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Two years ago, a 20-year-old student at the University of Chicago named Max Lewis boarded a subway car on the citys Green Line. Lewis had just finished another day interning at an investment bank in downtown Chicago, and he was on his way back to his apartment. Then, without warning, a stray bullet tore through the subway cars window and hit Lewis in the neck. Doctors quickly determined that Max Lewis had been paralyzed from the neck down. Hed never be able to eat or walk again. Hed need a ventilator, forever. But Lewis could communicate with his eyes. By blinking, and using a letter board, he sent this message to his family: If I have to live like this, pull the plug. Please, seriously. Doctors took Max Lewis off of life support, and he died in the hospital shortly afterwards.

Its a horrifying story. But its not particularly unusual in Chicago. The same weekend that Max Lewis was shot in the neck, at least 100 other residents of Chicago were hit by gunfire, and 18 died. A few days later, Chicagos mayor at the time, Lori Lightfoot, gave an extended interview with CNN in Chicagos West Garfield Park neighborhood. She was surrounded by bodyguards for the whole thing. Lori Lightfoot did not offer any sympathy to the family of Max Lewis, nor did she propose any solution to the citys rampant crime problem. Instead, in the interview, Lori Lightfoot made it clear who the real victim was in Chicago. It was Lori Lightfoot. Im a Black woman and Im a member of the LGBTQ community, she said. Its not okay that systemic racism, homophobia, and sexism still exist but Im going to play the cards that Im dealt.

This pattern repeated in Chicago, over and over again, for years, until finally the residents of Chicago had enough of Lori Lightfoots malevolence and incompetence. Earlier this year, Lightfoot became the first mayor of Chicago to lose re-election in 40 years. Lori Lightfoots replacement was a former social studies teacher named Brandon Johnson. Like every other mayor elected in Chicago since 1927, Brandon Johnson is a Democrat. During the campaign, Johnson did not propose any serious solutions to the rampant crime in Chicago. Instead, he ran on a platform of anti-white racism and defunding the police department.

Brandon Johnson took office just over two months ago. One of the first major tests of his new administration came on Sunday night, when a mob began looting stores, fighting in public, and destroying property in the South Loop. This is considered one of the nicer areas of the city, for what thats worth. The bar is pretty low, admittedly. Heres what it looked like this weekend:Chicagos latest teen takeover
pic.twitter.com/YBK8t2gwZe

Jack Elbaum (@Jack_Elbaum) August 3, 2023

Notice the media calls this a teen takeover, which is maybe the most innocuous possible term they could use. It sounds like a birthday party at the local swimming pool. In reality, as anyone can see, it was rioting. And by the way, not all of the criminals were teens. Many of them were, but certainly not all of them. At least one journalist didnt want to whitewash this complete breakdown of public safety in one of Americas major cities. The reporter asked Brandon Johnson what he was going to do about the mob violence in the South Loop. Brandon Johnson responded by attacking the reporters choice of language. Watch:

Its the Lori Lightfoot approach. Dont blame the criminals. Blame the people who notice the criminals. Theyre the problem, because they use the wrong language. We see this a lot now on the left. Its one of the hallmarks of leftism, in fact: This preoccupation with language is everywhere. And every time they fixate on language, its always to obfuscate the issue.Theyre not trying to be precise. In fact, its the opposite of being precise. Theyre trying to confuse as many people as possible.

According to Johnson, the preferred term for what you just saw in Chicago is not mob violence or riot, but instead, large gathering. Yes, a large gathering you know, like a concert or a Chick-fil-A drive thru. Is there a single person alive who thinks thats the most accurate, useful terminology in this situation? Large gathering implies that nothing criminal occurred at all. A Thanksgiving dinner with 20 people could be described as a large gathering.

But Johnson insists thats the appropriate way to talk about what happened. Then he says, with no hint of irony whatsoever, quote, This is not to obfuscate what has actually taken place. But of course thats the entire point of what hes doing. Thats why people like Brandon Johnson claim theyre redirecting funds from the police, instead of defunding them. Its why they use terms like gender-affirming care instead of talking about double mastectomies and sterilizing hormones. Thats why they call the victims of abortion Fetuses instead of babies. The objective of Johnsons movement, at every turn, is to obfuscate whats actually taking place which is the destruction of the foundational elements of western civilization. That includes the nuclear family, and it includes law and order.WATCH: The Matt Walsh Show

Whats actually taking place, although youre not supposed to talk about it, is that major cities in this country are careening so quickly towards total disorder that well probably be seeing Koreans on the rooftops soon. These are not isolated incidents that were talking about. This is a pattern. Heres what Chicago looked like back in April, just a few months ago:?#BREAKING: Chaotic Scene Unfolds in Downtown Chicago as Teenagers Vandalize Cars and Gunfire Erupts

?#Chicago | #Illinois ?
There is currently a significant police response taking place in downtown Chicago due to a large group of teenagers causing chaos. They have been pic.twitter.com/n7xhBpsTKs

R A W S A L E R T S (@rawsalerts) April 16, 2023

Another large gathering for you. Thats all it is, remember. A large gathering, like a church picnic. Now, Brandon Johnson, who was the mayor-elect at the time, responded to this violence with a written statement, saying it was not constructive to demonize youth who have otherwise been starved of opportunities in their own communities. Of course he gets this exactly backwards. The job opportunities are leaving these communities because these people are making the communities unlivable. They arent starved of opportunities. They are chasing the opportunities away. Any one of these people could walk into the local convenience store and ask for a job. Instead theyd rather loot the place. Thats their choice.

At any rate, its fair to conclude that this is the prepared talking point of Johnsons administration, in response to mob violence. Every time his city is besieged by rioters, hes going to lecture you for noticing. Hes going to police your language. Back in April, Johnson was asked about his written statement. Heres how he defended it:

Its hard to believe any elected politician would say something like that. Theyre young! They make silly decisions! Like setting cars on fire, robbing stores, and beating people up. You wouldnt understand. Youre not a former middle school teacher like Brandon Johnson.

Its clear that, like so many other Democrats, Johnson is totally unequipped to handle rampant crime in his city. Leftist ideology has at this point left reality, and all of realitys concerns, completely behind. These people arent living in the same universe as normal taxpaying Americans, let alone the same city. They hear about hundreds of shooting victims and they start talking about homophobia. They see a mob of hundreds of people robbing stores and setting cars on fire, and they say its just silly. Its a fun prank. Like putting a whoopee cushion on someones chair. You know, that sort of thing.

Thats not to confine the problem to Johnson, or Lori Lightfoot. This is now the default position of the Democratic Party in response to mob violence everywhere. We see it anywhere Democrats are in charge, in an entrenched position of power. And its leading to predictable results. This was Copton a few months ago:

A sideshow erupts into looting! A huge crowd taking part in a sideshow suddenly got out of control, according to FOX 11. It sounds so innocuous. Who could have anticipated that the side show would erupt into looting! Its as unpredictable as your neighbors backyard barbecue erupting into a mass shooting! What are you going to do?

As it happens, not much. As the anchor said, just one arrest was made. Imagine that. Of course, Chicago and Compton arent the only towns with a George Soros-backed D.A. where these kinds of side shows are common. We could show you similar videos out of Philadelphia and many other cities. In the case of Philly, a recent episode of mob violence was described by local media as a flash mob. What did this flash mob do? Did they perform a coordinated dance routine or something? No, they waved guns around and injured police officers. Just an innocent flash mob, our media reports.

Officials and media outlets can condone riots all they want. They can use whatever euphemisms they choose. At some point, stakeholders people who own shops and homes will fight back. And indeed thats already happening. You may have seen this video from the other day. It shows store owners in California beating a guy with a stick, after he empties out their inventory of cigarettes. Heres what happened as the thief tried to leave:Whoop his ass 7-Eleven workers stop California man who tried to steal trash can full of cigarettes

By Katherine Donlevy
August 2, 2023 9:40pm Updated

Two 7-Eleven workers in California took matters into their own hands and used a stick to wallop a man who tried to steal a pic.twitter.com/DpB3IvFfii

SubX.News (@SubxNews) August 3, 2023

I have to admit: Im a sucker for a heart warming video. If you watch the whole thing youll notice that the narrator of that clip the person recording it starts out on the side of the robber. He tells the store owners that they cant do anything, because theyll get in trouble. Theres nothing you can do, the person says. And its clear why he said that. Weve all seen the reports of store employees being fired or arrested because they tried to stop shoplifters. And in this case, the shoplifter claims he has a gun, so theres even more reason for these store owners to stay back.

But they dont. The store owners stepped up, regardless of whatever personal consequences they might suffer. And then and this is the key moment when the robber is subdued, the narrator celebrates. He takes the side of the store owners.

What does that tell us? It tells us that when strong people take action, everyone else gets the message really quick. All it takes is some bravery, and some decisive action, for everyone else to fall in line. Did you ever notice that the riots in Kenosha, Wisconsin stopped after that night Kyle Rittenhouse defended the local businesses, and himself, from the mob? Theres a reason for that. But the leaders of the biggest cities in this country have no interest in defending their communities or taking any decisive action whatsoever. Instead, theyre making excuses.

Lets go back to that Brandon Johnson press conference from a few months ago the one where he defends the mob. I mean, one of the press conferences where he defends the mob. Watch what he says about root causes of violence:

Brandon Johnson wants to eradicate the root causes of violence. What are those root causes? He doesnt really say in that particular press conference, but you can probably guess. The root causes are white supremacy, and the police, and so on.

What Brandon Johnson didnt reflect on is why all this crime and destruction in our cities is so pointless and arbitrary. Why are teenagers gathering to set cars on fire? What exactly are they gaining from that? Why are they gathering by the hundreds, for no apparent reason, to commit acts of violence? Theyre not stealing food. Theyre not doing it for survival. In many cases theyre not even doing it for money. This is destruction for the sake of it.

What Johnson and his party will never say because its true is that were seeing the results of multiple generations of children raised with essentially no moral formation, no parental guidance, and no sense of purpose. They come from fatherless homes. Theyre taught by unionized employees who would rather be on vacation than in the classroom. Theyre given smartphones before they learn their multiplication tables if they ever learn them. And then, when they commit serious crimes, the people in charge blame everyone but them.

When Lori Lightfoot says its racist to criticize her, shes also saying its racist to criticize the delinquents we see in these videos. But its not. People who form mobs to destroy property are behaving like animals. They should go to prison for a long time. And unless we can say that, we will never address the root causes that Johnson claims to care about. Itll only get worse. More people will get beaten with sticks in 7/11s. More college students will get shot on the subway. Eventually, law-abiding citizens wont take it anymore. A critical mass of voters will demand the El Salvador solution: suspend civil liberties, round up the criminals and throw away the key. Thats the way these things always go. The lesson of history on this point is very clear: people can only take so much.

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Why is actor Gerard Depardieu on trial – and what does it mean for #MeToo in France?

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Why is actor Gerard Depardieu on trial – and what does it mean for #MeToo in France?

One of France’s most successful actors has been accused of sexually assaulting two women on the set of one of his films.

Gerard Depardieu, 76, has starred in more than 200 films over five decades, winning two best lead actor awards at the Cesars, as well as being nominated for an Oscar and 15 other Cesars.

On Tuesday, judges at the Tribunal de Paris are expected to reveal whether he has been found guilty of the two counts of sexual assault alleged to have happened in 2021, both of which he denies.

If convicted, he faces up to five years in prison or a fine of €75,000 (£62,000).

While the #MeToo movement ultimately led to the downfall of Hollywood film director Harvey Weinstein in the US, France’s #balancestonporc equivalent has struggled to gain momentum.

But Depardieu’s court case, coming soon after that of Gisele Pelicot, who waived her anonymity to reveal her husband had orchestrated her drugging and rape by more than 50 men, is proof for many that France is finally getting its own #MeToo moment.

Here, Sky News looks at the case – and what it means for women’s rights in France.

Gerard Depardieu arrives at court.
Pic Reuters
Image:
Gerard Depardieu arrives at court. Pic Reuters


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Depardieu arrives for sexual assault trial.

What is he accused of?

Depardieu is accused of sexually assaulting two female crew members on the set of the film Les Volets Verts (Green Shutters) in 2021.

The anonymous women both claim the actor forced himself on them on multiple occasions, touching them over their clothes, the court was told.

Gerard Depardieu arrivesfor his trial.
Pic Reuters
Image:
Pic Reuters

The first woman said in one incident, as she passed him in a corridor he grabbed her, pinned her down between his legs and rubbed himself against her waist, hips, and chest, making accompanying gestures and lewd comments.

The other woman claimed he touched her buttocks in public on more than one occasion, as well as touching her chest.

Depardieu denies the allegations and appeared in person at the Tribunal de Paris, telling the court: “I’ve always been told I have a Russian nature, I don’t know if it’s because of the drinking or the vulgarity.”

But he added: “I’m not touching the butts of women.”

Read more
Inside court at Depardieu’s trial
Depardieu acknowledges his ‘vulgarity’

One of the alleged victims claimed he behaved “like a madman” who took “pleasure in frightening me”.

Depardieu responded: “I understand perfectly if she’s a bit upset. I am capable of trash talk… I don’t have to talk like that, get angry like that, voila.”

He also claimed that he had been in a “bad mood” because the set was hot, which was difficult for him, being overweight.

The trial was due to start in October but was postponed until March after Depardieu’s legal team asked for a six-month delay due to his poor health. Suffering complications from diabetes and high blood pressure, they said he was unable to sit for long periods.

In Cannes in 1997. Pic: Reuters
Image:
In Cannes in 1997. Pic: Reuters

Separately, he also remains under investigation for the alleged rape and sexual assault of a 22-year-old actress. The woman claims Depardieu sexually assaulted her twice at his home.

She originally reported the alleged incidents in 2018 but the charges were dropped in 2019 following a nine-month investigation.

However, the case was reopened in October 2020 when the woman refiled the complaint.

In March 2022, Depardieu’s bid to get the case thrown out was rejected by Paris’s court of appeal, with authorities saying he would remain under investigation until the matter is either sent to trial or dismissed. He denies the allegations.

In April 2023, investigative French media outlet Mediapart reported claims of 13 women who said Depardieu sexually assaulted or harassed them between 2004 and 2022.

In an open letter in the newspaper Le Figaro that October, Depardieu said he had “never abused a woman”.

A group of 50 French stars, including singer and wife of former French President Nicolas Sarkozy Carla Bruni, wrote their own open letter defending him in Le Monde, condemning what they described as his “lynching” and describing him as “probably the greatest” French actor.

A week later, President Emmanuel Macron condemned the “manhunt” for Depardieu, calling him an “immense actor” who “makes France proud”.

A FEMEN activist shouts during a protest against French actor Gerard Depardieu .
Pic: AP
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A women’s rights activist during a protest in January 2024 in Paris. Pic: AP

Who is Gerard Depardieu?

Depardieu was born in Chateauroux, central France in 1948. He left home at the age of 16 for Paris, where he got his first acting job with a travelling theatre company.

After a few minor film roles, his break came in 1973 with a lead part in Bertrand Blier’s film Les Valseuses (Going Places) – alongside his former theatre friends Patrick Dewaere and Miou Miou.

From there his popularity boomed and he became one of the most prolific French actors of the 1980s and 1990s.

He won awards for his roles in The Last Metro and Cyrano de Bergerac, which also received an Oscar nomination. He was made president of the Cannes Film Festival jury in 1992.

His success also saw him become a Chevalier of France’s Legion d’Honneur and its Ordre national du Merite – two of the country’s most prestigious honours.

Former French President Jacques Chirac awards Depardieu the Chevallier de la Legion d'Honneur at the Elysee Palace in 1996. Pic: Reuters
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Former French President Jacques Chevalier awards Depardieu the Chevallier de la Legion d’Honneur at the Elysee Palace in 1996. Pic: Reuters

Read more from Sky News
Inside Gerard Depardieu’s court hearing
Gisele Pelicot – from victim to feminist hero

Pelicot’s son relives moment he discovered his father was a monster

Across roughly 250 films, he has worked with more than 150 directors, including Jean-Luc Godard and Ridley Scott.

He became close friends with Robert De Niro after they starred together in Bernardo Bertolucci’s film 1900 in 1976.

Depardieu married fellow actor Elisabeth Depardieu in 1971. She starred alongside him in Jean de Florette and Manon Of The Spring in 1986. They had two children, who both became actors. Their son Guillaume died from pneumonia aged 37 in 2008. The couple divorced in 1996.

He announced his retirement from acting in 2005, claiming he had made “enough” films and wished to pursue other things.

In 2012 he moved to Belgium to avoid paying taxes in France. He wrote an open letter to the then prime minister, saying he was surrendering his French passport because he wanted “nothing to do” with his home country and the government was trying to “punish success”.

With Russian President Vladimir Putin in Sochi in 2013. Pic: AP
Image:
With Russian President Vladimir Putin in Sochi in 2013. Pic: AP

Vladimir Putin personally signed an executive order to give him Russian citizenship in 2013. Two years later his films were banned in Ukraine over comments he made questioning the country’s sovereignty as an independent state. He has since condemned Russia’s war there.

He also claims to have been given citizenship by the United Arab Emirates.

In 2023 he was stripped of his National Order of Quebec after a documentary revealed him making lewd comments and sexual gestures on a trip to North Korea in 2018, which the region’s premier described as “shocking”.

At the Netflix premiere of the series Marseille in the city in 2016. Pic: Reuters
Image:
At the Netflix premiere of the series Marseille in the city in 2016. Pic: Reuters

Why is the Depardieu case so important in France?

The #MeToo and #TimesUp movements in the US saw women in the creative industries calling out sexual harassment and assault by their male counterparts.

But it “didn’t really take off in France” in the same way, Sarah McGrath, chief executive of Women For Women France, an organisation fighting against gender-based violence, tells Sky News.

While she saw colleagues around the world “thrilled that victims could finally feel confident to talk about the crimes they’d be subjected to”, she says in France “we had a very different experience”.

In 2018, dozens of female French stars and intellectuals signed an “anti-MeToo manifesto”, condemning the movement as a “witch hunt” and defending men’s sexual freedom to proposition women.

Although some, notably Depardieu’s co-star and friend Catherine Deneuve, have publicly U-turned on the issue, it demonstrated a resistance to change in French society.

With actor and co-star Catherine Deneuve in Cannes in 1984. Pic: AP
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With actor and co-star Catherine Deneuve in Cannes in 1984. Pic: AP

Blanche Sabbah, a French feminist activist and comic book author, says: “We love to talk about being the cultural exception in France.

“We have this idea that if you are some kind of artistic genius then you are less accountable for bad behaviour – and that we’re more sexually liberated – and don’t concern ourselves with moral panics like in the US. I think that stopped the [MeToo] movement in its tracks.”

Ms McGrath describes this “cultural exception” as “an attitude that a man’s reputation and livelihood is more important than victims”.

Both women also point to a “general distrust” of claimants and “false ideas” they are bypassing the courts and telling their stories in the media to “get money”.

“It’s simply not true and comes from a lack of understanding that the French justice system does not play a protective role for victims of sexual violence,” she says.

“Victims are actually more likely to come out with debts of thousands of euros if they go through the justice system, which far exceeds any compensation they might get.”

Gisele Pelicot. Pic: Reuters
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Gisele Pelicot outside court after her husband’s conviction. Pic: Reuters

But while the “balancestonporc” – report your pig – hashtag struggled to gain momentum in 2018, the women say they have seen a shift – particularly following the case of Gisele Pelicot and the conviction of her husband for raping and inviting at least 50 other men to rape her while she was drugged and unconscious.

“It’s taken time, but finally we’re getting somewhere,” Ms Sabbah says. “Gisele’s case serves as a reminder that our culture has a huge influence on how we behave.”

Those found guilty in the Pelicot case were aged between 20 and 70 and included a journalist, nurse, firefighters, and a DJ.

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Mass rape trial that ignited a movement

“She has proven that this is the problem of every man – that what you think your favourite movie star can do serves as an argument for justifying what crimes you would commit as a ‘normal’ person’,” Ms Sabbah adds.

Regardless of the outcome of the Depardieu case, both women agree that his prosecution represents a “huge step forward” for women’s rights and victims of gender-based violence.

“There have been three or four convictions [of men for gender-based violence] recently, so I think the way those cases are perceived now is different to how it was in 2018,” Ms Sabbah says.

“We have gone from ‘classement sans suite’ (no further action) to movie stars on trial.”

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Business

Trump hails ‘total reset’ with China as trade tariffs slashed

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Trump hails 'total reset' with China as trade tariffs slashed

The US and China have agreed to slash trade tariffs on each other, a move Donald Trump has said was part of a “total reset” in relations.

The president said the 90-day truce followed “very friendly” talks between the two sides in Switzerland over the weekend and those discussions would continue..

“China was being hurt very badly. They were closing up factories they were having a lot of unrest and they were very happy to do something with us”, he told reporters at the White House.

The breakthrough was announced early on Monday – to the delight of fincial markets – by the leader of the US delegation, treasury secretary Scott Bessent.

US trade representative Jamieson Greer confirmed so-called reciprocal tariffs were now at 10% each.

In real terms, it meant the US is reducing its 145% tariff to 30% on Chinese goods. A tariff of 20% had been implemented on China when President Donald Trump took office, over what his administration said was a failure to stop illegal drugs entering the US.

China has agreed to reduce its 125% retaliatory tariffs to 10% on US goods.

Sector-specific tariffs, such as the 25% tax on cars, aluminium and steel, remain in place.

Money blog: Life as a divorce lawyer

Tariffs, taxes on imports of more than 100%, had been imposed on both sides. China was the only country exempt from a 90-day pause on the “retaliatory” tariffs above the base 10% levies applied by America.

Major retailers had been warning Mr Trump of empty shelves as US importers pause shipments.

Mr Bessent said after a weekend of negotiations in Switzerland, the countries had a mechanism for continued talks.

It’s the second major trade announcement made by the US in the last week, after a deal was secured with the UK on Thursday.

The move signals a willingness from the Americans to make deals on tariffs.

Why Trump blinked in US-China trade war


Photo of Ed Conway

Ed Conway

Economics and data editor

@EdConwaySky

Of all the fronts in Donald Trump’s trade war, none was as dramatic and economically threatening as the sky-high tariffs he imposed on China.

There are a couple of reasons: first, because China is and was the single biggest importer of goods into the US and, second, because of the sheer height of the tariffs imposed by the White House in recent months.

In short, tariffs of over 100% were tantamount to a total embargo on goods coming from the United States’ main trading partner.

That would have had enormous economic implications, not just for the US but every other country around the world (these are the world’s biggest and second-biggest economies, after all).

So the truce announced on Monday by treasury secretary Scott Bessent is undoubtedly a very big deal indeed.

Read more from Ed Conway here

Welcomed news

The news was received positively by Asian stock markets on Monday as major indexes were up.

In China, the Shanghai Composite stock index rose 0.8%, the Shenzhen Component gained 1.7%, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index was up nearly 3%.

In countries across Asia, benchmark stock indexes also rose. Korea’s Kospi grew 1.1%, Japan’s Nikkei was up 0.8%, while India’s Nifty 50 index of most valuable companies gained more than 3%.

US stocks rose sharply at the open.

The S&P 500 and tech-heavy Nasdaq saw their biggest leaps in more than a month, rising almost 3% and 4% respectively.

The market rally was visible in Europe too.

The dollar – hit in recent weeks by US recession speculation – was up more than a cent versus the pound while oil prices also rallied. Brent crude, the international benchmark, was 3.5% higher at $66 a barrel.

What next?

When asked by journalists about what the US wanted to see from China in the 90s, Mr Bessent said, “As long as there is good faith effort, engagement and constructive dialogue, then we will keep moving forward.”

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Explained: The US-UK trade deal

The UK came to the front of the line for deals, Mr Bessent added, “as our oldest ally”.

Switzerland had also moved to the “front of the queue”, he said, while the EU has been slower.

As with the other counties subject to 90-day pauses, a permanent deal will need to be reached, but confidence across the world is likely to have been boosted.

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Businesses now need a clear timetable and roadmap for future negotiations under the newly announced economic and trade consultation mechanism, said Andrew Wilson, the deputy secretary general of the International Chamber of Commerce.

“The credibility of that process for resolving underlying frictions in the Sino-US economic relationship will be mission-critical in terms of restoring business confidence.”

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Politics

Nigel Farage says he would allow essential migration but numbers would be capped

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Nigel Farage says he would allow essential migration but numbers would be capped

Nigel Farage has told Sky News he would allow some essential migration in areas with skill shortages but that numbers would be capped.

The Reform UK leader said he would announce the cap “in four years’ time” after he was pressed repeatedly by Sky’s deputy political editor Sam Coates about his manifesto pledge to freeze “non-essential” immigration.

Politics latest: PM accused of ‘shameful’ language in migration crackdown

It was put to Mr Farage that despite his criticism of the government’s migration crackdown, allowing essential migration in his own plans is quite a big caveat given the UK’s skills shortages.

However the Clacton MP said he would allow people to plug the gaps on “time dependent work permits” rather than on longer-term visas.

He said: “Let’s take engineering, for argument’s sake. We don’t train enough engineers, we just don’t. It’s crazy.

“We’ve been pushing young people to doing social sciences degrees or whatever it is.

“So you’re an engineering company, you need somebody to come in on skills. If they come in, on a time dependent work permit, if all the right health assurances and levies have been paid and if at the end of that period of time, you leave or you’re forced to leave, then it works.”

Read more:
What are Starmer’s new immigration rules?
The choice facing Labour in face of Reform threat – analysis

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‘We need to reduce immigration’

Reform’s manifesto, which they call a “contract”, says that “essential skills, mainly around healthcare, must be the only exception” to migration.

Pressed on how wide his exemption would be, Mr Farage said he hopes enough nurses and doctors will be trained “not to need anybody from overseas within the space of a few years”.

He said that work permits should be separate to immigration, adding: “If you get a job for an American TV station and you stay 48 hours longer than your work permit, they will smash your front door down, put you in handcuffs and deport you.

“We allow all of these routes, whether it’s coming into work, whether it’s coming as a student, we have allowed all of these to become routes for long-term migration.”

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Sky’s Sam Coates questions PM on migration

Asked if he would put a cap on his essential skills exemption, he said: “We will. I can’t tell you the numbers right now, I don’t have all the figures. What I can tell you is anyone that comes in will not be allowed to stay long-term. That’s the difference.”

Pressed if that was a commitment to a cap under a Reform UK government, he suggested he would set out further detail ahead of the next election, telling Coates: “Ask me in four years’ time, all right?”

Mr Farage was speaking after the government published an immigration white paper which pledged to ban overseas care workers as part of a package of measures to bring down net migration.

The former Brexit Party leader claimed the proposals were a “knee jerk reaction” to his party’s success at the local elections and accused the prime minister of not having the vigour to “follow them through”.

However he said he supports the “principle” of banning foreign care workers and conceded he might back some of the measures if they are put to a vote in parliament.

He said: “If it was stuff that did actually bind the government, there might be amendments on this that you would support. But I’m not convinced.”

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