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Cabinet fightback — the revolt over spending

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This is an audio transcript of the Political Fix podcast episode: ‘Cabinet fightback — the revolt over spending

Lucy Fisher
We’re now firmly in Budget season. Robert, just how miserable are ministers?

Robert Shrimsley
They’re miserable. There’s no way past it. There’s no one walking around with a spring in their air and smelling the flowers. They’re all down.

Lucy Fisher
George?

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George Parker
Everyone says it’s grim, very miserable. It’s cheese-paring, it’s cutting stuff back. They hate this kind of stuff. But you know, it’s part and parcel of the spending review process.

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Lucy Fisher
Hello and welcome to Political Fix from the Financial Times with me, Lucy Fisher. Coming up, the cabinet fights back. Ministers revolt against Starmer and Reeves’s dire plans to cut public spending. Also, we’ll take a closer look at the justice system, drowning in cases and unable to cope. Plus, the Tory leadership race enters its final stretch. To discuss all of this and more, I’m joined in the studio by Political Fix regulars Robert Shrimsley. Hi, Robert.

Robert Shrimsley
Hello, Lucy.

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Lucy Fisher
And George Parker. Hi, George.

George Parker
Hi, Lucy.

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Lucy Fisher
So let’s talk first about the spending review, shall we? That’s been the big kind of crunch point this week. George, you’ve written a lot about how Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves are now facing down this cabinet revolt. Ministers are in complaining mode about just how strict the Treasury are being. Tell us more.

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George Parker
It was quite a while since we had the last spending review. I think we tend to forget how these things actually play out. Robert and I remember the old days when the spending review was always conducted in some dodgy hotel room in Blackpool during the party conference. It used to be an annual event and all sorts of backroom deals were being done in the Imperial Hotel in Blackpool.

Nowadays, it’s done on a slightly more irregular basis. This one is a one-year spending review covering the financial year ’25-’26. But it’s important because it sets the baseline for all the future spending decisions going forward for the rest of this parliament.

And what’s going on is that Darren Jones, the hatchet man in chief, the chief secretary of the Treasury, has been negotiating with spending ministers, trying to basically trim out what they regard as vanity Tory projects, waste. They’re trying to get voluntary redundancies, strip out the consultancies and all the rest of it. But it all adds up to quite a sort of tough negotiation.

And what we’ve seen this week is that some ministers have put in letters to Keir Starmer complaining about the way that they’re being treated. The Treasury have retorted, as they always do, about the usual what they call bleeding stumps in the Treasury or shroud-waving. This is all part and parcel of the game.

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And we’re into sort of the briefings on both sides that some ministers are saying they’ve been asked to make impossible cuts. People in the Treasury are saying, well, look, if you want to save £200mn on that project, that’s gonna have to come off someone else’s budget, so you’re gonna have a word with them.

So it’s becoming quite bruising, quite brutal. But it will be resolved by the time of the Budget on October the 30th.

Lucy Fisher
I mean, Robert, the argument made by many Labour figures is that there’s just no fat left to cut after 14 years of Conservative rule. Many cabinet ministers already think their department’s, you know, are gasping for more funds; not, you know, easy to make cuts. Who’s worst affected and who’s fighting back?

Robert Shrimsley
Well, traditionally, it’s the unprotected spending department. So you would expect that local government funding is always very, very hard hit. And that’s a particular issue at the moment because of social care, which everyone recognises to be in crisis. Justice has traditionally been a hard hit department.

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But the ones where you can attack and it’s very hard to attack, although there are definitely gonna be major welfare savings, I would expect DWP to have to take some pain. It’s also the case that those payments are sort of cyclical and pushed in. So you can’t do much.

Health is obviously protected, but how protected, how much room there is more expansive is a question; education, semi-protected.

So it’s a tough one for a lot of departments. And one of the classic Treasury tricks, as George was suggesting, is to say, OK, yeah, that’s a great thing. We have to do that, but you’ll have to fund it yourself from your existing budgets. So it’s very, very tough.

Lucy Fisher
It does feel to me like the messaging has ricocheted quite a bit from in the summer. Starmer warning of a painful Budget to come and that includes the spending review. Then I think both him and Reeves realising they got a bit far with that messaging and trying to kind of talk up a more optimistic picture. And this week George, it’s again it’s back to feeling all very difficult again, isn’t it?

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George Parker
It’s a very confusing message, particularly on public spending, that Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves repeatedly say that there will be no return to Tory austerity, as they put it. And it is quite a confusing picture, I think, for lots of people because you’ve got this quite tough spending round in the first year of the Labour government, ’25-’26.

But then what you’re going to see in the Budget in a couple of weeks’ time is Rachel Reeves putting up taxes to fund the public services. So you’ll probably remember that the Conservatives’ Jeremy Hunt had a plan for public spending into the next parliament, which basically set increases at 1 per cent real increases, which amounted to the unprotected departments that Robert mentioned real cuts of about 3 per cent a year per person consuming those public services.

And so what Rachel Reeves will do is she’ll start to chop up those budgets so they don’t have those real-terms cuts later in the parliament. So this is very much a Gordon Brown tactic, if you remember that: the idea of actually basically sticking to Tory spending plans in year one, making some really tough decisions. But then, as the parliament progresses and in brackets, as we get closer to the next election, the money starts to flow back into those public services.

Robert Shrimsley
It’s also important to note that because of the time in the election, this is a one-year spending round and these are three years of rounds. So Rachel Reeves and Darren Jones are doing one year now and then there’s years two and three are sorted out next spring. So there’s sort of two bites at this as well.

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Lucy Fisher
That’s right. And I’m certainly picking up from insiders in the Ministry of Defence that they are expecting, you know, a difficult settlement potentially this year for the next financial year, but then in spring, potentially a slightly more generous settlement. So again, it could be along the lines you’re talking about, George: do the difficult things first and then start to turn on spending (inaudible).

Robert Shrimsley
It’s quite a good incentive, it’s quite a good lever for the Treasury. Say play nice because we’ve got years two and three coming down the track as well. (Laughter)

Lucy Fisher
Well, some cabinet ministers might have fallen foul of that. We’ve seen reporting that Louise Haigh, the transport secretary, Shabana Mahmood, the justice secretary, and Angela Rayner, in charge of housing, have all sent these letters of complaint. So they’ve sort of come out into the public domain as being unhappy.

George Parker
I think they are unhappy. Some of them, by the way, have said that they haven’t sent in letters, at least not yet. So I think we should be a bit careful about who’s actually sent these letters in. But they are all unhappy because, as Robert mentioned, they’re the departments which are, you know, in the firing line. What we also know is that the Treasury aren’t impressed by the idea of people going behind their back to the headteacher — in this case, Keir Starmer — and sending these letters in. 

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Robert Shrimsley
Well, there’s not much that impresses the Treasury, actually. (Laughter)

George Parker
Well, that’s true. We know who these people are and I can tell you it’s gonna be counterproductive, is the message they’re getting. The briefing from Number 10, as you mentioned at the top of the programme, Lucy, is that Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves are absolutely steadfast on this. A lot of departments have now settled their spending round for this financial year we’re talking about. And what you get then is a diminishing number of holdout departments which haven’t quite signed up yet. And as you get fewer and fewer, then the trade offs become more and more stark. You know, if you’ve got let’s say, Shabana Mahmood of the justice department saying we need another 500mn for this then they’ll say, well, that means you can take £500mn off Peter Kyle over at the science department. 

Robert Shrimsley
I mean, it’s a tricky game, as George implied, going to the prime minister, because once you’ve played that card, you’ve got no others. So, I mean, it’s very common historically to see the MoD, the defence department, going over the heads of the Treasury, which hates defence spending, to the prime minister and often with some success, because defence is one that the prime minister feels the need to protect a bit more. 

But I think they’ve gone quite early in this respect. I think it’s probably been counterproductive. And justice we’re gonna talk about, but there clearly is a major problem that’s got to be addressed. But I think too many ministers can’t appeal to the prime minister. This is a trick you can’t play very often. 

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Lucy Fisher
I think it’s a good point. I do think as well, George, as you say, like it feels there is an earlier cigarette paper between Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves. They’ve quite self-consciously modelled their relationship on David Cameron and George Osborne in terms of the closeness, working in tandem, not allowing people to sort of see a chink of light and try and exploit that. 

George Parker
I think that’s definitely true. I think it’s also a fact that Keir Starmer, you know, respects and trusts Rachel Reeves to make these tough economic decisions. I think it’s also fair to say that Keir Starmer is prime minister, the first Lord of the Treasury, but I don’t think he’s instinctively that fascinated or gripped by economics. So there’s a real understanding about how the partnership works. And I think, you know, we had no reports of splits between Number 10 and Number 11 and over many years. That’s not always been the case, has it, by any stretch of the imagination. 

Robert Shrimsley
I’m not even gonna see it as . . . For the two of them they have to persuade their party that this is a long game. Look, we know it’s gonna be tough in year one, and it’s still quite tough in year two. But if we’ve got this right, if we’ve got our tactics right on growth, things will begin to free up. And of course, the other thing they do still have is a significant amount of investment funded by borrowing. And I think that’s gonna be most of the sweeties in the Budget is gonna be what Rachel Reeves can deliver in extra capital investment. 

George Parker
And one other thing that I think people are causing a bit of disquiet in the spending department is this. There was a cabinet meeting, a political cabinet meeting on Tuesday this week where Rachel Reeves set out the priorities for the Budget: fixing the foundations, protecting working people. 

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And the third priority she mentioned was fixing the NHS, which was the first time that we’d really heard the NHS being talked about in the context of this Budget. Because, you know, the NHS is one of the protected departments in the next few years. But the message was that the NHS is the number one priority for the people. 

Now the thing about the NHS, a vast organisation, an extra £1bn for the NHS is a drop in the ocean; it’s a rounding error. £1bn extra for the Ministry of Justice is a huge amount of money. So you can see why there’s a lot of nervousness that if Rachel Reeves is gonna start looking after the NHS in the next three years, what does it mean for our Budgets? 

Lucy Fisher
And Robert, another sort of big story this week has been one George Parker scoop about the funding gap that Rachel Reeves identified. 

Robert Shrimsley
I never trust those. (Laughter) 

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Lucy Fisher
Very well-sourced, I’m sure. She’s identified a funding gap of £40bn, significantly higher than previously this figure of £22bn fiscal black hole, which of course was in-year and a kind of direct inheritance from the Conservatives. But this bigger sum now that they need to raise taxes to fill in, don’t they? And that speaks to her wanting to give a bit of extra cash to some departments like the health department. 

Robert Shrimsley
Yeah. I mean, black hole is a terribly abused word and we’re all guilty of it and so are they. What I took that to mean is that’s what she needs to spend so it doesn’t feel like we are standing still or, as George said, returning to Tory austerity. There has to be a bit more. So I took that as part of the cover for the tax rises that we all know are coming.

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Lucy Fisher
Just before we move on, there’s a Political Fix live special scheduled for November the 1st in which we’ll ask if Labour’s Budget will boost growth. I’ll be hosting and listeners will get to quiz the FT’s economics editor, Sam Fleming, and other colleagues, including Robert, in the subscriber webinar. You can register for free at ft.com/ukgrowth. The details are in the show notes.

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[MUSIC PLAYING] 

Well, we’ve spoken on the podcast before about the prisons capacity crisis, but a related problem is the dismal courts backlog. And the FT’s chief features writer Henry Mance has been investigating and joins us now in the studio. Hi, Henry. 

Henry Mance
Hi, Lucy. 

Lucy Fisher
So you set out to examine how a record backlog of criminal trials has left lawyers drowning in cases. Tell us about what you found. 

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Henry Mance
Yeah, exactly. Well, we don’t know quite what the backlog of cases is in the crown courts because the Ministry of Justice’s data has gone haywire. But we do know that at the end of last year, we hit a record figure of nearly 70,000 cases awaiting a trial or a hearing. And that’s up from, you know, less than half that in 2019. So the backlog had started to rise before Covid. Covid hits, there’s a barristers’ strike. 

And now if you have a serious but not incredibly serious criminal offence and if you’re lucky enough that the police actually go out and catch the person who did it and the CPS think that they’ve got enough evidence to to charge them, you might expect the trial would happen this year. You know, it’s nothing, you know, may not be a complex case. It might be a drugs case or, you know, an assault case — you know, nothing too investigatively taxing for the police or the CPS. 

But no, because of the backlog in the crown courts, you might be waiting not till 2025, not till 2026, but to 2027 before this goes to trial. And I think lawyers and barristers who are, you know, never the shyest people around, but they are tearing their hair out and saying this is ridiculous, we are overwhelmed. And the question is, what, if anything, can the government do about this so that people feel that justice is swift? 

Lucy Fisher
Yeah. Well, as you note in your piece, justice delayed is justice denied. And there are concrete impacts if witnesses don’t remember events as clearly and convictions become less likely when cases take place a lot later. You mind just telling the listeners a bit about what you heard at Snaresbrook court when you went down for the day. 

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Henry Mance
Yes. So Snaresbrook, England’s sort of biggest and busiest crown court, and I went down for a couple of days. And on one of these days a very incredibly polite judge . . . I mean, if you are in the dock in a crown court, don’t necessarily be worried that the judge is gonna be terrible to you. But this judge in particular had this problem where he was dishing out this stern warning, saying to these people like you must come back for trial and, you know, if you are guilty, you should plead guilty because it has these benefits now. 

Robert Shrimsley
And try not to murder anyone else. 

Henry Mance
(Laughter) Try not to murder anyone else. But he had to say, look, I’m terribly sorry about this trial date. We are setting a trial for you in 2026. And I know this is gonna hang over your life, and it does not feel right to me as someone who’s spent decades in the legal system. He grew up with certain expectations that you would have a trial within a year of someone who was charged, if they weren’t in custody. If they were in custody, within six months. And it offends the kind of sensibility of these people who have grown up proud of English justice that they are having to offer these trial dates. And so it was this ridiculous scene of seeing this judge apologising to these possible criminals for the way that the justice system is working at the moment. 

Lucy Fisher
I mean, what’s needed to fix the crisis? Is it simply a case of more money? Is there any kind of measure out there that doesn’t have a fiscal impact that could help? 

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Henry Mance
So there are two things you can do, both broadly. One is to just increase the capacity. So there has been money going in and it means that there are at the moment courts that aren’t working on it on a given day that a judge could be sitting, could be hearing cases and you could increase the capacity of it. But that takes money because every courtroom that’s open every day costs money. And that’s money at the moment that the Ministry of Justice doesn’t have. It suffered years of real-time cuts. So that’s one thing. You increase the capacity and that’s what judges have called for. They want this number of so-called sitting days to be increased. 

The other thing you can do is to make changes so that the speed at which cases are heard is increased. And one thing the government has announced this week is it’s gonna give magistrates more power to sentence criminals. So at the moment, magistrates can sentence people up to six months in jail. They’ll be able to sentence them up to 12 months in jail, which takes some of the burden off the crown courts, which normally deal with those more serious sentences. 

So that will speed things up a bit. Magistrates tend to be more likely to find people guilty and they tend to sort of rush through cases a bit quicker. They’ve seen it all before, unlike crown courts, which tend to take a little longer. 

The more radical thing you could do is to say, look, on some offences, some drugs offences, some kind of assault against an emergency worker, we’re not gonna have a jury trial here. You’re not gonna have that right. We’re gonna give that to, you know, maybe an enhanced magistrates’ court or some form of slicker justice where we don’t go through the whole rigmarole of getting 12 ordinary citizens together, you know, working round all their sickness and all their sort of work commitments and that things that people have done jury service will know all about. That’s very unpopular. New Labour tried it. David Blunkett when he was home secretary tried it and it was sort of seen as this affront to English justice. But it would speed up cases. 

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The problem at the moment, you know, it’s a lot of the court backlog, a third of the cases are sexual offences. These are incredibly complex crimes. There’s a lot of phone evidence you have to go through. People do not plead guilty to sexual offences. So overall, these very serious crimes, two-thirds of people plead guilty. They say, yeah, OK, I did break into your house. With sexual offences, it goes down to 40 per cent. With rape cases, adult rape cases, it goes down to 15 per cent. So you have to go through these very lengthy trials, very complex evidence, and there’s a lot at stake. 

And so there is some question about whether you could speed that up by having more specialist courts, specialist prosecutors and judges who really know how to handle these cases without getting things wrong and, you know, stepping over the line. But at the moment, it’s a mess. And I have to say that when I looked at this and I looked at, you know, what the Labour as an opposition and the government had outlined, the answer is not very much. 

Robert Shrimsley
I mean, in these rape cases, I mean if you’re waiting two or three years, I mean, a lot of them hang on identity evidence as well, don’t they, and, you know, one person’s word against another. So two or three years down the line, that makes it much harder to get a conviction, doesn’t it? 

Henry Mance
One of the cases I saw in Snaresbrook was an alleged rape of a girl at her 15th birthday party by a person who was then 16. And several years have now passed and the people are now in their early 20s. And for a jury to get their heads around the scenario they’re talking about when the people have changed completely in age, it must be impossible. 

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And I think so often juries really aren’t familiar with these cases, but they’re looking for signs that people might be lying. They’re looking for sort of hints. And if someone gets the detail wrong, even though that’s completely natural thinking — human memory is to get details wrong — they say ah, they must be making it up. And of course, the benefit of the doubt goes to the defendant. 

George Parker
Are there enough lawyers? Is that part of the problem? 

Henry Mance
That’s exactly part of the problem. And criminal law has always been a sort of poorly paid, much of it publicly funded part of the law. Lots of barristers do very well-remunerative work and at the moment they have options. If you train as a criminal barrister, you might go into that part of law, you get lots of court time, that’s great. 

But then you might say, I could do family cases. They pay much more. I could go and work on a public inquiry. There’s, you know, Covid inquiry, lots of public inquiries. They pay £120 an hour if you’re relatively experienced but not a hugely experienced barrister. Much better than trekking around crown courts and, you know, having hearings that cancel. At the moment you got huge numbers of trials that just don’t go ahead on the day that they should because there aren’t the barristers available. 

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Lucy Fisher
What about Britain’s sort of burgeoning, prosperous civil legal sector and the commercial courts? I mean, would it be an idea to try and tax those, either solicitors or those big court cases to try and fund the poorer criminal sibling? 

Henry Mance
This was an idea that one barrister said to me. He said, look, it’s ridiculous. We’ve got these people making, you know, millions of pounds and yet we’ve got these courtrooms leaking. And yet it’s the courtrooms where these dramatic criminal trials occur which are the ones that established the reputation of English justice, that make people, you know, comfortable to have their legal proceedings here. I mean, we can all think of sort of high-profile trials down the years. 

But if that sort of front door starts to look really shabby, then yeah, of course the better remunerated, the commercial stuff might suffer. I mean, I think we can all see some scope for, you know, scratching something off the top of some commercial law firms. It feels like they do have a lot of money. But I haven’t seen that as a serious proposal. 

Lucy Fisher
George, I mean, shouldn’t we be expecting more from Keir Starmer, given he’s a former director of public prosecutions? Shouldn’t he be taking more grip of this? 

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George Parker
You’d think so, yes. I mean, I think a lot of people listening to Henry’s brilliant account, or having read it in the Weekend FT last weekend, will be absolutely shocked. I mean, Keir Starmer is across this. I mean, he’s spoken quite eloquently about the problems in the court system. But we hear that in this wrangling over the next year’s spending round, the minister of justice is very much one of those departments which feels it’s being hard done by. And we’ll be looking over its shoulder at the NHS and fearing that other departments are gonna get a big share of the cake. And the problem, as we all know, is it’s not seen as by the public wrongly, as Henry’s eloquently put it, as a number one priority.

Robert Shrimsley
Is it also . . . I mean, presumably this must have a knock-on consequence to prison spaces because you’ve got all these people on remand or waiting for their trial incarcerated.

Henry Mance
Yeah, you’ve got 80,000-odd people in prison. About 17,000 of those are on remand. They’re people who are awaiting a judgment or a sentence. And what the Ministry of Justice says is that the problem is not just that you’ve got this quantity of people, because a large number of them will be sentenced to prison . . . 

Robert Shrimsley
(Inaudible) go back.

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Henry Mance
But they can’t. They can only go in certain prisons, reception prisons, and so you can’t disperse them. At a time when capacity is really stretched in the prison system you want flexibility to be able to put them in the right prisons. I mean, I think a lot of the focus has been, as far as I can see the debate on, you know, are the police actually catching criminals and what are we gonna do with prisons? So this is the bit in the middle that gets forgotten. But the prisons, you know, crisis absolutely affects what happens in the court.

Robert Shrimsley
It is quite a good holistic approach, isn’t it because the police won’t catch anyone, (laughter) we won’t try anyone, and there’s nowhere to send them if we actually convict them. It’s a joined -p government at its best, really.

Henry Mance
But one of the most ridiculous things about going to a court — and anyone can do this, go to a crown court and you go in for a basic hearing, a pre-trial hearing. And it’s like, well, we need the defendant to be present at this hearing. They’re in a prison in Manchester, in London or wherever. Can we just get them along for this video hearing? And the prison won’t be able to find them and they won’t be able to produce them for this hearing. And it’ll be what on earth is going on? And the sort of the levels of communication or the levels of inexperience on the prison system.

And lots of explanations were given to me why prisoners don’t turn up for video hearings, causing all kinds of waste of time at the court (inaudible). Well, they don’t turn up in person to their actual trials. And they’re, you know, just down to the practical details of Serco, which is the company with a contract for bringing prisoners to court in the south of England, doesn’t have enough people who are trained on 12-seater vans, which is a more efficient way than bringing people on six-seater vans to court. All of this stuff adds up, but it just shows that the system is at sort of breaking point in many ways.

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Lucy Fisher
Well, Henry, final word to you. Is there any reason to feel optimistic from your sort of examination of this area?

Henry Mance
I’m gonna say no. I think that the whole diagnosis of the Labour government is so far is that we have to keep the economy and the fiscal balance sort of very tight, rather than saying making this case of public services are broken, our first job is to fix them, whatever it may be. So I think, you know, most people, most voters will not go in a criminal court and that is why governments don’t bother fixing them.

Lucy Fisher
Henry Mance, thanks for joining.

Henry Mance
Thanks so much for having me.

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Lucy Fisher
I’ll put a note to Henry’s excellent article in the show notes.

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Well, it’s slightly better news for Starmer. His investment summit seemed to go off pretty well, George, earlier at the start of this week. It was a confident agenda. And you were there?

George Parker
I was. I was locked up, like most journalists, in the crypt of the Guildhall in London. We were only allowed out with escorts from the Department of Business to talk to people. But talking to people on the way out, you know, it seemed to have gone well. And there was the usual amount of grumbling beforehand about the logistics. And did they know who was gonna come and people saying that they weren’t sure their chief executive was gonna come. In the end, over 200 pretty powerful financiers turned up at the Guildhall. They saw Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves give quite a positive pitch for the country, which was well-received. And they were treated afterwards to a slap-up meal and an Elton John concert in St Paul’s Cathedral.

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And I was speaking to a couple of people, actually French businesspeople who’d come over, and they said actually, there was a bullish mood in the room towards the UK. They were looking a bit beyond some of the stuff we were talking about earlier about taxes and the forthcoming Budget, looking more at the macro picture of the UK. Where does the UK sit as an investment destination against the backdrop of political uncertainty amongst other western countries? And actually in that respect, quite well.

And they were sort of sizing up, Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves, I think. More than talking about the detail, they were trying to — I got this from someone in the government side — they felt that they were being checked out by these people to see whether they were actually serious about what they were saying.

Lucy Fisher
That’s interesting. Robert, we heard investment pledges of £63bn of investment pledged at this summit, at least if you believe the government spin-doctors. Of course, the vast majority of that was all pre-arranged and a lot of it under the Tory government. But it does feel like the early signals to the market have gone down well from Keir Starmer, would you say?

Robert Shrimsley
Yes. I mean, I think, as George says, the macro message from the government is we’re serious about partnering with business, we’re serious about investment, we’re serious about financial stability. We’re not gonna take risks with the Budget. This is what business wants to hear. We want to be a long-term partner in some of the big infrastructure projects. This is what people want to hear. And you know, these investment summits they’re always a little bit for show. But I think as a show it did what they wanted it to do. There were odd blips, but it did what they wanted it to do.

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Lucy Fisher
One hiccup that did threaten to derail it, and I will have to remind you, Robert, you bought Louise Haigh in last week’s stock picks.

Robert Shrimsley
(Laughter) About 45 minutes early before it happened, I think.

Lucy Fisher
You’re right, actually. Excellent timing. So she, of course, waded in saying, to my mind, two different and quite distinct things. One was she criticised the fire and rehire practice of P&O historically, which I think is, you know, totally understandable. Previous Conservative administration did that. And then — and this is, to my mind, shows where she’s not quite had a mindset shift from being in opposition to government — she, as transport secretary, urged the public to boycott the company. And perhaps unsurprisingly, the parent company, DP World, then threatened to pull £1bn of investment in the UK.

Robert Shrimsley
Yeah, maybe they did. Or maybe they just decided to make sure that they got a bit of bended knee from Keir Starmer before they announced the investment.

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I mean, I felt slightly sorry for Lou Haigh. I think you’re right that it was a naive mistake to go the extra mile saying, I boycott them. But, you know, she didn’t know DP World were coming. There was no joined-up discussion. Downing Street had approved some quite aggressive quotes against P&O, the company they own, as part of the (inaudible) employment rights package. So, you know, I think she thought it was fair enough to go in all guns blazing again. And no one would just tap her on the shoulder and go, do be careful when you do that because we’re getting a billion off them later.

So I thought slightly sort of I was also slightly unimpressed at the way Downing Street dumped on her quite so quickly, given that although she had crossed the line, she’d gone a bit further than Downing Street. It showed a bit of weakness when they could have toughed this out a bit more. Nonetheless, it was naive. You have a big investment summit; that’s not necessarily the week to be attacking businesses, though one might also say it’s not really the week to be unveiling your employment rights package, which bans fire and rehire. In the end of the day, it didn’t matter very much. But it was a useful warning to the government and to Louise Haigh in particular, is when you are dealing with global players who can go anywhere, you have to play nice.

Lucy Fisher
That’s right, George, isn’t it? And it shows that this reset in the heart of Downing Street, there are still lessons they’ve got to learn.

George Parker
Yeah, I mean, the whole media operation around it was pretty shambolic. I mean, the fact that they had to have Varun Chandra, who’s the business adviser to Keir Starmer, on the phone to DP World pleading with them to come, was bad news.

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Also, I mean, just around the investment summit itself, the story that ran off the back of it, including on the front page of the FT, was all about the fact that Rachel Reeves, who was attending the summit, had talked about the probability that national insurance contributions for employers, straight tax on business, was likely to feature in her Budget.

So the next day’s headlines weren’t about £63bn of alleged investment, but more about the fact that taxes were going on business. So yeah, the media operation’s still got some way to go, I think.

Robert Shrimsley
And the timing was odd. I mean, you could have done it after the Budget. It was two weeks before the Budget, and so two weeks after it is . . . 

Lucy Fisher
(Inaudible)

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George Parker
Yeah, definitely.

Lucy Fisher
Well, it’s gonna be quite a foreign affairs-themed few days ahead. Next week, Keir Starmer is off to Samoa and Jim Pickard, our colleague, is the lucky FT bod chosen to go with him — 36-hour flight each way, so we’ll have to get Jim’s update on that.

George Parker
I think Jim nominated himself before he realised quite how long he was gonna be on a plane.

Lucy Fisher
I think he saw himself sipping piña coladas by a pool, perhaps more. But we’ll have to wait to hear from Jim. But before then, David Lammy on Friday is off to Beijing; he’ll spend Saturday in Shanghai. He’ll be meeting his Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi. George, is this part of the sort of stepping up of engagement with China that Labour are undertaking, and they don’t face the same sort of hawkish backbench pressure that the Tories did?

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George Parker
Yeah, you always felt that Rishi Sunak as prime minister was being pushed around slightly on his China policy by the Tory right. You know, if you recall Sunak was prepared to restart the financial and economic dialogue with China while he was chancellor, and soon as the Tory right got hold of this during the leadership contest — the first one against Liz Truss — he had quickly abandoned this plan and disowned China and taken a much more hawkish stance on China, which then persisted right to the end of his premiership.

But you’re right that the Labour party seems to me to have a sort of more open approach to China. I think they’ll adopt in practice a similar sort of approach to the Tory government in terms of having this what the Americans call a small yard and a high fence — you know, basically having a constructive commercial relationship with China, but strong defences against areas where there might be Chinese interference and in national security. But you can tell that things are warming up. They need growth, they need China to be part of the growth picture.

And the interesting thing is that not only is David Lammy going to China this week, but we hear that Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, is probably going to China as well early next year to hold exactly the economic and financial dialogue that Rishi Sunak was supposed to cancel back in 2022.

Lucy Fisher
I think it’s striking that this will be David Lammy’s first trip to the Chinese mainland since taking office, but only the second taken by someone at that level in the UK government in the past six years. James Cleverly did go last year and during that same period I think there’s been eight high-level trips undertaken to the Chinese mainland by senior US politicians of the same rank or above. So it does feel, Robert, doesn’t it, like the UK has allowed itself to get a bit out of sync with the pack?

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Robert Shrimsley
Yeah, I mean it was a side effect of Brexit that, you know, the UK dropped out of its importance to China, became less important to China because it’s not in the EU at a time when increasing hawkishness was also moving into vogue. So it became very difficult. I mean, in practice, I’m not sure I think this will move the dial very much. It’s always better to be friendly, but the issues and security concerns that underpinned some of the Conservative problems in the relationship aren’t going away.

We could have Donald Trump back in the White House, which will certainly, you know, change things, because in the end, whatever Britain wants to do, forced to choose between China and America, it will choose America. And, you know, part of the defence strategy in the Aukus pact and all those things is to be one of the bulwarks against Chinese expansion. So I think it’s a good thing. Maybe there’s some benefits at the margins. I’m sure China would like to peel Britain off from complete obeisance to America, but I’m not sure how far it will go in the end.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

Lucy Fisher
So this week, the Tory leadership, the lengthy marathon contest, enters its final stage as party members finally get their votes. There’s already been a row about people getting votes earlier than others. Robert, what’s your take on how the contest is shaping up in this final stretch?

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Robert Shrimsley
I found it slightly strange in one sense in that there’s all this activity from Robert Jenrick. He’s making speeches, writing articles, coming up with new initiatives, promising new things like Jacob Rees-Mogg is gonna be party chairman. He’s busy, busy, busy campaigning.

And I’m struggling to think what I’ve heard from Kemi Badenoch in all of this time, so either she’s got a very, very good ground game and is just under the surface running an exceptional campaign, or she’s reached the conclusion that her best chance is to say as little as possible. And given that every time she has spoken out on an issue in the last few weeks, there’s been some kind of backlash. It’s just a very strange contest, a very small number of people. And although Kemi Badenoch is installed by the bookies as the favourite, it doesn’t feel like one you feel confident calling yet, I’d say.

Lucy Fisher
I think you’re right. I mean, I logged in to a Kemi Badenoch online rally, which was a slightly weird thing to watch. Her and her supporters, Claire Coutinho and Lee Rowley, two other Tory MPs, sort of sitting by separate computer screens. It wasn’t the most dynamic sort of rally, and I’m not quite sure why it had to be online.

George Parker
Well, that was an online rally.

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Lucy Fisher
It was online. It was like watching a Zoom call with, I think, you know, blurred-out backgrounds. She said in that on Wednesday that she’d taken part in three hustings earlier in the day. So perhaps she is doing more that is below the visibility line.

George, I mean, we’re speaking before a sort of televised hustings event on GB News on Thursday night. But a lot of what Tory MPs are saying is that Badenoch is more popular in London and in the south, and Jenrick is more popular in the north and Midlands. And Badenoch backers point out there are a lot more Tory members in the south. I mean, does that bode well for her?

George Parker
Well, I think it probably does. She’s (inaudible) the MP for Saffron Walden. She’s very accustomed to talking to home counties, Tories, she moves in those circles. And I think so. You know, when you heard Robert Jenrick at the Conservative party conference in Birmingham saying, I’m from Wolverhampton, it was all . . . you could almost hear a . . . 

Lucy Fisher
Tumbleweed.

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George Parker
Tumbleweed blowing across the stage because there seemed to be very little recognition or maybe people not necessarily knowing where Wolverhampton was or not really caring very much. So I think he does have a problem, Robert Jenrick in that respect. Robert mentioned the fact that he’s named Jacob Rees-Mogg as his party chairman-in-waiting. I just . . . I mean . . . 

Robert Shrimsley
He is a . . . I mean, he is a party favourite, so a lot of activists. I thought that was an effort to get some . . . I’ve got some celeb gold dust around as well.

George Parker
Yeah, I know. But I think back to James Cleverly — now no longer in the contest, of course — at the party conference talking about the fact we need to seem more normal. I mean, for all Jacob Rees-Mogg’s many sort of positive features, accusing him of being normal certainly wouldn’t be one of them.

Robert Shrimsley
We haven’t all got nannies and a sixth child called Sixtus. (Laughter)

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[MUSIC PLAYING]

Lucy Fisher
We’ve just got time left for stock picks. George, who are you buying or selling this week?

George Parker
Well, I’m not gonna be buying Louise Haigh, but I think I will be buying . . . 

Robert Shrimsley
I’m holding her now. It’ll come (overlapping talk). It’s gonna come good. (Laughter)

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George Parker
This is gonna be a very long-term investment, Robert, I tell you. I’m gonna be buying Jonathan Reynolds, who’s the business secretary. Went down very well by all accounts with the international high rollers at the investment summit at the Guildhall this week, sort of strikes a very moderate tone, explains Labour’s employment rights package in quite a measured way, sort of presenting it as not pro-worker, but pro-business; gets the tone right, I think, quite self-effacing.

And significantly, I was at a drinks reception at 11 Downing Street this week where Rachel Reeves said that Jonathan Reynolds was her favourite cabinet minister because he’d already settled this year’s spending round.

Lucy Fisher
Robert, how about you?

Robert Shrimsley
OK, so I’m gonna go for a penny stock. I am gonna buy Penny Mordaunt, who is not overpriced at the moment, having lost her seat and having once been the favourite for Conservative leadership. But I’ve been very struck by the way that both the rivals for the Tory leadership are working very hard to claim her as a prized supporter in this contest because they know that she’s popular with the party.

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There’s quite a lot of chatter about the by-elections coming up in the near future. People talk about whether Oliver Dowden, the former deputy prime minister, will stay long, even whether Rishi Sunak will stay. And I just think there’s a lot of people who’d like to see Penny Mordaunt back at the front rank, especially now the leadership contest is over. So I’m gonna buy Penny. How about you, Lucy?

Lucy Fisher
I’m gonna buy David Lammy. I do think when there has been some concerns about pace and sluggishness on the domestic agenda, it does feel like he has upped the tempo of foreign visits, he has got under way the things he said he wanted to do before the election in terms of resets with not only the EU but specific countries like Germany, France, Poland, Ireland. And I think it’ll be interesting to see how he gets on in China this week.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

Well, that’s all we’ve got time for. George, Robert, thanks for joining.

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George Parker
Thanks, Lucy.

Robert Shrimsley
Bye, Lucy.

Lucy Fisher
And that’s it for this episode of the FT’s Political Fix. A reminder, as I mentioned earlier, don’t forget to sign up for free to a Political Fix live webinar on November the 1st, which I’ll be hosting. The event will ask if Labour’s Budget will boost growth. You’ll get to quiz the FT’s economics editor, Sam Fleming, and other colleagues. I’ve put links and details in the show notes.

Also there, you’ll find articles we’ve made free for Political Fix listeners, as well as a link to Stephen Bush’s award-winning Inside Politics newsletter. You get 30 days free.

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And do subscribe to the show and leave us a review or a star rating. It really helps spread the word.

Political Fix was presented by me, Lucy Fisher and produced by Tamara Kormornick. Manuela Saragosa is the executive producer. Original music and sound engineering by Breen Turner. Andrew Georgiades and Petros Gioumpasis were the studio engineers. Cheryl Brumley is the FT’s global head of audio.

We’ll meet again here next week. 

[MUSIC PLAYING]

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Business

IFRS often gave a distorted impression of the business

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Banker all-nighters create productivity paradox

Geoff Meeks’ letter (October 12) is an academic’s view of the International Financial Reporting Standards — the accounting rules for public companies.

I was a working accountant before my retirement, with the position of chief financial officer at a UK-listed multinational, charged with implementing IFRS. I was taken aback at how often the new standards, when implemented, gave a distorted impression of the success or otherwise of our business. I can think of at least one example where a fall in profitability in one part of the business resulted in an increase in reported profit. Suffice it to say we did not use IFRS in internal reporting and we, like many companies, felt we had to resort to non-statutory figures to give shareholders and others a more meaningful view as to the success or otherwise of the company. 

In my retirement I am more of a consumer of accounts than a producer. I still find it hard to answer the simple question “how well or badly is this company doing” just by looking at their reported numbers.

Jeremy Hicks 
London SW19, UK

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New £25billion mega airport opening in Europe will ‘take on London Heathrow and Dubai’

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Construction work is slated to start on Warsaw Solidarity Airport in 2026

A NEW mega airport in Europe is set to take on London Heathrow and Dubai – and works have finally been given a start date.

Warsaw Solidarity Airport in Poland hopes to open by 2032.

Construction work is slated to start on Warsaw Solidarity Airport in 2026

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Construction work is slated to start on Warsaw Solidarity Airport in 2026Credit: CPK/Foster+Partners
The plans for the airport have been finalised

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The plans for the airport have been finalisedCredit: CPK
The huge new airport will have its own train station

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The huge new airport will have its own train stationCredit: CPK

Passengers travelling from countries in Central and Eastern Europe will be able to fly almost anywhere in the world.

Last year, Foster + Partners and Buro Happold, the architect firms behind the ambitious build, unveiled detailed plans of what the future travel hub could look like when it opens.

A series of CGI images depicted the airport’s passenger terminal, main rail station and transfer hub.

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According to the New Civil Engineer, the proposed plans have been finalised, with construction work set to begin in 2026 – two decades after the project was first announced in 2005.

Since last year, design changes were made to the roof, walkways, waiting areas and the bus station, in a bid to improve passenger comfort.

Further designs for the airport’s runways, taxiways, underground railway tunnel and air traffic control tower are still being finalised.

Grant Brooker, head of studio at Foster + Partners previously told Notes from Poland: “Our design focuses on passengers. Our ambition is to create an accessible building that will improve the travel experience…[through] clear visual connections.

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“We believe the CPK [the airport] will completely change the way people travel around Poland, and will also become a new gateway to Europe and the rest of the world.”

Even though the airport has yet to receive planning permission, preparation work on the site is already underway with tree removal said to be currently taking place.

Construction work is slated to start in 2026, with a phased opening date set for 2032.

One of the world’s best airports reveals its ‘hidden gems’ passengers don’t know about’

Initially, Warsaw Solidarity Airport was being built to replace Warsaw Chopin Airport because it was nearing capacity.

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However, the huge new travel hub will now complement the existing airport.

Poland plans to build on its overall passenger growth, with the new airport also helping the country’s flag carrier (LOT Polish Airlines) to increase its passenger numbers.

The new passenger terminal will be able to accommodate 11,000 passengers per hour, with the capability to hold 40 million annual passengers by 2035.

A third runway, and other terminal extensions, will see passenger numbers increase to 65 million by 2060.

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In addition to the new airport being built, improvements will also need to be made to the country’s rail infrastructure.

Warsaw Solidarity Airport was first announced back in 2005

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Warsaw Solidarity Airport was first announced back in 2005Credit: CPK/Foster+Partners
The airport will also have its own bus station

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The airport will also have its own bus stationCredit: CPK

This is because the airport will be located 40km away from Warsaw.

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Because of its location outside the city, the airport will have its own train station that will connect to the country’s pre-existing railway network.

It is not yet known when flights will operate from the airport and which airlines will fly from the travel hub.

The huge airport project is expected to generate around 150,000 jobs in the area.

However, the plans for the new travel hub have been met with fierce backlash from local residents and travel experts.

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Two years ago, Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary told local newspaper Rzeczpospolita: “This airport is unnecessary. It was planned in the wrong place and at the wrong time.”

Three other new airports opening in Europe

Luis de Camoes Airport, Portugal

First discussed back in 2008, Lisbon has revealed plans for its new Luis de Camoes Airport. The £7billion airport will replace the current Lisbon Airport. The new travel hub will have two runways and welcome 100million passengers by 20250. Luis de Camoes Airport hopes to open in 2034.

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Kastelli International Airport, Greece

Greece has revealed plans for a huge new £422million airport. Kastelli International Airport will become one of the largest in the country when it opens in Crete. The new airport will initially be able to welcome up to 10million passengers, when it opens in 2027.

New Bodø Airport, Norway

Norway is replacing its current Bodø Airport with the new £546million New Bodø Airport. The airport aims to be open by 2029, with the capacity to handle 2.3million passengers per year.

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Doncaster Sheffield Airport, which closed in November 2022, could reopen thanks to a new multi-million-pound plan.

And Plymouth Airport hopes to reopen after being closed for more than a decade.

A phased opening will start in 2032

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A phased opening will start in 2032Credit: CPK

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KKR and Bain in all-out $4bn fight for Japan’s Fuji Soft

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Line chart of Share price, ¥ showing Fuji Soft's shares go on a rollercoaster ride amid private equity battle

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Two of the world’s biggest private equity firms, KKR and Bain, have entered an all-out fight over a $4bn Japanese software company, as Tokyo’s M&A markets step into uncharted territory. 

The battle, which has been brewing for more than a year, entered a new phase on Friday after Fuji Soft’s board decided to maintain its backing for KKR’s long-standing bid of ¥8,800, or $59, a share — but refused to reject outright Bain’s more recent offer and the 7 per cent extra it had put on the table.

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“We believe that Bain Capital’s proposal is a sincere proposal and will continue to consider it,” said Fuji Soft’s board on Friday evening in Tokyo.

The board’s qualified support for KKR comes after a public intervention earlier this week from Fuji Soft founder and major shareholder, Hiroshi Nozawa, who called Bain a ‘white knight’ and urged its rival to step aside.

A straight contest between two private equity firms of this size is unheard of in Japan, say analysts and traders. Companies, and the assets they hold, are often not valued as if there is a market for corporate control.

“Investors have a choice between two offers, one higher than the other but both from extremely experienced PE firms,” said one person close to the situation. “Stock holders in Fuji Soft will have to explain to their investors, if they tender to the lower offer, exactly why they made that choice. The contest itself is testing important new ground.”

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Fuji Soft is an ideal private equity target, due to what people familiar with the matter say could be a real estate portfolio worth close to $1bn. Another factor is the presence of two battle-hardened investors in the stock — 3D Investment Partners and Farallon Capital Management, which were both pivotal in the multiyear battle for control of Toshiba.

Fuji Soft, which sells cloud software and digital systems, has been in play ever since Singapore-based fund 3D, its largest shareholder, proposed the company go private, kicking off an auction process and pulling in the private equity firms.

KKR, which said on Friday that it was pleased to have Fuji Soft’s continued support, first agreed a deal with 3D and then announced a tender offer in August of this year, aimed at taking the company private.

Those plans were thrown into disarray when Bain put out a non-binding proposal in September, sending Fuji Soft shares up sharply and shocking the market.

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Line chart of Share price, ¥ showing Fuji Soft's shares go on a rollercoaster ride amid private equity battle

In response, KKR accelerated its tender and split it in two, the first part involving 3D and Farallon Capital agreeing to sell their stakes. That means, as things stand, that KKR controls 32.7 per cent of the stock.

KKR’s second half of the tender offer is to run from late October to late November, is at the same price and allows shareholders time to assess Bain’s move. It also has a requirement of bringing in enough shares to trigger a mandatory squeeze-out.

However, last week, Bain once again threw things into doubt, following up on its initial planned proposal with its binding takeover offer for Fuji Soft of ¥9,450 a share. Bain’s bid would value the group at $4.2bn, versus close to $4bn for KKR.

The company currently trades at ¥9,660, above both offers, which some bankers and analysts say indicates a belief in an escalating bidding war.

Bain, which said in a statement that it “continues to support Fuji Soft as a white knight to the management and founder of the company”, shows no sign of dropping out, despite Friday’s board announcement.

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But, despite the share price optimism, other bankers have poured cold water on the idea of another higher offer, since the shares already won by KKR represent a de facto blocking position.

“The Japanese market is ready for this kind of fight between PE firms, but nobody is going to risk their reputation going hostile,” said one Tokyo-based banker familiar with the deal.

3D declined to comment. Farallon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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Lombardy theatres on a mission to keep opera alive

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You quote Yuval Sharon, director of the Detroit Opera House, commenting that “he wouldn’t mind too much if opera died” (“Singing a new tune”, Music, Life & Arts, September 28).

His argument, which you say is an unusual position for the artistic director of an opera house to take, is that the next stage in the death of an art form is its rebirth. Directors of Italian opera houses would definitely demur.

Indeed just last month, a group of five provincial opera houses in Lombardy unveiled plans to make opera more accessible.

The project launched on September 24, Giacomo Puccini’s La bohème opening at the Teatro Sociale in Como with special ticket prices for under-30s, followed two days later with full, but nevertheless accessible, prices for the general public.

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AsLiCo, a non-profit association established in Milan in 1949, has been running a project called Opera Education for schoolchildren of all ages since 1996 and through Opera White is now also taking opera into old people’s homes. In Brescia, for example, on the morning on September 29 a group of physically and psychologically challenged young people were given a guided tour of the city’s Teatro Grande.

They were treated to a backstage recital of arias from Vincenzo Bellini’s I Capuleti e i Montecchi by the tenor Matteo Falcier whom they heard in the role of Tebaldo in the afternoon. The first night had been two days earlier. Through its Open project, the Teatro Grande is widening accessibility to opera. Similar initiatives are under way in Cremona, Pavia and Bergamo.

In December last year the practice of opera singing in Italy was inscribed on Unesco’s list of “intangible cultural heritage of humanity”. The directors of the five Lombard theatres are doing their best to ensure that it remains so.

David Lane
Rome, Italy

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FT Crossword: Number 17,872

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FT Crossword: Number 17,872

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Money

Asda shoppers rush to buy cosy autumn homeware scanning for £2 instead of £21

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Asda shoppers rush to buy cosy autumn homeware scanning for £2 instead of £21

ASDA shoppers are rushing to the supermarket to buy a cosy homeware item that’s scanning at tills for £2 instead of £21.

An eagle-eyed customer spotted the deal at their local store and shared it with others on social media.

The customer shared their find on the Extreme Coupon and Bargains group

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The customer shared their find on the Extreme Coupon and Bargains groupCredit: Facebook

They took to the Extreme Coupon and Bargains Facebook group to share the find.

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The savvy supermarket shopper revealed how they nabbed a George easy care duvet set with two pillowcases for just £2 with the original price £21.

The post read: “Bargain of the day king size winter bedding, only £2!”

Many users tagged their friends and family to alert them of the incredible savings.

Another user commented: “I got this too, it’s beautiful.”

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If you’re keen to get one of the discounted duvets, it could be worth calling your local Asda store to see if they have what you’re looking for in stock.

You can find your nearest store by using the locator tool on the supermarket’s website.

Do bear in mind too that when prices are reduced by this much it’s usually in order for stores to clear excess stock, so availability will vary from store to store.

Other George Home Duvet Sets in King size are still going for at least £21 online.

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It’s always best to phone ahead to your local shop to check what they have available to avoid disappointment.

It always pays to compare prices so you know you’re getting the best deal.

Primark has everything you need to buy an autumn boo basket – and prices starting at just £2.50

Prices can also vary day to day and by what deals are on at the time, plus remember you might pay for delivery if you’re ordering online.

You can compare prices on platforms like Google Shopping.

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Just type in keywords, or a product number, to bring up search results.

Price Spy also logs the history of how much something costs from over 3,000 different retailers, including Argos, Amazon, eBay and the supermarkets.

Once you select an individual product you can quickly compare which stores have the best price and which have it in stock.

Idealo is another website that lets you compare prices between retailers.

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All shoppers need to do is search for the item they need and the website will rank them from the cheapest to the most expensive one.

CamelCamelCamel only works on goods being sold on Amazon.

To use it, type in the URL of the product you want to check the price of.

How to save at Asda

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Shop the budget range

Savvy shopper Eilish Stout-Cairns recommends that shoppers grab items from Asda’s Just Essentials range.

She said: “Asda’s budget range is easy to spot as it’s bright yellow! Keep your eyes peeled for yellow and you’ll find their Just Essentials range.

“It’s great value and I’ve found it has a much wider selection of budget items compared to other supermarkets.

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 Sign up to Asda Rewards 

The savvy-saver also presses on the importance of signing up to Asda’s reward scheme.

She said: “Asda Rewards is free to join and if you shop at Asda you should absolutely sign up.

“As an Asda Rewards member, you’ll get exclusive discounts and offers, and you’ll also be able to earn 10% cashback on Star Products.

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“This will go straight into your cashpot, and once you’ve earned at least £1, you can transfer the money in your cashpot into ASDA vouchers.

We’ve previously rounded up the best supermarket loyalty schemes – including the ones that will save you the most money.

Look out for booze deals

Eilish always suggests that shoppers looking to buy booze look out for bargain deals.

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She said: “Asda often has an alcohol offer on: buy six bottles and save 25%.

“The offer includes selected bottles with red, white and rose options, as well as prosecco. There are usually lots of popular bottles included, for example, Oyster Bay Hawkes Bay Merlot, Oyster Bay Hawkes Bay Merlot and Freixenet Prosecco D.O.C.

“Obviously, the more expensive the bottles you choose, the more you save.”

Join Facebook groups

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The savvy saver also recommends that fans of Asda join Facebook groups to keep in the know about the latest bargains in-store.

Eilish said: “I recommend joining the Latest Deals Facebook Group to find out about the latest deals and new launches in store.

“Every day, more than 250,000 deal hunters share their latest bargain finds and new releases. 

“For example, recently a member shared a picture of Asda’s new Barbie range spotted in store.

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“Another member shared the bargain outdoor plants she picked up, including roses for 47p, blackcurrant bushes for 14p and topiary trees for 14p.”

Do you have a money problem that needs sorting? Get in touch by emailing money-sm@news.co.uk.

Plus, you can join our Sun Money Chats and Tips Facebook group to share your tips and stories

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