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    Starmer condemns Israel’s plans to escalate war in Gaza and warns it will ‘only bring more bloodshed’

    Sir Keir Starmer has warned Benjamin Netanyahu that his plans to occupy Gaza City are “wrong” and will “bring more bloodshed”, as he urged the Israeli prime minister to “step away from the path of destruction”. The prime minister’s comments come after the Israeli leader’s security cabinet approved plans for a major escalation in the conflict early on FridayThe Israeli plan stops short of fully taking over all of Gaza, as had been touted ahead of the war cabinet meeting.But Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid has slammed the takeover plan as a “disaster” and “exactly what Hamas wanted”. A plume of smoke erupts during Israeli bombardment in the Gaza Strip as pictured from across the border in southern Israel More

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    Voices: ‘The fairest way’ or a ‘political disaster’? Readers split on whether Reeves should raise income tax

    Independent readers are sharply divided over whether Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves should raise income tax to help fill the £50bn shortfall in the public finances this autumn.Some see it as the fairest option, targeting those most able to pay. “A penny or two on the rates of income tax might just work wonders,” said one, while others argued it is long past time to align capital gains with income tax rates or reform property taxes.Opponents warn that raising income tax could damage growth and hand political advantage to Reform leader Nigel Farage. “A rise in income tax across the board would be a political disaster for Labour,” cautioned another.Some prefer alternatives such as VAT, targeted wealth taxes, or cutting waste before hiking any taxes. Several also pressed for bold investment in green infrastructure and small businesses, but all agreed the government must find a credible way to fund public services.Here’s what you had the say: What choice does she have?Really, what choice does she have? It is hardly surprising the economy is so sluggish and she has gaps to plug from the effects of a disastrous Brexit (it was: really), a pandemic, and a clueless previous administration, who, to be fair to them, also had limited choices. Among the solutions is to slaughter the sacred cow of putting up income tax. A penny or two on the rates of income tax might just work wonders and could be the fairest way of generating revenue from those best able to contribute towards the public good. DIRKCUTLASSThose with the broadest shouldersAs always, the disabled are blamed as the culprits upsetting Reeves’ books. The welfare climbdown can only be attributed to £5bn when Reeves’ calculations are in the region of £50bn. She and Starmer need to come clean and articulate the hangover of Covid furlough, problems caused by Ukraine and Trump, and put up taxes across the board – such as freezing allowances, increasing income tax and national insurance, equalising capital gains tax with income tax and making it liable for NI, reforming council tax on high-value properties. Starmer and Reeves need to be making sure those with the broadest shoulders bear their fair share of the burden.Get a free fractional share worth up to £100.Capital at risk.Terms and conditions apply.Go to websiteADVERTISEMENTGet a free fractional share worth up to £100.Capital at risk.Terms and conditions apply.Go to websiteADVERTISEMENTKernowWhat do you think – should Rachel Reeves raise income tax, or find the money elsewhere? Share your thoughts in the comments below.VAT is the better optionWhy income tax? VAT is the much better option as it is a consumption tax. It is easy to adjust for – you raise the tax-free threshold for the poorest in society to compensate. It doesn’t affect business significantly. As it taxes consumption, this encourages saving and investment. KwameTax unearned incomeTax unearned income in line with income tax brackets. This would be worth £16 billion a year. Stop subsidising private companies completely. Apply a void tax to all properties empty for more than six months. Introduce a system whereby renovations etc. are exempt. Some savings ideas – centralise all NHS procurement and HR. Have a locum register for nurses and stop using expensive agencies (same salaries for temp nurses, though). Slightly Tipsy MaxAlign capital gains tax with income taxSince the wealthy get most of their income from gains, why not align capital gains tax rates to income tax rates, as is done in Australia? That would bring in around £8 billion a year. In addition, replacing council tax and stamp duty with a French-style proportional property tax could generate an additional £3bn–£4bn per year, with even more potential under a land value tax framework. There’s plenty of scope for a chancellor and a prime minister who aren’t afraid of their own shadows. Pomerol95Cut waste before raising taxesStill no sign of any reduction in government wasted expenditure – now in the billions each month. No use Starmer looking serious about income tax rises. He refuses to act to curb expenditure or legislate for change! SPCKPolitical disaster for LabourA rise in income tax across the board would be a political disaster for Labour. Farage would walk into No. 10 on the ticket of “never believe Labour’s promises”. fastyellosaabNo changes to basic rate expectedThe last UK Chancellor to increase the basic rate of income tax was Denis Healey back in 1975. Do not expect any changes to the rate, even though it would actually be the fairest way to raise revenue. Expect tinkering with allowances and other tax measures, which are easier to “sell” politically. Blackkbeard’s hostPeople fear job loss more than a tax riseReally? Does anyone worry like that – that their income tax might go up by 1 per cent or they may have to pay a bit more for petrol? That’s not what keeps people awake at night when there are so many worse possibilities, like being made redundant and having no income at all, which could happen to most of us at any time. Chrisw27Commitment to growth neededSorry, but what does stabilising the economy mean? Jobs, SMEs, house prices are falling like there’s no tomorrow. Extra taxes are not going to make things better. We need a government committed to growth – massive projects to get us a green new economy that will create jobs and prosperity. Support for SMEs to grow faster. Conversations about big hard issues like how do we pay for the NHS in a world of an ageing population, and where the care is going to come from. Instead, we have a continuation of business as usual. I challenge myself to see one policy that is different to what we would have if Rishi were in power. I struggle. Boring75Taxes rises should have been in the manifestoGood news – there should have been tax rises in the manifesto. You can’t have good public services run on fresh air and, after fourteen years of Tory rundown – particularly of the NHS – there is much repairing to do, given that Tory taxes were almost all paid to their mates rather than into public services. Evidence? Just look at the state of the water service and supply “industry”. Let’s see it brought back into public control. rEUjoinHigh taxes in the 1970sIn the 1970s, Labour raised income tax to 83 per cent for top earners; the rest paid 33 per cent or more. Bin men went on strike (like Birmingham today). Doctors wanted more pay. Train drivers struck. Does this start to sound familiar? KarlHurting the poorestJust like raising employers’ NIC was obviously going to impact the poorer working person, so will raising VAT. Wealthier people can afford to pay more; poorer people can’t – and it matters not if you take more of their wages or make them pay more for their goods, the result is the same to the poor. Pen2030Tinkering won’t fix deep problemsStarmer and Reeves think tweaking things here and there – a few extra billion in taxes, a few billion less in welfare spending – will sort the finances and the UK economy. No. The problems run deep and require more positive actions than Starmer and Reeves are willing to take. So the UK economy will continue to stagnate. More and more voters will lose faith and look elsewhere. ChrisMatthewsFind efficiencies before tax risesWhy does Starmer not encourage a government efficiency (oxymoron, I know) drive – cutting waste in all departments? Sell off unused government land or buildings. Try to look at other ways of filling holes, PM, before making another U-turn on a promise not to raise taxes. All the other tax increases in place since Labour took over to fill the black hole – where’s that increased income gone? Face it, the UK government hasn’t got a clue.ChuckiethebraveSome of the comments have been edited for this article for brevity and clarity.Want to share your views? Simply register your details below. Once registered, you can comment on the day’s top stories for a chance to be featured. Alternatively, click ‘log in’ or ‘register’ in the top right corner to sign in or sign up.Make sure you adhere to our community guidelines, which can be found here. For a full guide on how to comment click here. More

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    ‘Troubling’ courts service IT bug ‘extremely serious’ – former lord chancellor

    An IT bug causing “technical issues” within the body running courts in England and Wales is “unbelievably serious” and could be compared to the Post Office Horizon scandal, a former lord chancellor has said.The BBC has reported that it took HM Courts & Tribunals Service (HMCTS) several years to react to the bug, which is said to have caused evidence to go missing, be overwritten or appear lost, resulting in judges in civil, family and tribunal courts making rulings on cases when evidence was potentially incomplete.HMCTS said there is no evidence to suggest any case outcomes were affected as a result of the issues.The bug was found in case-management software used by HMCTS and the Social Security and Child Support (SSCS) Tribunal, which handles benefit appeals, is thought to have been most affected, the BBC said.Referred to as Judicial Case Manager, MyHMCTS or CCD, the BBC said the software is used to manage evidence and track cases, and is used by judges, lawyers, case workers and members of the public.Documents seen by the BBC show the bug caused data to be obscured from view, meaning some evidence was sometimes not visible as part of case files used in court.The BBC said a leaked internal report said HMCTS did not know the full extent of the data corruption, including whether or how it had affected cases.Alex Chalk, former lord chancellor and former justice secretary, said what has happened is “incredibly serious” and could have involved cases which determine whether a child is taken into care.“So unbelievably serious. And, so the whistle blowers indicate, it could potentially have bled into other tribunals as well, whether it deals with divorce and so on.“And the thing that is so troubling is that this report evidently got on to the desk of the senior leadership of HMCTS in March 2024 when I was in office, and it was never brought to my attention.“And I am incredibly troubled by that, because any lord chancellor, of any stripe, if they discover that there’s potentially a situation in the courts which is leading to injustice, then you will immediately want to investigate that, and yet in effect that was covered up and I’m afraid I think that is extremely serious,” Mr Chalk told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.The BBC said several sources within HMCTS have likened the situation to the Horizon Post Office scandal.Mr Chalk was asked on the Radio 4 Today programme if what has happened could be compared to the Post Office scandal, and he said: “It could be.”An HMCTS spokesperson said: “Our internal investigation found no evidence that any case outcomes were affected as a result of these technical issues.“The digitisation of our systems is vital to bring courts and tribunals into the modern era and provide quicker, simpler access to justice for all those who use our services.“We will continue to press ahead with our important modernisation.”It is understood that while the bug resulted in some documents not being accessible to users on the digital platform, they were in fact always present on the system.It is also understood that because of a number of “fail-safes”, parties and judges involved in these cases always had access to the documents they needed. More

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    Rushanara Ali resigns as homelessness minister after rent hike ‘hypocrisy’

    The homelessness minister Rushanara Ali has resigned hours after she was accused of raising the rent at her east London townhouse by £700 per month just weeks after the previous tenants’ contract ended.In a letter to the prime minister she said that remaining in the role would be “a distraction from the ambitious work of this government”.Ms Ali had been facing calls to quit over her handling of the rental property, with shadow housing secretary Kevin Hollinrake accusing her of “staggering hypocrisy”. Rushanara Ali has resigned as homelessness minister More

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    Video: First migrants detained under ‘one in, one out’ UK-France deal

    Video shows the first migrants detained under the UK’s new “one in, one out” deal with Emmanuel Macron, who could be sent back to France within weeks.People who were detained were among those who risked the Channel crossing on Wednesday, the day the pilot scheme began operating.Around 155 people were detected making the crossing on Wednesday in two boats.Sir Keir Starmer wrote on X: “I said that if you enter this country on a small boat, you will face detention and return. I meant it.”Under the pilot scheme, UK officials aim to make referrals for returns to France within three days of a migrant’s arrival by small boat, while French authorities will respond within 14 days. More

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    Surge in household costs puts Reeves’s economic growth plan at risk

    Rachel Reeves has been given an inflation warning by the Bank of England, as it cut interest rates to their lowest level in two years but forecast months of sharp price rises driven by higher food prices.Days after the chancellor was warned of a £50bn black hole in the government’s finances, the Bank said Ms Reeves’s national insurance hike and the rise in the minimum wage were helping to push up the cost of the supermarket shop. There was relief for borrowers, as the interest rate was cut to 4 per cent. But the Bank said headline inflation would accelerate to 4 per cent by September, while inflation on food is set to hit 5.5 per cent between now and Christmas – putting a squeeze on household budgets.Chancellor Rachel Reeves has welcomed the rate cut More

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    Homelessness minister facing calls to resign after ‘hiking rent at London townhouse by £700’

    Homelessness minister Rushanara Ali is facing calls to resign over her handling of a rental property, following reports she raised the rent at her east London townhouse by £700 weeks after the previous tenants’ contract ended.Shadow housing secretary Kevin Hollinrake accused the Labour minister of “staggering hypocrisy”, saying: “Rushanara Ali has been somebody who’s obviously a government minister in charge of homelessness. She’s spoken out about exploiting tenants, about providing more protections to tenants.”You can’t say those things, then do the opposite in practice, as a landlord. She’s got to resign.”He said the conduct appeared to be “unethical, not illegal” but “we can’t just say one thing and do another.”Homelessness minister Rushanara Ali is facing calls to resign over her handling of a rental property (David Woolfall/UK Parliament) More

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    UK hasn’t seen poverty like this for 60 years, says Gordon Brown in call to scrap two-child benefit cap

    Britain has not seen poverty this bad for more than half a century, Gordon Brown has warned, urging Sir Keir Starmer to scrap the two-child benefit cap at the next budget. The former prime minister and Labour chancellor – who said “we are dealing with a divided Britain” and a “social crisis” – backed reforms to gambling taxes in order to generate the £3.2bn needed to scrap the cap. Mr Brown said the gambling industry is “under taxed”, throwing his weight behind a report from The Institute For Public Policy Research (IPPR) which said that around half a million children could be lifted out of poverty through the reforms. Former prime minister Gordon Brown has backed the IPPR’s report More