criminal Justice Committee heard.Police and cyber crime agencies are increasingly dealing with fraudsters operating online, with gold scams and romance fraud becoming particularly prominent.The trend increased sharply during the pandemic – in 2020 Police Scotland recorded 7,710 cyber crimes, but in 2024 that increased to 18,280.Chris Ulliott, head of cybersecurity at NatWest, told the committee on Wednesday: “We analyse every single email coming into our estate, looking for malicious content.“About a third of the emails, millions a month, we actually block because they are believed to be the start of an attack against our staff.“If I look outside our network at the attacks that are probing our estate, we’re averaging about 100 million attacks per month just trying to break past the defences we have in the organisation”.He said this has led to a cybersecurity team with hundreds of staff and a budget of millions.Mr Ulliott said there is growing concern about fraudsters using artificial intelligence (AI) to make their approaches to people seem more credible.The technology could even be used to alter a fraudster’s appearance in a real-time online call to look like an “elderly British gent” to gain trust with a victim.Mr Ulliott said Scattered Spider, the group which may have been behind the recent attack on Marks & Spencer, is likely a loose international group in their teens and 20s who are sharing ideas on online forums.SNP MSP Rona Mackay said the numbers revealed by the NatWest official were “absolutely staggering”.Police Scotland Assistant Chief Constable Stuart Houston said law enforcement agencies around the world are collaborating to try and catch cyber criminals, with the FBI sharing intelligence on fraud and ransomware groups.Adam Stachura from the charity Age Scotland said many elderly people are not confident users of online technology.He said the impact of cyber crime can be devastating for the elderly, saying: “It can create financial destitution – that hit to confidence and self-worth.”David Keenan, chief information officer at Arnold Clark, discussed the serious cyber attack which crippled the car company’s network at the end of 2022.He said recovery was a months-long effort and the attack came despite the company having 12 staff dedicated to cybersecurity.The SNP’s Ben Macpherson said cyber crime is “the criminal justice issue of our time”.He said cyber criminals had even impersonated himself in order to contact constituents in Edinburgh Northern and Leith. More

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    Starmer breaks silence on arson attack at his London home: ‘It’s an attack on democracy’

    Keir Starmer has broken his silence following arson attacks on properties linked to him, calling it “an attack on democracy”.The prime minister said the attacks are “an attack on all of us, on democracy and the values that we stand for” as he addressed the House of Commons during Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday (14 May).Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch condemned the attacks as “completely unacceptable”.“I think I speak for the whole house when I say that this wasn’t just an attack on him, but on all of us and on our democracy,” the Tory leader said.Police are continuing their investigation into the attacks on properties and a car linked to Sir Keir. More

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    Watch live: Starmer faces Badenoch at PMQs after immigration crackdown backlash

    Watch live as Keir Starmer faces Kemi Badenoch at PMQs on Wednesday (14 May), as he continues to face criticism for his “island of stranger speech”.The prime minister faced backlash from members of his own party after his speech unveiling the government’s new immigration measures was compared to inflammatory rhetoric used by Enoch Powell in his “rivers of blood” speech.Downing Street was forced to deny the comparison and said Sir Keir “completely rejects” the suggestions he echoed Powell, and stands by his words.“We completely reject that comparison,” the prime minister’s spokesperson told reporters.“The Prime Minister rejects those comparisons and absolutely stands behind the argument he was making that migrants make a massive contribution to our country, but migration needs to be controlled.”He will face questions in the Commons at noon, the majority from the Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch, who criticised Sir Keir and said Labour doesn’t believe in secure borders. More

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    Mark Carney says Canadians ‘not impressed’ by King’s offer of second state visit to Trump

    Canada was “not impressed” by the King’s invitation to Donald Trump for an unprecedented second state visit to the UK, the country’s prime minister has said.Freshly elected leader Mark Carney said February’s invitation jarred with Canadians because it was delivered physically by Keir Starmer during an Oval Office press conference while Trump was challenging Canada’s sovereignty and suggesting America’s northern neighbour should become the 51st state of the US. The former British colony is also a key member of the Commonwealth and regards King Charles as its head of state.“I think, to be frank, they [Canadians] weren’t impressed by that gesture… given the circumstance,” Mr Carney told Sky News. “It was at a time when we were being quite clear about the issues around sovereignty.” Mr Carney, a former Bank of England governor, ran his election campaign on standing up to Mr Trump’s tariff plans and threats to make Canada a state of the US. He has reiterated to Trump that Canada will “never ever” become part of the US. A wave of anti-Trump sentiment in Canada in the wake of the US president’s comments about a takeover helped Mr Carney secure an unexpected victory. His party, the Liberals, won 168 seats out of 343 in Canada’s House of Commons. Sir Keir personally delivered the invitation during his White House visit in February More

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    Thousands of civil servants to be moved out of London as government cuts costs

    Thousands of civil servants are set to be relocated outside of London as the government looks to reduce costs and “radically reform the state”.The move will see 12,000 civil service jobs shifted from the capital to new regional hubs, with 11 London office buildings slated for closure, including one of the government’s largest Westminster sites. The projected savings are estimated at £94 million annually by 2032.The major government shake-up, which is expected to provide a £729m boost for local economies, was first revealed exclusively by The Independent.Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, Pat McFadden, stated the government is committed to decentralising decision-making, moving it “closer to communities all across the UK.”Government departments are now tasked with submitting relocation plans for their staff, including senior officials, as part of the upcoming spending review. The deadline for these submissions is 11 June.This initiative will lead to the establishment of two major new ‘campuses’: one in Manchester focusing on digital innovation and artificial intelligence, and another in Aberdeen specialising in energy.The number of civil servants working in London will fall by 12,000 in the coming years as the Government seeks to relocate staff outside the capital (Yui Mok/PA) More

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    JD Vance’s ‘British Sherpa’ claims UK has more free speech offences than Putin’s Russia

    A Cambridge University professor whom JD Vance described as his “British Sherpa” has claimed that “more people have got into trouble in the UK for free speech offences” than in Vladimir Putin’s Russia.Dr James Orr, an associate professor of philosophy of religion, is a close friend of the US vice president.His remarks came after Mr Vance said during a speech at the Munich Security Conference that European governments, including the UK’s, had retreated from their values and ignored voter concerns on migration and free speech.Russia ranks 171/180 in the 2025 World Press Freedom Index. Anti-war activists have been jailed and detained. More