More stories

  • in

    BBC ‘determined to fight’ Trump legal challenge, says chairman

    BBC chairman Samir Shah has said the broadcaster is “determined to fight” Donald Trump after the US president said he would sue the corporation for between $1bn and $5bn over the editing of a 2021 speech broadcast by Panorama.It had been reported that Sir Keir Starmer was planning to call Mr Trump over the weekend where he would tell the president that the BBC must get its house in order, as well as defending the broadcaster as a British institution – but it is understood the call did not take place. In an email to staff, Mr Shah said there is “no basis for a defamation case”. “There is a lot being written, said and speculated upon about the possibility of legal action, including potential costs or settlements”, he said. Trump said ‘this is beyond fake, this is corrupt’ when asked about the BBC edit More

  • in

    How Labour’s controversial immigration crackdown could make Britain’s asylum rules among the toughest in Europe

    It’s a tough message Shabana Mahmood will hope will reach the disgruntled voter, the criminal gangs smuggling people on small boats, and even the would-be migrants on the northern shoreline of Pas-de-Calais 100 miles from Westminster.On Monday afternoon, the home secretary will reveal sweeping reforms to the asylum system in an unprecedented bid to make it easier to remove migrants fleeing conflict and hardship and make the UK a less attractive destination.Over a troubled first 16 months in power for Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour government, illegal immigration has been a hot button topic, with claims ministers have failed to control the country’s borders. In the year to June, the UK received the highest number of asylum applications since 2011, while the number of people arriving via small boat crossings hit almost 20,000 in the same period.Now, after attempts by Sir Keir to stem the flow – the targeting of people-smuggling gangs and then the “one in, one out” deal with France – Ms Mahmood, appointed home secretary in September, will introduce her own sweeping reforms.People thought to be migrants attempt to board a small boat in Gravelines, France – where many wait the opportunity to travel across the English Channel to the UK More

  • in

    Oatcakes face Brussels ban under Starmer’s Brexit reset deal with EU

    The UK’s historic Brexit vote may have been almost a decade ago, but the fall out has rumbled on interminably – now, EU rules on oat production are the latest flashpoint threatening to undermine government efforts to work with the bloc.Ministers are said to be engaged in a battle to save the humble oatcake, as Keir Starmer’s government seeks to reset relations with the EU.UK efforts to realign agricultural policy with Brussels means that British oats could fall foul of regulations for being too mouldy – containing too high a level of mycotoxins – which proliferate in crops like oats when they are grown in damper coastal climates like Britain’s.Farming groups raised concerns last year following the introduction by the European Commission of restrictions on mycotoxin levels in foods sold in the EU. Consumed at high levels, mycotoxins can be damaging to human health. As well as cereal crops, they can be found in nuts and dried fruits, and eaten in large quantities can lead to various adverse health effects, including kidney and liver damage, immune suppression, and have been linked to cancer. The concern for British farmers is that during damp, warm seasons, much of Britain’s oat harvest risks being condemned as unfit for human consumption under these EU rules, rendering the crop unsellable. The EU has turned up the heat on UK oats, angering farmers More

  • in

    Budget gossip and U-turns to blame for Britain’s weak growth, former Bank of England economist warns Reeves

    Speculation over the upcoming Budget is partly to blame for weaker-than-expected economic growth figures as worries over tax hikes hit business and consumer spending, the former top economist at the Bank of England has warned.Andy Haldane, who was chief economist at the Bank until 2021, told Sky News’s Mornings With Ridge And Frost that the build-up ahead of the Budget has been a “circus” and called for the process to be overhauled to prevent leaks that can damage the economy.It follows official figures last week that revealed economic growth slowed to 0.1 per cent in the third quarter, down from 0.3 per cent in the previous three months and worse than most economists predicted.Chancellor Rachel Reeves blamed the weaker performance on the Jaguar Land Rover production shutdown in the wake of its cyber attack, with gross domestic product (GDP) declining by 0.1 per cent during September after the fallout hit activity in the manufacturing sector.But Mr Haldane said the Budget rumours had “without any shadow of a doubt” had a direct impact on growth.Staff got back to work at the Jaguar Land Rover Wolverhampton factory after production was halted for five weeks More

  • in

    Shabana Mahmood warns ‘dark forces are stirring up anger’ over migration ahead of sweeping asylum reforms

    Home secretary Shabana Mahmood has warned that “dark forces are stirring up anger” over immigration as she prepares to set out sweeping reform of the asylum system. It comes amid growing concern among senior party figures over the reforms, which the Home Office has billed as being the “biggest changes to the asylum system in modern times” and have been inspired by a strict approach taken by Denmark.Ms Mahmood is set to rewrite how Britain grants refuge to those fleeing conflict and upheaval with a statement in the House of Commons on Monday – an overhaul she insisted is needed because the “pace and scale of change destabilised communities”.Shabana Mahmood will give a statement to the Commons on Monday afternoon More

  • in

    Election campaign in Hungary heats up as Orbán challenger Péter Magyar gains rural support

    With Hungary’s parliamentary elections still five months away, the country is already immersed in an intense political campaign between Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and his challenger, Péter Magyar, that promises to be the biggest challenge of the nationalist leader’s career. Elected for a first term in 1998 and then for four more terms beginning in 2010, Orbán has stood at Hungary’s helm for 20 years. Beloved by his supporters but accused by his critics of corruption and authoritarian tactics, he has overseen a political system in which his far-right Fidesz party has exercised nearly unchecked power. But now, support for Europe’s longest-serving leader is declining amid poor economic performance and chronic inflation, and a challenger who has shifted the political tides by promising to dismantle Orbán’s system and put Hungary on a more prosperous, democratic track. “Viktor Orbán’s despicable, corrupt government will do everything to preserve their stolen loot and their power, we have no doubt,” Magyar, a 44-year-old former Fidesz insider, told The Associated Press. “This power cannot be reformed, it is not able to regain contact with the people. This power has become inhumane.” Grassroots campaign Most polls show Magyar and his Tisza party with a solid lead over Orbán’s Fidesz — a feat nearly unprecedented for any opposition force in the past two decades. Many observers in Hungary have puzzled over how Magyar, unlike generations of Orbán’s previous political opponents, has in fewer than two years managed to emerge from relative obscurity to build a party with such substantial support. András Bíró-Nagy, director of the Budapest-based Policy Solutions think tank, says Magyar’s near-constant “grassroots campaigning” in rural Hungary — and his focus on bread-and-butter issues like the cost of living and poor public services — have contributed to his success in small towns that traditionally gravitated toward Orbán’s nationalist message.On Thursday, Magyar visited Tab, a community of fewer than 4,000 people in southwestern Hungary. The stop was one of dozens he plans across the country on a tour he calls “Road to Victory.”Hundreds filled the town’s socialist-era community center and listened to Magyar speak for nearly two hours. As Erika Bognár, a 76-year-old widowed retiree, walked into the event, she declared angrily that her monthly pension was too low to survive on, and that she wanted “a system change, because this system sucks.”“Everywhere in the shops people are grumbling they can’t make ends meet,” she said. “We live in misery, we have been pushed completely into misery.”Bognár’s experience reflects that of many Hungarians who are dissatisfied with the country’s economy. The European Union has frozen some 14 billion euros ($16.2 billion) in funding to Hungary over rule-of-law and corruption concerns, a deficit that has exacerbated chronically stagnant economic performance. Orbán’s government has sought to mitigate the economic pain by introducing price caps on many products, and to woo voters with pre-election government spending like low-interest loans for first-time home buyers and abolishing income tax for mothers with at least two children.Still, Bognár, who says she’s rarely voted in elections until now, blames Orbán’s government for rising costs of living, and believes that if Magyar is elected, “it won’t get any worse.” War and peace Orbán has sought to portray his opponent as an existential danger that — through his inexperience and alleged foreign allegiances — would bankrupt the country and drag it into the war in neighboring Ukraine, allegations Magyar has denied.Unlike nearly every other EU leader, Orbán has refused to supply Ukraine with economic aid or weapons to assist in its defense against Russia’s full-scale invasion, and has cast as warmongers those countries that do support Kyiv. He has also cast the EU as an oppressive force, and compared the bloc to the Soviet Union, which dominated and occupied Hungary for decades in the 20th century. The Tisza party, Orbán has alleged, is nothing more than an EU project contrived in Brussels to topple his government and install a puppet regime that will drain Hungary’s finances into Ukraine — and even involve it directly in the war. “Whoever thinks that they support a change in government is in reality supporting the war, whether they know it or not,” Orbán said in a speech to tens of thousands of supporters in October.“There are many Hungarians who believe that they are supporting a good cause when they support Brussels and its puppet government candidates. We must tell them: Brussels today is not a source of help, but a source of danger.”Orbán’s message is amplified by a sprawling pro-government media empire that has dominated Hungary’s political discourse for more than a decade, as well as taxpayer-funded campaigns that malign Magyar and promote Orbán’s policies. Balázs Orbán, who is not related to the prime minister but is his political director and Fidesz’s campaign manager, did not respond to requests for comment. Tilted playing field Bíró-Nagy noted that the past several Hungarian elections were deemed “free but not fair” by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which found a “pervasive overlap” between the messaging of Fidesz and the government, as well as biased news coverage that “limited voters’ opportunity to make an informed choice.”The situation for the 2026 elections “has not changed in any sense,” Bíró-Nagy said. “What we see is that there is no level playing field.” Sándor Rofrics, a member of a local Tisza activist group in Tab, said outside Magyar’s event that he believes “money is no object for Fidesz, even state money. They will spend a lot of public money on this campaign.”Magyar himself acknowledges that his party has fewer resources with which to campaign, portraying the contest as a “David and Goliath” struggle where “we’re essentially facing a machine with a full arsenal — propaganda, secret services, unlimited government money.”In addition to traditionally opposition liberal and centrist voters, Tisza has also reached out to disaffected Fidesz supporters and voters with more conservative views. Magyar says his party does not define itself “along ideological fault lines,” but campaigns on “the image of a functioning and humane Hungary, bringing EU money home, introducing anti-corruption measures and welcoming everyone in our community.”With five months until the ballot and Tisza still leading, Magyar said he senses a desire for change in the towns and villages he visits on his campaign tour. But despite his party’s lead, “I think you should never look down on or underestimate your opponent, especially not Viktor Orbán.”“He is an experienced player and has a lot to lose in this election, perhaps more than just the prime minister’s seat,” he said.___Béla Szandelszky contributed reporting. More

  • in

    Labour to announce largest UK immigration overhaul in a generation

    Labour will overhaul human rights laws to make it easier to deport foreign criminals and small boat migrants as part of a major immigration crackdown. Under sweeping reforms unveiled by the home secretary, the government will attempt to change the way the European Convention on Human Rights is interpreted by UK judges in a bid to stop asylum seekers using their rights to a family life to avoid deportation. Home Office officials have claimed the ECHR “is allowing large numbers of people to stay in the UK, against the public’s wishes”, and that new legislation will allow Britain to ramp up the number of removals. The radical measures are part of much-publicised reform of the asylum system, billed by the government as “the most sweeping reforms in modern times”, as Labour looks to see off the threat of Reform UK and Nigel Farage. Shabana Mahmood is also expected to ban three countries from accessing UK visas if they fail to take back illegal migrants.Three African countries, Angola, Namibia and the Democratic Republic of Congo, will face visa sanctions, blocking their tourists, VIPs and business people from travelling to Britain if they do not co-operate more on the removal of illegal migrants.The move was reportedly inspired by Trump administration homeland security secretary Kristi Noem, according to the Times.But critics have hit out at Labour’s proposals, warning any move to alter how the UK interprets the human rights laws will drive asylum seekers underground and leave them vulnerable to exploitation. Prime minister Sir Keir Starmer and home secretary Shabana Mahmood (Phil Noble/PA) More

  • in

    Government issued warned over flagship post-Brexit fisheries law

    The Government has been warned that its flagship post-Brexit fisheries law is “failing” to deliver on promises of revitalised fish stocks and thriving coastal communities.MPs, environmentalists, and inshore fishermen argue the Fisheries Act, introduced after the UK left the EU’s fisheries policy, continues to allow overfishing and inadequately distributes quotas to support local communities.This criticism follows the environmental charity Blue Marine Foundation losing a legal challenge. Courts ruled ministers hold wide discretion in allocating quotas, undermining efforts for stricter sustainable management.Labour MP and chairman of the parliamentary Environmental Audit Committee (EAC), Toby Perkins, said: “The 2020 Fisheries Act, written by the Conservative government during Brexit, is failing to deliver its promise of ‘world class sustainable management of fisheries’.“Instead, it is allowing the continued overfishing of stocks: more than 50% of fishing opportunities were allocated above scientific advice this year and every year since Brexit.”But, he said: “Following scientific advice to allow fish stocks to recover in the short-term will mean a more profitable fishing industry in the medium or long-term.”Mr Perkins said the case brought by Blue Marine showed the Act was not able to able to hold ministers to account for their decisions.He said the Joint Fisheries Statement, which sets out the policies to achieve the eight objectives in the legislation, including four focused on sustainability, had to be reviewed by law, to assess whether the Act was meeting those objectives.“This will be an opportunity to implement sustainable fishing, stop discarding and distribute quota more equitably so that generational family fishers don’t continue to lose out to corporate industrial trawlers,” he said.Trays of fish at Peterhead fish market in Aberdeenshire (Michal Wachucik/PA) More