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Some of Britain’s biggest companies are this weekend scrambling to fill the void left by the crisis at the CBI as they consider backing a new body being set up after talks with Conservative and Labour officials.

Sky News has learnt that businesses from across a range of sectors including banking, insurance, retail and telecoms have been contacted about the launch of BizUK.

The organisation, which is being assembled by WPI Strategy, a leading public affairs firm, will not seek to replace the CBI directly but will be a temporary body that will try to help private sector chiefs influence the main political parties’ manifestoes with a general election potentially only 18 months away.

A letter sent on Friday by Nick Faith, WPI’s director, to FTSE-100 companies and seen by Sky News, said BizUK would “support the representation of business to the main political parties in this critical pre-election period”.

He wrote: “This is being set up in light of the issues currently affecting the CBI, which while hopefully temporary, do mean there is an acknowledged lack of representation on crucial national policy issues for at least the period towards the next election.

“It is clear that businesses operating in the UK need an independent, cross-sector organisation which can ensure they can continue to meet and work constructively with political decision-makers.”

Mr Faith, who declined to comment to Sky News, said in the letter that WPI had “held recent, encouraging discussions with both the Government and Opposition parties” about the initiative.

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He insisted: “To be clear from the outset, we are not looking to replace the CBI.

“We are not a trade body.

“Instead BizUK will be a temporary, time-limited initiative, focused on helping businesses communicate new thinking ahead of the next general election.”

Mr Faith said its work would focus on four core areas: skills and productivity; trade and investment; science and technology; and energy security and decarbonisation.

He added that BizUK’s membership would be “limited in number”, although he did not specify how many companies had been invited to join.

Its intention will be to produce four main reports that will enable BizUK “to advocate clear and coherent policy positions that best represent its members’ views”.

“BizUK would work closely with decision makers right across the political spectrum to ensure the findings from our workstreams are communicated ahead of the next general election.”

He said that the new organisation’s members would be publicly disclosed companies and would – unlike the CBI’s fee structure – all pay the same membership cost.

WPI was the architect of the Covid Recovery Commission, a cross-sector liaison group which worked to influence post-pandemic economic policy.

The rapid establishment of a heavyweight new business forum focused on liaising with government could represent a hammer blow to the CBI, which said after an emergency board meeting on Friday that it would suspend its core operations until June.

It then plans to hold an extraordinary general meeting of members to allow them to vote on a way forward for the UK’s biggest business lobbying group, which has been brought to the brink of collapse by its handling of a series of sexual abuse scandals.

Last week, the CBI fired its director-general, Tony Danker, saying he had lost the confidence of its board after a string of allegations about his personal conduct.

He accused the group of “throwing me under a bus”.

The CBI appointed Rain Newton-Smith – until recently its chief economist – as Mr Danker’s successor, but although she is regarded as capable, her appointment was roundly criticised for failing to embrace the kind of reform that members believe the CBI requires.

On Friday, companies including Aviva, BMW, John Lewis Partnership and NatWest Group said they were terminating their membership in protest at the CBI’s culture and mishandling of the scandal.

One boss said rejoining the CBI would only be conceivable if it recruited an outsider as its director-general and replaced Brian McBride, its president.

The organisation, which was established by Royal Charter in 1965, has 190,000 members, who until yesterday included the majority of Britain’s best-known companies.

The Guardian reported on Friday that a second former female CBI employee had alleged that she was raped by a colleague during her time at the lobbying group.

“We have listened carefully to what our colleagues, members and stakeholders have said over recent days and weeks,” the CBI board said.

“We have heard loud and clear a demand for far-reaching change.

“We want to properly understand from our colleagues, members, experts and stakeholders how they envisage our future role and purpose.

“As a result, we have taken the difficult but necessary decision to suspend all policy and membership activity until an Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) in June.

“At the EGM we will put forward proposals for a refocused CBI to our membership for them to decide on the future role and purpose of the organisation.

“This work and the cultural reform will be the entire and urgent focus of the organisation over the coming weeks.”

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Chancellor Rachel Reeves accused of refusing to ‘face up to her own failures’ amid market turmoil

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Chancellor Rachel Reeves accused of refusing to 'face up to her own failures' amid market turmoil

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has been accused of refusing to “face up to her own failures” by “jetting off to Beijing” during a week of market turmoil.

Shadow chancellor Mel Stride accused the chancellor of ducking difficult questions as the “government was losing control of the economy” while Ms Reeves visited China over the past week with a delegation including the governor of the Bank of England and the heads of HSBC, Standard Chartered and Schroders.

On Monday, both long-term 30-year and 10-year government borrowing costs rose, with the 30-year effective interest rate (the gilt yield) reaching a new high of 5.47% – a rate not seen since mid-1998.

The pound also hit a 14-month low, prompting questions over the chancellor’s future.

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She received a slight reprieve on Tuesday morning as the pound recovered some loss and ticked up slightly to $1.22, while government borrowing costs dipped slightly.

But the Conservatives used Ms Reeves’s absence over the past week to attack her, with Mr Stride telling the Commons: “While the government was losing control of the economy, where was the chancellor?

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“Her trip to China had not even begun when my urgent question was taken in the House last week, she was still in the country, but she sent the chief secretary rather than face up to her own failures.

“So can I ask (Rachel Reeves) why she chose not to respond herself? The chancellor, of course, ducked the difficult questions by jetting off to Beijing.

“I believe that in Labour circles, they are calling it the Peking duck.”

Chinese Vice President Han Zheng gestures to Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves following a photo session at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, Saturday, Jan. 11, 2025. (Florence Lo/Pool Photo via AP)
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Chinese Vice President Han Zheng with Rachel Reeves in Beijing during her visit. Pic: AP

But Ms Reeves dismissed the criticism and vowed to stick to the fiscal rules she set out in the October budget – to get day-to-day spending through tax receipts and get debt down as a share of the economy.

“We remain committed to those fiscal rules and we will meet them at all times,” she said.

She also defended her trip to China, saying engaging with countries around the world will “deliver growth”, and said she brought up human rights issues with China.

“Leadership is not about ducking these challenges, it is about rising to them,” she told the Commons.

“And the economic headwinds that we face are a reminder that we should, indeed we must go further and faster in our plan to kickstart economic growth that plunged under the last government.”

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The chancellor said her trip to China has meant greater access to the Chinese market for British firms and helped safeguard the UK’s national security.

New agreements were made on vaccine approvals, fertiliser, whisky labelling, legal services, automotives and accountancy to “unlock £1bn of value for the UK economy”, she said.

Ms Reeves said she raised the case of imprisoned British citizen and media tycoon Jimmy Lai with every minister she met in China.

She said she also raised concerns about Russia’s war in Ukraine, human rights, restrictions on rights and freedoms in Hong Kong and the “completely unjustified sanctions against British parliamentarians”.

“A key outcome of this dialogue is that we have secured China’s commitment to improve existing channels so that we can openly discuss sensitive issues and the ways in which they impact our economy because if we do not engage with China, we cannot raise our real concerns,” she said.

“This dialogue is just one part of our engagement with trading partners right across the world.”

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Watchdog launches investigation into Google over search and advertising policy

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Watchdog launches investigation into Google over search and advertising policy

Google could be required to hand over data it collects to businesses as the UK competition regulator launched an investigation into the tech giant.

The Competition and Markets Agency (CMA) said it launched the inquiry to assess how Google‘s search and advertising services impact users and businesses such as advertisers, news websites, and rival search engines.

It will be looking to see if Google used its dominant market position to stop others from competing and if barriers are preventing potential rivals from entering the market.

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Of particular interest to the CMA is whether Google can “shape the development” of new AI services.

Also being assessed is whether Google is using its prime position to preference its own services, such as Google Shopping and Google Flights.

“Potential exploitative conduct” through Google’s collection and use of “large quantities of consumer data” without informed consent will be examined, as will the use of things like news articles without paying the publishers, the CMA said.

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The CMA could compel Google to make collected data available to other businesses or order them to give publishers more control over how their data is used.

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Google is by far the most popular search engine in the UK, answering more than 90% of all general search queries, and hosting more than 200,000 UK advertisers.

The investigation announced on Tuesday is the first launched under the digital markets competition regime which took effect on 1 January.

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The new regime enables the CMA to designate companies with a so-called strategic market status and impose new rules on them as a result.

Effective competition among search engines could keep down the cost of search results advertising, equivalent to nearly £500 per household per year, the CMA said.

Investigations in EU and US

The UK is just the latest country to look at Google’s search engine primacy.

A federal US court ruled in August Google illegally maintained an online search monopoly.

Meanwhile, an EU investigation into Google’s parent company Alphabet is examining whether it imposed restrictions that made it difficult for developers to promote services by other companies, looking at search results for services such as Google Shopping and Google Flights.

The UK government had ordered regulators such as the CMA to come up with ideas for growth and investment amid sluggish economic growth.

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Starbucks ends policy allowing people to sit in and use toilets without buying anything

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Starbucks ends policy allowing people to sit in and use toilets without buying anything

Starbucks has reversed its North American policy allowing people to sit in stores and use the loo without buying anything.

Patrons in the US and Canada now must buy something or leave.

Starbucks did not respond to questions about the impact the policy change could have on its UK shops.

Sky News asked if there was a code of conduct in UK branches, if people were required to make a purchase, and if there were plans to revise the code if one existed.

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The Seattle-headquartered coffee giant published a new coffeehouse code of conduct for its North American business to “ensure our spaces are prioritised for use by our customers”.

Anyone not adhering to the rules will be asked to leave and could have the police called on them.

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Among the prohibited behaviours is “misuse or disruption of our spaces”. Also included in the list of banned behaviours is vaping or smoking, discrimination or harassment, begging, and drinking “outside alcohol”.

“By setting clear expectations for behaviour and use of our spaces, we can create a better environment for everyone,” a Starbucks spokesperson said.

A departure from an open-door outlook

It’s a departure from previous guidelines created in 2018 after two black men were arrested in a Starbucks they went to for a business meeting. The Philadelphia coffee shop they attended had a policy of asking non-paying customers to leave and called the police on the pair. The incident was captured on camera and embarrassed the business.

In response, a regional change was designed to make an open-door policy.

Starbucks’ then-chairman Howard Schultz said: “We don’t want to become a public bathroom, but we’re going to make the right decision a hundred per cent of the time and give people the key.”

The reversal comes as Starbucks struggles with slowed sales amid pro-Palestine boycotts.

Over the summer it suddenly replaced its chief executive after the company suffered a bigger-than-expected drop in sales.

New CEO Brian Niccol was offered the use of a corporate jet for his 1,000-mile commute from his home in Newport Beach, California, to Seattle, Washington.

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