Connect with us

Published

on

The Archbishop of Canterbury will use his Easter sermon to say the church is not party political after facing criticism over his high-profile condemnation of the government’s controversial Rwanda deportation scheme.

Justin Welby will tell the congregation on Sunday that Anglicans are “all different” in their politics, as he urged “love-in-action” to help those caught up in conflict, including children in Gaza and Sudan, hostages held by Hamas and people in Ukraine.

The top cleric has come under fire for his scathing denunciation of Rishi Sunak’s plan to tackle small boat crossings and send asylum seekers on a one-way flight to Kigali, arguing it was “morally unacceptable” and “leading the nation down a damaging path”.

Mr Welby has previously been told at Westminster that neither “handwringing or bell ringing” will solve the problem and that he should “check his white privilege” over his opposition to the Rwanda policy.

Follow Sky News on WhatsApp
Follow Sky News on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News

Tap here

In his Easter address, the archbishop will tell the faithful: “We must confront evil and pain.

“Whether it is the evil of people smugglers, or county lines in our schools, or the pain and suffering in a family riven with grief or rage or substance abuse.

“Jesus, the God-man, who experienced every pain and temptation, is calling us to love-in-action.

“It must be action driven by prayer, directed in wisdom.

“The church is not party political, for its members are all different in our politics.

“But we do not pick causes by opinion polls or human pressure, we show love-in-action and word because of who God is, revealed in Jesus.

“We act because of what God says, found in the bible and to be lived out by the church – in over 30,000 social projects – in 8,000 food banks.”

Read more on Sky News:
PM and chancellor could lose their seats at next general election, major poll suggests
How ‘TikTok idiots’ and ‘wild’ conspiracy theories are disrupting police investigations

He added: “Therefore, let us seek action amongst the starving children of Gaza and Sudan – and the parents who try desperately to find food for them, action for the hostages held by Hamas, action for those in the trenches and cities and fears of Ukraine, action in at least 30 but probably closer to 50 other places of armed conflict, action for the 25-30% of children in this country in poverty.

“Because God is revealed in Jesus, action-in-love means we must live sacrificially and generously, for others not ourselves.”

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Pope at Easter Vigil after health scare

The government’s Rwanda legislation, which is intended to prevent further legal challenges to the stalled asylum scheme after the Supreme Court ruled the plan was unlawful, remains stuck in parliamentary limbo after a series of further defeats in the Lords, with MPs not scheduled to debate it again until after Westminster returns from its Easter break.

Meanwhile, Pope Francis has presided over the Easter vigil service at the Vatican, delivering a 10-minute homily and performing baptisms, a day after suddenly skipping the Good Friday procession at the Colosseum as a health precaution.

Continue Reading

Politics

South Korea elects pro-crypto candidate Lee Jae-myung as president

Published

on

By

South Korea elects pro-crypto candidate Lee Jae-myung as president

South Korea elects pro-crypto candidate Lee Jae-myung as president

Lee Jae-myung has plans to enable the state pension fund to invest in crypto, approve Bitcoin ETFs, and launch a Korean won-backed stablecoin.

Continue Reading

Politics

California assembly passes bill to allow crypto payments to state

Published

on

By

California assembly passes bill to allow crypto payments to state

California assembly passes bill to allow crypto payments to state

The California State Assembly passed a bill that would allow state agencies to accept crypto for payment in a unanimous 68-0 vote, which will now head to the Senate.

Continue Reading

Politics

Rachel Reeves is about to make huge spending decisions – these could be the winners and losers

Published

on

By

Rachel Reeves is about to make huge spending decisions - these could be the winners and losers

A week today, Rachel Reeves presents the spending review; how the budget is divided between government departments between 2026 and 2029 – the bulk of this parliament. 

It’s a foundational moment for this government – and a key to determining the success of this administration.

UK exempt from Trump’s latest tariff hike: politics latest

So, what’s going to happen?

The chancellor did boost spending significantly in her first year, and this year there was a modest rise.

For 0600 Coates piece

However, the uplift to day-to-day spending in the years ahead is more modest – and pared back further in March’s spring statement because of adverse financial conditions.

Plus, where will the £113bn of capital – project – spending go?

So, we’ve done a novel experiment.

We’ve taken Treasury documents, ministerial statements and reports from the Institute for Fiscal Studies.

We put them all into AI – into the deep research function of ChatGPT – and asked it to write the spending review, calculate the winners and losers and work out what goes where, and why.

For 0600 Coates piece

It comes with a health warning. We’re using experimental technology that is sometimes wrong, and while ChatGPT can access up-to-date data from across the web, it’s only trained on information up to October 2023.

There are no answers because discussions are still going on. Think of it like a polling projection – clues about the big picture as things move underneath.

But, critically, the story it tells tallies with the narrative I’m hearing from inside government too.

The winners? Defence, health and transport, with Angela Rayner’s housing department up as well.

Everywhere else is down, compared with this year’s spending settlement.

For 0600 Coates piece

The Home Office, justice, culture, and business – facing real terms squeezes from here on in.

The aid budget from the Foreign Office, slashed – the Ministry of Defence the beneficiary. You heard about that this week.

Health – a Labour priority. I heard from sources a settlement of around 3%. This AI model puts it just above.

Transport – a surprise winner. Rachel Reeves thinks this is where her capital budget should go. Projects in the north to help hold voters who live there.

But, could this spell trouble?

More from Sky News:
Who is the public’s favourite minister?

Chancellor threatens to sue Abramovich

Bridget Phillipson leaves 10 Downing Street.
Pic: PA
Image:
Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson will not be happy with ChatGPT’s suggestion for her department. Pic: PA

Education – down overall. Now this government will protect the schools budget. It will say ‘per pupil’ funding is up. But adult education is at risk. Is this where they find the savings?

So much else – Home Office down, but is that because asylum costs are going down.

Energy – they’re haggling over solar panels versus home insulation.

Justice should get what it wants, I am told. This isn’t about exact percentages. But you can see across lots of departments – things are tight.

Even though Rachel Reeves has already set the budgets for last year and this, and only needs to decide spending allocations from 2026 onwards, the graphs the Treasury will produce next week compare what will be spent to the last set of Tory plans.

This means their graphs will include the big spending increases they made last year – and flatter them more.

They’ll say that’s fair enough, others will disagree. But in the end, will it be enough for public services?

Continue Reading

Trending