PM to say Reform UK leader is promoting a ‘fantasy’ that would unleash a Truss-style economic crisisStarmer to say Reform’s spending plans would cause Truss-style meltdownGovernment minister Emma Hardy has urged doctors to “vote no” in an upcoming strike ballot.The water minister told Sky News:We hugely value everybody who works in the NHS and we hugely value our doctors: that’s why they’ve had a 28% increase in their salary compared to three years ago, and why we’re offering above-inflation pay [rises].But what patients are telling me, patients where I’m from in Hull and up and down the country, is they’re really pleased with the government for reducing waiting lists by 200,000 but they want to see that progress continue with the NHS, and they really don’t want to see strikes.So my message to the doctors is: we value you, that’s why we’ve offered the above-inflation pay rise.Farage is making the exact same bet Liz Truss did: that you can spend tens of billions on tax cuts without a proper way of paying for it. And, just like Truss, he is using your family finances, your mortgage, your bills as a gambling chip on his mad experiment. The result will be the same.The British arm of a US contractor that profits from testing whether some people in the UK should receive disability benefits has paid out £10m in dividends to its investors. Maximus, a Virginia-based business, reported a 23% rise in pre-tax profit for its UK arm, from £23.6m to £29.1m, in its financial year to the end of September, accounts lodged at Companies House show. Its revenue rose 2%, from £294m to £300m.The health secretary, Wes Streeting, has urged doctors to vote against industrial action as the British Medical Association (BMA) ballots resident doctors, formerly known as junior doctors, for strike action that could last for six months. Writing in the Times on Thursday, Streeting said: “We can’t afford to return to a continuous cycle of standoffs, strikes, and cancellations.”The House of Lords watchdog has launched an investigation into a Conservative hereditary peer who admitted he “erroneously” made claims last year for travel expenses he did not incur. He is the fifth peer to face an inquiry after Guardian reporting into the upper house.Jobcentres will no longer force people into “any job” available, the employment minister has said, promising there will be long-term, personalised career support for those losing out due to welfare cuts. Alison McGovern said she was ending the Conservative policy under which jobseekers were obliged to take any low-paid, insecure work and that the service would now be focused on helping people to build rewarding careers.Scotland’s first minister has warned that the Hamilton byelection is now a “straight contest” between the SNP and Reform UK as he urged voters to back his party. John Swinney claimed the Labour campaign is in collapse and urged their supporters to act and “unite behind our shared principles” to defeat Farage’s party. Continue reading...
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