用户名/邮箱
登录密码
验证码
看不清?换一张
您好,欢迎访问! [ 登录 | 注册 ]
您的位置:首页 - 最新资讯
Boris Johnson latest news: Rishi Sunak warns UK facing cost-of-living ‘perfect storm’ | The Independent
2022-05-19 00:00:00.0     独立报-英国政治     原网页

       

       ?

       Close

       Inflation hits 40-year high as energy bills soar

       Rishi Sunak has called on businesses to “invest, train and innovate” more to help boost domestic prosperity as he called the supply shocks in Britain a “perfect storm”.

       Warning that the “next few months will be tough”, Mr Sunak in a speech to the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) on Wednesday, said he stood ready to do more to help families cope with the impact of inflation.

       Speaking at the annual dinner of the business organisation, he said: “We are on your side and will help them increase productivity and enterprise by cutting tax.”

       “In the autumn Budget we will cut your taxes to encourage you to do all those thing,” he said. “That is the path to higher productivity, higher living standards, and a more prosperous and secure future.”

       Informing about the government’s plans aimed at tackling the cost of living crisis, Mr Sunak said “we have provided £22bn of direct support, and we are going further. In October, we’re cutting energy bills by a further £200.

       "In just a few weeks’ time, the national insurance threshold will increase to £12,500.”

       Recommended Rishi Sunak says government can’t stop inflation as clamour grows to help poorest Young adults ‘fear they’ll never start a family’ due to cost-of-living crisis Michael Fabricant condemned for ‘shameful’ joke about Tory MP accused of rape Porn, sexual assault, rape – Westminster’s dangerous underbelly is finally exposed

       Key points Sunak says government can’t stop inflation amid growing clamour to help poorest Chancellor calls on businesses to ‘invest and innovate’ amid ‘perfect storm’ ‘Middle-class coke heads’ taking drugs at football matches to face five-year ban ‘Police should use discretion if cost-of-living crisis fuels rise in crime’

       Show latest update 1652942129 Doctors ‘let down by government’ during pandemic

       The British Medical Association launched a scathing attack on the government for failing “in its duty of care” to doctors during the coronavirus crisis.

       The union, which conducted its own review of the government’s handling of the crisis, slammed it for failing to provide doctors with enough personal protective equipment in the early stages of the pandemic.

       Four in five doctors said they did not feel adequately protected during the first wave of the virus, according to the BMA report.

       One doctor quoted in the report said: “We made our own, and bought our own when we could find any, we depended on friends sourcing FFP3 masks, my son’s school was 3D printing visors.”

       Read the details here:

       Doctors let down by Government during Covid-19 pandemic, says BMA Leading medics have penned a scathing report about the Government’s response to the crisis.

       Namita Singh 19 May 2022 07:35

       1652939947 Calls to bring government aid rise amid Chancellor’s warning of economic ‘storm’

       The Treasury has been called on to bring benefit and pension rises forward to help the nation’s most vulnerable, as the Chancellor warned of a “perfect storm” of supply shocks rocking Britain over the next few months.

       Karl Handscomb, senior economist at the Resolution Foundation think tank, said waiting for the annual increase in April 2023 was “a recipe for more debt”, adding: “The main thing is the need to provide more support for those highly reliant on benefits.

       “If (the Treasury) get started now, they can do it before the next energy price rise in October,” he told the BBC.

       Read the details here:

       Calls to bring support rises forward as Chancellor warns of economic ‘storm’ Rishi Sunak called on businesses to ‘invest, train and innovate more’ to help boost productivity and improve the long-term prosperity of the UK.

       Namita Singh 19 May 2022 06:59

       1652939215 Liz Truss claimed only Irish people hit by Brexit would be ‘a few farmers with turnips’

       Cabinet minister Liz Truss once claimed that the impact of a no-deal Brexit on Ireland would only affect “a few farmers with turnips in their trucks”, a former UK diplomat has claimed.

       Alexandra Hall Hall resigned her diplomatic role in the US in 2019 – saying she no longer wished to “peddle half-truths” on behalf of leaders she did not “trust”.

       Responding to the foreign secretary’s plan to override parts of the Northern Ireland Protocol, Ms Hall Hall said she was “so pleased to see Liz Truss become a genuine expert on Irish matters”.

       Adam Forrest has the details:

       Truss accused of making ‘turnip farmers’ Brexit remark about Ireland Former official says minister made dismissive remark during US visit

       Namita Singh 19 May 2022 06:46

       1652938567 Government to face court hearing over links to PPE supplier accused of modern slavery

       Legal action taken against the government’s decision to continue working with a PPE manufacturer accused of labour abuses is set to proceed to a full judicial hearing, in the first case of its kind to consider the presence of modern slavery in the UK’s supply chain.

       The High Court granted permission for The Citizens, a non-profit group, to proceed in challenging the decision to continue using the UK subsidiary of the Malaysian company, Supermax, as an approved supplier of disposable gloves for NHS workers.

       Supermax has faced multiple allegations of modern slavery, stretching back to 2019. The US has banned imports from the company after an investigation found “ample evidence” of forced labour within its factories, while Canada has also ceased business with the firm over similar concerns.

       Our senior news correspondent Samuel Lovett reports:

       Government to face court hearing over links to PPE supplier accused of modern slavery The government is facing legal action over its decision to continue using Supermax as a supplier of disposable gloves for NHS workers

       Namita Singh 19 May 2022 06:36

       1652938469 Lord Kinnock says wife’s Alzheimer’s is a challenge but he ‘deals with it out of love’

       Former Labour leader Lord Kinnock has said the hardest part of being married to someone with dementia is “the knowledge that the change is going to continue and they are ceasing, very gradually, to be the person that they have been”.

       Baroness Kinnock, 77, herself a former minister, was diagnosed in 2017 with Alzheimer’s disease, it was revealed earlier this year.

       Talking of his wife’s condition, he said: “Glenys is a highly articulate, immensely lively, funny woman, a brilliant cook, wonderful mother and grandmother - and in all of those areas she has lost capability.

       “She would meet every challenge, whether it was border guards in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, or a new recipe, she would take it on.”

       Ex-Labour leader says disease makes his wife extremely frustrated and is a challenge to him, reports Jane Dalton.

       Lord Kinnock says wife’s Alzheimer’s is challenge but he ‘deals with it out of love’ Ex-Labour leader says disease makes his wife extremely frustrated and is a challenge to him

       Namita Singh 19 May 2022 06:34

       1652937509 International law should be applied to cyberspace, Attorney General to say

       International law should be applied to cyberspace to make it clear when a nation state has acted unlawfully and what action can be legally taken in response to a cyberattack, the Attorney General will say.

       Suella Braverman will speak on Thursday at the Chatham House foreign affairs think tank to set out the UK’s position on cybersecurity and international law and how it can help inform decisions on what constitutes unlawful action.

       Ms Braverman is expected to use the speech to highlight how a united international approach to the issue would help establish and shape such a framework, highlighting the global response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as an example.

       International law should be applied to cyberspace, Attorney General to say Suella Braverman will use a speech at the Chatham House think tank to lay out the Government’s position on the issue.

       Namita Singh 19 May 2022 06:18

       1652936645 Rishi Sunak says government can’t stop inflation as clamour grows to help poorest

       Rishi Sunak has said there is nothing the government can do to stop rising inflation impacting Britain’s families, as he resists clamour from Conservatives – including former chancellor Kenneth Clarke – for urgent help for those struggling with price hikes.

       Instead, Mr Sunak used a speech to the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) to promise tax breaks for business in the autumn Budget, aimed at stimulating sluggish productivity.

       As inflation topped 9 per cent for the first time in 40 years, and experts warned that the true rise in living costs was closer to 11 per cent for the poorest families, the chancellor said he was powerless to stem global pressures such as the pandemic, war in Ukraine, and supply chain disruption.

       There is no measure any government could take, no law we could pass, that can make these global forces disappear overnight. The next few months will be tough.

       Rishi Sunak

       My colleagues Andrew Woodcock and Anna Isaac report:

       Rishi Sunak admits he can’t stop inflation, as clamour grows for help for poor Chancellor offers tax breaks to business, but shuns calls for new help for families

       Namita Singh 19 May 2022 06:04

       1652936275 Government to unveil new £600mn plan to fight benefit fraud

       The Government is expected to unveil a new £600 million plan to fight benefit fraud and save the taxpayer £2 billion over the next three years.

       The plan will involve 2,000 trained specialists reviewing two million universal credit claims over the next five years.

       Department of Work and Pensions officers will also be bolstered with new powers, including undertaking arrests, executing warrants, conducting searches and seizing evidence.

       Read the details in this report:

       New £600m plan to fight benefit fraud to be unveiled The plan will involve 2,000 trained specialists reviewing two million universal credit claims over the next five years.

       Namita Singh 19 May 2022 05:57

       1652934812 ‘Middle-class coke heads’ taking drugs at football matches to face five-year ban

       “Middle-class coke heads” could face a football ban of five-year is convicted of selling or taking class A drugs at matches, said the government.

       Policing minister Kit Malthouse announced the rule on Thursday. The measure is aimed at the government’s attempt to tackle a rise in violence and disorder at sports matches.

       Boris Johnson said the drug habits of “middle-class coke heads” are driving crime across the UK.

       Middle-class coke heads should stop kidding themselves, their habit is feeding a war on our streets driving misery and crime across our country and beyond. That’s why we are stepping up our efforts to make sure those who break the law face the full consequences - because taking illegal drugs is never a victimless crime.

       Boris Johnson

       The new punishments will be implemented by extending Football Banning Orders, reports my colleague Andy Gregory:

       Cocaine-fuelled football hooligans to be given five-year match ban Police are increasingly finding class A drugs ‘at heart of disorder’ at games, minister says

       Namita Singh 19 May 2022 05:33

       1652934102 ‘Police should use discretion if cost-of-living crisis fuels rise in crime’

       The cost-of-living crisis will “invariably” fuel a rise in crime and police should use “discretion” when deciding whether to prosecute people desperate to eat, the new HM chief inspector of constabulary has said.

       As inflation hit a 40-year high on Wednesday, which experts warned was unevenly impacting poorer households, Andy Cooke said that he expected a corresponding rise in petty crime will “be a challenge for policing to deal with”.

       I think whenever you see an increase in the cost of living or whenever you see more people dropping into poverty, I think you’ll invariably see a rise in crime.

       Andy Cooke

       My colleague Andy Gregory reports:

       Police should use ‘discretion’ if cost-of-living crisis fuels crime, watchdog says Rising prices will ‘be challenge for policing to deal with’, Andy Cooke warns

       Namita Singh 19 May 2022 05:21

       Newer 1 / 2 Older

       


标签:政治
关键词: government     crisis     Namita     Rishi Sunak     crime     Singh     inflation    
滚动新闻