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    Ex-Tory minister leads backlash against Kemi Badenoch over net zero retreat

    Kemi Badenoch is facing backlash from business leaders and a former Tory minister against her calls to unpick net zero policies after she launched a policy renewal as part of a major speech. The Tory leader claims that she was one of “just a handful” of MPs to raise concerns about the lack of a plan to hit the 2050 environmental targets when they were introduced by Theresa May’s government.On Tuesday she went further, warning the targets are impossible to achieve in a move which has received severe criticism.Leading the attack is former Tory environment minister Chris Skidmore, who took to social media platform X to highlight a speech made by Ms Badenoch in favour of net zero policies when she was business and trade secretary.Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch is launching a “policy renewal” process for the party More

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    Bridget Phillipson tells critics to ‘leave London for a change’ to see scale of schools crisis as reform row escalates

    A war of words has erupted over Bridget Phillipson’s school reforms, with the education secretary urging critics to “try leaving London for a change”.Ms Phillipson said she was being attacked by Tory shadow ministers and “their friends in the commentariat” all based in the capital, with many academies outside London struggling or failing altogether. She wrote in The Daily Telegraph: “Opposition shadow ministers and their friends in the commentariat should try leaving London for a change: they’ll find plenty of underperforming academies which need new answers to drive up standards in their classrooms.”Ms Phillipson urged critics to ‘leave London for a change’ More

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    Watch live: Labour expected to announce plans to cut benefits by billions

    Watch live as Labour is expected to announce plans to slash billions of pounds from the UK’s benefit bill amid a growing backlash among the party’s backbenchers.Work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall will address the House of Commons laying out the Sir Keir Starmer’s plans for welfare reform to get more people back to work and cut the cost of the benefits bill by as much as £5bn.Labour backbenchers have met the plans with fierce criticism. Veteran left-winger Diane Abbott described the overhaul as “not a Labour thing to do”.Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Pat McFadden defended the plans, saying that the Cabinet is “united” behind the move and that people on long-term sickness benefits should not “languish there forever”.Reforms to the Personal Independence Payment (PIP) are widely expected, with Labour MPs understood to be divided on the cost-cutting policy package. The payment is designed to help people with extra costs incurred by their disability, whether they are working or not. More

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    Minister vows ‘life on sickness benefits to end’ for millions as Labour looks to stave off rebellion over welfare cuts

    Millions of people will be prevented from signing off work and living off sickness benefits indefinitely, Cabinet minister Pat McFadden has warned ahead of major welfare reforms to be announced on Tuesday. Issuing a stern message ahead of the work and pensions secretary’s statement in the Commons, Mr McFadden – seen by many as Keir Starmer’s de facto deputy prime minister – said the government was determined to make the welfare state “fit for the 21st century”. He vowed to see off rebel Labour MPs opposed to benefits cuts and rejected calls for the new measures to be replaced by a wealth tax.Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Pat McFadden More

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    Is cutting benefits the only way to save money on welfare?

    Billions in rumoured welfare cuts are set to be announced by work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall today as ministers reportedly look to shave £6 billion from Britain’s benefits bill.Changes to health and disability benefits are understood to make the bulk of the reforms, with claimants and campaigners fearing that millions may soon find it harder to qualify for the welfare they are entitled to.The cost of health-related benefits for the Treasury has grown in recent years, with the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) projecting the total state spend will increase from £48.5 billion in 2023/24 to £75.7 billion in 2029/30.Work and pensions secretary is expected to make a major announcement today (Lucy North/PA) More

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    Sick and disabled face being stripped of £1,200 a year each in welfare benefits as Reeves tries to balance Budget

    The shocking scale of the benefits cuts needed by Rachel Reeves to balance the books could see the disabled and long-term sick lose as much as £1,200 a year, a leading think tank has warned.The analysis by the respected Institute for Fiscal Studies comes as work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall will unveil plans to slash benefits by around £5bn.The government has already indicated that it will focus on working-age welfare claimants, particularly those claiming disability and incapacity welfare payments, with fears that the annual bill for these benefits will hit £70bn by 2030.The concerns come as the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) downgraded the UK’s already low growth forecasts in the wake of the impact of Donald Trump’s tariffs around the world.Chancellor Rachel Reeves met with regulators on Monday to discuss ways of cutting red tape to boost growth in a bid to kickstart the economy More

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    Labour welfare reforms – is cutting benefits the only option?

    Billions in rumoured welfare cuts are set to be announced by work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall this week as ministers reportedly look to shave £6 billion from Britain’s benefits bill.Changes to health and disability benefits are understood to make the bulk of the reforms, with claimants and campaigners fearing that millions may soon find it harder to qualify for the welfare they are entitled to.The cost of health-related benefits for the Treasury has grown in recent years, with the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) projecting the total state spend will increase from £48.5 billion in 2023/24 to £75.7 billion in 2029/30.Work and pensions secretary is expected to make a major announcement this week (Lucy North/PA) More

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    Starmer ‘running out of excuses’ as legal case for handing over Chagos Islands unravels

    Keir Starmer has been told he is “running out of excuses” to press ahead with the controversial deal to hand over the Chagos Islands to Mauritius.It comes after a minister admitted that Britain actually has a protection in international law against one of the major reasons senior politicians have been briefed that the UK has no choice but to hand over the islands.The government is closing in on a deal to hand over the Chagos Islands on the back of an International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruling that the archipelago belongs to Mauritius. The agreement would see the UK lease back the Diego Garcia airbase for 140 years at an expected cost of £18bn. Donald Trump has indicated he backs the deal but critics point out that the ICJ ruling is only advisory.The Independent has learned that senior politicians have been briefed that one of the main reasons to go ahead with the deal is that the UK would fall foul of the United Nations Convention of the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), preventing ships going to and from the base. But a written answer has revealed that the UK is protected under international law against UNCLOS challenges.US navy at Diego Garcia More