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Embassies should see cars clamped for congestion charge debts

Embassies should see cars clamped for congestion charge debts

Baroness Jones of Moulsecoomb said the Government had 'far too much patience' with indebted foreign governments, while Lib Dem foreign affairs spokesman Lord Purvis of Tweed called for ministers to discuss outstanding fees with US President Donald Trump during his September visit.
Responding, Foreign Office minister Baroness Chapman of Darlington described diplomacy as 'an art'.
She said the fee for driving in inner London was a 'charge' rather than a tax, which embassies should pay.
According to Transport for London, the US embassy based south of the River in Nine Elms owes almost £15.5 million in congestion charge debts.
The Japanese mission faces debts of more than £10.6 million, while the Chinese embassy racked up a £10.3 million debt between 2003 and March 31 2025.
Lord Purvis referred to a diplomatic reception held at the Foreign Office in central London and asked: 'Should we not start instituting a drop-off and collection fee at King Charles Street just as long as we get our money back?'
The Liberal Democrat also said Mr Trump 'would certainly not want a reputation of not paying fines' and said: 'When he comes for the state visit, can we ensure that this is part of the agenda so that there's no congestion in the city of London from the American delegation and they pay us what they owe?'
Baroness Chapman replied that there was a 'whole range of measures' open to the Government, and that she would 'take on board' the one which Lord Purvis suggested.
'Others include encouraging the use perhaps of public transport or cycling or walking around our wonderful city, but he suggests that we raise these matters directly with our counterparts, and I can assure him that we do just that,' the minister added.
Former London Assembly Labour leader Lord Harris of Haringey asked: 'Would it, for example, be possible to clamp the cars that have done this, because I suspect that might concentrate the minds?'
Following him, the Green Party's Baroness Jones said: 'This has been going on ever since the congestion charge first came in.
'They've racked up these debts and I love Lord Harris's idea – we should clamp them all.
'We have a record of which cars have infringed the congestion charge. We clamp them all.'
Baroness Chapman told peers: 'All I would say is that diplomacy is an art and it comes more naturally to some than to others perhaps.'
She added: 'I think it's right that we don't escalate this issue above some of our very real concerns around security and defence and trade that we seek to work very closely with our counterparts on.'
Their exchanges were triggered by a question from Labour peer Lord Faulkner of Worcester, who asked about Government efforts to claw back unpaid business rates, parking fines and London congestion charges in April and May.
Baroness Chapman said that the Government had received 31 responses to the exercise earlier this year.
'Some agreed to settle debts, other disputed charges, and some refused to pay the London congestion charge claiming exemption under the Vienna Convention,' the minister said.
'FCDO (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) action since April 3 2025 has helped reduce national non-domestic rates debt by £287,142, car parking fines debt by £7,035 and London congestion charge debt by £7,430.'
To laughter, Conservative shadow foreign office minister Lord Callanan said: 'I think there is unity across the House on this one.
'I think we're all amused by the prospect of some poor parking warden having to put a ticket on President Trump's limousine and what might happen to him from the actions of the secret service.
'But it is of course that conduct of diplomatic staff is a reflection of important values, respect, dignity and mutual recognition between nations, so following on from the reply that she gave to the Liberal Democrats, will (Baroness Chapman) consider linking future privileges or engagement opportunities to the good standing of diplomatic missions in their civic responsibilities, so as to encourage greater accountability?'
The minister said she would keep the situation 'under close consideration'.
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Scotland will be at ‘forefront of UK's technological revolution', says Murray
Scotland will be at ‘forefront of UK's technological revolution', says Murray

The Independent

time25 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Scotland will be at ‘forefront of UK's technological revolution', says Murray

Scotland is in line for billions of pounds of investment, the UK Government said as it announced plans to site an AI Growth Zone north of the border. Scottish Secretary Ian Murray said the move will help put the country at the 'forefront of the UK's technological revolution'. It was announced as part of the UK Government's Compute Roadmap, which promises £1 billion to expand the country's AI research resource 20-fold over the next five years. It is understood several promising sites for the AI Growth Zone – which ministers hope will speed up the rollout of vital infrastructure like data centres – have already been identified in Scotland. It is hoped researchers and businesses at the centres will be able to process huge amounts of data to deliver the next generation of breakthroughs and innovations – including potentially finding new ways to treat and beat diseases, speeding up how we can diagnose conditions like cancer, and even using AI to help in the fight against climate change. Confirmation of an AI Growth Zone for Scotland comes after the UK Government announced £750 million of funding to build the UK's new national supercomputer at the University of Edinburgh. As part of the Compute Roadmap, ministers have now also confirmed the capital will be home to the UK's first National Supercomputing Centre. This will be a dedicated centre of expertise, with individual sites hosting everything from large data sets to cutting-edge processing power. Science, Innovation and Technology Secretary Peter Kyle said: 'From the shipyards of the Clyde to developments in steam engine technology, Scottish trailblazers were central to the industrial revolution. 'AI is this generation's next great industrial leap, so who better to help drive that change than a nation with innovation hardwired in its DNA.'We've set out an ambitious plan to cement our position as a global leader in AI, with Scotland set to play a key role – unlocking fresh investment and new opportunities. That's how we're putting our Plan for Change into action.' Mr Murray said: 'This is a landmark moment and will place Scotland at the forefront of the UK's technological revolution. 'The up to £750 million investment in Edinburgh's new supercomputer also places Scotland at the cutting edge of computing power globally. 'This will see Scotland playing a leading role in creating breakthroughs that have a global benefit – such as new medicines, health advances, and climate change solutions. 'This is the Plan for Change – delivering real opportunities and economic growth for communities across Scotland.' Scottish Government business minister Richard Lochhead said: 'With our world-renowned talent for research, innovation and ingenuity, Scotland is perfectly placed to capitalise on AI's rapid growth and be a supplier of this transformational technology, not just a consumer. 'We are also home to vital supporting and enabling infrastructure – from good-quality digital connectivity to the abundant renewable energy supplies needed to power the huge demand from computer processing in a sustainable way. 'The UK Government's confirmation that an AI Growth Zone and National Supercomputing Centre will be established in Scotland is welcome. 'It will help unlock new opportunities for businesses, researchers, citizens and communities — supporting high-quality jobs through economic growth and boosting productivity.'

AI to unlock 'billions of pounds of investment and thousands of new jobs' in Scotland
AI to unlock 'billions of pounds of investment and thousands of new jobs' in Scotland

Scotsman

time26 minutes ago

  • Scotsman

AI to unlock 'billions of pounds of investment and thousands of new jobs' in Scotland

Scotland to be epicentre of 'next great industrial leap' as AI Growth Zone confirmed Sign up to our Politics newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Scotland is poised to be at the centre of 'this generation's next great industrial leap' with billions of pounds of investment and thousands of new jobs created after the UK government earmarked an AI Growth Zone to be established north of the Border. The country's booming offshore wind industry is set to power the strategy - which could see data centres and other crucial technology infrastructure built. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Data centres could be built in Scotland as part of an AI Growth Zone The UK government has pointed to Scotland's access to wind, hydro and solar power sources making up a renewable energy capacity of 17.6 GW – enough to power more than 10 million homes . Labour UK ministers see it as an ideal base to help drive forward the UK's AI agenda, but other emerging sectors, including low carbon hydrogen are hoping to take advantage of an excess in renewable electricity being generated. The Scottish Government has welcomed the announcement and it is understood that devolved enterprise agencies north of the Border are working with partners that are seeking to support credible investment proposals and ensure Scottish content can be maximised in the construction and operation of the facilities. AI Growth Zones were unveiled by the UK government in January – and will serve as dedicated hotbeds for AI that speed up the rollout of vital infrastructure like data centres which are crucial to the technology's development. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad READ MORE: New supercomputer for Scotland and funding for Acorn Project confirmed in Spending Review Concerns have been raised about the scale-up of AI - including around jobs, security, reliability and the sheer amount of energy required to power AI data centres amid the climate crisis when energy demand will need to be reduced. The UK government believes new data centres will allow researchers and businesses to process huge amounts of data to deliver the next generation of breakthroughs and innovations. It is hoped the technology can assist efforts to find new ways to treat and cure diseases, speed up how conditions like cancer can be diagnosed - while there are even ambitions to use AI to help in the fight against climate change. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad AI is being harnessed in Scotland to develop a 25-minute skin cancer diagnosis test - with artificial intelligence projects around skin and breast cancer diagnostics being pushed forward. The rollout will mean that permanent, high-skilled jobs alongside construction roles will be created with the UK government hoping to scale up the sector at pace. In a further boost for the Scottish economy, Edinburgh will be home to the UK's first national supercomputing centre after Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced up to £750 million of funding for the project in last month's Spending Review. Previous plans for a supercomputer at University of Edinburgh's Advanced Computing Facility were shelved by the UK govenrment The centre, to be based at Edinburgh University, will work as a dedicated centre of expertise, with individual sites hosting everything from large data sets and cutting-edge processing power, to linking up researchers and academics with leading talent in their region. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It is hoped the new supercomputer will give scientists from across the UK the capacity needed to carry out research – including related to personalised medical treatments, making air travel more sustainable or modelling climate change. The supercomputer plan was initially shelved by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer's Labour government last August amid reported concerns the project was not focused enough on artificial intelligence. That move angered SNP First Minister John Swinney who claimed projects in Scotland were being neglected in favour of investment projects south of the Border. The supercomputer will work alongside an AI research resource (AIRR), a network of the UK's most powerful supercomputers, that were built to bolster scientific research. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The AIRR is already being used to research Alzheimer's vaccines and treatments for cancer by simulating how drugs work inside the body and 'testing' millions of potential drugs virtually to speed up the creation of new medicines. UK Science, Innovation, and Technology Secretary, Peter Kyle, said: 'From the shipyards of the Clyde to developments in steam engine technology, Scottish trailblazers were central to the industrial revolution. Labour MP and Tech and Science Secretary | Getty Images 'AI is this generation's next great industrial leap, so who better to help drive that change than a nation with innovation hardwired in its DNA.' He added: 'We've set out an ambitious plan to cement our position as a global leader in AI, with Scotland set to play a key role – unlocking fresh investment and new opportunities. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'That's how we're putting our plan for change into action.' Scottish Secretary, Ian Murray, said the announcement was 'a landmark moment' that 'will place Scotland at the forefront of the UK's technological revolution'. Scottish Secretary Ian Murray | PA He added: 'The up to £750 million investment in Edinburgh's new supercomputer also places Scotland at the cutting edge of computing power globally. 'This will see Scotland playing a leading role in creating breakthroughs that have a global benefit - such as new medicines, health advances, and climate change solutions. This is the plan for change – delivering real opportunities and economic growth for communities across Scotland." Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The Labour plans form part of the new compute roadmap, a strategy aimed at reducing reliance on foreign processing power and transform the UK's public compute capacity. By 2030, the UK government expects this capacity to increase to 420 AI exaFLOP – the equivalent of one billion people spending 13,316 years doing what the system will do in one second. To support the plans, researchers, academics and tech bosses have been brought together to develop an AI science strategy to be published in the autumn. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The group includes Google DeepMind vice-president Pushmeet Kohli, vice-president of the Royal Society Alison Noble and chairwoman of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Charlotte Deane. Ms Reeves said the plans would 'transform our public services, drive innovation and fuel economic growth that puts money in people's pockets'. SNP Business Minister, Richard Lochhead, said the Westminster announcement was 'welcome', adding that Holyrood will work 'collaboratively with the UK government to make sure 'Scotland is at the heart of this globally-important industry'. Richard Lochhead He said: 'With our world-renowned talent for research, innovation and ingenuity Scotland is perfectly placed to capitalise on AI's rapid growth and be a supplier of this transformational technology, not just a consumer. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'We are also home to vital supporting and enabling infrastructure - from good quality digital connectivity to the abundant renewable energy supplies needed to power the huge demand from computer processing in a sustainable way.' 'The UK government's confirmation that an AI Growth Zone and national supercomputing centre will be established in Scotland is welcome', he added. 'It will help unlock new opportunities for businesses, researchers, citizens and communities—supporting high-quality jobs through economic growth and boosting productivity. 'The Scottish Government and our enterprise agencies have been working with prospective Scottish AI Growth Zone projects to support high quality bids into the national selection process being led by the UK government. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad

Andy Beshear, a Democratic governor in a state Trump won by 30 points, tests a 2028 message in South Carolina
Andy Beshear, a Democratic governor in a state Trump won by 30 points, tests a 2028 message in South Carolina

NBC News

time26 minutes ago

  • NBC News

Andy Beshear, a Democratic governor in a state Trump won by 30 points, tests a 2028 message in South Carolina

GREENVILLE, S.C. — In an early preview of a potential 2028 presidential campaign, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear hit the road across South Carolina this week, testing a message focused on how to grow the Democratic coalition. 'The actions of the Trump administration are providing a huge opportunity for Democrats to go out and regain the trust of the American people to be the party of common sense, common ground and getting things done,' Beshear, 47, told union members gathered at the South Carolina AFL-CIO convention in Greenville on Wednesday. 'When we deliver and make people's lives better, they're willing to vote in different ways. They're willing to support different people, and that's where we've got to be,' the Kentucky governor, who is serving his second term in a deep-red state, added. Throughout his remarks to voters in Greenville and at small gatherings of local Democratic officials from Columbia to Charleston, Beshear laid out a blueprint for Democrats to win back rural voters, union voters, independent voters and even Republicans — music to the ears of Democratic voters still feeling the sting of 2024's losses and eager to hear about how the party can rise again. Though he insisted that his travel to South Carolina came about partly because of his son's baseball tournament near Charleston, Beshear hasn't been coy about his presidential aspirations before arriving in the state that voted first in last year's Democratic presidential primaries. And his pitch sounded very much like something he could sell to voters selecting the party's next national leader in a few years' time. In an interview with NBC News' 'Meet the Press' just days before he arrived in South Carolina, Beshear said he would ' take a look ' at launching a presidential campaign in 2028. He's at least the fourth Democratic elected official to publicly visit the state this year, arriving just a week after California Gov. Gavin Newsom and several weeks after Govs. Wes Moore of Maryland and Tim Walz of Minnesota. Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., also has an event planned in the state later this week. Winning back 'everyday' voters At stop after stop, Beshear notes that he knows how to win voters in traditionally Republican areas. After all, he's done it twice. The first time was in 2019, when he won his first gubernatorial election by less than half a percentage point, beating incumbent GOP Gov. Matt Bevin. In 2023, Beshear improved his margins, beating then-state Attorney General Daniel Cameron, a Republican, by five percentage points. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump won Kentucky by almost 26 percentage points in 2020 and by over 30 percentage points in 2024. 'We have a huge opportunity right now. Donald Trump is tearing apart our democratic norms,' Beshear told union members at the Greenville event. 'He's gutting the social safety net. He's weaponizing our national guards. He's fraying our international alliances, and he is decimating our intelligence community and our public health expertise.' All of that, Beshear explained, makes it a prime opportunity for Democrats to 'win back voters who have been increasingly skeptical of that Democratic brand. But it's going to take focus, and it's going to take discipline. We've got to talk to people and not at them, and we have to explain our why.' That last piece — 'explain our why' — was Beshear's main task for Democrats across the state. 'The Democrats are real good at the 'what,'' Beshear told Democratic strategists and elected officials gathered Wednesday in Columbia. 'I mean, our policy positions are 10 times longer than anybody else's.' 'But what we rarely talk about is why we're for that policy,' the governor added. 'For me, my 'why' is my faith. I'm guided by the golden rule that says I love my neighbor as myself and the parable of The Good Samaritan that says, 'Everyone is my neighbor.' And when you explain your 'why,' even when you make tough decisions, even in states like mine and yours, it creates the grace and the space for people to disagree.' The governor, in Greenville, added, 'this is how I won areas in eastern Kentucky — Appalachia — that normally vote for Republicans by large margins.' Beshear's cross-party appeal in a deep-red state is attractive to South Carolina Democrats, who work under Republican supermajorities in the state House and Senate and haven't controlled the governor's mansion since former Gov. Jim Hodges finished his tenure in 2003. 'One thing I like about Gov. Beshear, especially for this state, is that track record of being able to appeal to the everyday person across party lines,' state Sen. Tameika Isaac Devine told NBC News. 'I think we're going to have to have somebody who can not only excite people but actually has a track record of getting elected and getting stuff done.' At the Columbia event, Hodges introduced Beshear, telling the assembled Democrats to laughter and applause that, 'One of the reasons we want him here today is … to talk about something that I think we lose sight of sometimes as Democrats, and that's winning. Hodges added that he was asked, 'If a certain governor would consider running for president, what would be the most important attribute that he might bring to the table?' 'And I said, 'Well, he knows how to win.' That's a great place to start,' the former governor said. A prescription for the Democratic Party The governor used his events, which included several meet-and-greets with local Democratic leaders and elected officials, to offer his party a way to move forward through the second Trump term and into a post-Trump era. 'We've got to be more than just against someone. We've got to be for something, and that overall 'something' has to be a better life for the American people,' Beshear told NBC News in an interview in Greenville. Later, during the Columbia meet-and-greet event, Jeremy Jones, the chair of Young Democrats of Central Midlands, told NBC News that he's 'been an Andy fan for a long time.' Asked to describe what he hopes to see in a potential future Democratic presidential nominee, Jones said, 'Someone who is a good leader, very aggressive, knows how to fight back and be unapologetically Democrat, even if it's not popular.' Minutes later, Beshear, in a brief speech to attendees, said, 'We've got to speak out, even in places where we might be in the super-minority. We've got to be unapologetically the Democrats that we are. And we have to show people that when you elect us, we lift up Democrats, Republicans and independents.' After facing steep losses in the 2024 presidential election, prominent Democratic officials started pointing fingers, blaming Democrats' problems on the insistence that supporters use inclusive language or on the aging party officials who refused to step aside. Sen. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., told POLITICO that instead of the term 'oligarchy,' Democrats should rail against 'kings.' And former Democratic National Committee Vice Chair David Hogg earned a rebuke from DNC Chair Ken Martin after he announced his plans to boost primary challengers against aging Democratic elected officials. On Wednesday, during the event in Columbia, Beshear appeared to take Slotkin's side on the language argument, 'Every Kentuckian, including myself, knows about a dozen people that are no longer with us. A child of God taken far too soon. I didn't lose one of my friends to substance use disorder. I lost them all to addiction.' 'Another example,' Beshear added, invoking the massive GOP-backed domestic policy package that President Donald Trump signed earlier this month called the 'One Big Beautiful Bill Act.' 'That big, ugly bill is not only going to gut rural health care and hit our rural economies, it's going to decrease food assistance all over this country. We're not going to be able to change and push back on that if we say it's going to increase food insecurity; what it's going to do is make people go hungry.' Both comments earned nods and sounds of approval from the dozens of Democrats gathered around the room. Democrats have been grappling with questions about age and experience since before former President Joe Biden, 82, dropped out of the 2024 presidential race amid widespread concerns about his debate performance and whether he was up to the job. Beshear called on his party to 'empower' young leaders and encouraged young Democrats to 'embrace' leadership positions. 'For me, I hate this phrase 'young leader' because, if you're leading, you're already a leader, and making sure that we don't have pejorative terms for those that we ought to be lifting up and listening to,' the governor told NBC News. The first test: 2026 Beshear will chair the Democratic Governors Association in the 2026 midterm elections, helping direct attention, votes and money to 36 gubernatorial races across the nation. In an interview, he said that he plans to use his position to express his fierce opposition to the 'One Big Beautiful Bill Act,' which, in part, imposed massive funding cuts to Medicaid and nutritional assistance programs. 'Democrats can and should get out there to make sure that we're telling the American people what this bill is going to do, and who is doing it to them, because the midterms could be a strong rebuke to ripping health care away from so many people, to firing so many health care workers, and hopefully give us the opportunity to undo a lot of this damage,' Beshear said. Longer term, the governor said, he hopes that his call for Democrats to focus on the issues most important to American families will appeal to voters on both sides of the aisle. 'I want to move — to the degree my voice can help this country — just past the constant 'R versus D' and even, and even past, maybe the term bipartisan to nonpartisan,' Beshear said in an interview. 'Because a lot of these things — creating new jobs, improving roads and bridges — they're not red or blue and, and they lift everybody up.' Beshear even credited his state's two Republican senators for, at times, 'doing the right thing.' 'If we're going to get to that place where we treat issues that shouldn't be partisan as nonpartisan, then we've got to be willing not only to work together, but to give credit where credit's due when somebody does the right thing,' he said. '[GOP Sens.] Rand Paul and Mitch McConnell are against tariffs. That's a good thing.' In Charleston on Thursday morning, his message seemed to please some attendees. 'I think he made a really good point, which is his 'why,' is his faith, he treats everybody the same. He used the parable of The Good Samaritan,' Towner Magill, 37, told NBC News after hearing Beshear speak at a meet-and-greet event. 'I'm sort of tired of seeing people on the Democratic side vilifying people on the right, whether we have disagreements or not.' 'We're not getting together with community members anymore,' Magill added. 'I want somebody at the top who is going to make that easier, the climate and this country easier.'

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