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    Social media curfews for children could become law, Labour minister says

    A social media curfew that would see children made to stop using apps like TikTok, Instagram and Snapchat after 10pm could be made law in Britain, the technology secretary has revealed.Peter Kyle said he is “watching very carefully” TikTok’s move to limit usage of its app for users under 16 after 10pm, and examining tools parents could use to switch off access at set times.“These are things I am looking at,” he told the Daily Telegraph, adding: “I’m not going to act on something that will have a profound impact on every single child in the country without making sure that the evidence supports it.”There is increased pressure on ministers to look at how teens use social media amid expert concerns around ‘addiction’, alongside interrupting sleep schedules and disrupting schooling and family life.Mr Kyle said he was considering enforcement options under the Online Safety Act following regulator Ofcom’s publication of the Children’s Code.Technology secretary Peter Kyle says he is is considering a range of measures to protect young people online (PA) More

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    Demands to fine ‘headphone dodgers’ who blast loud music on buses and trains

    Keir Starmer has been urged to fine nuisance public transport users who play music out loud on buses and trains up to £1,000.Amid growing public anger at what the party dubbed “headphone dodgers”, Sir Ed Davey is pushing for a crack down on the antisocial behaviour. The Liberal Democrats are seeking a change in the law that would explicitly ban playing music and videos out loud on English public transport. Ed Davey’s party is pushing for a crackdown on antisocial bus behaviour More

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    Tory peer and pollster predicts local election wipeout for his own party

    Conservative peer and pollster Lord Hayward has predicted a wipeout for his own party at the upcoming local elections, warning it will also be a difficult night for Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour. Voters in 23 local authorities across England will go to the polls on 1 May to choose their new councillors, with mayors also up for election across six regions. It will be the first big electoral test for the parties since last summer’s general election, and more than half of the council seats up for grabs are currently held by the Conservatives.Lord Hayward said he expects the Tories to lose between 475 and 525 local authority seats, predicting that the party, which is defending nearly 1,000 seats, will only win between 375 and 425. Kemi Badenoch admitted the local elections are “going to be very difficult” for her party More

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    Reeves signals UK could lower tariffs on US car imports in bid to secure Trump trade deal

    Rachel Reeves has signalled that she is prepared to slash tariffs on US automobile imports to the UK in a bid to land a trade deal.According to a report in The Wall Street Journal, a document has been circulating that suggests the UK could reduce tariffs from 10 per cent to 2.5 per cent on US vehicles and parts.The apparent concession was revealed as the chancellor arrived in Washington DC for a summit at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and ahead of a meeting with US Treasury secretary Scott Bessent.The report is the second concession understood to be on the table from the UK after reports that Sir Keir Starmer’s government could shelve a planned digital services tax.Reeves speaks at the World Economy Summit taking place in Washington this week More

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    Ann Widdecombe says she is not ‘teaming up with any losers’ in dig at Tories and Robert Jenrick

    Reform UK’s Ann Widdecome says she is not “teaming up with any losers” in a dig at the Conservatives and senior MP Robert Jenrick.Ms Widdecombe’s comments, made during an interview with Times Radio on Wednesday (23 April), come after Mr Jenrick said he would bring a “coalition together” in order to end the electoral battle between the Reform and the Tories.When asked by Daniel Finkelstein if she would “team up” with Mr Jenrick, Ms Widdecombe replied: “Absolutely not. I’m not teaming up with any losers. Reform is winning. Reform is at the top of the polls.” More

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    UK-US trade talks live: Rachel Reeves under pressure to secure Trump deal after fresh blows to economy

    Starmer: We must lower the temperature on Supreme Court ruling debateRachel Reeves is preparing for crucial talks with her US counterpart as she pushes to secure a trade deal amid economic uncertainty.Official figures published on Wednesday showed the government borrowed more than expected for the latest financial year, the third-highest level of borrowing since 1947. Activity across the UK’s private sector has also plunged to a more than two-year low as Donald Trump’s trade tariffs hammered exporters and caused a collapse in confidence.The chancellor will have her first face-to-face meeting with US Treasury secretary Scott Bessent as she spends three days in Washington DC for the International Monetary Fund (IMF)’s spring meetings.Her trip comes after the IMF slashed the UK’s economic growth forecast, warning that the fallout from Mr Trump’s trade war will hit Britain harder than the rest of Europe.Mr Trump implemented 10 per cent levies on all UK goods as he announced sweeping tariffs on imports from the rest of the world earlier this month.While ministers have said talks on a deal remain ongoing, figures in the Trump administration have cast doubt on their prospect of success.Comment | ‘Security’ is a sound enough slogan – but can Labour deliver it?Read the full Voices article from Andrew Grice:Jabed Ahmed23 April 2025 15:29US Treasury’s Bessent calls on IMF and World Bank to refocus on core missionsUS Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has called on the International Monetary Fund and World Bank to refocus on their core missions of macroeconomic stability and development, arguing that they have strayed too far into vanity projects such as climate change that have reduced their effectiveness.Me Bessent, in remarks outlining his vision for US engagement with the IMF and World Bank on the sidelines of the institutions’ spring meetings, said that they serve critical roles in the international financial system.”And the Trump administration is eager to work with them – so long as they can stay true to their missions,” Mr Bessent said.”The IMF and World Bank have enduring value. But mission creep has knocked these institutions off course. We must enact key reforms to ensure the Bretton Woods institutions are serving their stakeholders – not the other way around,” he said, calling on U.S. allies to join the effort. “America First does not mean America alone.”( More

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    Robert Jenrick signals Tory-Reform pact with promise to ‘unite the right’

    Robert Jenrick has vowed to “unite the right” ahead of the next general election, signalling an electoral pact between the Conservatives and Reform UK. The senior Tory, seen as a leadership contender waiting to replace Kemi Badenoch, said “one way or another” he is determined to form a coalition between the parties. Speaking to a group of students in March, he said his worry is that Reform UK “becomes a permanent or semi-permanent fixture on the British political scene”. Robert Jenrick is seen as a leadership contender waiting for Kemi Badenoch to fall More

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    Badenoch accuses Starmer of ‘not having any balls’ over Supreme Court ruling

    Kemi Badenoch accused Sir Keir Starmer of “not having any balls” regarding his reaction to the Supreme Court’s ruling on the definition of a woman.Last week five judges ruled that the terms “woman” and “sex” in the Equality Act refer to a biological woman and biological sex, in a decision that could have wide-ranging ramifications for trans women’s rights to use services and spaces reserved for women.Asked if the PM still believed that a transgender woman was a woman, his official spokesman said: “No, the Supreme Court judgment has made clear that when looking at the Equality Act, a woman is a biological woman. That is set out clearly by the court judgment.”The Conservative leader labelled the prime minister a “weather vane who twists in the wind” on Wednesday (23 April) following Sir Keir’s U-turn on his views. More