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    Starmer close to post-Brexit defence deal with EU after concession on fishing rights

    Sir Keir Starmer is close to striking a major deal with the EU that would let British arms companies sell billions of pounds of weapons to European allies, it has emerged.Under the agreement, UK companies would be able to bid for business under the bloc’s new €150 billion (£130 billion) defence fund. But the deal comes after the UK reportedly made major concessions to Brussels on EU access to Britain’s fishing waters, in what critics will likely see as a betrayal of Brexit. The EU last month unveiled its “Readiness 2030” security strategy as part of a drive to break its dependence on the US amid heightened Russian aggression.The strategy included an easing of budget rules to create the multi-billion pound loan plan focused on buying defence equipment in Europe rather than suppliers in the US. A deal on defence procurement comes after British negotiators prepared to make concessions on fishing More

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    Charities warn of record high child poverty if two-child benefit cap not scrapped

    Scrapping the two-child benefit cap is the most cost-effective way to reduce child poverty, charities have argued in a letter to the prime minister.Failing to scrap the limit could put child poverty at its highest level since records began by the end of this parliament, groups including Barnardo’s, Save the Children UK and Citizens Advice have warned.The two-child benefit cap, imposed by Tory former chancellor George Osborne, prevents parents from claiming benefits for any third or subsequent child born after April 2017. A separate limit on benefits, imposed under the Tory-Liberal Democrat coalition in 2013, restricts how much a household can receive in benefits in total.Sir Keir Starmer has previously said he wants to scrap the cap but that the government cannot currently afford to More

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    Runcorn by-election: Can Sarah Pochin give Reform the rebrand Nigel Farage is hoping for?

    By-elections are always tough for a sitting government. Voters use them to take out their frustrations on politicians who haven’t delivered what they promised, without the risk of their vote having national consequences. Opposition parties can promise the world, knowing that later down the line if they don’t deliver, they can blame it on a lack of funding from the party in power.While many see the upcoming Runcorn by-election as Sir Keir Starmer’s first major test in government, he’s not the only politician with a point to prove. Nigel Farage is attempting to persuade voters that Reform UK is a credible electoral force.The party has grown in popularity in the past year – but it has also lurched from scandal to scandal. From last month’s explosive row with MP Rupert Lowe that saw him ousted over allegations he harassed female staff, to the party’s failure to properly vet its candidates at last year’s general election, it has been far from plain sailing.But in selecting Sarah Pochin, Reform’s candidate for Runcorn and Helsby, Mr Farage is attempting to draw a line under the past.Nigel Farage with Sarah Pochin, Reform UK’s candidate for the Runcorn and Helsby by-election (PA) More

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    MPs and peers call for Trump to be blocked from addressing parliament during UK visit

    MPs and peers are campaigning to block Donald Trump from addressing parliament during his state visit to the UK, warning the US president “does not respect democracy”. The US president has suggested Buckingham Palace is “setting a date for September” for him to stay in Britain.However, some parliamentarians have voiced concerns that it would be “inappropriate” for him to speak in the Palace of Westminster as his predecessors Barack Obama, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton did.Some parliamentarians are reportedly lobbying to prevent the US president addressing parliament (Niall Carson/PA) More

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    Prison staff to demand use of stun guns in jails after HMP Frankland attack

    Prison officers are calling on the justice secretary to allow the use of electric stun guns in the UK’s most dangerous jails following an attack on guards at HMP Frankland last week. Mark Fairhurst, national chairman of the Prison Officers’ Association (POA), said they will make the demand when they meet with Shabana Mahmood on Wednesday.The meeting comes after officers at HMP Frankland in County Durham were attacked with hot oil and homemade weapons by Manchester Arena bomb plotter Hashem Abedi.A view of HMP Frankland in Durham (Tom Wilkinson/PA) More

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    Brexit costs and red tape denying NHS cancer patients life-saving drugs, report finds

    Brexit costs and red tape are denying British cancer patients life-saving drugs and trials of revolutionary treatments, a damning new report has warned. Soaring numbers are being diagnosed with cancer as the population grows alongside improvements in diagnosis and public awareness, heightening the importance of global cooperation on new treatments. But, five years after Britain left the European Union, an in-depth analysis has concluded that Britons with cancer have “lost out” due to rising costs and post-Brexit red tape. By contrast, patients across Europe are enjoying a golden age of pioneering research and new treatments, it found. Brexit red tape is denying British cancer patients life-saving drugs More

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    Reform would be biggest party in hung parliament if election held today, new poll says

    If a general election were held today, Reform UK would be on course to win the most seats, but no party would be close to an overall majority, a new poll suggests.Nigel Farage’s party would win 180 seats, with the Tories and Labour on 165 seats each, according to the More in Common survey of 16,000 voters. Sir Keir Starmer’s party would achieve an even worse result than it sustained under Jeremy Corbyn in 2019, losing 246 seats, the modelling claims. Surveys conducted years away from a general election are unlikely to represent anything close to its result, because there is no way of predicting what the most important issues will be come polling day. Reform currently has just four MPs, having already lost one of the five elected last year.But More in Common director Luke Tryl said the survey shows that “British politics has fragmented to an unprecedented level”. Nigel Farage’s Reform would have the largest number of seats – but no majority, the poll says More

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    Reform UK candidate backed means testing winter fuel payments despite Nigel Farage calling move ‘vindictive’

    Reform UK’s by-election candidate supported means testing the winter fuel payment despite Nigel Farage describing the policy as “vindictive”, it has emerged. Sarah Pochin, who is standing to replace Mike Amesbury in Runcorn and Helsby, backed the principle of “making sure those that are in need get that payment… but that those that don’t need it don’t get it”. “We have so much else we need to spend our money on, like sorting out the adult social care issue,” Ms Pochin added in a newly resurfaced video from 2017 shared by the campaign group Reform UK Exposed. Nigel Farage with Sarah Pochin, Reform UK’s candidate for the Runcorn and Helsby by-election (PA) More