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    Britain facing cuts after Reeves rules out tax raid

    Britain is facing cuts after Rachel Reeves doubled down on her manifesto pledge not to raise taxes to fund Labour’s spending plans.In a speech in Manchester on Wednesday morning, the chancellor insisted Labour’s spending plans – set to be outlined next week – were “fully costed and fully funded” and that she would not need to raise income tax, VAT or employee national insurance contributions. But a major think tank has joined critics from within government to warn that the chancellor would have no choice but to make cuts to other public services. The Resolution Foundation said the government has increased departmental spending by almost £400bn since it came to power but pressures to increase health and defence spending will make it “hard to avoid cuts” to other public services. Reacting to Reeves’s speech, a senior Labour source added: “I suspect that means a lot of cuts.”An audience member looks unimpressed by Reeves’s speech More

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    France finally agrees to intercept migrant boats at sea – months after deal to stop crossings agreed

    France has finally agreed to draw up a plan to stop small boats at sea by the summer, after police were criticised for standing by as people smugglers picked up migrants. The French government is understood to be enlarging its navy with new patrol boats that could intercept so-called “taxi boats” before they leave for the UK. The strategy is designed to be ready before French president Emmanuel Macron travels to London for a Franco-British summit on 8 July. It comes after a furious row erupted over the lack of action as more than 1,000 people crossed the English Channel on Saturday.Migrants scramble on board a small boat leaving the beach at Gravelines More

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    Winter fuel payments won’t be reinstated for all in blow to millions, minister confirms

    Winter fuel payments will not be reinstated for all pensioners, a minister has confirmed in a blow to millions of people across the country. It came as Rachel Reeves confirmed an expected U-turn on the controversial cuts would be in place for this winter — but said the government wouldn’t set out details of how they would pay for it until the Autumn budget. Sir Keir Starmer last month announced his intention to give more people access to winter fuel payments, just months after Labour made the previously universal payment means-tested. Rachel Reeves confirmed that the winter fuel payment would be restored for some pensioners in time for this winter More

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    Watch live: Starmer faces Badenoch at PMQs after Reeves vows winter fuel U-turn

    Watch live as Sir Keir Starmer faces Kemi Badenoch at PMQs on Wednesday (4 June), days after unveiling the UK’s defence strategy for the next decade.On Monday (2 May), the prime minister announced his Strategic Defence Review with the aim to move the UK to “warfighting readiness”.The government said that it will increase defence spending to 2.5% of gross domestic product from April 2027.Sir Keir also announced plans to build up to 12 new attack submarines which will replace the current fleet from the late 2030s onwards, and also confirmed that £15billion will be spent on its nuclear warhead programme.As the Labour government hikes up defence spending, opposition leaders will likely challenge the Prime Minister over what funding areas will have to be slashed in order to compensate.He will face questions in the Commons at noon, the majority from the Conservative leader who trivialised the plans as “just an announcement” as “a lot of the things they’ve announced in this strategic defence review require money”.Badenoch could also press the prime minister on the increasing numbers of small boat crossings.On Saturday (31 May), more than 1,100 migrants arrived in the UK, the highest number recorded on a single day so far in 2025. More

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    Labour ‘at war’ over Reeves’ spending review amid fears manifesto pledges will be ditched

    Rachel Reeves is facing a cabinet revolt over her spending review amid fears departmental cuts will lead to key manifesto spending promises being ditched.In what is being described as a “proxy war”, the chancellor is facing a push to consider taxes on the wealthy instead of cuts before she outlines her government spending plans next week.Room for manoeuvre is further restricted by an expectation that the government will U-turn on cancelling winter fuel payments for millions of pensioners, as well as ending the two-child benefit cap, which could cost Ms Reeves as much as £5bn.The row follows reports that major departments, including Yvette Cooper’s Home Office and Angela Rayner’s Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, have still not settled on an agreement for the spending review due to be unveiled on Wednesday 11 June.There was some good news with reports that education secretary Bridget Phillipson had agreed her department’s spending envelope with a week to go. But the holdouts come despite the Treasury setting an unofficial deadline of last weekend to agree.Reeves and Rayner have been struggling to agree over the spending review More

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    Reeves and Starmer face cabinet revolt over spending review

    Rachel Reeves is facing a cabinet revolt over her spending review amid fears departmental cuts will lead to key manifesto spending promises being ditched.In what is being described as a “proxy war”, the chancellor is facing a push to consider taxes on the wealthy instead of cuts before she outlines her government spending plans next week.Room for manoeuvre is further restricted by an expectation that the government will U-turn on cancelling winter fuel payments for millions of pensioners, as well as ending the two-child benefit cap, which could cost Ms Reeves as much as £5bn.The row follows reports that major departments, including Yvette Cooper’s Home Office and Angela Rayner’s Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, have still not settled on an agreement for the spending review due to be unveiled on Wednesday 11 June.There was some good news with reports that education secretary Bridget Phillipson had agreed her department’s spending envelope with a week to go. But the holdouts come despite the Treasury setting an unofficial deadline of last weekend to agree.Reeves and Rayner have been struggling to agree over the spending review More

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    Starmer urged to intervene in ‘never-ending nightmare’ of Aung San Suu Kyi and people of Myanmar

    Sir Keir Starmer has been urged to personally intervene in the “unspeakable tragedy” developing in Myanmar and to meet the British son of Aung San Suu Kyi, who has been imprisoned by the country’s military junta.The call comes in a new report which highlights the plight of Ms Suu Kyi and 22,000 other political prisoners, after a coup which overthrew her democratically elected government four years ago.It also shines a spotlight on the army’s airstrikes and ground attacks against civilians and details atrocities including massacres, beheadings, executions, rapes and tortures.Aung San Suu Kyi is one of 22,000 political prisoners in Myanmar More

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    Police warn Starmer of ‘stark choices’ on investigating crimes if faced with cuts under spending review

    Sir Keir Starmer has reportedly been warned by UK police chiefs that forces could face “stark choices” on which crimes to prioritise investigating amid fears over spending cuts.Head of the Metropolitan Police Sir Mark Rowley was among the senior police officers who issued the direct warning in a letter to the prime minister ahead of the unveiling of next Wednesday’s spending review, according to reports. Sir Keir and chancellor Rachel Reeves are already facing a cabinet revolt over the government spending plans, with Yvette Cooper’s Home Office believed to be among the ministers who have not settled on an agreement.In their letter, the police chiefs predicted “far-reaching consequences” if the Treasury pushes ahead with slashing costs, including cuts to frontline policing last seen under austerity.They added that the Home Office and Treasury negotiations have been going “poorly”.The Times reported Britain’s most senior police chiefs wrote to Sir Keir: “We understand that the Treasury [is] seeking to finalise departmental budget allocations this week and that the negotiations between the Home Office and the Treasury are going poorly.Head of the Metropolitan Police Sir Mark Rowley was among the senior police officers who issued the direct warning in a letter to the prime minister ahead of the spending review, according to reports More