James O’Brien warns of Covid unemployment colliding with Brexit – LBC

7 August 2020, 15:19

James O'Brien warned that the unemployment caused when furlough ends is going to collide with the effects of Brexit.

Speaking on his LBC show, he said: "You know the narrative of the feckless workshy layabout was the pre-Brexit two-minutes hate.

"It was single mothers when I started this job. Then it became unemployed people. And you couldn't open a right-wing newspaper without seeing unemployed people under attack.

"If it was an unemployed single mother who had been given a big house in a smart part of town, that was all their Christmases at once."

He then went on to discuss what would happen next: "What's going to happen is the precise moment when people come to realise the reality of unemployment, so they are going to wake up to the reality of Brexit.

"And the people who have flogged you the false narrative about the unemployed, the people who've looked you in the eye and told you that living on 95 a week is an absolute King's ransom, who also told you there would also be 350m for the NHS.

"You are going to wake up to the reality of what unemployment means at precisely the same time you wake up to the reality of what Brexit means. And the people that lied to you about both, who are they going to go after to avoid responsibility for their own crimes?"

Watch his full, fascinating monologue at the top of the page.

Continued here:

James O'Brien warns of Covid unemployment colliding with Brexit - LBC

WATCH: Brexit Party chairman says civil servants should be ‘let go’ if they won’t return to office over Covid-19 fears – The New European

Video

PUBLISHED: 09:46 06 August 2020 | UPDATED: 13:07 06 August 2020

Adrian Zorzut

Brexit Party chairman Richard Tice on Sky News. Picture: Sky News

Sky News

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Richard Tice told LBCs Tom Swarbrick that Downing Street should lead by example and let go of staff unwilling to return to the workplace.

The former MEPs comment comes in the same weeks workers were urged to return to the office by prime minister Boris Johnson.

In July, Johnson said employers would be given the right to decide when staff should return to the workplace from August 1. He then insisted people should return in order to help struggling businesses in city centres who rely on worker footfall to survive.

MORE: Boris Johnson working from Chequers retreat after telling people to get back to office

A new survey published in the Times found that only 34% of Britons are back at their desks, compared with 75% of Germans, Italians and Spanish, and 83% of office staff in France.

But Tice, irate at the findings, said the government needed to incentivise people to come back into the city centre, [like making] transport free for six months.

The government needs to lead by example, he continued. Hundreds of thousands of civil servants need to come back into the office.

And bluntly, if not, then let them go. There are plenty of other people who can do the job.

A surprised Swarbrick asked Tice on what ground he would fire up to 66% of Whitehalls workforce.

The Brexiteer failed to give a solid answer, instead saying: If we dont do this, the economy is literally going to go down a vicious spiral into the kitchen sink.

He then went on to say that it was not good enough for papers like the Daily Mail to berate firms for not forcing people back to the workplace when the news organisations own staff are still working from home.

Paul Niland said on Twitter: As usual @TiceRichard completely misses the point. The conversation to be had is about *HOW* to make working environments safe to return to. That key factor is missing from his thinking because what do Brexit cheerleaders know about calculating consequences.

Martin Hall asked why workers had to return to the office. They are working perfectly well from home. Things havent ground to a halt.

Marina Perkiss pointed out: In that case, how come he dialled in for his call with @TomSwarbrick1?

Almost four years after its creation The New European goes from strength to strength across print and online, offering a pro-European perspective on Brexit and reporting on the political response to the coronavirus outbreak, climate change and international politics. But we can only rebalance the right wing extremes of much of the UK national press with your support. If you value what we are doing, you can help us by making a contribution to the cost of our journalism.

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WATCH: Brexit Party chairman says civil servants should be 'let go' if they won't return to office over Covid-19 fears - The New European

Prime Minister urged to block peerage of former Brexit Party MEP over IRA Warrington bomb comments – Belfast Telegraph

The Prime Minister has been urged to block the peerage of a former Brexit Party MEP who previously failed to condemn the IRA Warrington bomb.

laire Fox was one of 36 people to the Lords by Boris Johnson.

At the time of the 1993 attack, which killed two boys and injured more than 50, Claire Fox was a leading member of the Revolutionary Communist Party which said the right of the Irish people to take whatever measures are necessary in their struggle for freedom.

In a letter to Boris Johnson, Labours Warrington North MP Charlotte Nichols said Ms Foxs nomination had caused hurt to those directly affected by bombing and revulsion in her constituency.

To allow Ms Fox to become a Life Peer would be to show crass insensitivity to victims of terrorism, and to the communities still scarred by the attack 27 years on, she said.

Warrington will never forget that day, nor the victims whose lives were cruelly cut short.

Labours MP for Ashton under Lyne, Angela Rayner, added that Boris Johnsons failure to block the peerage was an insult to the people of the North West and shows that he doesnt care about the victims and survivors of terrorism in our communities.

She added: If the Prime Minister refuses to block this nomination he is showing that he doesnt care about the victims and survivors of terrorism in our communities.

Ms Fox has denied defending IRA terrorism, and when asked about the controversy on Sky News this week, she said her views had moved on.

Well it is true that I was involved in revolutionary politics a long time ago and they will have been views that I had then that I think at the time were part and parcel of politics as they were understood, including on Ireland, and they are very controversial today, but it was a long time ago.

She added: Thats what Id say, it was a long time ago. Times have moved on, I understand people are very angry about views I had...27 years ago. Thats life, you know. I stand on what I say now.

Asked about accepting a peerage after calling for the House of Lords to be abolished, she said: I appreciate that people will want to level the charge of hypocrisy against me but I just think that although its an unelected chamber and I do think its an affront to democracy Im pleased to be given and opportunity and a platform to argue for things that I feel very strongly about, like for example free speech and obviously some of the ideas associated with Brexit.

So Ive taken it. Ive given it some thought as you would imagine.

Colin Parrys 12-year-old son Tim was killed in the Warrington bomb in the attack as well as three-year-old Johnathan Ball.

Mr Parry criticised the decision to hand Ms Fox a peerage, saying: This offends me and many others deeply.

The Daily Mirror reported that an earlier statement from Ms Fox added: Contrary to what has been reported elsewhere, I do not support or defend the IRAs killing of two young boys in Warrington in 1993.

I have not mentioned the horrific times of over 23 (now 27) years ago since then and do not believe there is any justification for violence in Ireland today.

The killing of Johnathan Ball and Tim Parry was a terrible tragedy.

The 1994 IRA ceasefire and the 1998 Good Friday Agreement drew a line under the conflict. Its surely time to move on.

A Downing Street spokesman said: Claire Fox has addressed her historic comments about the Troubles and acknowledged the pain that the families of the victims of terrorism have faced.

She is not a Conservative peer, and her political views will differ from those of the Conservative Government.

Mr Johnsons list also includes Tory donors, his brother Jo and long-term friends such as the Evening Standard owner Evgeny Lebedev.

Belfast Telegraph

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Prime Minister urged to block peerage of former Brexit Party MEP over IRA Warrington bomb comments - Belfast Telegraph

No deal Brexit impact on UK economy ‘dwarfed’ by coronavirus says Bank of England Governor – Daily Express

Andrew Bailey, Governor of the Bank of England, explained the impact of a no deal Brexit has been dwarfed by the effects of the coronavirus pandemic on the economy. He said while both can affect trade, the bank's research has shown that COVID-19 is a much bigger shock to the economy. Speaking to Sky News, Mr Bailey said: "It is very complicated at the moment, both COVID and Brexit could both negatively affect trade.

"All our work suggest COVID is a bigger shock moreover, of course, COVID has already had an effect on trade.

"You then get to the extremely complicated question, how much of that effect on trade has actually already been taken over by COVID."

His comments come as Brexiteer and Conservative MP Mark Francois recently warned the EU's chief negotiator Michel Barnier that the British public is growing impatient following years of Brexit negotiations.

Mr Francois hit out at Mr Barnier who said last week a Brexit deal looked "unlikely" and that the two sides remained at a stalemate.

READ MORE:EU's status as trading force in doubt after halloumi row

The Brexiteer warned the UK could leave with no deal on December 31 as Prime Minister Boris Johnson has refused to request an extension to the trade talks.

David Frost, the UK's chief negotiator, meanwhile confirmed there was a continued impasse but struck a more hopeful tone in his media appearance following intensified discussions.

Speaking to talkRADIO, Mr Francois said: One thing that runs through history is, people who bully us tend not to do well out of it.

"That isn't going to work and if necessary we will leave on December 31 and we will trade on Australia/WTO terms which is how most of the world trades anyway.

"We're not frightened of doing that. We would prefer a deal but if they're going to be intransigent we're going down the WTO path.

"I think the British public is running out of patience with Mr Barnier. The show is getting a bit boring.

"If they don't want a compromise that's fine, we'll do our own thing."

Brexit talks will intensify over the summer between the UK and EU, according to Government sources.

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A senior UK Government official involved in the talks said the "only way forward now is to have a textual negotiation to get into the detail", which is scheduled to happen in August and September.

Formal talks are "pre-programmed in" for the week of August 17 and fringe discussions will continue next week.

A senior UK Government official involved in the talks, when asked about whether the discussions were closer to breakdown or breakthrough, said: "I think we are potentially closer to both, to be honest - I think it is hard to quantify.

"I can quite see how we can make a breakthrough relatively quickly if they do adjust their position in the most important areas and, if they don't, we won't.

"It really is in their hands to a large extent and it is related to the fundamental principles in these few areas."

Read more:

No deal Brexit impact on UK economy 'dwarfed' by coronavirus says Bank of England Governor - Daily Express

WATCH: Government’s new Brexit advert boasting of new era of ‘cooperation’ and ‘close ties’ mocked – The New European

Video

PUBLISHED: 15:49 05 August 2020 | UPDATED: 18:03 05 August 2020

Adrian Zorzut

A screengrab of the government's latest Brexit promo; Twitter

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Footage of an ad bigging up Britains new ties with Europe gained some unsavoury publicity when it launched on Wednesday.

Shared on the Cabinet Offices official Twitter page, the video is the latest instalment of the governments Lets Get Going media blitz preparing business for Brexit.

The clip, which is accompanied by promotional tunes and clips of Europe on a map, boasts of a new era of cooperation between sovereign equals which is supposedly underpinned by close ties between our people.

It goes on to say that both sides will build on our existing close friendship, inspired by both shared history and shared values.

But the promotional drive failed miserably on Twitter, drawing stinging rebukes over its language and content.

Otto English, a freelance writer posted: You realise this makes absolutely no sense. If the other EU countries are sovereign why have we had to leave?

Liz Anderson dredged up Downing Streets very own Brexit White Paper which states the UK parliament had remained sovereign throughout our membership of the EU.

Um, this might come as a bit of a shock to you, lads, but we *always* were sovereign, she wrote.

Others had a bone to pick with the term sovereign equals.

Architect and writer Steve Lawrence said: This is nonsensical the EU isnt in any way sovereign, its just a treaty.

Former Whitehall staffer Sarah Hurst wrote: Well, I had a job in the civil service, trying to solve Brexit problems, but I was sacked. So now I dont know what part you want me to play.

Ian Dunt, an editor for Politics.co.uk, wrote: Still waiting for someone to tell me one thing, just one single f****** thing, which we have attained. Every word of this was true when we were EU members.

Jon Henley joked: You are aware, I trust, that the EU is 27 countries? The UK is one country.

That doesnt sound very equal to me.

Almost four years after its creation The New European goes from strength to strength across print and online, offering a pro-European perspective on Brexit and reporting on the political response to the coronavirus outbreak, climate change and international politics. But we can only rebalance the right wing extremes of much of the UK national press with your support. If you value what we are doing, you can help us by making a contribution to the cost of our journalism.

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WATCH: Government's new Brexit advert boasting of new era of 'cooperation' and 'close ties' mocked - The New European

Standard Life Aberdeen warns on Brexit and says the economy could be scarred by coronavirus – Evening Standard

Asset management giant Standard Life Aberdeen today warned the economy could be scarred and that Brexit remains a deep uncertainty.

The City stalwart said that coronavirus could cause a long term loss of output, labour market scarring and lower real interest rates.

The company said: "The COVID-19 pandemic and associated shutdowns of economic activity have precipitated significant negative growth shocks across the world. However, the contraction phase of the crisis has also been comparatively short-lived and we anticipate an element of recovery as restrictions are lifted.

"Nevertheless, the long-term consequences of the crisis will be profound, including a longer-term loss of output, labour market scarring, lower real interest rates, and an altered balance between monetary and fiscal policy. In addition, the Brexit process remains in transition and remains a further source of uncertainty."

Despite the warnings the company maintained its half year dividend.

The company will pay out a dividend of 7.3p, the same as this time last year. It is one of few FTSE 100 companies to have not slashed or canned its dividend payout due to coronavirus.

Over the first six months this year the company's fee revenue took a hit. Revenue came in at 706 million, down from 815 million in the same period 2019.

The firm remained active during lockdown and said that despite remote working it still managed to launch 18 new funds during the period.

Assets under management also fell over the period from 544.6 billion to 511.8 billion.

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Standard Life Aberdeen warns on Brexit and says the economy could be scarred by coronavirus - Evening Standard

Brexit Boost: UK to regain former greatness after giving up fleet to join Europe – Daily Express

Paul Lines told Express.co.uk that during his 45 years as a fisherman he has only seen the demise of the British sector. However, Mr Lines stated that following Brexit the UK can return to its former glory and replace their European competition as the dominant force in the industry.

Mr Lines said: "Britain stands to regain some of its former greatness.

"I have been in fishing for 45 years and all I have ever seen is the demise of fishing, I have seen half of our fleet cut up.

"I have seen days where the sea comes in and restricts what you do.

"I have seen quotas fall to the point where we have got one vessel left.

READ MORE:EU warning: European fishing to be 'devastated' if UK chooses no deal

"What we have got left we struggle to get a living from."

He added: "We gave it all away to be part of Europe, now we want it back.

"We want to see their boats cut up, we want to see their new modern fleet gone because we want that.

"As a country we have got to have that, if we are going to survive on our own, we have got to have everything that we can bring to play to make money."

Mr Lines also warned UK fishermen will still struggle to compete with those in the European Union even after taking back control of the country's waters.

The fisherman statedthat currently the UK hashardly any rights to fish in their own waters and so the Government needs a firm strategy regarding how to progress the fishing industry after Brexit.

Mr Lines said: "On January 2, when community waters will become British waters out to two hundred miles or the median line, that is when the transition period ends, and we start to take control and redevelop our fishing industry.

"Because as it is at the moment, we have hardly got any right to fish in what we will call our own waters.

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"We have got no vessel and that is where the Government needs a firm strategy on how they intend to make use of this.

"Because you can have all you like, if you do not have infrastructure or boats to catch the fish then the whole marketplace will be Europes Im afraid.

"Whether people like to think it or not we are not a nation of fishing, but the continent is, and they have got all the markets."

In June 2016 the UK voted to leave the European Union. The UK officially left the European Union at the end of January this year.

Britain is currently in a transition period until the end of 2020 with the EU while the Government negotiates a free trade deal with the bloc.

Read more:

Brexit Boost: UK to regain former greatness after giving up fleet to join Europe - Daily Express

Concerns raised over transport of perishable Irish goods post-Brexit – Agriland

Concerns have been raised over the risk of delays in transporting perishable goods from Ireland to other EU countries post-Brexit.

Fianna Fil TD James Browne raised the issue in the Dil last week, saying that while there is a strong agreement with fellow EU countries on ensuring our [Irish] goods, once they arrive in the continent, can continue onwards quickly, he is concerned of what will happen in the UK which, to a large extent, is out of the states hands.

Deputy Browne said that perishable items, such as meat and fish that need to be transported to the Paris markets are no good if there is a delay in getting them there.

One truck driver told me that nobody buys turkeys on St. Stephens Day, so if perishable products do not get to market on time, they are no good.

Deputy Browne asked the Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade Simon Coveney what position discussions are in with his UK counterpart on the issue of border checks on trucks originating in Ireland, arriving in the UK from Rosslare Europort, but which plan to travel onwards to another country within the EU.

Minister Coveney said that ensuring the UK land-bridge remains an effective route to market for Irish and other EU traders has been a key priority for the government in the context of Brexit.

The UKs accession to the common transit convention is a key step. It is important to recognise that the UK government has decided to be part of that convention in an effort to be helpful, Minister Coveney said.

This allows EU goods to transit through the UK without undergoing full customs export and import formalities on entry and exit.

There remains a risk of substantial delays on parts of the land-bridge route between the UK and France, for example: Dover to Calais; the Eurotunnel; and possibly Holyhead. While we can work to address these at the EU end, there is little we can do to mitigate the impact on Irish traders arising from queues in the UK.

Minister Coveney said a commitment has been secured from countries such as France, Belgium and the Netherlands that when goods arrive from the UK on Irish trucks, these trucks will enter the green lane and will not be treated the same as UK trucks arriving.

This is because the Irish trucks will be coming from another part of the single market and re-entering the single market, Coveney continued.

The minister acknowledged that any blockage is likely to be in the UK, where he does not envisage a situation that Irish trucks will be allowed to skip the queue when there is significant traffic to get on ships.

Deputy Browne stressed the potential of Rosslare Europort, which is ideally located and is the quickest sea route from Ireland to the continent and must be priority given the security it offers for getting Irish foods to Europe on time.

Minister Coveney said that shipping companies have been looking at potential direct routes from Dublin and Rosslare to the single market and various ports on the EU mainland.

However, without doubt, the fastest way to get fresh and chilled goods to market quickly if the land-bridge can be used efficiently and without significant blockages in queuing systems is to drive across the UK and use shorter ferry routes, Minister Coveney added.

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Concerns raised over transport of perishable Irish goods post-Brexit - Agriland

Brexit and Beyond: Trademark Protection Strategies in an Uncertain Global Marketplace – Lexology

The unprecedented challenges posted by the COVID-19 pandemic forced many companies and their in-house legal teams to temporarily shelve their Brexit preparations in order to deal with the immediate threats posed by the pandemic. While COVID-19 remains an ongoing and serious concern for US operations, companies that also do business in the UK also need to put Brexit planning for their trademark portfolio back on the agenda. Having declined to request a further extension, the UK is set to exit the European Union on Dec. 31. Businesses need to prepare now in order to protect their trademarks in an uncertain global market.

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Brexit and Beyond: Poll Results

At the ACC Greater Philadelphia 12th Annual In-House Counsel Conference, attendees of Womble Bond Dickinsons panel presentation provided the following responses to polling questions posed throughout the discussion.

How well-informed do you feel about Brexit and trademarks?I have read all the guidance and know it all 0%I have seen some guidance, and made some plans 6%I am aware of changes, but not made plans 82%Brexit will make no difference 6%What is Brexit? 6%

What is your biggest Brexit concern for trademarks?Losing registered protection in the UK 50%Increased expense 10%More administration and management of portfolios 15%Squatters registering in the UK 20%Loss of rights due to non-use 0%Enforcement in the UK 0%Controlling parallel imports 5%

Link:

Brexit and Beyond: Trademark Protection Strategies in an Uncertain Global Marketplace - Lexology

Brexit: Another hidden cost has been laid bare people will be less willing to help the UK in a crisis – The Independent

The question began: Imagine a country suffered some kind of major crisis, and was looking for help from others. People across Europe were asked how willing their country should be to offer financial help to other countries. The UK came near the bottom of the list, below all EU countries and ahead of only Tunisia and Colombia.

The huge opinion poll was carried out by YouGov in 13 EU countries and the UK, and has just been published. If you find the Eurovision Song Contest voting depressing, look away now: in nine EU countries more people would be unwilling to help the UK in a crisis than willing. In only four countries is the balance the other way round, so now we know who our friends are: the Danes, the Poles, the Swedes and the Romanians (although note that only half of EU countries were surveyed).

We British, on the other hand, are models of European generosity, being willing, on balance, to help out all 27 EU members, even though we have now left their club. Our renunciation of EU membership must be one of the biggest causes of these findings, which expose the damage to Britains reputation from Brexit.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

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Brexit: Another hidden cost has been laid bare people will be less willing to help the UK in a crisis - The Independent

French fishermen have long track record of ports chaos and WON’T sit back after Brexit – Daily Express

French fishermen have a history of blockades in the English Channel over minor disagreements, according to Barrie Deas, the CEO of the National Federation of Fishermen's Organisations. He has warned they are likely to continue their actions after the UK becomes an independent coastal state and noted it would be "naive" to think they would not act if they are not happy. His comments come as the bloc wants to see the status quo maintained for fishing access and quotas, but the UK Government wants Britain to have full control of its own waters.

Speaking to Express.co.uk, Mr Deas said: "French fishermen, especially in the Channel area, have a long track record of blockading Channel ports when they're upset about something.

"They've done it for much lesser reasons than the UK becoming an independent coastal state, renegotiation of quotas, even if there is access for French fishermen.

"I think it would be naive to expect that they will be happy about this or do nothing about it.

"There's a long history of those kindsof blockades."

READ MORE:Boris Johnson building 'White House centre of power'

Mr Deas said France takes 84 percent of the quota for cod in the English Channel while the UK is allowed only nine percent.

He explained the extortionate quotas need to be ironed out in a Brexit trade deal between the UK and EU.

He told Express.co.uk: "EU vessels have automatic access to the resource-rich UK waters.

"That's what underpins everything, the deal from the 1970s.

"When quotas were introduced in 1983, a decade later, they reflected that original deal.

"You have situations like, in Channel Cod, the UK share of that quota is nine percent.

"The French is 84 percent.

"Celtic Sea haddock where the UK share is 10 percent and the French share is 66 percent.

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"It's those kinds of extortions that the fishing industry wants ironed out."

Disagreements over how to guarantee fair competition, fisheries, rules for settling disputes or the role of the EU's top court have so far prevented progress in trade talks as the bloc seeks to tie London closely to its rules while Boris Johnson wants to cut the UK away further.

A French official said the leaders agreed that they must stick to their stance on fisheries and the so-called level playing field provisions aimed at ensuring fair competition.

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French fishermen have long track record of ports chaos and WON'T sit back after Brexit - Daily Express

UK chems sector stabilises in Q2, risks of second wave, Brexit pose threat – ICIS

LONDON (ICIS)--UK-based chemicals producers marked stable to improved export sales in the second quarter but risks for the industry remain on the horizon, according to the Chemical Industries Association (CIA) on Wednesday.

Half of businesses stated that exports to the EU and the rest of the world remained at current levels or improved in the second quarter following severe declines earlier in the year, in response to a survey conducted by the CIA.

The same number of respondents also noted capital expenditure and business utilisation had also tracked stable-to-improvement in the same period, while 80% marked similar trends in growth in employee numbers and Research & Development (R&D) spending.

A pickup in activity was recorded throughout Europe in latter part of the second quarter, as lockdown measures began to ease and economies started to recover.

This is supported by a strength in the retail trade in June from May levels, with a 5.7% increase marked in the eurozone, reflected by a 5.2% rise in the wider EU, accounting for seasonal adjustment.

Growth continued from May, when retail trade marked a 20.3% jump in the eurozone, while climbing 18.3% in the EU, meaning that retail trade volumes for both blocs returned to levels reach before containment measures were implemented in 2020.

Compared with the previous year, the calendar adjusted retail sales index increased by 1.3% for both the eurozone and EU.

Conditions are expected to continue on this trajectory in the third quarter, with 80% if businesses expecting stable or improved domestic sales, with more than 70% of firms anticipating the same for export sales and capital expenditure.

Not all indicators are positive, as around 10% of companies expecting continued job losses and R&D expenditure reductions, as some downstream industries such as automotive, aerospace and construction have suffered more than others including healthcare, food and drink and some consumer goods areas.

Despite some resilience CIA chief executive Steve Elliott says that the prospect of increased coronavirus infection rates in the second half of the year, coupled with Brexit means that the future is uncertain for the UKs biggest manufacturing export market.

An autumn demand stimulus package for those manufacturing industries that have been hardest hit will help the entire supply chain, said Elliott.

What we as a sector need is a successful conclusion to the UK:EU trade talks including tariff-free frictionless trade and regulatory consistency; taxation reform through a reduction in corporation tax; improved incentives for R&D and a new green energy deal with a serious review of energy costs.

The prospect of a no-deal Brexit will have severe implications for the UKs chemicals industry, as it would struggle to sell materials to the EU the countrys largest trading partner as materials would not be housed under Reach regulation.

Front page picture: Signs calling for safety measures as London's bars and restaurants reopened in JulySource: Guy Bell/Shutterstock

Focus article byMorgan Condon

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UK chems sector stabilises in Q2, risks of second wave, Brexit pose threat - ICIS

This isnt a tough new food policy for post-Brexit UK. Its thin gruel and easy to set to one side – The Guardian

The headlines were compelling. The Covid-19 crisis would lead to a dramatic increase in poverty and hunger; free school meals should be extended to a further 1.6 million children; another 1.1 million children in England should become eligible for holiday food programmes. The National Food Strategy document released last Wednesday was, on the face of it, an impressive opening shot from the team led by businessman Henry Dimbleby.

But for all the laudable anger over hunger contained in this first report from the National Food Strategy, it was received across the world of food production and policy with at best eye-rolling and at worst exasperation. It is the product of grubby politics, includes worrying proposals on post-Brexit trade policy, muddled thinking on the causes of poverty and risks wasting a golden opportunity to answer one of the most important challenges of the 21st century: how we feed ourselves.

The notion of a national food strategy was first put to Michael Gove, the then secretary of state for environment, food and rural affairs, in 2016 by, among others, Minette Batters, now president of the National Farmers Union. Gove had only to find someone to lead it. During the referendum campaign, he had famously announced that wed had enough of experts. It wasnt just a novel slogan by which to secure Brexit. It is an item of faith in Whitehall. If youre appointing someone to lead a government review, God forbid they should have serious credentials. That makes it harder to ignore their findings. But the appointee still had to be convincing.

Gove had just the person: his close friend Henry Dimbleby. He started out as a journalist, then moved into management consultancy, before founding the healthier fast food chain Leon. In 2013, when Gove was education secretary, Dimbleby had published a review into school food provision. But, for all his diligent work in the sector, he has no qualifications in food policy. That would make him eminently ignorable if his recommendations turned out to be tricky. He is also cut from the right political cloth. As he later boasted to friends, Dimbleby spent the night of the 2016 Brexit referendum at Goves house and had voted Leave.

Dimbleby cannot be faulted for his thoroughness. He worked with an illustrious team of advisers and conducted endless consultations with food producers, policy specialists and consumers. But he then made the bizarre decision to write his paper in the first person, complete with colourful personal anecdotes. Its not the National Food Strategy - its the Dimbleby report. And that makes it very easy to bat away. He told me he did this because it was impossible to get a consensus of informed experts. It isnt impossible. Its merely hard. Just last week, for example, the environment, food and rural affairs select committee released its own damning report on government failures on food supply during the Covid-19 crisis. That represented consensus.

Last week Defra officials were quietly telling interested parties not to waste too much energy on Dimblebys findings

Still, if thats Dimblebys position, we should let him own his words. While he acknowledges the impact of poverty and proposes short-term fixes such as extending free school meals, he fails to recognise that systematic inequality is caused by a failure of long-term government economic policy. But then that would be to criticise Downing Street. Likewise, he regularly refers to the freedoms offered by leaving the EU, without considering whether the Brexit he voted for will blight the lives of the impoverished children he clearly cares about so deeply.

But it is the section on post-Brexit trade policy that is most troubling. It reads as if he has taken dictation direct from government. He robustly defends the governments recent vote against the amendment to the agriculture bill, introduced by MP Neil Parish, which would have prevented the ratification of any trade agreements allowing the importation of food not produced to standards of production and welfare equivalent to those in the UK. Without getting into nerdy detail, Dimblebys defence misunderstands the Parish amendment. Interestingly, the argument he deploys is identical to that in a recent post by Liam Fox MP on the Conservative Home website.

Dimbleby also argues that, as products that dont meet our standards already make it into the UK, for example, pork from Denmark, campaigners are being too precious. As Tim Lang, professor of food policy at City University, London, put it to me: We all know about such products. That doesnt mean you make allowing them in policy.

Dimbleby claims he supports maintaining high food standards and that this can be assured through, among other things, the governments recently announced Trade and Agriculture Commission. The commission has already been roundly dismissed as unfit for purpose by leading figures in the food industry. It is farmer-heavy, has no experts on animal welfare or public health and a lifespan measured in months. Its an arms-length government PR exercise stuffed with industry interests and cant resolve all the issues involved in the time given, Lang says. Dimbleby says his is an independent report. But at critical moments it just becomes a government report. Many people think it will be sidelined, though his knighthood is safe.

This first paper is due to be followed next year by another, looking at sustainable supply chains and agriculture. Those reports should then feed into a government white paper. Last week, Defra officials were quietly telling interested parties not to waste too much energy on Dimblebys findings and to focus instead on lobbying over the contents of the white paper. Already, the current Defra secretary, George Eustice, has issued a weak statement thanking Dimbleby for his work but merely committing to carefully consider his recommendations on poverty. It is the sound of a ball being kicked firmly into the long grass. Tragically, a serious opportunity to challenge the shape of our food system has been missed.

Jay Rayner is the Observers restaurant critic and a feature writer

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This isnt a tough new food policy for post-Brexit UK. Its thin gruel and easy to set to one side - The Guardian

Brexit breakthrough: Leaver predicts Macron will backdown as UK heads for win-win deal – Express

CEO of campaign group The Freedom Association, Simon Richards, argued a Brexit trade deal between the UK and EU was likely to be agreed. While speaking to Jonathan Saxty with Brexit Watch, Mr Richards claimed the French President Emmanuel Macron would eventually concede in the Brexit trade talks. The Brexiteer added President Macron and other EU member state leaders would complain but eventually agree to an equally beneficial trade deal with the UK.

Mr Richards admitted Boris Johnson and his negotiating team may also complain about the agreement of a trade deal but would have ultimately succeeded in their Brexit trade deal goals.

Mr Richards said: "If I were a betting man, despite making money in 2016 on Brexit.

"If I were a betting man I would still say the likelihood is that there will be a deal, a deal that works for both sides."

The Brexiteer outlined how this would likely happen and how the EU would attempt to save face.

DON'T MISS:Boris must make TWO crucial changes to make UK a Brexit powerhouse

He said: "What usually happens is that you would likely get Emmanuel Macron saying 'That David Frost and those Brits were so tough.

"'The Brits got a completely outrageous deal but we did the best for the EU.'"

Mr Richards hinted the UK may apply a similar attitude after trade talks have concluded.

He said: "Equally I think you will get David Frost and Boris Johnson saying those French people drove a hard bargain.

"But at this point, everybody is happy then."

Mr Richard also argued in favour of a no deal Brexit and insisted the UK would be perfectly fine trading of World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules.

He continued: "That said, I would have no problem whatsoever with having a no deal, WTO terms.

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Boris must make TWO crucial changes to make UK a Brexit powerhouse[EXCLUSIVE]EU snub: How fisheries have more than just monetary value to Britons[INSIGHT]Macron's 'tough-guy' stance on Brexit exposed[REPORT]

"Personally I would quite like that, I think that would be my preference.

"In that scenario, you are just not beholden to anybody and then you can build on that from day one.

"I think there is a mistake in thinking that everything has to be absolutely just-so from midnight at the end of the year.

"These things can be done in bits, in my view."

Both the UK and EU have admitted little progress has been made in the Brexit trade deal talks but insisted they will continue to press on in hopes of securing a trade deal.

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Brexit breakthrough: Leaver predicts Macron will backdown as UK heads for win-win deal - Express

Tories ridiculed for absurd Brexit advert claiming the UK and EU are ‘equals’ – indy100

A government advert is being ridiculed for suggesting the UK has a "close friendship" and "shared values" with the EU.

The advert, promoted by the Cabinet Office, is supposed to inspire excitement about the UK's "new relationship" with the European Union post-Brexit.

But as many people pointed out, "friendship" doesn't usually involve a four-year public campaign to leave as quickly as possible.

Especially when negotiations have inflamed tensions with EU officials and led to years of parliamentary upheaval at home.

But the majority of backlash to the advert was sparked by the suggestion that the UK and the EU are "sovereign equals".

Firstly, although EU states do agree to by treaty to share sovereignty, in practice each has its own government and makes its own decisions with guidance from EU rules.

And secondly, the suggestion that the UK is "equal" to every single EU member state put together is a little arrogant, to say the least.

The UK left the EU on 31 January but will remain in a transitional period until December 31.

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Tories ridiculed for absurd Brexit advert claiming the UK and EU are 'equals' - indy100

Helping hand on Brexit for British expats in Vera – Euro Weekly News

VERA Council is offering British expat residents a helping hand on the Brexit process.

The local authority is setting up an information point on the UKs departure from the European Union in the Diversity Centre offices.

The council, within its municipal responsibilities, is providing information and consultations on the disconnection process for the British community resident in our municipality, as our priority is to apply all the necessary measures which result in the well-being of all residents in our town, commented Vera Mayor Jose Carmelo Jorge Blanco.

The council said a member of the municipal staff will be available from 10am to 2pm, Monday to Friday, to deal with queries and provide information on the possible consequences of the UK leaving the EU and to try and clear up any doubts.

Due to the Covid-19 situation, for the moment consultations are either by email to

llvasqueznavarro@vera.es or by pre-appointment made by calling 617 155 060.

This week the mayor, Intercultural Mediation councillor Jose Maria Fernandez and Social Services councillor Ana Lourdes Ramirez, met with Lourdes Vazquez Navarro, who is in charge of the office, to study getting the new public service up and running.

Cathy Elelman is the local writer for the Costa de Almeria edition of the Euro Weekly News.

Based in Mojacar for the last 21 years, Cathy is very much part of the local community and is always well and truly up on all the latest news and events going on in this region of Spain.

Her top goals are to do the best job she can informing the local English-speaking community, visitors to the area and the wider world about about the news in Almeria, to learn something new every day, and to embrace very new challenge this fast-changing world brings her way.

Share your story with us by emailing newsdesk@euroweeklynews.com, by calling +34 951 38 61 61 or by messaging our Facebook page http://www.facebook.com/EuroWeeklyNews

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Helping hand on Brexit for British expats in Vera - Euro Weekly News

Brexit should prompt UK to rethink attitude to Indigenous artefacts – The Guardian

Britains departure from the EU and the renewed focus on empire should prompt a significant shift in its approach to returning sacred artefacts to Indigenous communities, the head of an Australian government-funded project has said.

More than 33,000 items of Indigenous Australian heritage are held in UK museums, including some believed to have been stolen during or shortly after Captain James Cooks first voyage to Australia 250 years ago.

Manchester Museum became the first UK institution to return some of these objects in a powerful handover ceremony in November. Yet despite a growing restitution movement, many leading British museums have appeared reluctant to hand over sacred artefacts because of concerns about the wider implications for their collections.

Craig Ritchie, who runs what is believed to be one of the worlds biggest repatriation projects, said Brexit and the renewed focus on Britains imperial history represented a powerful moment to reassess the UKs relationship with Indigenous Australians so that it isnt just one where we happen to share a monarch and isnt just one where we are interested in trade deals.

He said: If its true that Brexit is more than simply getting out of some kind of political union with Europe and is, in fact, an expression of the UK trying to rethink its place in the world independent of Europe, then part of that is the opportunity to rethink and recalibrate the relationship between the UK and its former colonial dominions and the indigenous people in those former colonies.

Ritchie is head of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (Aiatsis), which is funded by the Australian government and has identified more than 100,000 sacred artefacts and cultural material in institutions around the world, of which a third are in the UK.

Although Aiatsis hopes to return as many artefacts as it can, Ritchie said: Not everything will come home and probably not everything should, adding that it was willing to explore alternative arrangements with UK institutions.

However, he said the final resting place of the objects was a decision that should be made by the community of origin rather than just a recalcitrant white institution thats refusing to give stuff back.

The Pitt Rivers Museum, which displays the University of Oxfords archaeological and anthropological items, has the biggest collection of this material in the UK with about 16,000 pieces. The museum works with Aiatsis to help understand the material and is known for engaging with indigenous peoples.

Cambridge Universitys Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology has the UKs second largest collection of indigenous items, with about 3,000 artefacts, and the British Museum is believed to have about 2,900 in its collection.

Ritchie said the institutes discussions with the British Museum, which has previously been reluctant to permanently return relics to Australia, were going to be a longer process and that it would have to step our way through what could easily become quite a minefield of politics and tricky questions.

The then culture secretary, Jeremy Wright, last year ruled out any change in the law to allow national museums to return objects to their countries of origin. Arts Council England is due to publish updated guidance this year on the repatriation of cultural objects, superseding existing guidance produced by the defunct Museums and Galleries Commission in 2000.

Of the 38 UK institutions that responded to an Aiatsis survey two years ago, 17 said they were willing to consider a return request and most said they were happy to share information about their collections.

Ritchie said the confluence of events surrounding Brexit, the renewed focus on Britains colonial legacy, and the successful repatriation by Manchester Museum would herald a significant shift in the approach of many UK institutions.

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Brexit should prompt UK to rethink attitude to Indigenous artefacts - The Guardian

Another hidden cost of Brexit has been laid bare people will be less willing to help the UK in a crisis – The Independent

The question began: Imagine a country suffered some kind of major crisis, and was looking for help from others. People across Europe were asked how willing their country should be to offer financial help to other countries. The UK came near the bottom of the list, below all EU countries and ahead of only Tunisia and Colombia.

The huge opinion poll was carried out by YouGov in 13 EU countries and the UK, and has just been published. If you find the Eurovision Song Contest voting depressing, look away now: in nine EU countries more people would be unwilling to help the UK in a crisis than willing. In only four countries is the balance the other way round, so now we know who our friends are: the Danes, the Poles, the Swedes and the Romanians (although note that only half of EU countries were surveyed).

We British, on the other hand, are models of European generosity, being willing, on balance, to help out all 27 EU members, even though we have now left their club. Our renunciation of EU membership must be one of the biggest causes of these findings, which expose the damage to Britains reputation from Brexit.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

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Another hidden cost of Brexit has been laid bare people will be less willing to help the UK in a crisis - The Independent

Brexit deal: What is happening in UK-EU trade talks? – Daily Express

The UK and EU finished the latest round of talks about the future trading relationship between the two entities in London last week.

The UKs chief negotiator David Frost said the UK must face the possibility that it will not agree a deal on its future relationship with the EU by the end of the year.

Mr Frost said with less than six months to go until the end of the Brexit transition period, the UK must "continue preparing for all possible scenarios" for once that deadline passes.

He added there are considerable gaps in the contentious areas which include the UKs position on fishing rights and post-Brexit competition rules.

READ MORE:Nigel Farage's radical calls for NEW electoral system exposed

Both the UK and EU have said they are at a deadlock regarding fishing rights.

Mr Barnier describes as "simply unacceptable" the UK demand for "near-total exclusion of EU fishing vessels from UK waters".

The EU understands the UK wishes to be an independent state, but claims common stocks need to be managed jointly.

Mr Frost has given little indication the UK is ready to give ground on fishing or over competition.

The UK's chief negotiator said his side will continue to strive for a "Canada-style" free trade deal allowing for wide divergence from EU rules, something Brussels negotiators and EU governments have always rejected, especially given Britain's economic clout and geographical proximity to the continent.

Currently, the UK-EU are still very far apart on key issues in the trade talk negotiations.

A senior EU official said the British side had not demonstrated any new flexibility despite what they see as London's weakening position.

The EU official told Politico: They have been very, very slow in reacting and not shown a lot of willingness to move forward.

Ireland, Belgium, Holland will be impacted by Brexit. A part of this Brexit Adjustment Reserve could very well be used to compensate our fishermen.

So you know the Brits might not have expected that, that we would have come up with that, and this budget. For us, it is very important that we prepare for every possible outcome.

The source added the EU is prepared to make a dal, but would not forget the EUs interests.

They said: We would definitely prefer a deal and we are ready to conclude a deal its better for both of us but we are preparing for every scenario.

We're not going to sell Europe just like that.

Our values will remain untouched.

Informal talks continue in the week of July 27 ahead of the next formal round of negotiations from August 17.

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Brexit deal: What is happening in UK-EU trade talks? - Daily Express

Brexit a perspective from the Global South – Open Democracy

Global Britain has benefits for the African continent in the sphere of education. As an alternative to the EUs Erasmus Plus scheme, for example, the UK is set to roll out a global student exchange programme which benefits students outside the European Union. In a report for Kings College London, a former UK universities minister Jo Johnson argued that There is little reason to ignore the experiences and knowledge these countries offer to UK students in an exclusive relationship with its closer European neighbours. Not only does the novel exchange programme mean well for Britain in the sphere of higher education in terms of knowledge exchange and cultural influence, but students in African higher education institutions could enormously benefit from the knowledge and technical skills that such an exchange would provide and which hitherto they had no access to, as the Erasmus programme was mostly limited to European institutions for the specific purpose of creating a pan-European identity alien to the African student.

Of course, a pan-European identity is not necessarily a bad thing, but it seemingly excludes many from non-EU countries in the Global South and what we do indeed need in the world are global exchange programmes that enable the development of a global identity amongst denizens of different polities rather than only a regional identity. The insistence on the building of regions and the construction of regional identities is almost always exclusionary and can preclude the intercultural dialogue and understanding that we need to curb the racism, brutalism, nativism within and beyond Europe.

In addition, Brexit has meant that the stringent policies instituted by Theresa Mays government which contributed to the decline of international student enrolment in British universities have been overturned. There is now a conscientious effort to ensure that international students can stay and work in the UK after their studies, regardless of where they come from. Although this has been criticised by Europhiles who have long benefited from preferential treatment in immigration and work requirements (including the lower home tuition fees they pay due to their passports and EU citizenship), these criticisms seem to suggest that the beneficiaries of these unequal treatments want to sustain the inequitable system.

Passports and citizenships should only show where people come from for administrative and security reasons, but it should not be the prime factor in immigration and work, not least because it marginalises citizens from the Global South whose passports and citizenship are ostensibly nothing but tags of exclusion. Given that Global Britain entails that, all things being equal, citizens from the Global South would be considered on equal terms in education and work, this provides opportunities for the best talents in Africa to gain access to knowledge and skills that would be beneficial not only to the UK but to their own home countries.

And the benefits of citizens from the Global South studying in the UK are economic. Remittances already constitute a huge chunk of the GDP of many countries in the Global South. In fact, the UK is amongst the top-20 remittance-sending countries in the world. Due to the positive impacts that immigrants already have on UKs economic development, the post-study work possibilities would afford citizens of the Global South the opportunity to contribute to the development of their own countries through remittances but also through the potential investments and skills they are likely to take back with them.

Though it has been contended that Brexit will lead to the contraction and decline of the biggest African economies such as Nigeria, Egypt, Kenya, and South Africa, due to the abandonment of various trade deals and the dependence on a seemingly volatile UK economy this is not definitive. Indeed, despite the decades of international cooperation and trade with the EU, African countries have remained amongst the poorest and most malnourished in the world. Nigeria and South Africa are still recovering from recessions and there is some indication that the former will suffer a severe recession (its worst in four decades) due to the impact of the coronavirus pandemic. The trade deals with the EU have not made African countries better, nor should we assume trade deals with the UK would. This is because Africas economic traumas stem largely from the political corruption that is not just rampant but contributes to indefinitely perpetuating the interests of the political elites. Of course, this is not to play down the impacts of European colonialism on the postcolony.

Because domestic political issues constrain African polities from reaping the fruits of trade deals, the focus should not be on whether or not they trade with the EU or the UK we live in a world where Africa has other trade partners outside Europe. China is becoming one of the largest trade partners of African countries. Rather, the focus must be on curbing domestic corruption in order to savour the benefits of economic cooperation and interdependence with any country or, for that matter, regional institution. Charity so the old adage goes begins at home.

From a Global South perspective Global Britain appears to be a good idea that should be nurtured and supported by Eurosceptics and Europhiles who genuinely care about the state of the world and their fellow global citizens in the most marginalised regions of the world.

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Brexit a perspective from the Global South - Open Democracy