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Rachel Reeves has admitted she was “wrong” to say higher taxes were not needed during the election campaign – but businesses will have to make less money or pay staff less to cover their tax increase.

A month before Labour won the July election, the chancellor said “we don’t need higher taxes, what we need is growth”.

On Wednesday, the chancellor raised taxes by £40bn – the highest amount since 1993.

She told Sky News’ Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips: “I was wrong on 11 June, I didn’t know everything, because when I arrived at the Treasury on July 5, so just under a month after I said those words, I was taken into a room by the senior officials at the Treasury and they set out the huge black hole in the public finances beyond which anybody knew about at the time of the general election.”

She accused the previous government of having “hid it from the country, they hid it from parliament and indeed, they hid it from the official independent forecaster, the OBR”.

Follow live: Chancellor admits she was ‘wrong’

The lion’s share of the £40bn in tax rises will be shouldered by businesses as employers’ national insurance (NI) will go up by 1.2 percentage points to 15% from April, while the earnings threshold at which employers start paying NI has been slashed from £9,100 to £5,000.

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Ms Reeves said this will raise £25bn over the next five years.

The tax rise has been heavily criticised but the chancellor defended her decision as she said the government “made a choice” to get employers to pay the rise instead of employees.

She told Trevor Phillips: “Yes, businesses will now have to make a choice, whether they will absorb that through efficiency and productivity gains, whether it will be through lower profits or perhaps through lower wage growth.”

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White House reportedly mulling pardon for Binance founder CZ

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White House reportedly mulling pardon for Binance founder CZ

White House reportedly mulling pardon for Binance founder CZ

Binance co-founder Changpeng Zhao said that being considered for a presidential pardon from Trump would be “great news if true.”

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US and China soften trade rhetoric, giving analysts hope of market rebound

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US and China soften trade rhetoric, giving analysts hope of market rebound

US and China soften trade rhetoric, giving analysts hope of market rebound

Tensions between the two countries appear to have cooled off on Sunday, as representatives from both sides signal a willingness to negotiate.

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Fears Trump may lose focus after praise for Gaza peace deal at Egypt summit

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Britain has been playing a role behind the scenes of Trump's deal between Israel and Hamas | Beth Rigby

Sir Keir Starmer will on Monday join world leaders at a historic summit in Egypt to witness the signing of the Gaza peace plan to end two years of conflict, bloodshed and suffering, that has cost tens of thousands of lives and turned Gaza into a wasteland.

Travelling over to Egypt, flanked by his national security advisor Jonathan Powell, the prime minister told me it was a “massive moment” and one that is genuinely historic.

US President Donald Trump moved decisively last week to end this bloody war, pushing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Hamas into a ceasefire as part of his 20-point peace plan.

Pic: AP
Image:
Pic: AP

In the flurry of the following 48 hours, Mr Starmer and another twenty or so leaders were invited to Egypt to bear witness to the signing of this deal, with many of them deserving some credit for the effort they made to bring this deal around, not least the leaders of Qatar, Egypt and Turkey, who pressed Hamas to sign up to this deal.

On Monday, the remaining 20 living hostages are finally set to be released, along with the bodies of another 28 who were either killed or died in captivity, and aid is due to flow back into a starving Gaza.

Some 1,200 Israelis were killed on 7 October 2023, with another 250 taken hostage. In the subsequent war, most of Gaza’s two million population has been displaced. More than 67,000 Gazans have been killed, according to Palestinian health officials

Then, the signing ceremony is due to take place on Monday afternoon in Sharm el-Sheikh. It will be a momentous moment after a long and bloody war.

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But it is only just the beginning of a long process to rebuild Gaza and try to secure a lasting peace in the region.

The immediate focus for the UK and other nations will be to get aid into Gaza with the UK committing £20m on Monday for water, sanitation and hygiene services for Gazans.

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Humanitarian aid rolls into Gaza

But the bigger focus for the UK and other European allies is what happens after the hostages are released and Israel withdraws its troops.

Because what happens next is a much bigger and more complicated task: rebuilding Gaza; turning it into a terrorist-free zone; governing Gaza – the current plan is for a temporary apolitical committee; creating an international stabilisation force and all the tensions that could bring about – which troops each side would allow in; a commitment for Israel not to occupy or annex Gaza, even as Netanyahu makes plain his opposition to that plan.

The scale of the challenge is matched by the scale of devastation caused by this brutal war.

The prime minister will tomorrow set out his ambition for the UK to play a leading role in the next phase of the peace plan.

Back home the UK is hosting a three-day conference on Gaza’s recovery and reconstruction.

Last week, France hosted European diplomats and key figures from Middle Eastern countries, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Qatar and later this week, the German chancellor is hoping to organise a conference on the reconstruction of Gaza with the Egyptians.

But in reality, European leaders know the key to phase two remains the key to phase one: and that’s Donald Trump.

As one UK figure put it to me over the weekend: “There is lots of praise, rightly, for the US president, who got this over the line, but the big challenge for us post-war is implementing the plan. Clearly, Arab partners are concerned the US will lose focus”.

The prime minister knows this and has made a point, at every point, to praise Mr Trump.

Bridget Phillipson and Mike Huckabee. Pics: Sky/AP
Image:
Bridget Phillipson and Mike Huckabee. Pics: Sky/AP

His cabinet minister Bridget Phillipson learned that diplomatic lesson the hard way on Sunday when she was publicly lambasted by the US ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee for suggesting to my colleague Trevor Phillips that the UK “had played a key role behind the scenes” and failed to mention Mr Trump by name.

“I assure you she is delusional,” tweeted Governor Huckabee. “She can thank @realDonaldTrump anytime just to set the record straight”.

On Monday, leaders will rightly be praising Mr Trump for securing the breakthrough to stop the fighting and get the remaining hostages home.

People hug next in Hostages Square. Pic: Reuters
Image:
People hug next in Hostages Square. Pic: Reuters

But this is only the beginning of a very long journey ahead to push through the rest of the 19-point plan and stop the region from falling back into conflict.

Britain has, I am told, been playing a role behind the scenes. The PM’s national security adviser Mr Powell was in Egypt last week and has been in daily touch with his US counterpart Steve Witkoff, according to government sources. Next week the King of Jordan will come to the UK.

Part of the UK’s task will be to get more involved, with the government and European partners keen to get further European representation on Trump’s temporary governance committee for Gaza, which Tony Blair (who was not recommended or endorsed by the UK) is on and Mr Trump will chair.

The committee will include other heads of states and members, including qualified Palestinians and international experts.

As for the former prime minister’s involvement, there hasn’t been an overt ringing endorsement from the UK government.

It’s helpful to have Mr Blair at the table because he can communicate back to the current government, but equally, as one diplomatic source put it to me: “While a lot of people in the Middle East acknowledge his experience, expertise and contact book, they don’t like him and we need – sooner rather than later – other names included that Gulf partners can get behind.”

On Monday it will be the US, Egypt, Qatar and Turkey that sign off on the peace plan they directly negotiated, as other Middle Eastern and European leaders, who have flown into Sharm el-Sheikh to bear witness, look on.

But in the coming days and weeks, there will need to be a big international effort, led by Mr Trump, not just to secure the peace, but to keep it.

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