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The father of a British tourist being held in the US has told Sky News “what was meant to be a life-changing trip has turned into a nightmare”.

Rebecca Burke, 28, from Monmouthshire, was attempting to cross into Canada from the US when she ended up being handcuffed and taken to a detention facility due to an issue with her visa.

Ms Burke, who has been travelling since January, had a tourist visa for her backpacking trip around North America, but her entry into Canada – where she was planning to stay with a host family in exchange for food and accommodation – was rejected.

Canadian officials said she needed a working visa and sent Ms Burke back to the US – where she was then “taken by homeland security in handcuffs to a large detention centre”, her father Paul Burke said.

She has now been held in the Tacoma Northwest facility in Washington state for 14 days.

Paul Burke and his wife with their daughter Rebecca
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Rebecca researched for months before jetting off to the US and Canada


“We thought of all the countries in the world, two of the safest for a British tourist to go to would be the USA and Canada,” Mr Burke said during an interview on Sky News Breakfast. “What was meant to be life changing for her has turned into a nightmare.”

Mr Burke and his wife have been able to speak to their daughter daily, as she can make phone calls from a shared iPad.

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They have become worried about Ms Burke’s health, as her vegan meals consist solely of cold rice and potatoes.

Paul Burke, whose daughter Rebecca is being held in a US detention centre
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Paul Burke has fears for his daughter’s health

“We spoke to her last night and she said she had to go and see the medic because she’s got digestive problems,” Ms Burke said.

“We’ve got very kind people [in Washington] who have offered to visit her. They’ve said when they visit, she’s behind a glass screen and they have to talk to her on a telephone.

“I can’t believe a British tourist is being kept in these conditions.”

Paul Burke and his wife with their daughter Rebecca
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Ms Burke has been able to trade with other women in the centre


Ms Burke – a graphic artist – has been able to trade with other women in the centre to secure fresh fruit, her dad said.

“She’s trading portraits of the other women and the other women’s kids, in return for an orange or some other food,” he said. “In terms of how the other women are treating her, it really is a band of sisters working together. They’re taking care of each other.

“They’re all trying to help each other and support each other, which is one good thing.”

Paul Burke and his wife with their daughter Rebecca
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Rebecca Burke has been told it could take another 10 days for her case to be dealt with


It is unclear when Ms Burke’s case will be dealt with by US immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials, who are “overloaded with cases” due to the US government’s blitz on immigration, her father said.

“The detention centres are being filled because of the crackdown,” Mr Burke continued. “Becky told us that her detention centre will be at capacity next week.”

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“She was told by the ICE officer, it could still be another 10 days [until her case is dealt with],” he continued. “Why can’t it be tomorrow? We just want her home.”

A Foreign Office spokesperson said: “We are supporting a British national detained in the USA and are in contact with the local authorities.”

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Labour accused of another manifesto breach after major workers’ rights U-turn

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Labour accused of another manifesto breach after major workers' rights U-turn

The Labour government is facing accusations of two manifesto breaches in as many days after turning its back on a promise to protect workers from unfair dismissal from day one in a job.

A day after Rachel Reeves confirmed an extended freeze on income tax thresholds that critics said amounted to a manifesto-breaching tax hike on working people, the business secretary announced a key measure in the flagship Employment Rights Bill would be watered down.

The qualifying period for unfair dismissal is currently two years, and Labour said in their manifesto they would bring it down to one day.

But Peter Kyle announced on Thursday it would now be six months, having faced opposition from businesses.

Mr Kyle defended the change, insisting “compromise is strength”, but Tory leader Kemi Badenoch described it as “another humiliating U-turn” and a number of Labour MPs aren’t happy.

Andy McDonald, MP for Middlesbrough and Thornaby East, branded the move a “complete betrayal”, while Poole MP Neil Duncan-Jordan said the government had “capitulated”.

Former employment minister Justin Madders, who was sacked in Sir Keir Starmer’s reshuffle earlier this year, also disputed claims the move did not amount to a manifesto breach.

“It might be a compromise,” he said, “but it most definitely is a manifesto breach.”

What did the manifesto say?

The Employment Rights Bill was a cornerstone of Labour’s 2024 election manifesto, and also contains measures that would ban zero-hours contracts.

The party manifesto promised to “consult fully with businesses, workers, and civil society on how to put our plans into practice before legislation is passed”.

“This will include banning exploitative zero-hours contracts; ending fire and rehire; and introducing basic rights from day one to parental leave, sick pay, and protection from unfair dismissal,” it said.

Angela Rayner was a key driver of the bill before she left cabinet, but Peter Kyle (below) is now calling the shots. Pic: PA
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Angela Rayner was a key driver of the bill before she left cabinet, but Peter Kyle (below) is now calling the shots. Pic: PA

Pic: Reuters
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Pic: Reuters

How did we get here?

But the legislation – which was spearheaded by former deputy prime minister Angela Rayner – has been caught in parliamentary ping pong with the House of Lords.

Last month, some peers objected to the provisions around unfair dismissal, suggesting they would deter some businesses from hiring.

They also opposed Labour’s move to force employers to offer guaranteed hours to employees from day one, arguing zero-hour contracts suited some people.

Ministers said reducing the qualifying period for unfair dismissal turned the bill into a “workable package”.

Read more:
Budget 2025: The key points at a glance
Starmer insists Labour ‘kept to our manifesto’

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Employment Rights Bill is ‘anti-growth blueprint’

Businesses have largely welcomed the change, but unions gave a more hostile response.

Sharon Graham, the general secretary of Unite, said the bill was now a “shell of its former self”.

“With fire and rehire and zero-hours contracts not being banned, the bill is already unrecognisable,” she said.

The TUC urged the House of Lords to allow the rest of the legislation to pass.

Paul Nowak, the general secretary, said: “The absolute priority now is to get these rights – like day one sick pay – on the statute book so that working people can start benefitting from them from next April.”

‘Strikes the right balance’

The Resolution Foundation said the change in the unfair dismissal period was a “sensible move that will speed up the delivery of improvements to working conditions and reduce the risk of firms being put off hiring”.

It said the change “strikes the right balance between strengthening worker protections and encouraging businesses to hire” and deliver “tangible improvements to working conditions”.

The Confederation of British Industry (CBI) added: “Businesses will be relieved that the government has agreed to a key amendment to the Employment Rights Bill, which can pave the way to its initial acceptance.

“This agreement keeps a qualifying period that is simple, meaningful and understood within existing legislation.

“It is crucial for businesses confidence to hire and to support employment, at the same time as protecting workers.”

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Budget 2025: Reeves urged to ‘make the case’ for income tax freeze – as PM hits out at defenders of ‘failed’ policy

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Budget 2025: Reeves urged to 'make the case' for income tax freeze - as PM hits out at defenders of 'failed' policy

Rachel Reeves needs to “make the case” to voters that extending the freeze on personal income thresholds was the “fairest” way to increase taxes, Baroness Harriet Harman has said.

Speaking to Sky News political editor Beth Rigby on the Electoral Dysfunction podcast, the Labour peer said the chancellor needed to explain that her decision would “protect people’s cost of living if they’re on low incomes”.

In her budget on Wednesday, Ms Reeves extended the freeze on income tax thresholds – introduced by the Conservatives in 2021 and due to expire in 2028 – by three years.

The move – described by critics as a “stealth tax” – is estimated to raise £8bn for the exchequer in 2029-2030 by dragging some 1.7 million people into a higher tax band as their pay goes up.

Rachel Reeves, pictured the day after delivering the budget. Pic: PA
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Rachel Reeves, pictured the day after delivering the budget. Pic: PA

The chancellor previously said she would not freeze thresholds as it would “hurt working people” – prompting accusations she has broken the trust of voters.

During the general election campaign, Labour promised not to increase VAT, national insurance or income tax rates.

Sir Keir Starmer has insisted there’s been no manifesto breach, but acknowledged people were being asked to “contribute” to protect public services.

He has also launched a staunch defence of the government’s decision to scrap the two-child benefit cap, with its estimated cost of around £3bn by the end of this parliament.

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Prime minister defends budget

‘A moral failure’

The prime minister condemned the Conservative policy as a “failed social experiment” and said those who defend it stand for “a moral failure and an economic disaster”.

“The record highs of child poverty in this country aren’t just numbers on a spreadsheet – they mean millions of children are going to bed hungry, falling behind at school, and growing up believing that a better future is out of reach despite their parents doing everything right,” he said.

The two-child limit restricts child tax credit and universal credit to the first two children in most households.

The government believes lifting the limit will pull 450,000 children out of poverty, which it argues will ultimately help reduce costs by preventing knock-on issues like dependency on welfare – and help people find jobs.

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Budget winners and losers

Speaking to Rigby, Baroness Harman said Ms Reeves now needed to convince “the woman on the doorstep” of why she’s raised taxes in the way that she has.

“I think Rachel really answered it very, very clearly when she said, ‘well, actually, we haven’t broken the manifesto because the manifesto was about rates’.

“And you remember there was a big kerfuffle before the budget about whether they would increase the rate of income tax or the rate of national insurance, and they backed off that because that would have been a breach of the manifesto.

“But she has had to increase the tax take, and she’s done it by increasing by freezing the thresholds, which she says she didn’t want to do. But she’s tried to do it with the fairest possible way, with counterbalancing support for people on low incomes.”

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She added: “And that is the argument that’s now got to be had with the public. The Labour members of parliament are happy about it. The markets essentially are happy about it. But she needs to make the case, and everybody in the government is going to need to make the case about it.

“This was a difficult thing to do, but it’s been done in the fairest possible way, and it’s for the good, because it will protect people’s cost of living if they’re on low incomes.”

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Prostate cancer: NHS screening programme could come one step closer today

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Prostate cancer: NHS screening programme could come one step closer today

An NHS screening programme for prostate cancer could come one step closer if it’s backed today by a key committee that advises the government.

The National Screening Committee, comprised of doctors and economists, will reveal whether it now believes the benefits of screening outweigh any risks, and whether testing could be done at a reasonable cost to the NHS.

When it last looked at the evidence in 2020, it rejected calls for screening, even though prostate cancer kills 12,000 men a year.

But in recent months, there has been growing pressure for screening from high-profile public figures such as Olympian Sir Chris Hoy and former Sky News presenter Dermot Murnaghan.

Both have been diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer, yet the disease is curable if detected in its early stages.

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Sir Chris Hoy and Dermot Murnaghan on facing cancer

Former prime minister David Cameron has also backed the campaign for screening this week after revealing he had been treated for the cancer.

The committee will decide whether new research has tipped the scales in favour of screening older men, or whether to target only those at higher risk, such as black men and those with a family history of the disease.

The case for…

Lithuania is currently the only country to screen all men aged 50-69 with a blood test for PSA, a protein released by prostate cells.

A low level is normal. But levels can rise steeply in men with cancer.

A recent study showed that regular PSA testing of men over 50 could reduce deaths by 13%.

That’s about the same survival benefit of breast screening.

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Cameron treated for prostate cancer

…and the case against

But the PSA blood test isn’t completely reliable.

One in seven men with prostate cancer actually have a normal PSA level.

And even those with a high level may have a cancer that is so slow growing that it’s just not a threat.

That’s why the National Screening Committee has warned in the past that PSA screening could lead men to have surgery or other treatment that they don’t actually need. Treatment can result in incontinence or impotence.

But the evidence has moved on.

These days men with a high PSA should have an MRI scan of their prostate, which significantly reduces the risk of unnecessary treatment. And the treatment itself is getting safer.

But the committee may judge that the risks and benefits of screening all men in their 50s and 60s are still too finely balanced to give the go-ahead.

They may wait for results from the Transform trial, which has just been launched and will compare different screening strategies. That could take many years.

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‘When I was diagnosed, it was too late’

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But campaigners are hopeful that the committee will recommend the screening of men at higher risk of prostate cancer in the meantime.

Black men have twice the risk of those from other ethnic groups.

Men whose father or brothers have had prostate cancer are two and a half times the risk.

And there is also an increased risk for men whose mother or sisters have had breast or ovarian cancer.

Roughly 1.3 million men fall into one of the risk groups.

But identifying and inviting them for screening could prove tricky. GPs don’t always note a patient’s ethnicity in their medical records, and they would usually only know about a patient’s family history if they have been told.

If the committee recommends screening in some form, it is likely to go out to a public consultation before landing on the desk of Health Secretary Wes Streeting for a final decision.

Ultimately, it is his call whether at least some men are screened for what is now the most common cancer in England.

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