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We were never going to have a great British bonfire of the tax system after Brexit

We were never going to have a great British bonfire of the tax system after Brexit
cityam.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cityam.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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Breakfast

start to bring down inflation. the first is we need to do more to secure our own energy supplies, insulated homes, invest in nuclear and renewables. that is the cheapest form of energy and can get bills down. the second, the botched brexit deal means food and other prices are higher than they need to be because of extra bureaucracy at the border. we need to make improvements to the deal to improve the flow of goods and services to get prices down. and last in that package, we need to help people back into the labour market with hundreds of thousands in the uk who were working before the pandemic who now are not. if we could get some back into the labour market it would help deal with price rises. there are things we could do immediately to help with the cost of living. i have said over a year now that we need a proper windfall tax

Inflation , Energy-supplies , First , Insulated-homes , Renewables , Prices , Deal , Energy , Food , Bills , Border , Brexit-deal

trans-Pacific: UK signs treaty to join Trans-Pacific free trade bloc

The UK will now seek to ratify the agreement, which will include parliamentary scrutiny as the CPTPP member countries complete their legislative processes to admit Britain into the trading bloc - of which India is not a member. "I'm delighted to be here in New Zealand to sign a deal that will be a big boost for British businesses and deliver billions of pounds in additional trade, as well as open up huge opportunities and unparalleled access to a market of over 500 million people," said Badenoch.

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Brexit deal with EU branded 'yet another British capitulation' to Brussels | Politics | News

Brexiteer Ben Habib claims Jeremy Hunt and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak are 'ideologically set against an independent United Kingdom'.

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Breakfast

industry negotiators have called the disruption unnecessary and damaging. and the government, which has sign—off on any deal, has described the latest offer as fair and reasonable. at the moment, there's no sign of a breakthrough — and without one, we could be looking at another summer of strikes on the railway. katy austin, bbc news. a failed north korean satellite launch has prompted south korea and japan to warn millions of people to prepare to evacuate or seek shelter. siren. the launch of the rocket initially caused sirens to go off in the south korean capital seoul — but the warnings were quickly dropped after it became clear that it had crashed. let's talk to our seoul correspondentjean mackenzie. i guess, as the hours go by, we are beginning to get a sense of what has happened. bring us up to date,

Formula-one , Government , Brexit-deal , Disruption , Sign-off , Sign , Offer , Industry-negotiators , One , People , Strikes , Katy-austin

Breakfast

since the 1980s. let me explain why some have reached that conclusion. good morning. the plan is to build a huge factory in bridgwater in somerset. it'll make batteries for electric cars. it's thought 9,000 jobs will be created. jaguar land rover�*s owner, tata, was reportedly considering another site in spain. so this is being seen as a big win for the uk. tata's chairman is expected to meet the prime minister this week, to finalise a deal. it is profoundly significant. it's significant in the sense that, without it, the future for uk car manufacturing would start to look extremely bleak. so bridgwater is an interesting location. they of course had hinkley point c being constructed — still being constructed — for the last ten years, and that's built a lot of specialised construction capacity and some skilled employment in the area. and i do wonder if that's a key — been a key factor in the decision—making around

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Breakfast

to be edging closer. the boss of jaguar land rover is set to meet the prime minister this week to close a deal on a massive car battery plant in somerset. i'll be finding out what it all means. in sport, whose name will be on that plane as the england women's world cup squad's announced, with under 50 days to go until the start of the tournament? hello, we are celebrating 75 years of nhs charities through the portraits of the people whose work has benefited from the charity, all captured by the photographer rankin. some drizzle in places but through the day a lot of the cloud will push back towards the east, the best of the sunshine in the west. i will have all the details throughout the programme this morning.

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Breakfast

this specific location. the uk's car industry employs 800,000 people, and the government says it understands the need to invest in battery manufacturing to secure the sector's future. so far, there's only one battery plant operating in the uk and one other in the planning stage. by contrast, the eu has 35 open, under construction or planned. and last week, stellantis — one of the world's biggest car—makers — warned it may have to close uk factories if the government does not renegotiate the brexit deal. the firm, which owns vauxhall, peugeot, citroen and fiat, warned a previous commitment to make electric cars here was now under threat. so many will be hoping a deal with tata will help secure the industry's future here in the uk. but it comes with a big price tag. it's been reported that the total sum of incentives and subsidies runs into hundreds of millions of pounds.

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Breakfast

the cloud will slowly burn back towards the east as we head through the morning. and into the afternoon there should be a lot of sunshine around right across the capital. temperatures a bit higher than they were yesterday. we are more widely being 19 to maybe even 21 celsius. we still have the strength of that north—easterly wind. not quite as brisk as it was yesterday. this evening and overnight we will get plenty of cloud pushing for the west once again into thursday morning. thursday, once again the sunshine will eventually emerge. and it's looking similar for the rest of the week. hello, this is breakfast withjon kay and sally nugent. the boss of jaguar land—rover is said to be on the verge of finalising a deal with the government, to build a multi—billion—pound electric car battery plant in the uk. ben is looking at this for us this morning. yes, it's been described by some as the most significant investment in the uk car industry

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BBC News at Six

anticipating a recession, let alone a long recession. there are couple of reasons for that, the energy prices have of course followed in the international market. we have also had the government�*s northern ireland brexit deal which has helped confidence, say the imf. and there has also been better news elsewhere in the economy. but the imf does sound a warning sign about inflation, and we anticipate tomorrow morning that inflation will start to come down quite shortly, but it says this is not a cause for premature celebration because there are concerns about the stickiness of inflation, particularly in food prices, and they feel that interest rates may have to stay higher for longer. rates may have to stay higher for loner. . ~' ,, one of britain�*s top doctors says she�*s shocked by the findings of a bbc investigation into the contents of illegal vapes used by teenagers. a study of vapes confiscated from a school found some contained two times the safe amount of lead, six times the safe amount of chromium and nine times the safe amount of nickel. the bbc has been told they could cause severe health problems. 0ur health editor hugh pym reports.

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