Labour is warning that unemployment in Britain could soar to levels not seen since the 1980s unless ministers boost support for businesses struggling because of the coronavirus lockdown restrictions. A new study from the House of Commons library shows that up to one million people could be added to the current jobless total of 2.8m, unless extra support is given from August.
Robert Jenrick overruled civil servants and lawyers to push through a £1bn property deal backed by the Tory donor Richard Desmond. A Whitehall whistleblower said the housing secretary dismissed officials' advice over the luxury housing plan in London’s Docklands. According to The Sunday Times, civil servants warned Jenrick that the development violated planning rules and was “70% to 80%” likely to be judicially reviewed.
The lockdown leave people dangerously vulnerable to new viruses, a leading epidemiologist has warned. Sunetra Gupta, professor of theoretical epidemiology at the University of Oxford, says the restrictions could weaken immune systems because people are not exposed to germs and so do not develop defences that could protect them against future pandemics. She said we could be “like clumps of trees waiting to be set ablaze”.
Russia secretly offered to pay Taliban-linked fighters to kill British and American soldiers in Afghanistan, according to reports in the US. The New York Times says there has been a major escalation by Moscow to undermine the White House and its coalition allies, including the UK, as President Donald Trump attempts to strike a peace deal with the Taliban.
Boris Johnson has vowed that his government will “not go back to the austerity of 10 years ago” ahead of a speech on Tuesday. Speaking to the Mail on Sunday, the prime minister said he will launch a new taskforce, led by the chancellor, which will look at speeding up the building of hospitals, schools and roads. “We are absolutely not going back to the austerity of 10 years ago,” he said.
Lisa Nandy, the shadow foreign secretary, says the UK must ban the import of goods from illegal settlements in the West Bank if the Israeli government presses ahead with annexation plans this week. She told The Observer the move would be a “major step” and require “courage that so far ministers have not been willing to show”, adding that “such a blatant breach of international law must have consequences”.
Ministers could impose the first local lockdown within days following a surge in coronavirus cases in Leicester. Sources say Matt Hancock, the health secretary, is “quite worried” and has been examining the legislation required for a shutdown after it was revealed there have been 658 coronavirus cases in the area in the two weeks to June 16.
Greta Thunberg has criticised world leaders for wanting to be pictured with her to “look good”. The teenage environmental campaigner told Swedish radio that the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, had queued up to have a “selfie” with her. She said: “Presidents, prime ministers, kings and princesses came and wanted to talk to me. It seemed as if they had forgotten for a moment to be ashamed that their generation had let future generations down.”
There are fears that no one will ever be held to account for the murder of WPC Yvonne Fletcher, who was killed by shots fired from the Libyan embassy in London in 1984. Critics say the government is ensuring the prime suspect, Saleh Ibrahim Mabrouk, will never face justice by secretly barring him from returning to Britain.
The Rolling Stones have warned Donald Trump that he could face legal action if he continues using their music at his campaign rallies. After the Trump campaign used the song You Can't Always Get What You Want at last week's rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, a statement from the band's legal team said it was working with the performing rights organisation, the BMI, to stop the unauthorised use of their music.
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