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Germany's Merz held call with Trump on Ukraine arms deliveries

Germany's Merz held call with Trump on Ukraine arms deliveries

Reuters6 hours ago
BERLIN, July 4 (Reuters) - German Chancellor Friedrich Merz spoke with U.S. President Donald Trump on the phone on Thursday about arms deliveries to Ukraine, a spokesperson for the German leaders told Reuters.
Merz initiated the call with Trump, the spokesperson said on Friday.
Spiegel magazine first reported on the call.
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Just ignore Farage, Johnson tells Tories
Just ignore Farage, Johnson tells Tories

Telegraph

time5 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Just ignore Farage, Johnson tells Tories

Boris Johnson has said that the best strategy to counter Nigel Farage is to ignore him. Speaking to the Swiss magazine Weltwoche, the former prime minister pointed out that when he was leading the Conservatives, the Brexit Party – which changed its name to Reform UK in 2021 – was at 'zero per cent' in the polls. Some MPs have called for the former prime minister to return to the Commons to revive the fortunes of the Conservative Party, which is now being beaten in the polls by Reform. Mr Johnson said that while he felt 'a deep sense of regret' that he was 'not able to be useful', he could afford to return to politics because he had to pay for his wife Carrie's new kitchen. However, he did offer advice on how to tackle the threat from Reform, saying that the best thing was for political rivals to offer their own policies and not to talk about Mr Farage. 'My strategy with the individuals that you mention is don't talk about them,' he said. 'When I was running the UK, this party you mention was on zero per cent in the polls, sometimes 3 per cent max. Don't talk about them. Talk about what you are going to offer the people.' The Brexit Party was on 19 per cent in the polls when Mr Johnson took over as prime minister in July 2019. By the general election in December, that had fallen to 2 per cent. Mr Johnson was speaking a year on from the general election, at which Reform secured five seats with 14.3 per cent of the vote and the Tories lost 252 seats, recording a 23.2 per cent vote share. The most recent survey of voting intention by YouGov has Reform on 26 per cent, Labour on 24 per cent, and the Conservatives on 17 per cent. In the May local elections, Reform wiped out Conservative councils across England in an historic sweep. Mr Farage's party won control of seven local authorities and became the largest party in three others. Both Sir Keir Starmer and Kemi Badenoch, the Tory leader, have been accused of spending too much time addressing the threat from Reform. In March, in an interview with The Telegraph, Mrs Badenoch dismissed Mr Farage as a reality TV star, saying government was not an episode of I'm a Celebrity. Mr Farage retorted that it was a good thing that people know who he was, and compared his television past with that of Donald Trump. In May, Sir Keir gave a speech dedicated to attacking Reform. The Prime Minister declared the Right-wing party his main opposition, and said that the Conservatives had 'run out of road'. His efforts to tackle Reform have backfired, however. He echoed the party's hard-line stance on migration in a speech last month, when he said that Britain was at risk of becoming an 'island of strangers', but it was met with fury from Labour MPs and he later said he regretted using the phrase. I'm trying to pay for Carrie's kitchen Mr Johnson said he was sorry that he was 'not able to be useful' to the Conservative Party. 'I feel a deep sense of regret that I'm not able to be useful today,' he said. Asked whether he would consider returning to power – as Cincincattus later did in Rome – he implied that he could not afford to. 'Rome is in good hands and I'm very happy,' he said. 'I'm engaged in the innocent task of trying to pay for my wife's kitchen refurbishment which is extremely expensive and difficult and that's basically what I'm doing.' While in office Mr Johnson is said to have privately complained about the cost of refurbishing the Downing Street flat he shared with his wife. A row over who funded the redecoration, which came to more than £100,000 with thousands spent on luxury wallpaper, fuelled a backlash among Tory MPs. 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'They thought the millions of EU nationals were all leaving and they were not… They panicked when we couldn't find people to stack the shelves and drive the trucks after Covid but the crucial thing is that we took back full legal control and can rectify such mistakes immediately while Starmer would surrender control again to the EU.' A European Union research document last week claimed Brexit was the main driver of Britain's worsening migration crisis, stating that the post-Brexit 'liberalisation of migration laws' caused a record increase in net migration. But Mr Johnson defended Brexit, saying it saved lives during the Covid pandemic because it meant the nation was able to roll out vaccines quickly. 'Brexit was a wonderful thing and is a wonderful thing and I love Brexit more and more with a weird intensity because it's about freedom and autonomy is the most wonderful thing for people, for countries, for families,' he said. 'We saved lives because of Brexit and we were able to get our economy moving again faster because of Brexit.' Mr Johnson also addressed the conflict in the Middle East, downplaying the suggestion of imminent regime change in Iran. 'I've become a bit of a sceptic about the value of regime change in the Middle East,' he said. 'Countries need to make their own decisions about their governments. You can't impose a new government. We tried it in Iraq, we tried it in Libya, it wasn't a great success… 'I may be wrong but I don't think there will be regime change very soon in Tehran. That's not the information I'm getting.' A Reform source said: 'Boris Johnson did unprecedented damage to this country. He is the mastermind behind the mass immigration experiment. 'Whilst he tries to save and rewrite his legacy of mass immigration and net zero, Reform is offering the country real change.'

Roller-coaster week sends UK yields higher
Roller-coaster week sends UK yields higher

Daily Mail​

time10 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Roller-coaster week sends UK yields higher

UK borrowing costs have seen their first weekly rise since May after a 'rollercoaster' ride sparked by growing fears about Labour's handling of the public finances. Ten-year borrowing costs shot close to 4.7 per cent on Wednesday after a tearful House of Commons appearance by Chancellor Rachel Reeves sparked doubts about her future. And though the moves in UK bonds – known as gilts – were mainly reversed in the following days as the Prime Minister backed Reeves, the episode added to worries sparked by the Government's humiliating climbdown on welfare reforms on Tuesday. Yields last night ended the week at 4.56 per cent, up from 4.5 per cent the previous Friday. It was the first weekly increase after a steady run of declines since mid-May. That partly reflected global moves as US bond yields turned higher thanks to worries about America's ballooning debt and trade tariffs. Nevertheless, it will pile further pressure on the beleaguered Chancellor as the increased borrowing costs will make it even harder to balance the books. Oliver Faizallah, head of fixed income research at wealth advisers Charles Stanley, said: 'This week's blowout was a reminder that the gilt market will not take kindly to excess borrowing.' Yields on UK ten-year bonds, known as gilts, began the week at around 4.5 per cent and eased close to 4.4 per cent ahead of the welfare vote in Parliament on Tuesday night – when it seemed Labour would manage largely to push through its plans. But last-minute concessions that helped the Government win the vote wiped out the intended savings. That blew a £5billion hole in the Chancellor's plans and sending yields racing towards 4.5 per cent the next day, before they climbed even further after Reeves' Commons appearance. It added to the damage to public finances caused by a previous U-turn on winter fuel payments, a deteriorating growth outlook and an increased commitment to defence spending. Andrew Goodwin, of Oxford Economics, said the volatility in gilts 'emphasises the need for fiscal discipline'. The sharp rise in yields reflected anxiety in the markets that, despite the Labour Chancellor's dismal economic record so far, her successor might prove even more of a worry by loosening the Government's commitment to balancing the books. Instead, ministers will need to try to find the missing billions elsewhere. Goodwin said: 'The experience will have demonstrated to the Government that markets will likely look unfavourably on any further loosening of the fiscal rules, increasing the chances that we see large tax rises in the Budget this autumn.'

Hamas says it has given ‘positive' response to latest ceasefire proposal
Hamas says it has given ‘positive' response to latest ceasefire proposal

BreakingNews.ie

time14 minutes ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Hamas says it has given ‘positive' response to latest ceasefire proposal

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