Rishi Sunak has said he is “slamming the brakes on the war on motorists” – with the government confirming that councils will be stopped from enforcing blanket 20mph speed limits.
Low-traffic neighbourhoods are also in the prime minister’s crosshairs and will only be permitted where there is local consent.
The Department for Transport added that it plans to stop council implementing so-called “15-minute cities” amid fears they “aggressively restrict where people can drive”.
Speaking to The Sun, Mr Sunak described such schemes as “hare-brained” – and claimed penalising drivers going about their daily lives “doesn’t reflect the values of Britain”.
The PM’s announcement comes as the Conservative Party conference gets under way this weekend in Manchester.
Mr Sunak will be hoping to capitalise on the advantage he gained during the Uxbridge by-election, where London’s controversial Ultra Low Emission Zone was a key issue on the doorstep.
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Why is ULEZ so controversial?
In an announcement, the government said its new long-term government plan aims to support the 50 million people who hold a driving licence in the UK.
Other measures will include efforts to simplify paying for parking by phone, charging utility firms that dig up busy roads at peak times, and a consultation on motorcycles using bus lanes.
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Transport Secretary Mark Harper said: “Too often the private car is vilified when it has been one of the most powerful forces for personal freedom and economic growth.
“That’s why the government is taking the long-term, necessary decision to back the motorists who keep our country moving.”
Mr Harper, who will set out further details in a speech to Tory members on Monday, said this plan will complement “continued investment in public transport”.
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The license came eight months after the regulator granted the company in-principle approval, and a few weeks after Bybit secured a non-operational license for Dubai.
Sir Keir Starmer has denied any ministers were involved in the collapse of the trial of alleged Chinese spies.
Christopher Cash, 30, a former parliamentary researcher, and teacher Christopher Berry, 33, were accused of spying for China, but weeks before their trial was due to begin, it was dropped.
Berry, of Witney, Oxfordshire, and Cash, of Whitechapel, east London denied the allegations.
Sir Keir, his ministers and national security adviser Jonathan Powell have faced accusations they were involved in the trial being dropped.
The prime minister has maintained that because the last Conservative government had not designated China as a threat to national security, his government could not provide evidence to that effect, which the director of public prosecutions Stephen Parkinson said was required to meet the threshold for prosecution.
Mr Parkinson had blamed ministers for failing to provide the crucial evidence needed to proceed.
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During a trade visit to India, the prime minister was asked whether any minister, or Mr Powell, were involved in the decision not to provide the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) with evidence that, at the time of the alleged offences, China represented a threat to national security.
He replied: “I can be absolutely clear no ministers were involved in any of the decisions since this government’s been in in relation to the evidence that’s put before the court on this issue.”
Sir Keir reiterated his line that the case could only rely on evidence from the period the pair were accused of spying, from 2021 to 2023, when the Conservatives were in government.
He said: “The evidence in this case was drawn up at the time and reflected the position as it was at the time,” the PM said in India.
“And that has remained the situation from start to finish.
“That is inevitably the case because in the United Kingdom, you can only try people on the basis of the situation as it was at the time.
“You can’t try people on the basis of the situation, as it now is or might be in the future, and therefore, the only evidence that a court would ever admit on this would be evidence of what the situation was at the time.
“It’s not a party political point. It’s a matter of law.”
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Is China an enemy to the UK?
Sir Keir’s assertion has been called into question by former top civil servants and legal experts.
Mark Elliott, professor of public law at the University of Cambridge, told Sky News there is no legal requirement for a country to be declared an enemy for someone to be tried for breaching the Official Secrets Act.
He said the current government was “cherry picking” what the previous government had said about China to claim they did not regard them as a threat to national security.
However, there are several examples of the Tory government saying China was a national security threat during the time Berry and Cash were accused of spying.