‘Imagine if Messi coached Ronaldo’: how Murray 2.0 will need to adapt to flourish with Djokovic
Minister defends Rachel Reeves’ China trip amid market turmoil – as it happened
Culture secretary Lisa Nandy has defended chancellor Rachel Reeves’ decision to visit China amid turbulence in the economy as being “right and proper”.Speaking on the BBC Radio 4 Today programme, Nandy said fluctuations affecting the bond market and the pound were part of “a global trend that we’ve seen affecting economies all over the world.”“Rates rise and fall,” she said. “We’ve seen it, most notably in the United States.”Nandy continued:We are confident that we’re taking both the short term action to stabilise the economy, but also the long term action that is necessary to get the economy growing again
Andy Burnham joins calls for ‘limited’ national inquiry into sexual abuse gangs
The Greater Manchester mayor, Andy Burnham, has joined calls for a “limited” national inquiry into grooming gangs, saying the scope of the local inquiry he had commissioned in Oldham did not have the same legal powers.On Wednesday, MPs rejected a Conservative amendment to the children’s wellbeing and schools bill, calling for a new, national inquiry into grooming gangs.Had it passed, the bill, which includes measures aimed to protect children, and tighter rules around home schooling, would have been blocked.The vote followed vocal attacks online by the tech billionaire Elon Musk against Keir Starmer and the safeguarding minister, Jess Phillips, after it was revealed she turned down a request for a public inquiry into exploitation in Oldham, made by the local council.The prime minister and other ministers have suggested they are open-minded about a future inquiry, but have said the government’s priority is acting on the recommendations of the 2022 report into child sexual abuse led by Prof Alexis Jay
Reasons given for Boris Johnson peerages ‘inadequate’, campaigner says
The reasons given for a peerage awarded by Boris Johnson have been described as “inadequate” and a “mystery” by a freedom of information campaigner after an 18-month struggle.Charlotte Owen, a former special adviser in the Conservative government, was appointed to the House of Lords in Johnson’s resignation honours list in 2023.Both her appointment and that of another former special adviser, Ross Kempsell, were subject to criticism from the former prime minister’s political opponents and transparency campaigners, who called for the reasoning behind the appointments to be revealed.Martin Rosenbaum, a journalist and freedom of information campaigner, took the House of Lords appointments commission to a first-tier tribunal in order to reveal who had written letters of citation for the two Tory peers.The commission initially refused Rosenbaum’s freedom of information request on the grounds they contained confidential personal information, but the tribunal upheld the journalist’s arguments that releasing the information was in the public interest
Starmer to keep saying Truss crashed economy despite legal letter, No 10 suggests – as it happened
Downing Street has signalled that Keir Starmer plans to ignore Liz Truss’s legal letter saying he should stop saying she crashed the economy because that, she claims, is untrue and libellous. (See 11.58am.)Asked about the letter at the morning lobby briefing, the PM’s spokesperson said:I am not sure I have seen the detail of the letter, but from what I can my gather, I don’t think the prime minister is the only person in the country who shares the view in relation to the previous government’s handling of the economy.I guess the question is whether she will be writing to millions of people up and down the country as well, who felt her economic record which pushed their mortgage bills up
Muskmania couldn’t save Steve Reed from the farmers, or himself | John Crace
It’s an ill wind, and all that. For most of the last week, the political agenda has been hijacked by a billionaire coming down from a ketamine high who had just discovered a child sexual abuse case that had been widely reported in this country for the past 12 years. Cue rightwing politicians indulging in competitive brown-nosing as they pretended they had always been interested in grooming gangs while the government tried to point out there had already been an inquiry and it was probably better to implement its recommendations rather than waste time and money with another one.This may have been an unwanted problem for Keir Starmer and the home secretary, who took the brunt of the unedifying shitshow, but for every other minister it came as something of a relief. They could all ease themselves back into the new year, secure in the knowledge that for once no one was paying them any attention
US seizure of Greenland is ‘not going to happen’, says David Lammy
The UK foreign secretary, David Lammy, has said a US military seizure of Greenland is not going to happen, as he played down Donald Trump’s threats to seize the territory from Denmark.“No Nato countries have gone to war [with each other] since the establishment of Nato, and I do not envisage that,” he said, adding: “It is not going to happen.”Lammy’s remarks, in a round of broadcast interviews in advance of a setpiece speech on Thursday, formed part of an array of views that exposed subtle differences with the Trump administration covering defence spending targets, the scale of the threat posed to Europe by Vladimir Putin, the return of the Islamic State-linked detainee Shamima Begum to the UK and the possibility of convincing China not to throw in its lot with Russia.The differences emerged despite Lammy insisting he was not in the business of condemning the UK’s closest ally, but they underline how taxing it may be for the Labour government to tread an independent course with a demanding Trump administration.The foreign secretary tried to square off the differences by arguing that much of what Trump said should not be taken literally
Americans stocking up on foreign goods before Trump tariffs: ‘a sense of urgency’
How could Trump’s second term affect DEI initiatives in the US?
TikTok ban: supreme court appears inclined to uphold law that could see app barred in US – as it happened
Let’s teach teenagers how to use smartphones responsibly | Letters
Why Mark Zuckerberg turned to Dana White to secure Maga’s favor | Karim Zidan
England’s Lauren Filer: ‘I don’t want to hurt anyone, but to get a few helmets is fun’