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Was the deputy prime minister trying to evade and dodge tax? Is she a ‘hypocrite’? Or was she simply doing what she thought was the right thing?

Beth takes Ruth and Harriet behind the scenes of her interview with Angela Rayner this week as they ask whether she will survive in government, or if she will have to resign.

It all emerged after Ms Rayner admitted she didn’t pay enough tax on her home in Hove – you can catch the exclusive 20-minute interview in the Electoral Dysfunction feed.

After recording, Verrico & Associates confirmed that it had advised Ms Rayner on the purchase of the flat. Joanna Verrico, the managing director, told The Telegraph: “We acted for Ms Rayner when she purchased the flat in Hove. We did not and never have given tax or trust advice. It’s something we always refer our clients to an accountant or tax expert for.

“The stamp duty for the Hove flat was calculated using HMRC’s own online calculator, based on the figures and the information provided by Ms Rayner. That’s what we used, and it told us we had to pay Ā£30,000 based on the information provided to us. We believe that we did everything correctly and in good faith. Everything was exactly as it should be.”

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Aave to offer zero-fee stablecoin ramps in Europe after MiCA approval

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Aave to offer zero-fee stablecoin ramps in Europe after MiCA approval

Aave Labs became one of the first major decentralized finance (DeFi) projects to secure authorization under Europe’s new Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation, allowing the company to offer regulated stablecoin ramps across the European Economic Area (EEA).

The approval enables ā€œPush,ā€ Aave Labs’ fiat-to-crypto service, to let users convert between euros and crypto assets, including the Aave protocol’s native stablecoin, GHO. The Central Bank of Ireland granted the authorization to Push Virtual Assets Ireland Limited, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Aave Labs.Ā 

The company selected Ireland for its European operations, signaling that the country is becoming a preferred hub for compliant onchain finance under MiCA. On June 25, the crypto exchange Kraken secured its MiCA authorization in Ireland, allowing it to expand its offerings across Europe.Ā 

The move came as global stablecoin supply surpassed $300 billion in 2025, signaling strong demand for fiat-pegged crypto assets. At the time of writing, CoinGecko data showed that the total stablecoin market cap across the crypto sector was at $312 billion.Ā Ā 

Top stablecoins by market capitalization. Source: CoinGecko

Related: DeFi players launch alliance to champion Ethereum to policymakers

Aave’s Push opens regulated access to GHO and other stablecoins

With its MiCA approval secured, Push will offer regulated on and off-ramps to GHO and other stablecoins integrated in Aave’s product suite.Ā 

According to Aave’s announcement, the conversion fees are set to zero, which is a competitive rate compared to the typical fee structure across legacy fintech providers and centralized exchanges (CEXs).Ā 

While the protocol introduced the product as a ā€œzero-feeā€ solution, it did not specify whether this fee structure was permanent or tied to an introductory period.

Aave Labs said a compliant payment infrastructure is foundational to developers hoping to onboard mainstream users into DeFi.Ā 

By providing a predictable, audited pathway between euros and crypto assets, Push could reduce one of the biggest frictions in DeFi adoption: the dependence on CEXs for fiat-to-crypto conversions.Ā 

The ability for a DeFi-native organization to run a compliant fiat bridge represents a meaningful shift as the protocol supports tens of billions in stablecoin liquidity.Ā 

According to DefiLlama, Aave processed a volume of $542 million in the last 24 hours alone. The data aggregator also showed that the total value of assets borrowed by users from Aave’s lending pools exceeds $22.8 billion.