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    Tories accused of ‘hollowing out’ Britain’s defence as historic regiments culled

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThe Conservatives have been accused of “hollowing out” Britain’s armed forces as Rishi Sunak tries to turn focus toward defence for the final days of the general election.After nearly 15 years of Tory rule, the British Army has lost 23 regiments, with the number of units at its lowest level since 2010, The Independent can reveal.Click here for our live coverage of the general election campaign.New research by Labour shows the Army has lost more than a tenth of its regiments, with cuts from the Royal Armoured Corps, Royal Artillery, Royal Medical Corps, Royal Military Police and Royal Logistics Corps since 2010.Labour accused the Conservatives of having hollowed out Britain’s armed forces More

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    The UK will hold its first election in almost 5 years. Here’s what to know

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster email The United Kingdom will hold its first national election in almost five years on Thursday, with opinion polls suggesting that Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s Conservative Party will be punished for failing to deliver on promises made during 14 years in power.The center-right Conservatives took power during the depths of the global financial crisis and have won three more elections since then. But those years have been marked by a sluggish economy, declining public services and a series of scandals, making the Tories, as they are commonly known, easy targets for critics on the left and right.The Labour Party, which leans to the left, is far ahead in most opinion polls after focusing its campaign on a single word: Change. But the Tories face other challenges as well. The new Reform Party is siphoning off votes from the rightwing of the Conservatives after criticizing the Tory leadership for failing to control immigration.Here is a look at the election and what’s at stake. How will the election work? People throughout the United Kingdom will elect all 650 members of the House of Commons, one for each local constituency. There are no primaries or run-offs, just a single round of voting on July 4.Britain uses a “first past the post” system of voting, which means that the candidate that finishes top in each constituency will be elected, even if they don’t get 50% of the vote. This has generally cemented the dominance of the two largest parties, Conservatives and Labour, because it is difficult for smaller parties to win seats unless they have concentrated support in particular areas. How is the prime minister chosen? The party that commands a majority in the Commons, either alone or with the support of another party, will form the next government and its leader will be prime minister.That means the results will determine the political direction of the government, which has been led by the center-right Conservatives for the past 14 years. The center-left Labour Party is widely seen to be in the strongest position. Who is running? Sunak, a former Treasury chief who has been prime minister since October 2022, is leading his party into the election. His primary opponent is Keir Starmer, a former director of public prosecutions in England and leader of the Labour Party since April 2020.But other parties, some of which have strong regional support, could be crucial to forming a coalition government if no one wins an overall majority.The Scottish National Party, which campaigns for Scottish independence, the Liberal Democrats, and the Democratic Unionist Party, which seeks to maintain ties between Britain and Northern Ireland, are currently the three largest parties in Parliament after the Conservatives and Labour. Many observers suggest the new Reform Party, fronted by Brexit campaigner Nigel Farage, may siphon votes from the Conservatives. Why are the Conservatives under pressure? The Conservatives have faced one challenge after another since they took power in 2010. First there was the fallout from the global financial crisis, which swelled Britain’s debt and caused the Tories to impose years of austerity to balance the budget. They then led Britain out of the European Union, battled one of the deadliest COVID-19 outbreaks in western Europe, and saw inflation soar after Russia invaded Ukraine.Regardless of the circumstances, many voters blame the Conservatives for the litany of problems facing Britain, from sewage spills and unreliable train service to the cost-of-living crisis, crime and the influx of migrants crossing the English Channel on inflatable boats.On top of that, the party has been tarred by the repeated ethical lapses of government ministers, including lockdown-busting parties in government offices. The scandals chased former Prime Minister Boris Johnson from office and ultimately from Parliament after he was found to have lied to lawmakers. His successor, Liz Truss, lasted just 45 days after her economic policies cratered the economy. What are the big issues? The economy: Britain has struggled with high inflation and slow economic growth, which have combined to make most people feel poorer. The Conservatives succeeded in controlling inflation, which slowed to 2% in the year through May after peaking at 11.1% in October 2022, but growth remains sluggish, raising questions about the government’s economic policies.Immigration: Thousands of asylum seekers and economic migrants have crossed the English Channel in flimsy inflatable boats in recent years, triggering criticism that the government has lost control of Britain’s borders. The Conservatives’ signature policy for stopping the boats is a plan to deport some of these migrants to Rwanda. Critics say the plan violates international law, is inhumane, and will do nothing to stop people fleeing war, unrest and famine.Health care: Britain’s National Health Service, which provides free health care to everyone, is plagued with long waiting lists for everything from dental care to cancer treatment. Newspapers are filled with stories about seriously ill patients forced to wait hours for an ambulance, then longer still for a hospital bed.The environment: Sunak has backtracked on a series of environmental commitments, pushing back the deadline for ending the sale of gasoline- and diesel-powered passenger vehicles and authorizing new oil drilling in the North Sea. Critics say these are the wrong policies at a time the world is trying to combat climate change. Why is the election being held now? Sunak surprised pundits and most of his own lawmakers six weeks ago when he set the election for July 4, at least three months earlier than expected. While most observers thought the vote would take place in the fall, Sunak gambled on a summer election, hoping that positive economic news would help him persuade voters that Conservative policies were beginning to work.The decision was so startling that it landed the Tories in hot water. Allegations have emerged that party members and police officers assigned to protect government officials had placed wagers on a summer election, suggesting they had inside information and damaging Sunak’s ability to claim that his party is more trustworthy than Labour.Commentators had been speculating about the timing of the election for months because the parliamentary term was scheduled to end in mid-December. While each parliament is elected for up to five years, the prime minister can call an election whenever it is most advantageous politically. More

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    European Union accuses Facebook owner Meta of breaking digital rules with paid ad-free option

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster email European Union regulators accused social media company Meta Platforms on Monday of breaching the bloc’s new digital competition rulebook by forcing Facebook and Instagram users to choose between seeing ads or paying to avoid them. Meta has been giving European users the option since November of paying for ad-free versions of Facebook and Instagram as a way to comply with the continent’s strict data privacy rules. Desktop browser users can pay about 10 euros ($10.50) a month while iOS or Android users will pay roughly 13 euros to avoid being targeted by ads based on their personal data.The U.S. tech giant rolled out the subscription option after the European Union’s top court ruled that under strict EU data privacy rules, Meta must first get consent before showing ads to users. The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, said preliminary findings of its investigation show that Meta’s “pay or consent” advertising model was in breach of the 27-nation bloc’s Digital Markets Act.The commission said Meta’s model doesn’t allow users to exercise their right to “freely consent” to allowing their personal data to be used to target them with online ads.The commission had opened its investigation shortly after the rulebook, also known as the DMA, took effect in March. It’s a sweeping set of regulations aimed at preventing tech “gatekeepers” from cornering digital markets under threat of heavy financial penalties. “The DMA is there to give back to the users the power to decide how their data is used and ensure innovative companies can compete on equal footing with tech giants on data access,” European Commissioner Thierry Breton, who oversees the bloc’s digital policy, said in a statement. Meta now has a chance to respond to the commission, which must wrap up its investigation by March 2025. The company could face fines worth 10% of its annual global revenues, which could run into the billions of euros. “Subscription for no ads follows the direction of the highest court in Europe and complies with the DMA,” Meta said in a statement. “We look forward to further constructive dialogue with the European Commission to bring this investigation to a close.” Under the Digital Markets Act, Meta is classed as one of seven online gatekeepers while Facebook, Instagram and its ad business are among about two dozen “core platform services” that need the highest level of scrutiny. More

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    UK’s landmark postwar elections: When Blair won the first of his 3 elections in 1997

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster email Britain’s upcoming general election is widely expected to lead to a change of government for the first time in 14 years. Many analysts believe it will be one of the country’s most consequential elections since the end of World War II.Ahead of the July 4 vote, The Associated Press takes a look back at other landmark U.K. elections since the war.____In 1997, the Labour Party had been out of power for longer than it has been now — 18 years compared to the current 14.When it lost the 1992 election to John Major’s Conservatives, many questioned whether it would ever be able to win power again.So it was quite a turnaround when Labour, under the leadership of the youthful Tony Blair, won the May 1, 1997 general election by a landslide. “New Labour, New Britain” was the party’s slogan, and “Things can only get better” by D-ream was its theme song. Under Blair, Labour won a majority of 179 seats, even bigger than the party’s victory over Winston Churchill’s Conservatives soon after the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945. The Conservatives ended up with just 165 of the 650 seats in the House of Commons, their worst result since 1906.One factor for the Tories’ defeat was the economic crisis of Sept. 1992, when the British pound was ignominiously ejected from a European exchange rate system. It was difficult to dislodge widespread misgivings that the government was losing control of the economy.Major also had to contend with a series of financial and sexual scandals within his Conservative Party in the years running up to polling day. The party was also deeply divided over the U.K.’s place within the European Union, even though Major had negotiated an opt-out for the country from joining in the creation of a common currency, the euro. He called some of his recalcitrant Cabinet ministers “the bastards” in an unguarded moment.But perhaps most importantly, Blair’s centrist policies did not frighten voters who had withheld their support from Labour for a generation. Blair would lead Labour to three straight election wins and spend a decade as prime minister, longer than any other leader of the party. His supporters cite notable domestic achievements including the signing of the Good Friday Agreement in 1998, which largely brought an end to decades of sectarian violence in Northern Ireland. Blair’s government also ratcheted up spending in the public services, such as schools and hospitals, and oversaw the longest period of economic growth in Britain in the post-war era. However, he remains a hugely controversial figure in Britain because of his support for the U.S.-led war in Iraq in 2003. Some within the Labour Party were relieved when Blair quit in 2007 and handed power to his long-time Treasury chief Gordon Brown. Unfortunately for Brown, the global financial crisis was just around the corner. More

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    Cleverly accuses Glastonbury festival-goers of ‘celebrating loss of life’ after Banksy small boats stunt

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailJames Cleverly has accused festival-goers of “celebrating the loss of life in the Channel” after a Banksy stunt at Glastonbury.The home secretary attacked the artist and revellers at the festival, claiming they were “joking about and celebrating” small boat migration.“People die in the Mediterranean, people die in the Channel, this is not funny, it is vile,” he told Sky News on Monday morning. “This is a celebration of the loss of life in the Channel,” Mr Cleverly told Sky News.A Banksy work appeared in the crowd during IDLES’s Glastonbury 2024 set More

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    In a proud and troubled UK town, voters wonder whether their election choice will make a difference

    Sign up to our free Brexit and beyond email for the latest headlines on what Brexit is meaning for the UKSign up to our Brexit email for the latest insight A lot of politicians have promised change to voters in Hartlepool, a wind-whipped port town in northeast England. For decades, Labour Party representatives said they would fight for working people, even as well-paid industrial jobs disappeared. Later, Conservatives under then-Prime Minister Boris Johnson vowed to bring new money and opportunities on the back of Brexit.But as British voters prepare to elect a new government Thursday, Hartlepool’s many problems persist. It has higher unemployment, lower pay, shorter life expectancy, more drug deaths and higher crime rates than the country as a whole.Opinion polls put center-left Labour well ahead of the governing Conservatives nationwide, but many voters remain undecided — and even more are jaded. To regain power after 14 years, Labour must win back disillusioned voters in Hartlepool and other northern towns where decades of economic decline have spawned health and social problems, and a deep sense of disillusionment.“At the last election, I voted Conservative because Johnson promised our waters back — and lied through his teeth,” said Stan Rennie, a fisherman who has caught lobster off Hartlepool for five decades but says he can scarcely scrape a living anymore.“Because we’re the northeast, I don’t think the government even knows we exist,” he said. “We’re the forgotten land.”A proud, rugged town jutting into the North Sea 250 miles (400 kilometers) north of London, Hartlepool is scarred by industrial decline. The shipyards and steelworks that once employed thousands are long gone. The fishing fleet has been shrinking for years.In a 2016 referendum, Hartlepool voted heavily to leave the European Union, persuaded by Johnson and other Brexit-backers that quitting the bloc would let the U.K. control immigration and free up billions in cash for struggling post-industrial areas.Three years later, many postindustrial areas in England’s Labour-supporting “Red Wall” switched allegiance and backed Johnson’s Conservatives in an election. Labour hung on in Hartlepool until 2021, when the Conservatives won the seat in a special election.In the past few years, Hartlepool has received government money to spiff up its train station, restore old buildings and revive the waterfront, but well-paid jobs have been slow in coming. In a town center pocked with empty shopfronts, retiree Sheila Wainwright had to stop and think when asked what politicians had delivered for Hartlepool.“Improved the promenade?” she suggested. “But then you’ve seen all the shops shutting, like every other town.“I don’t think you can believe anybody. They all come out with this stuff, but it never happens, as far as I can see.”Jonathan Brash, Labour’s election candidate, hears similar sentiments when he knocks on doors around town. He says he understands the mistrust.“Everywhere people seem to look, they find a country that’s not really working,” said Brash, a local councilor who grew up in Hartlepool. “Our public health service is in real difficulties. Crime is on the rise on our streets. There aren’t enough police officers. Our public realm has disintegrated over the last 14 years.”Few feel more betrayed than Hartlepool’s fishing community, custodians of a trade central to the town’s identity. Many fishers voted for Brexit to rid themselves of EU quotas and red tape, but say that little has changed. And a new crisis erupted in late 2021 when dead and dying shellfish started washing up along England’s northeast coast.Rennie and other fishermen suspect dredging conducted as part of redevelopment of old industrial land has churned up toxins from the nearby River Tees. It was once one of the country’s most heavily industrialized areas — a center for chemicals, ships and steel — and is now the site of a huge regeneration area known as the Teesside Freeport.Two government-commissioned reports ruled out dredging but failed to confirm the cause of the die-offs. Rennie and a group of fishing colleagues have enlisted scientists to do their own research.“Our lifetime’s work has just been destroyed,” Rennie said, standing alongside the fishing boat he can no longer afford and the lobster pots that often come up empty. “It’s in our blood, and they’re taking that away.”Rennie can trace fishing in his family back 500 years. But, he says, “it’s going to die with me.”Fishing seems fated to play a tiny part in Hartlepool’s economic future, but politicians hope another aspect of its maritime heritage — shipping — will be crucial.The town’s 200-acre (81-hectare) commercial port employs far fewer people than when ships were built and coal unloaded here, but it’s still a place of activity, much of it related to the fast-growing renewable energy industry. Businesses in the port make undersea coils for wind turbines and help service vehicles building the world’s biggest offshore wind farm, Dogger Bank, some 80 miles (130 kilometers) from land.“We’re going to have a major role in terms of the offshore wind sector” and other emerging technologies including carbon capture and hydrogen, said Jerry Hopkinson, executive chair of operator PD Ports.“There are some really, really big opportunities here on Teesside,” he said. “Lots more cargo, lots more ships.”While Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s Conservatives stress the need for Britain to keep drilling for oil and gas in the North Sea, Labour is promising to make Britain a “clean energy superpower.” Brash, Labour’s candidate, says that will help Hartlepool regain its place as an engine of the British economy.“Right now, across the world we’ve got reindustrialization with cleaner technology,” he said. “We’re behind in the U.K., frankly, because of the decisions of this government. But it is coming. … Hartlepool and places like it have to be the absolute epicenter of that change.”That change can seem a long way off. Whoever becomes prime minister — and polls suggest it will be Labour leader Keir Starmer — will face stagnant economic growth, high public debt and creaking public services. Independent think-tank the Institute for Fiscal Studies says neither Labour nor the Conservatives are being honest with the public about the choice the next government will face between higher taxes and worsening public services.Opinion polls suggest Brash will beat Conservative incumbent Jill Mortimer in Hartlepool, though many voters express a lack of enthusiasm for either party. Some are tempted by veteran right-wing politician Nigel Farage, who has shaken up the campaign with his anti-immigration rhetoric and populist promises.“He’s funny, and that’s what people relate to,” said Dylan Fisher, a care worker for people with autism. “Maybe he is the biggest liar of all. But he’s really good at talking.”Mistrust of politicians is as common as empty shops in Hartlepool. But amid the shuttered stores, a handful of creative small businesses provide bright spots. Linda Li, who helps manage the Kraft Work Yarns knitting shop, beams as she stands amid a rainbow of yarn balls and talks warmly about the store’s customers and regular “knit and natter” sessions.Born and raised in Hartlepool, she treasures its sense of community and says, “It’s the only town that I can feel at home in.”She always votes — “I’ve never missed an election” — and said she will back Labour, though she isn’t confident it will deliver on its promises.“We know what the party say they stand for, but whether or not it will happen, we don’t know,” she said. “But it’ll be nice to have a bit of a change from what we have now.” More

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    University chancellor says she is an ‘accidental trailblazer’ for women in Stem

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThe new chancellor of a Scottish university, who describes herself as an “accidental trailblazer”, has said she will fulfil the role for the common good.Anne-Marie Imafidon has spent her career helping young women break into the largely male-dominated science, technology, engineering and maths (Stem).Recognised around the world for founding Stemettes, a social enterprise which encourages girls and young women to enter the field, Dr Imafidon will be officially installed as chancellor of Glasgow Caledonian University (GCU) on July 2.She will be replacing singer and campaigner Annie Lennox, the university’s previous chancellor.The chancellor pictured outside of Glasgow Caledonian University. (GCU/PA)As Scotland’s largest modern university, GCU promotes women’s participation in Stem through its outreach programmes, mentoring, and by offering scholarships for women in engineering, and has also received awards for its commitment to gender equality.Originally from London, Dr Imafidon, 33, has worked on a wide range of Stem projects, including writing books on the industry, hosting podcasts and appearing on television shows, and Stemettes has reached around 60,000 young women.Ahead of her installation as chancellor, she said she is “really excited” to be working with GCU, and that she plans to be a “chancellor for the common good” – a key value held by the university.She said: “I actually set up quite a number of different businesses before I started Stemettes as an organisation and ran a networking events company at one point with my friends.”It was her early experiences of various forms of discrimination that led her to help make Stem industries a more accepting space for women.She said: “There are lots of things that were different about me that never really seemed to crop up in conversations or as we were building databases or whatever else.“It’s always been an interesting one to kind of reflect on being in that minority and something that, at times, is also a shrinking minority in technical spaces.“Stem has always been something I’ve enjoyed doing,  as a hobby as well as a career, and it’s only as I’ve got older and been more perceptive.“It’s interesting to reflect on being in that minority and something that, at times, is also a shrinking minority in technical spaces.The new chancellor met with GCU students earlier this year. (Peter Devlin/GCU/PA)“I’ve looked up and looked around in those rooms and noticed there’s something off about me being one of the only women in this space. I’ve ended up being an accidental trailblazer, recognising there’s a problem and wanting to do something about it. I’ve been driven and motivated, and also fortunate, to have an impact on changing the situation.“Starting Stemettes was a response to me noticing that I was one of very few women in the room. There’s a knock-on impact not just for individuals stepping into male-dominated tech spaces, but also for the economy at large.“I started Stemettes with the realisation that, if I ever have children, I don’t want them to reflect on the fact that their mum is one of the only ones left in a space that’s driving so much of what’s going on in the world.“If I have any girls, I don’t want them to feel like this is not something they should be a part of. The innovation we have now is hindered by not having women and girls at least around the table.“We’re building a lot of technology that’s ending up harming not only women and girls, but all of society, creating more problems than it’s solving with each technological advance.”She added: “I actually set up quite a number of different businesses before I started Stemettes as an organisation.“I ran a networking events company at one point with my friends, and my best friend and I, for a very, very short period, ran a dating company as well.“At GCU we have a big focus on entrepreneurship as well and the opportunities that that creates for folks when they embark on that journey.The Chancellor with Cara Nicole Edgar, a 4th year BEng (Hons) Computer Aided Mechanical Engineering student. (Peter Devlin/GCU/PA)“Starting Stemettes was actually a response to me noticing that I was one of very few in the room, but also that there’s a knock-on impact not just for individuals that would be stepping into male-dominated tech spaces, but also the economy at large.“I started Stemettes in that realisation that while I don’t have children, if I do I don’t want them to reflect on the fact that their mum is one of the only ones left in a space that’s driving so much of what’s going on in the world.“If I have any girls I don’t want them to feel like this is not something they should be a part of, and also any of the innovation that we have now by not having women and girls at least around that table.“We’re building a lot of technology that’s ending up harming not only women and girls, but all of society and is creating more problems that it’s solving with each technological advance.”Dr Imafidon will be installed as GCU chancellor at the Royal Concert Hall in Glasgow on Tuesday, as part of three days of graduations ceremonies for the university’s students. 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    Black journalist removed from Reform UK rally by security

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailA black journalist was removed from a Reform UK rally by security guards saying they “didn’t know” why he was not allowed to attend the event.Femi Oluwole, 34, was turned away from Nigel Farage’s “biggest campaign rally” in Birmingham on Sunday despite showing security his press card.In footage, a security guard can be heard saying: “Unfortunately sir, you’ve been told you cannot come into the venue today.”When Mr Oluwole asked why, he said: “I don’t know. They’ve just told us you’re not allowed into the venue. I’ve been told you can’t come in.” Two security guards then physically escorted Mr Oluwole from the building.Reform UK leader Nigel Farage speaking at his party’s rally in Birmingham on Sunday More