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    Brianna Ghey’s mother considers parent of her daughter’s killer ‘a friend’

    Esther Ghey has revealed that she now considers the mother of her daughter’s killer “a friend”.Brianna Ghey was murdered by Scarlett Jenkinson and Eddie Ratcliffe in a premeditated attack in Cheshire in 2023.But Ms Ghey says she has developed a close bond with Scarlett’s mother, Emma, because she “had lost a child too”.She told the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme: “I really appreciate Emma. I would call her a friend now.”​She added that Ms Jenkinson is “just a normal mother” who was unaware of her child’s online activities, highlighting “the danger with smartphones”.​Reflecting on their shared grief, Ms Ghey said: “It’s helped me to see that we are both navigating something extremely difficult – and she’s lost a child too.”​Jenkinson and Ratcliffe, both 15 at the time, lured Brianna to Culcheth Linear Park in Warrington where she was fatally stabbed 28 times with a hunting knife in February 2023.Jenkinson was sentenced at Manchester Crown Court in December 2023 to a minimum sentence of 22 years in prison, and Ratcliffe to a minimum term of 20 years.In the same interview, Ms Ghey also called for stronger measures to protect children in schools.She supports a “blanket ban” on smartphones in schools across the country, citing concerns over how these devices can be misused by students.She explained: “We need to support teachers in a blanket ban across England. If a school has banned phones in one area and in the same area another school hasn’t – it becomes an issue with parents.“It needs to be done across the board to make it easier.”Ms Ghey has met Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and his predecessor Rishi Sunak to discuss the issue and has criticised the Online Safety Act, saying it does not go far enough.She has campaigned for an age limit on smartphone use, stricter controls on access to social media apps, tougher action on knife crime and for mindfulness to be taught in schools. More

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    Starmer to declare end of globalisation while Trump’s tariff war rages

    Sir Keir Starmer will declare the end of globalisation and admit it has failed the public amid the growing fallout of Donald Trump imposing global trade tariffs, including 10 per cent on the UK.The prime minister will argue in a speech on Monday that the shock from the US president’s trade war means Britain must “move further and faster” cutting red tape to boost economic growth. And, in an article on Sunday, Sir Keir said “the world as we knew it has gone”. “We must rise to meet the moment,” he said.Sir Keir Starmer will say globalisation has failed More

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    Two MPs ‘astounded’ after being denied entry to Israel

    Two Labour MPs who were denied entry to Israel have said they are “astounded” by the decision.Abtisam Mohamed and Yuan Yang have said it is “vital” that parliamentarians are able to “witness first-hand” the situation on the ground in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.The current war in Gaza began on 7 October 2023, when Hamas fighters launched an attack inside Israel, killing around 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages back to Gaza. Since then, Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry says more than 50,000 people have been killed in Israel’s retaliatory military offensive.The MPs were refused entry because they intended to “spread hate speech” against Israel, the nation’s population and immigration authority claimed.Abtisam Mohamed More

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    Streeting defends Labour’s national insurance hike as health secretary urges Farage to ‘come clean’ over Reform’s NHS plans

    Wes Streeting defended Labour’s controversial national insurance hike as the health secretary accused Reform UK and the Conservatives of plotting to pull billions of bounds of funding from the NHS.As the tax rise comes into effect today, Mr Streeting has challenged critics including Nigel Farage and Kemi Badenoch to explain how they would pay for a reversal of the policy change. The 2p increase to employer national insurance has been criticised by opposition parties, business chiefs and top economists, who have linked it to the stagnant economy, since it was unveiled by Rachel Reeves back in October. Wes Streeting is being rolled out by Labour as an anti-Reform attack dog More

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    Reform UK candidate accused late Queen of ‘scrounging’ and called for Royals to be jailed

    One of Reform UK’s local election candidates accused Queen Elizabeth of “scrounging” and “sponging” and called for her to be jailed, The Independent can reveal.Mark Wade, council candidate in Chorley Rural West, marked Her Majesty becoming the longest-reigning British monarch with a post on Facebook saying she had spent “a long time scrounging”. He also commented on the late Queen’s visit to Crumlin Road Gaol in north Belfast: “The Queen has just entered an old jail in Belfast, let’s shut the gates and get the rest of her sponging family to join her.” Critics said the comments raise questions about Reform UK’s partiotism More

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    Jaguar Land Rover pauses US shipments as Starmer plots course over Trump’s 10% tariff

    Jaguar Land Rover is pausing shipments to the US as it works to “address the new trading terms” of in the wake of Donald Trump‘s 10 per cent tariff on British goods coming into force.Sir Keir Starmer was expected to spend the weekend making back-to-back phone calls to world leaders about the tariffs, after talking with the Australian prime minister, Anthony Albanese, and the Italian PM, Giorgia Meloni, on Friday. In those calls the leaders agreed that an “all-out trade war would be extremely damaging”.Sir Keir was “clear the UK’s response will be guided by the national interest” and officials would “calmly continue with our preparatory work, rather than rush to retaliate”, a No 10 spokesperson said.On Saturday afternoon, Jaguar said it was “taking some short-term actions including a shipment pause in April, as we develop our mid- to longer-term plans”. Jaguar Land Rover has paused shipments to the US (JLR/PA) More

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    Starmer under pressure from biggest backers to unpick Brexit after Trump tariffs

    Labour’s biggest financial backers are among the loudest voices pressing Sir Keir Starmer to have a much more ambitious approach to his Brexit reset in the wake of Donald Trump unleashing an international trade war by imposing sweeping tariffs.Trade unions, who were previously divided over Brexit and still provide more than half of Labour’s campaign funding, are now at the forefront of a new push for much closer ties with the EU.Armed with a huge 5,000 voter survey by the pollster who has carried out strategic research for both Labour and the unions, the Trades Union Congress (TUC) has joined with business groups and others to urge Sir Keir to rethink his Brexit red lines.While the prime minister has insisted he will resist what he calls “a false choice” between the EU and US the TUC’s public demands are being reflected in private by many in Labour as well.It follows President Trump imposing a 10 per cent base “reciprocal tariffs” on the UK, half of the 20 per cent slapped on the EU. Other countries such as China, South Korea, Japan and Cambodia faced tariffs of more than 30 per cent.But some specific tariffs including 25 per cent on automobile, steel and aluminium products have hit the UK as well putting at least 25,000 jobs at risk in the car-making sector alone.Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer (Eddie Mulholland/Daily Telegraph/PA) More

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    John Rentoul answers your Trump tariffs questions from the ‘Brexit dividend’ to chlorinated chicken

    Donald Trump’s declaration of “Liberation Day” – a dramatic unveiling of sweeping new tariffs on US imports – has reignited questions about America’s global role, its economic influence, and what it all means for Britain post-Brexit.With the UK hit by a 10 per cent tariff, compared with 20 per cent for the EU, some Brexiteers were quick to claim a win. But if being slightly less penalised by a volatile US president is the best economic case for Brexit, it’s a shaky argument. There’s still no comprehensive UK-US trade deal, and experts warn that the so-called “Brexit dividend” has yet to materialise.In a live Q&A for The Independent, I answered your questions on Trump’s trade war, the UK’s response, and whether Keir Starmer can steer a better course with the EU. We discussed soft power, chlorinated chicken, the single market, and whether China really stands to gain.What emerges is a picture of a world in flux – and a UK still feeling its way through the fog of Brexit and global disruption. Here’s what you asked during the “Ask Me Anything” event – and how I answered.Q: Trump calls this ‘liberation day’ – but is he actually pushing the world away from the US dollar and undermining America’s soft power?pundaA: That is an interesting question. I don’t think Trump is completely detached from reality, but he is certainly good at pretending that bad news is just a blip in the prelude to Making America Rich Again. I think that now he has impressed his voters with the idea that he is standing up for them against foreigners, many of the tariffs will be dropped, with Trump proclaiming huge concessions and unprecedented trade deals as cover. There was an interesting, if depressing, study of the effect of tariffs during Trump’s first term – they were mostly selective and short-lived, but they made a lot of his rust-belt voters slightly worse off. The study found that the voters worst affected were those most in favour of tariffs.Q: Time to talk with the EU and be nice to them this time, surely?CoulsdonguyA: Keir Starmer is talking to the EU and trying to be nice to them, because it made sense before Trump’s trade war to ease the friction on UK-EU trade as much as possible without rejoining the single market – and if we had rejoined the single market, we might have been hit by the EU tariff of 20 per cent, so there is a genuine Brexit dividend in the form of being hit less hard than the EU.Ministers have been pretty robust about chlorinated chicken and hormone-fed beef. Jonathan Reynolds, the trade secretary, said yesterday that the government would abide by Labour’s “clear manifesto position to maintain that regime” – namely food production standards.(Although I personally don’t have a problem with US chicken or beef, provided it is clearly labelled.)Q: How might the UK go about capitalising on this with our EU neighbours?MattA: It is an opportunity in the sense that the UK will be hit less hard, and may be able to mitigate some of that damage by having EU-based companies that export to the US move here, but it is the opposite of an opportunity in any other sense of the word!Q: Is there any point in the UK trying to negotiate with Trump?PaulKA: I think we should do both: negotiate and not retaliate. I think he will reverse on tariffs at some point, and if he needs a “great” trade deal to cover his retreat, that should be fine by us.Q: If rejoining the single market makes economic sense, why won’t Starmer act – especially with a huge majority and Brexit now a minority view?KerrimanA: A counterintuitive question, at a point when not being in the single market means the UK faces 10 per cent tariffs on US exports instead of 20 per cent! But generally it remains true that we would be better off in the single market, while, for some voters, sovereignty is more important than GDP.Politically, though, Labour trying to reverse Brexit would lose a chunk of voters without gaining any, because those who are pro-EU are voting Labour anyway – unless the Lib Dems can use the issue to force Labour voters to switch to them.Q: Is he a genius who’ll help the US at the world’s expense – or the opposite, bringing harm to everyone?FishingInTheRiverOfLifeA: Trump is good at selling a simple political message, which is that he is going to stop those “cheating” and “pillaging” foreigners from taking advantage of the US. How much he believes in the economics of protection is almost a meaningless question. It is worth remembering that British politicians such as Joseph Chamberlain thought that tariffs were a good idea, and the issue split the UK (and UK parties) for decades, even though free trade usually had the upper hand. Chamberlain thought tariffs were a terrific wheeze because they would raise a lot of money and allow the abolition of income tax – or so he thought.Q: If China play their cards well, could they come out on top in the end?pundaA: No. Everyone loses from a trade war. But in relative terms, China’s rise to world economic domination will continue. It does not need any action on the part of the Chinese government: Chinese companies will respond to market incentives and try to sell where they do not face tariffs.Q: Can you explain what tariffs we already levy on imports from the USA? Trump said 10 per cent – is that correct?NigePA: No, the 10 per cent is not correct. I have heard Jonathan Reynolds, the trade secretary, say that the average tariff the UK charges on imports from the US is 4 per cent. We impose tariffs on goods including beef, cars and denim jeans. Before Trump, the average US tariff on UK goods was about 3 per cent, according to the World Trade Organisation.Every respectable economist that I have seen has said that the so-called formula used by the USTR (US Office of the Trade Representative) is nonsense. Just because it uses Greek letters doesn’t make it formal economics. It is like a supposedly scientific equation in a shampoo advert. What the “formula” does is roughly relate the tariff rate to the size of a country’s trade surplus with the US – with a minimum of 10 per cent. So that countries that sell more to the US than they buy from it have higher tariffs. The UK imports about the same as it exports, which is why it is on the lowest rate of 10 per cent.These questions and answers were part of an ‘Ask Me Anything’ hosted by John Rentoul at 1pm BST on Friday 4 April. Some of the questions and answers have been edited for this article. You can read the full discussion in the comments section of the original article.For more insight into UK politics, check out John’s weekly Commons Confidential newsletter. The email, exclusive to Independent Premium subscribers, takes you behind the curtain of Westminster. If this sounds like something you would be interested in, head here to find out more. More