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The House Article | Trade in a turbulent world: how should the UK respond?

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Trade in a turbulent world: how should the UK respond?
Trade in a turbulent world: how should the UK respond?


3 min read

This week, trade ministers from across the world will gather at the 14th World Trade Organization Ministerial Conference in Yaoundé, Cameroon.

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They will do so amid a turbulent context for trade, the rules that govern it, and international relations more broadly. President Trump’s tariffs, growing protectionism elsewhere, and the fall-out from wars in Ukraine and the Middle East have injected considerable volatility into the global system. It is a challenging time for those of us who support free trade.

This global instability has generated acute challenges for the rules-based system for trade. In response to President Trump’s tariffs, there has been a growing proliferation of so-called ‘mini deals’ as countries scramble to mitigate the impact on their economies. The UK-US Economic Prosperity Deal (EPD) is one such example. The EPD is a strange beast – it is not legally binding, only covers a handful of sectors, mixes specific commitments with more aspirational ones, has only partially been implemented, and does not appear to be compatible with WTO rules on non-discrimination. When the International Agreements Committee, which I have recently joined as Chair, examined the EPD, we warned that the Government “should be wary of implicitly supporting the dismantling of the system in this way.” And whilst the EPD was clearly borne of pragmatism, it is far from clear that it will offer businesses the stability they crave.

Yet the UK is far from alone in pursuing a realpolitik approach with the US; several others, including the EU, have signed similar “deals”. And in parallel, the growing importance of the services sector and digital economy, historically neglected in traditional Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) but vital for the UK’s economic growth, has contributed to a growth in sector-specific agreements. Taken together, these developments throw debates about WTO reform into sharp relief.

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The UK’s approach to trade agreements is also evolving. In the immediate aftermath of Brexit, the focus was on FTAs, but since then there has been a move away from FTAs and towards a broader suite of trade instruments – embedded in the current Government’s Trade Strategy. As trade minister in the last Government, I signed dozens of non-binding Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs). Many of these were symbolic, but there is a growing trend to use these for more substantive commitments.

To make sense of these shifting sands, my Committee has recently launched a new inquiry into the future of rules-based trade and the UK’s use of trade instruments. We encourage anyone with knowledge or experience in this area to come forward and share their views, so that we can undertake our duty of scrutiny effectively and make impactful recommendations to the Government in the report we will produce.

While questions about different types of trade agreement may seem academic, they also have important scrutiny implications for Parliament. One of the biggest problems with the current system for scrutiny of international agreements in the UK is that scrutiny is triggered by the form of a treaty and the process the Government chooses to follow, rather than its substance. This has detrimentally affected scrutiny in the past, including with important non-trade treaties, such as with Rwanda on asylum seekers. The Government has signed up to enhanced scrutiny procedures for FTAs, but if it intends to sign up to more and more substantive trade commitments through other vehicles, that will have implications for Parliament’s ability to scrutinise these commitments. As the only Committee in Parliament which scrutinises treaties as routine, the hope for our Committee is that our new inquiry will complement our wider scrutiny work – and underline the case for reforms to the treaty scrutiny process.      

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Ex-CIA boss eviscerates Trump

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Ex-CIA boss eviscerates Trump

Former CIA director John Brennan has told MS Now that he trusts the Iranians more than US president Donald Trump, because Trump wouldn’t recognise the truth even if “slapped in the face with it repeatedly”.

Brennan was talking about Trump’s claims that Iran is discussing a peace deal. The Iranians have responded that they have no intention of agreeing an end to the war started illegally by the US and Israel until their own military aims are achieved:

Ex-CIA boss Brennan is right. Iran would be foolish to trust Trump or Israel to agree a deal that wouldn’t be used just to re-arm ready to attack Iran again, as Trump and Netanyahu did when Israel took a pounding in the June 2025 ’12-day war’. With Israel reportedly running out of defensive missiles and the US allegedly hiding troops in civilian hotels as its Gulf bases take hit after hit, it would make no sense for Iran to let them off the ropes until both imperialist regimes have learned a lesson.

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Featured image via the Canary

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Politics Home Article | Third and final shipment of vitrified waste from the UK to Germany

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Politics Home Article | Nuclear project academy goes national

Sellafield Ltd and Nuclear Transport Solutions (NTS) are making preparations for the third and final return of high-level waste (HLW), in the form of vitrified residue, to Germany.

Seven flasks will be transported from Sellafield via a German port to the Brokdorf interim storage facility later in 2026.

This will be the final shipment from the UK to Germany. The first shipment of six flasks, to Biblis, was successfully completed in 2020 and the second shipment of seven flasks to Isar was completed in 2025.

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The waste results from the reprocessing and recycling of spent nuclear fuel at the Sellafield site in West Cumbria, which had previously been used to produce electricity by utilities in Germany.

Vitrified residue returns are a key component of the UK’s Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA) strategy to repatriate high level waste from the UK, fulfil overseas contracts and deliver UK Government policy.

These returns involve Sellafield Ltd working in partnership with Nuclear Transport Solutions (NTS) to return the waste to German customers.

NTS, part of the NDA, will perform the shipments, drawing on 50 years’ experience of transporting nuclear materials safely and securely around the world.

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The waste will be transported by sea on a specialist vessel to a German port, then onwards to its final destination.

The shipments will be carried out in full compliance with all applicable national and international regulations, and subject to issue of all relevant permits and licenses.

Sellafield Ltd and NTS will provide further information on the shipments in due course.

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US senator makes bizarre Iwo Jima reference

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US senator makes bizarre Iwo Jima reference

Deranged Zionist US senator Lindsey Graham has compared Iranian oil facility Kharg Island to Japanese island Iwo Jima to demand an all-out US invasion to control it. The World War II battle of Iwo Jima cost the US 26,000 casualties, including almost 7,000 dead. Graham said:

We did Iwo Jima. We can do this.

The Iwo Jima comparison may hold – but not the way Graham intended. In fact, it may well be an understatement. Former US Army Ranger Joe Kent, who recently resigned as head of Trump’s National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC) over the illegal Iran war, says that invading Kharg Island:

would be a disaster. It would essentially be giving Iran a bunch of hostages on an island that they could barrage with drones and missiles.

At Iwo Jima, the US knew that taking the island would come at a heavy cost, but that once won there would be little Japan could do from 1,200km away. Kharg Island lies 25km from mainland Iran and Iran’s drones and missiles could easily reach it from anywhere in Iranian territory.

Clearly the US senator and the Israel lobby that runs him care nothing for the lives of US servicemen. But the sight of thousands of flag-draped coffins arriving back in the US would destroy Trump and the lobby along with support for their illegal war that is already plummeting.

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Featured image via the Canary

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Trump blusters through another interview on Iran

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Trump blusters through another interview on Iran

US president Donald Trump has appeared to confirm – presumably unintentionally – that Israel has been targeting and killing Iranian figures who are, or could be, discussing potential peace deals with the US.

Trump claimed that the US is talking to a ‘most respected’ Iranian leader, but said that he couldn’t name him because “I don’t want him to be killed”. And as if further confirmation was needed, he slipped and said:

They’ve wiped out – we’ve wiped out – we’ve wiped out everybody.

Of course, Iran denies even having any such conversations and says it will continue the war the US and Israel started until its own war aims are achieved. So Trump may well be making up his claim – but the Freudian slip of his excuse for not naming a name still speaks volumes.

Featured image via the Canary

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Politics Home Article | Nuclear project academy goes national

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Politics Home Article | Nuclear project academy goes national

The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA) is launching a UK‑wide training programme to support project professionals across the nuclear sector.

The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA) is rolling out a UK-wide training programme to support project professionals in the nuclear industry.

The One NDA Project Academy is an expansion of a programme initially launched at Sellafield in 2016.

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It will support employees at the NDA’s 17 sites in England, Scotland and Wales.

The news comes as the University of Cumbria was confirmed as the academy’s operator, continuing a relationship that began when the initiative started 10 years ago.

Previously known as the Project Academy for Sellafield, it has helped more than 7,000 people advance their careers through the academy’s programmes.

Primarily for Sellafield Ltd employees, the academy also took leaners from large and small businesses in Cumbria.

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It offers more than 60 courses across a range of disciples, including:

  • project management
  • quality
  • health and safety
  • risk
  • stakeholder management
  • project controls

From short courses to degree programmes, all are designed to meet the evolving demands of infrastructure delivery.

Jacq Longrigg, NDA group people development director, said:

“The project academy has pioneered a fresh approach to professional development in programme and project delivery, setting new standards for the UK skills agenda.

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Now, the academy will move onto the next phase and provide development opportunities for all our project and programme community across the NDA group.

We’re proud to invest in our people, our communities, and in the successful delivery of our mission.”

Under its new contract the University of Cumbria will lead the academy for 6 years, with the option to extend for a further 3.

Kate Dixon, director of the Institute of Engineering at University of Cumbria, said:

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“We are delighted to continue our collaboration with Sellafield Ltd and the NDA Group.

The academy has become an important part of our identity, benefiting thousands of people and many businesses across the region. Its success has inspired similar programmes with BAE Systems, the BBC, and the NHS — and it all began at Sellafield.”

Andy Sharples, project director for Sellafield Ltd, said:

“I’ve seen first-hand the impact of the Project Academy has had on people, who are now helping us to deliver infrastructure projects at one of the UK’s most complex sites.

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We’re excited to help create a sustainable pipeline of talent to support not only Sellafield, but any infrastructure programme in the UK.”

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Manchester mosque attack not designated a hate crime

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Manchester mosque attack not designated a hate crime

Greater Manchester Police are refusing to class repeated white supremacist attacks on Manchester mosques as hate crimes.

The Muslim Social Justice Initiative (MSJI) said that the attackers had desecrated Qurans and caused £30,000 in damage to Stockport’s Elaf mosque. The thugs had also attempted to rig a boiler to explode. MSJI also noted that police keep refusing to classify attacks on mosques in the area as racially motivated, despite four other attacks on the same mosque in the past year:

The Elaf mosque is not the only one to be targeted. In February 2026 a man armed with an axe, knife and hammer entered Manchester Central Mosque. Mosque officials said that the attack was part of a:

notable rise in threats and hostility over recent years [and an] increase in Islamophobic incidents.

The BBC, along with local press, did report the attack on its news website, but the BBC’s national coverage was limited to a single online article. This is a stark contrast to the attention given to an arson attack on ambulances belonging to a Jewish charity.

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Francesca Albanese report finds torture is standard Israeli policy

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Francesca Albanese report finds torture is standard Israeli policy

Israeli torture of Palestinians is a core state policy, a new United Nations (UN) report led by Francesca Albanese warns. The UN Special Rapporteur on Palestine found that various forms of torture have become tools of the genocide. And she warned that the practice extends far beyond prison walls:

Albanese said:

Since the onset of the genocide, the Israeli prison system has degenerated into a laboratory of calculated cruelty.

What once operated in the shadows is now practiced openly: a regime of organised humiliation, pain and degradation, sanctioned at the highest political levels.

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Albanese named Israel’s far-right security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, among others, as having:

institutionalised torture, collective punishment and manifestly dehumanising conditions of detention.

Those responsible, she said:

 must face investigation and justice, including before the International Criminal Court.

The report said that in the aftermath of 7 October, torture became an “integral” component of:

the domination of and punishment inflicted on men, women and children, both through custodial abuse and through a relentless campaign of forced displacement, mass killings, deprivation and destruction of all means of life to inflict long-term collective pain and suffering.

Francesca Albanese centres settler colonialism

Settler-colonialism is central to Albanese’s analysis. And torture is a core tactic in the Israeli process of land theft and violent displacement. She accused Israel of carrying out:

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A continuous, territorially pervasive regime of psychological terror…designed to break bodies, deprive a people of their dignity and force them from their land.

And Albanese said there was nothing random about Israel’s use of torture:

This is not incidental violence. It is the architecture of settler-colonialism, built on a foundation of dehumanization and maintained by a policy of cruelty and collective torture.

The Canary has reported on Israeli torture of Palestinian detainees, doctors, activists and children. One far-right pundit even called for the torture of climate and Palestine solidarity activist Greta Thunberg. You can read our reporting on the issue here.

A group of Israeli soldiers raped a Palestinian prisoner in one of the most high-profile recent cases. Footage of the rape was leaked, leading to a trial. Shockingly – and despite video evidence – all of the accused were acquitted on 12 March:

Israel enjoys impunity in its violence, whether in the jails or abroad in military assaults on Iran and Lebanon. At the heart is Zionist ideology is a chilling indifference to the pain of the occupied and any who oppose Israel’s expansionist plans. And Israel’s allies, the UK included, are clearly content to support Israel despite its use of torture as a state policy.

Featured image via the Canary

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Has Britain already fallen?, with Melanie Phillips

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Has Britain already fallen?, with Melanie Phillips

The post Has Britain already fallen?, with Melanie Phillips appeared first on spiked.

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People With Poor Mental Health Are Five Times Lonelier

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People With Poor Mental Health Are Five Times Lonelier

According to the World Health Organisation, about 16% of people worldwide are facing social isolation and loneliness. In 2024, 22% of UK adults said they felt lonely at least some of the time.

But that loneliness is not shared equally. Younger generations seem to be lonelier than older ones, while almost half of people in poverty say they feel lonely compared to 15% of high earners.

And new data from the Belonging Forum’s 2026 Belonging Barometer has found that “people reporting poor mental health are five times more likely to feel lonely” than those with good mental health.

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What did the research find?

The survey, conducted with Opinium, involved 10,000 UK adults.

It’s part of the Belonging Barometer, which the Belonging Forum says is designed to look at “how connected people feel to others, their communities, and their sense of purpose”.

  • Roughly one in five people with poor mental (21%) or physical health (20%) say they have no close friends,
  • Only 27% of those with poor mental health say the things they do in life are worthwhile, compared to 85% in good mental health,
  • Only 33% of people with poor mental health said they feel a strong sense of belonging to their neighbourhood, compared to 65% in good mental health,
  • Nearly two-thirds (64%) of people with poor mental health reported high anxiety yesterday, vs 29% of those in good mental health,
  • Though 76% of those with good mental health say they are satisfied with their friendships, this falls to 52% among those reporting poor mental health,
  • Two in five people with poor mental health report feeling lonely often or always, compared to 3% of people in good mental health.

That means about 2.9 million people in the UK with poor mental health say they feel lonely often or always – “roughly the population of Greater Manchester”.

“Health and belonging are closely connected”

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Kim Samuel, founder and chief architect of the Belonging Forum, said: “Health and belonging are closely connected. When people struggle with their physical or mental health, they are much more likely to experience loneliness, weaker friendships, and higher levels of anxiety.”

He added, “These findings show that belonging is not only about community or identity. It is also about wellbeing. When people are unwell or facing barriers in their daily lives, it becomes harder to build and maintain the relationships that help us be connected and supported.

“A society where people cannot participate fully in social life is a society where belonging becomes harder to sustain.”

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Martin Lewis Reacts To Alan Carr’s Last One Laughing Joke About Him

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Martin Lewis Reacts To Alan Carr's Last One Laughing Joke About Him

Martin Lewis has managed to one-up Alan Carr, following the former Chatty Man host’s joke about him on the comedy series Last One Laughing.

The money-saving expert recently became a surprising subject of conversation on the star-studded reality show, in which a line-up of comics must try and outlast their competitors by not laughing for as long as possible.

One challenge saw the group being tasked with sharing their “best life advice”, with Alan offering up: “It’s not who you know, it’s who you blow.”

“Do you know who told me that?” the Celebrity Traitors winner then quipped to his castmates. “Martin Lewis. The money-saving person.”

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“That’s a hell of a money-saving tip, isn’t it?” Romesh Rangathan responded, to which Alan joked: “I know! I only popped in for a mortgage!”

Posting on social media on Monday, Martin confirmed that he had seen Alan’s joke, before issuing a cheeky reply of his own.

“Many people asking me did I see what Alan Carr said about me on Last One Laughing. I have indeed, I love the show. And I did indeed tell him that,” he joked. “It’s what made me the man I am today!”

He added: “For those who don’t know what this is about. Don’t worry. It’s an inside joke (quite literally in some respects) for those who watch it.”

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Many people asking me did I see what Alan Carr said about me on Last One Laughing. I have indeed, I love the show. And I did indeed tell him that, its what made me the man I am today!

— Martin Lewis (@MartinSLewis) March 23, 2026

For those who don’t know what this is about. Don’t worry. Its an inside joke (quite literally in some respects) for those who watch it.

— Martin Lewis (@MartinSLewis) March 23, 2026

LOL: Last One Laughing UK is now onto its second season on Amazon Prime Video, with Jimmy Carr and Roisin Conaty back on hosting duties in the new batch of episodes.

The current line-up also includes Diane Morgan, Maisie Adams, Mel Giedroyc and, for the second time, Bob Mortimer, who is currently up for two TV Baftas off the back of his work on the first run.

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Completing the cast this time around are David Mitchell, Amy Gledhill, Gbemisola Ikumelo and Sam Campbell.

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