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  • PRESS RELEASE : Britain powers ahead on AI with billions of pounds of new investment and thousands of jobs secured as London Tech Week wraps up [June 2026]

    PRESS RELEASE : Britain powers ahead on AI with billions of pounds of new investment and thousands of jobs secured as London Tech Week wraps up [June 2026]

    The press release issued by the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology on 12 June 2026.

    More than £6 billion of new investment and around 8,000 new jobs have been announced this week, as companies from around the world choose to build, hire and scale here.

    More than £6 billion of new investment and around 8,000 new jobs have been announced this week, as companies from around the world choose to build, hire and scale here – reinforcing Britain’s position as a global hub for AI.  

    From AMD’s £2 billion commitment for next generation AI compute, to Nebius investing £1.7 billion in new infrastructure, to homegrown companies like Oxford Quantum Circuits securing record funding – this is Britain’s AI leadership turning into real jobs, investment and opportunities across the country. 

    These deals span the full breadth of the AI economy – from chips and cloud infrastructure to autonomous vehicles and open-source development – showing the UK isn’t just keeping pace in the global AI race but helping to shape its direction.  

    The momentum has been matched by government action throughout the week to strengthen the UK’s tech sector – backing the skills, infrastructure and innovation needed to unlock growth. That includes new support for young people to seize the opportunities of AI, the first-ever AI Adoption Summit, a landmark £1.1 billion AI Hardware Plan, plus new backing for open-source AI builders, and a data centre design challenge – so Britain builds with taste.  

    Technology Secretary Liz Kendall said: 

    Britain is seizing the opportunities of tech and AI to create jobs, improve lives and grow businesses.

    Companies from across the globe are choosing to invest here and hire here, bringing billions of pounds and thousands of new jobs with them.

    And this Government is backing them with our £1.1billion hardware plan and our investment in skills and training.

    We are rebuilding Britain for the modern age and creating a future that works for all.

    A range of major investments have been announced, totalling over £6 billion of investment and around 8,000 new jobs – from global leaders and frontier companies choosing to grow here. This includes:

    • AMD commits up to £2 billion of investment over five years to Accelerate AI Innovation and Research in the United Kingdom.  
    • Nebius, the AI cloud company, announced it is investing approximately £1.7 billion to build out capacity in the UK with three new deployments of advanced NVIDIA compute, as the company continues to expand its commercial and AI R&D hub in London. 
    • Amazon opened a new fulfilment centre in Northampton and announced plans for a second major site in Kettering, committing more than £1 billion and up to 4,000 jobs in a single county as part of its planned £40 billion UK investment. 
    • British unicorn Ark has announced an investment of £807m in the expansion of its Longcross Park campus. The expansion supports the deployment of leading AI cloud provider Nebius, which is also increasing its footprint in the UK as well as an additional data centre facility with 36MW of future capacity. 
    • Eros Innovation is investing £265m and establishing a sovereign British Cultural AI capability, supporting 3,000+ jobs across 15 productions over five-years (2 films shooting in the UK in 2026), licensing its $1.7bn cultural dataset to its UK operation and launching an AI Studio to develop Large Cultural Models trained on British creative heritage and governed by British law. 
    • Quantum computing scale-up Oxford Quantum Circuits (OQC) securing a £260 million investment – the largest quantum funding round in the UK, backed by the British Business Bank.  
    • Silicon Valley investors Playground Global are launching a new fund backed by up to £150 million from the British Business Bank – the largest fund investment the bank has ever made – to invest in UK-based hardware companies and help them scale.  
    • Arlequin AI investing up to £45 million in the UK over the next 5 years with capital deployed across local hiring, UK R&D, and sovereign deployment capability for government and critical national infrastructure clients. 
    • Midlands Mindforge has now entered its active investing stage, thanks to the support of the Mayors of the East and West Midlands, UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), the Rigby Group and the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) via the Invest in UK University R&D Midlands Campaign. This will help to unlock an initial £30m of capital into the region making its first round of investments into spinout companies. 
    • Cosine announced the formation of a coalition of major UK institutions including, BAE Systems, BT, Lloyds Banking Group, NatWest, PwC and Leonardo UK, to co-design Lumen Sovereign, Britain’s first fully sovereign frontier AI model. Backed by the Government’s Sovereign AI Fund, Lumen Sovereign will be trained entirely on UK soil using Isambard-AI. 
    • AI coding startup Cursor announced plans to open its European headquarters in London. 
    • Fynd, the AI-native unified commerce platform serving brands and retailers across India, the Middle East, Africa and Southeast Asia, has opened its first UK office in London. This investment is projected to create 70 jobs across London, Manchester and the wider UK by 2028. 
    • General Intuition — the frontier research lab dedicated to foundation models for spatial and temporal reasoning — has opened a UK office in London King’s Cross. The lab will invest some of its recent $133M seed round into expanding its London-based research team, drawing on the UK’s strong talent base. 
    • Legora, the AI platform for legal professionals, is expanding its European footprint with a dedicated engineering hub in London in a major vote of confidence in the UK’s AI capabilities.  
    • Multiverse announced the opening of a new technology hub in Edinburgh and plans to create 200 jobs in the next year across the new office and its London headquarters. 
    • German AI unicorn n8n will expand its investment into the UK by delivering up to 200 high-skilled jobs over the next three years, a strong endorsement of the UK’s AI talent ecosystem. 
    • PhysicsX secured a $300 million Series C investment, taking its valuation to approximately $2.4 billion. The funding will accelerate PhysicsX’s global expansion, platform development, and frontier physics AI research. 
    • Reflection, the US-based open-source AI lab founded by former Google DeepMind researchers Misha Laskin and Ioannis Antonoglou, is expanding its UK footprint with plans to hire more than 100 highly skilled employees within the next 12 months, growing to over 1,000 roles within three years. 
    • US tech company Replit will be opening up an office in London this year.
  • PRESS RELEASE : Tough US-style courts to crack down on repeat offenders [June 2026]

    PRESS RELEASE : Tough US-style courts to crack down on repeat offenders [June 2026]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 12 June 2026.

    The public will be better protected from crime under a major expansion of tough Texas-style courts which will see thousands of offenders monitored by judges.

    • New £9 million funding to more than double number of problem-solving courts
    • Repeat offenders to be strictly monitored by one judge or risk time in prison
    • World-recognised approach has been shown to reduce reoffending by a third

    A £9 million funding boost announced today (12 June) will help to more than double the number of Intensive Supervision Courts, an innovative approach to sentencing which aims to cut reoffending by tackling the root causes of crime.

    The model recognises that factors like addiction and trauma can be the root causes of repeat offending. It forces low-level offenders to attend weekly sessions and regularly appear before the same judge who will track their behaviour, reserving prison spaces for the dangerous criminals who need them.

    Those who fail to attend hearings, continue to misuse substances or refuse to engage in mandatory treatment courses will face tough consequences such as tagging or even time in prison for breaching strict conditions.

    These problem-solving courts have reduced reoffending across the world, with countries using this model seeing a reduction in further arrests of one third compared to offenders serving standard sentences – ending the revolving door of prison and cutting crime. 

    In Texas alone, the approach helped drive a significant reduction in the prison population and contributed to a 29 per cent drop in crime.  

    The expansion will see the number of these pioneering courts rise from 5 to 11 sites across the country, with a specific focus on prolific offenders, women and those with substance misuse issues.

    Deputy Prime Minister and Lord Chancellor, David Lammy said:

    Prolific offending often goes hand in hand with addiction and trauma, and tackling that can help cut crime.  

    These tough new courts ensure offenders are held to account while giving them the tools they need to turn their lives round for good, reducing reoffending and making our streets safer in the process.

    Evidence shows offenders on probation are far more likely than the general public to experience addiction and mental health issues, which are proven to increase the likelihood of reoffending.

    Further studies show how more than two thirds of women in custody report being victims of domestic abuse, a factor which is a known indicator of crimes. They also reveal how more than half of female offenders have sustained brain injuries while roughly the same percentage have drug addictions.  

    Tackling these underlying issues and addressing the root causes of crime helps to prevent more victims and reduce the £18 billion overall cost of reoffending to the taxpayer.

    Baroness Gillian Merron Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Women’s and Mental Health said:

    We know that custody alone does little to rehabilitate offenders, particularly those whose crimes are driven by addiction or mental health issues.

    This initiative will help them turn their lives around by unpacking these issues and giving them the support they need to turn their backs on crime for good.

    Through this we can cut reoffending and make communities safer, while getting those often left behind back on their feet and contributing to society again.

    The expansion builds on the success of four existing pilot courts in Birmingham, Bristol, Liverpool and Teesside which have seen hundreds of offenders receive tough supervision in a bid to help them leave behind a life of crime. A fifth court has been announced and is due to open in Liverpool later this year.

    A recent evaluation of the pilot scheme showed two thirds of offenders did not breach their orders while those with significant addiction issues received a clean drug test two-thirds of the time, clear evidence that the model is working. 

    Additionally, probation staff, the judiciary and local services like drug treatment providers have reported that offenders’ drug and alcohol use has reduced and those requiring help with their mental health were now receiving the right support to help cut their offending.

    Dr Tom McNeil, CEO of The JABBS Foundation for Women and Girls 

    Too many people are trapped in a revolving door of prison, at substantial cost to the taxpayer and public services. The system isn’t working for them, and it’s not working for society.

    That’s why today’s announcement is a significant step in the right direction and follows the evidence on what works to divert women away from custody. In our work with partners across the justice system, we’ve seen first-hand the positive impact these courts have on tackling underlying issues.

    Intensive Supervision Courts target prolific low-level offenders whose needs are better addressed in the community, helping to break the cycle of repeat offending. However, prison will continue to play an important role for serious offenders who pose the highest risk to the public.

    The Government is increasing probation funding by up to £700 million extra by 2028/29, including the recruitment of at least 1,300 additional probation officers over the next year. This will help deliver tougher, more effective supervision of violent offenders and better protect the public.

    This includes the biggest expansion of tagging in British history, with thousands more domestic abusers, thieves and burglars now subject to GPS and alcohol monitoring as part of a £100 million crackdown on crime.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New CEO appointed to drive Greater Cambridge growth [June 2026]

    PRESS RELEASE : New CEO appointed to drive Greater Cambridge growth [June 2026]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government on 12 June 2026.

    • David Hill named as Chief Executive to lead Greater Cambridge Development Corporation
    • Appointment confirms government’s infrastructure-first approach to accelerate economic growth in Greater Cambridge
    • New body will bring land together for development, invest in key sites and unlock stalled land to realise Cambridge’s full economic potential

    David has been appointed today (Friday 12 June) as the first Chief Executive of the proposed Greater Cambridge Development Corporation – a new regeneration body being designed to drive infrastructure-first growth at scale and deliver thousands of new homes and jobs across the region.

    David brings extensive senior experience from central government, including as interim Permanent Secretary at DEFRA and Director General with national responsibility for water policy. He has also served in local government as Director of Strategic Commissioning and Policy at Essex County Council. He will take up the role in September 2026.

    Subject to parliamentary process, the Development Corporation will coordinate strategic delivery across Greater Cambridge – from community facilities and utilities to housing – giving the region certainty and securing its status as an engine of national growth. The statutory instruments establishing the Development Corporation have been laid before Parliament.

    This is another step in realising the government’s ambitions for Cambridge and the wider OxCam Growth Corridor, building on the announcements made by the Housing Minister and Chancellor last week.

    Housing and Planning Minister, Matthew Pennycook said:

    “I am delighted that David has agreed to become the first Chief Executive of the Greater Cambridge Development Corporation.

    “Building on his strong track record in government, I know David will work closely with local partners to ensure the region is equipped with the powers and authority needed to deliver new housing, jobs and infrastructure at scale.”

    Chief Executive of the Greater Cambridge Development Corporation, David Hill said:

    “I’m honoured and excited to be taking up this new role, and look forward to working with all our partners to deliver the jobs, infrastructure and homes needed to enable Cambridge to grow and to benefit local communities.”

    Chair of the Cambridge Growth Company, Peter Freeman CBE said:

    “I am delighted that David will become Chief Executive of the Greater Cambridge Development Corporation in September. His experience will be invaluable in ensuring the Development Corporation is set up to succeed. Our overriding aim is to enable Greater Cambridge to deliver the economic growth the country needs by making it the most liveable city in Europe.”

    The appointment supports the government’s mission to accelerate economic growth, ramp up housing supply and fast-track infrastructure delivery across England.

    Further information

    The Chief Executive appointment was made following a fair and open recruitment exercise carried out by Homes England and the Cambridge Growth Company.

    Biography

    David Hill has held Director General roles at Defra since 2019, leading on water, environment and strategy. He was interim Permanent Secretary from June to October 2025. Prior to joining Defra, David was Director of Strategic Commissioning and Policy at Essex County Council, leading a range of place-based initiatives. He has held senior roles across Government, including leading on apprenticeship reform at DfE, and served as Principal Private Secretary to the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government and as Private Secretary to the Deputy Prime Minister.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK statement on Ukraine to IAEA Board of Governors [June 2026]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK statement on Ukraine to IAEA Board of Governors [June 2026]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 10 June 2026.

    Delivered to the International Atomic Energy Agency Board of Governors meeting on June 2026.

    I thank the Director General for his sobering report, and for the continued professionalism and courage of IAEA staff on the ground. Their presence remains indispensable in reducing risks and providing independent, credible reporting under extraordinarily difficult conditions. 

    The report points to a progressively degrading operating environment across Ukraine’s nuclear sites. However, developments since its issuance underscore that these risks are not static. They are worsening. 

    It is Russia’s illegal invasion and ongoing aggression against Ukraine that has created these conditions, forcing the Agency into the role of negotiating military pauses around nuclear facilities.  

    Chair, we are deeply alarmed by the recent drone strike against the Centralised Spent Nuclear Fuel Storage Facility at Chornobyl. That a strike of this nature could occur without immediate radiological consequences should not reassure us; it underlines how narrow the safety margins have become, and how dependent they now are on circumstance rather than control. 

    This facility sits within a vast exclusion zone, well outside any immediate military necessity. Striking nuclear infrastructure in such an environment is not coincidence – it is reckless and wilful irresponsibility. 

    This is reinforced by the detail of the Director General’s report: persistent and widespread military activity across all of Ukraine’s nuclear sites, including ZNPP; ongoing grid instability; attacks on energy infrastructure; and repeated reliance on emergency systems to compensate for those failures. 

    The sheer volume of incidents is striking: 

    • One power line to Rivne NPP remained disconnected throughout the reporting period following earlier military damage; 
    • On 26 February, Chornobyl NPP lost off-site power, while Khmelnytskyy (and South Ukraine NPP each lost an off-site power line; 
    • On 14 March, Chornobyl experienced a prolonged disconnection requiring activation of emergency diesel generators; 
    • At ZNPP, continued reliance on a single power line and repeated losses of off-site power on 14, 16 and 26 April, and 28 May. 

    This brings the total number of LOOP events at ZNPP to sixteen since the start of the conflict. 

    Chair, these incidents do not need to result in an immediate radiological release to be serious: each loss of off-site power and each disruption to grid stability further erodes defence-in-depth and reduces the safety margins on which secure nuclear operations depend. 

    IAEA reports of a drone strike on the turbine hall at ZNPP further demonstrate how even incidents without immediate radiological impact contribute to worsening risk environment driven by Russia’s illegal invasion. 

    We commend the Director General for his sustained efforts to broker temporary ceasefire arrangements to enable critical repair work at ZNPP. These are important and necessary measures to reduce immediate nuclear risk. 

    However, let me be clear: we should not be in this position at all. 

    The simplest way to reduce nuclear risk is for Russia to cease its aggression and withdraw from Ukraine. Nothing less will deliver the conditions required for safe and secure nuclear operations. 

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New natural history GCSE to grow next generation of green careers [June 2026]

    PRESS RELEASE : New natural history GCSE to grow next generation of green careers [June 2026]

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 12 June 2026.

    Biodiversity, conservation and human influences on the natural world among the topics of study, as public encouraged to have their say on the new qualification.

    In a landmark moment for education, young people will soon be able to grow the knowledge and skills they need for future careers shaped by science, technology and environmental change, as the new Natural History GCSE is one step closer to being taught in classrooms.   

    The new qualification will see pupils’ study three core areas: habitats and wildlife in the UK, human influence on the natural world, and will include the study of climate change, biodiversity loss and conservation. It will also include time outside of the classroom for fieldwork giving them an opportunity to get their hands dirty and apply their knowledge and skills by studying real habitats in their local area.  

    The government is seeking views from pupils, parents, teachers and the green industry, as it launches a 12-week consultation on the proposed subject content.  

    It comes as jobs in sustainable sectors and green careers continue to rise in demand, with around 900 UK businesses in nature-related sectors raising £2.8 billion in 2025, supporting 21,000 jobs.   

    With the UK’s natural capital asset value estimated at around £1.6 trillion, the new GCSE will ensure that children are equipped with the highly sought after skills for the workforce of a changing world and contributes to the wider commitment across government to cut the number of young people not in education, employment or training (NEET).   

    This forms part of the Education Secretary’s wider reforms to bring the national curriculum into the modern day and better prepare young people for life and work in today’s world and beyond. 

    Education Secretary, Bridget Phillipson, said:  

    As we move into a world where careers are being increasingly shaped by science, technology and environmental change, it’s crucial young people have the skills for the jobs of tomorrow. 

    This new GCSE will help students build a strong understanding of the natural world, alongside the knowledge, skills and hands-on experience to access careers in some of the UK’s fastest growing sectors.

    With extensive fieldwork built in, the GCSE will also get young people out and about exploring local parks, rivers and more – a critical part of childhood as more and more of our worlds are taken up by screens.

    At the heart of the new GCSE is a deep understanding of UK habitats and wildlife pupils will find around them – urban, freshwater, woodland, grassland, farmland and marine.  

    By learning to use scientific models such as taxonomic keys and food webs, the GCSE will ask students to understand how habitats form, and how changes on Earth affect forms of wildlife differently. 

    Pupils will also learn how the UK’s landscape has changed over time, giving young people the historical context to make sense of changes happening today, including shifts in migration patterns and species extinction. 

    Director of the Natural History Museum, Dr. Doug Gurr, said:   

    It was fantastic to welcome the Secretary of State to the Museum to mark the consultation launch of the proposed Natural History GCSE. We know there is strong demand from young people and educators to learn more about nature. Through the Museum-led National Education Nature Park (NENP), thousands of schools, nurseries and colleges across England are already taking practical action to boost biodiversity. Together, the proposed GCSE and the NENP can help equip a generation with the knowledge, skills and confidence to create a future in which people and planet thrive.

    The subject content will also examine human influences on the natural world, such as urbanisation, fishing and deforestation, as well as conservation approaches, while exploring how everyday actions – from wildlife-friendly gardens to reduced mowing of roadside verges – can support biodiversity.  

    Naturalist, explorer, presenter and writer, Steve Backshall, added:   

    I’ve spent my life exploring the furthest reaches of the globe – from ocean depths to mountain summits – and the natural world never stops surprising me. That sense of discovery is something every young person deserves to feel, and this GCSE could be the thing that sparks it.

    Getting students outside for real fieldwork – studying everything from urban parks to coastal salt marshes – is exactly how you build a genuine connection with nature. That hands-on experience isn’t just brilliant for the soul, it builds the kind of scientific and analytical skills that will serve them well in future life.

    We’re asking this generation to confront some of the biggest challenges humanity has ever faced – biodiversity loss, climate change, species extinction. This qualification gives them the knowledge and the tools to not just understand those challenges, but to be part of the solution.

    Nature Minister, Mary Creagh said:

    Our iconic British wildlife is under pressure from climate change, and this new Natural History GCSE will help reconnect our young people to the natural world.

    As this Government steps up action to plant forests and reintroduce birds and wildflowers we are seeing a skills gap open up across the country. This new qualification will inspire our young people with the knowledge and skills they need to protect the world around them.

    Young people will carry out a minimum of 20 hours of fieldwork – alongside building a connection with nature, this element will grow the scientific and analytical skills increasingly valued by employers in environmental sectors.  

    Similarly, the GCSE will develop practical skills in data collection, statistical analysis, and evidence recording – skills directly relevant to careers in environmental science, conservation, land management and data-driven green industries.  

    It follows the announcement of new V Levels, the biggest transformation to vocational education in a generation. From 2029, 16-19-year-olds will be able to study a V Level in Agriculture, Environmental and Animal Care, giving them hands-on experience and providing an opportunity for further study of the natural world.  

    The qualification is expected to be first taught in schools at the same time as the teaching of the revised GCSEs following the Curriculum and Assessment Review.

  • Fiona Twycross – 2026 Speech on Libraries

    Fiona Twycross – 2026 Speech on Libraries

    The speech made by Baroness Fiona Twycross, the Libraries Minister, at Libraries Connected in Kenilworth on 10 June 2026.

    Thank you, and I’d like to say a massive thank you for the invitation for me to speak here today. I’m absolutely delighted to be here, I’ll just say a few words at what I hear has been a brilliant and at times very moving conference.

    I’ve been the Libraries Minister responsible for Libraries for just over a year and as someone who always has at least one book on the go, it is an absolute delight and privilege. And I’ve been very much enjoying meeting a number of you when I’ve been on visits around the country.

    It’s great to see skilled and experienced people in the libraries sector coming together to share your insights and expertise. I know you work tirelessly – and enthusiastically – to deliver great services to your communities.

    I understand you have been covering a range of topics that are important for the sector – censorship, access, trust and reading for pleasure. I am also really pleased to see there has been a session on data as that is another priority for me, as it helps me sell what the sector does across Government.

    These are all issues that we are taking seriously in the centre of Government too and I would like to talk briefly today about how I will be carrying them forward into the forthcoming libraries strategy. And I think we had hoped that we’d be able to unveil the strategy today. We’re not quite there, but hopefully we’ll get there soon.

    I want to start by saying – and I don’t need to say this to you – but libraries matter. From the pop-up site I saw in Grimsby last month to the civic hub that is Liverpool Central, every time I visit a library I hear such enthusiasm from staff and users about the work you do and the impact you have, from supporting health and wellbeing, building businesses and showcasing arts and cultural experiences, libraries offer so much.

    Libraries matter because they are places where everyone can build their knowledge and skills. People depend on libraries for trustworthy information in the face of misinformation and a rapidly changing world. They also support freedom of speech, a core value of our society. I know that this is a lively topic of debate for the sector, not least here in Warwickshire, and I want to support you to see library collections continue to represent a variety of perspectives and topics.

    I am clear that the tone in which politicians talk about our public libraries can also have a chilling effect, and I am also clear that our libraries should be for everyone. When I was reading through my speech on the train, I thought it actually makes me sad and angry that I even feel I have to say that out loud.

    Throughout the year, it is great to see themed displays of books celebrating the diversity across our communities. Books about so many topics are at the heart of what libraries offer and it is always good to see you celebrate projects centred around reading.

    I was really pleased to see last weeks’ Libraries Change Lives Week focused on supporting the National Year of Reading through initiatives like ‘Discover Your Library Day’.

    I’m also proud that DCMS gave a £150,000 funding boost to 72 library authorities covering 100 places, providing opportunities to extend reading projects and activities. These are all places which are disadvantaged by high deprivation, weak social infrastructure and low library engagement.

    I look forward to finding out and hearing more about the impact of projects to deliver increased membership and use of libraries in those places, during 2026 and beyond.

    I’m also delighted that some of the regional winners of the Library of the Year award are here today. They were recipients of an £1,000 cash prize from DCMS with the money going towards continuing local reading projects.

    But the value of libraries – and why libraries matter – is often only available to people if they are members. I’m keen to see even more people signing up and using their local library, and getting the benefits that come with membership. Libraries are essential services in any neighbourhood. After all, public libraries in England have 6 million members and around 143 million physical visits a year.

    That is four times the number of people who attend the Premier League, Championship and EFL Leagues 1 and 2 annually!

    A third of adults regularly use their library, but there’s still more we can do to open up library services to more people, particularly those from underrepresented groups.

    I want everyone to find something of value at their local library. I want to support you in your work removing barriers to library membership such as worries about the affordability of fines. And I also want to increase active use and share the brilliant practice we see in so many places.

    I would like to see every child as a member of their local library so the next generation can enjoy the lifelong benefits libraries bring. The benefits they brought to me, in other words. We will work with the Local Government Association and others to consider how places like Best Start Family Hubs, schools, and other local public services can be supported to promote children’s library membership.

    I know the Culture Secretary, Lisa Nandy, wants to make a difference in the places that need it the most. This is why DCMS has published our Culture Priority Places. These will help us prioritise and target investment in those areas to build social and community cohesion and to enhance opportunity where outcomes are poorest.

    We have also committed to continuing the Libraries Improvement Fund until 2030. From this year LIF assessments will integrate our Culture Priority Places. And over the course of this parliament, we will invest up to £27.5 million in the Fund, supporting library services to upgrade physical and digital infrastructure to meet changing user needs.

    I would like to see us collectively work together to ensure public libraries are well run, well used and well connected. And, more than anything, have an impact in their local communities.

    I will continue to promote the critical contribution public libraries can and do make to so many important Government strategic objectives. For example, I recently met with Ministers in the Department for Education to talk about how we can build stronger partnerships between libraries, schools and Best Start Family hubs.

    When I or the Libraries Team have these discussions, it is always valuable to have robust data and evidence on library usage and impact that we can use to help to make your case and inspire policy makers across Government.

    Public libraries have always been engines to deliver change and I want to shine a spotlight on how libraries support the government to provide opportunities for all.

    I do recognise the difficult context that libraries are working in, and the constraints that this creates. Our view is not that libraries should deliver more without resource, but that it can be highly effective and cost effective to maximise libraries’ role in communities.

    I know that you are all waiting quite patiently for the forthcoming government libraries strategy. Many of you have already shared your views and feedback to help shape it, so thank you for that. And I hope I have given you a flavour of some of the things you can expect to see in it. I really value the input you have provided and those conversations I have had with people when on visits. I’d especially like to thank those of you who provided excellent case studies on the impact your library services have on your communities. They’re a really inspiring read. From Oldham, who are placing local data at the centre of service design, to Leicester who are working seamlessly across public and academic libraries. We have been blown away by the response.

    The examples and all of the case studies underline what we absolutely know to be true: that you are making a difference in people’s lives in the communities you serve through your work.

    I am committed to support you from central government to do that the best you can. We all have a part to play in ensuring that our public libraries continue to be the gateway to opportunity.

    One thing I did want to say ahead of us publishing the Libraries Strategy formally is to give you some assurance about the national development agency function. After consideration and discussion with the Arts Council, sector bodies and the British Library, and with a number of representations from some of you in the room, we have decided to retain the function with the Arts Council. [Applause] The Arts Council are really keen to keep this function as well.

    We know that there is work to be done together to understand what the sector wants from its development agency and to build a refreshed offer that serves your needs. But I hope that this allays any concerns you may have had and we look forward to taking the next steps on this together.

    Over the next five years I want the ambitions outlined in our strategy to shape our work plan for the future. I want us to work together to realise these ambitions. You are the guardians of a system that can, in my case and the case of so many others, turn a weekly choice of five books into a lifetime of opportunity. Long may that be the case! And thank you so much for everything you do, sometimes in hugely difficult circumstances. It really is genuinely appreciated, thank you.

  • NEWS STORY : UK And Ireland Agree To Strengthen Common Travel Area Security

    NEWS STORY : UK And Ireland Agree To Strengthen Common Travel Area Security

    STORY

    The Prime Minister and Taoiseach Micheál Martin have agreed to continue work to strengthen the integrity and security of the Common Travel Area. Downing Street said the two leaders discussed enhanced data sharing and joint intelligence operations during a call on 12 June.

    The Prime Minister also raised the attack in Belfast earlier in the week and said his thoughts were with Stephen Ogilvie and his family. Downing Street said he condemned the violence that followed the attack and praised the response of the Police Service of Northern Ireland.

    The leaders also discussed UK-EU relations ahead of Ireland’s upcoming EU Presidency and a second UK-EU summit later this year. Downing Street said they reflected on progress towards closer cooperation intended to support business, the economy and shared interests.

  • NEWS STORY : Dutch-Style Youth Employment Support To Be Rolled Out Across Britain

    NEWS STORY : Dutch-Style Youth Employment Support To Be Rolled Out Across Britain

    STORY

    The Government has announced plans to roll out Dutch-style employment support across Britain as part of efforts to reduce the number of young people not in education, employment or training. The Department for Work and Pensions said almost 180 Youth Hubs would begin opening from next week.

    The hubs are intended to bring education, welfare and employment support together in one place. The Government said the programme had been informed by the Dutch Jongerenpunt model, which provides integrated support for young people and has been linked by ministers to the Netherlands’ lower NEET rate.

    The Work and Pensions Secretary said the Government wanted to build a system in which inactivity was a last resort. The announcement comes as ministers seek to expand localised employment support and increase access to work-study pathways, employer partnerships and apprenticeships.

  • NEWS STORY : Government Plans Under-16 Restrictions On High-Risk Social Media Apps

    NEWS STORY : Government Plans Under-16 Restrictions On High-Risk Social Media Apps

    STORY

    The Government is preparing restrictions that would prevent children under 16 from accessing high-risk social media apps. The Guardian reported that the measures are expected to include additional restrictions on platforms considered safer, including limits on disappearing messages, livestreaming and chats with adult strangers.

    The plans follow a consultation on online safety for children. The Guardian reported that under-18s would also be banned from using romantic or sexual AI chatbots, while the Government is expected to set out further details of which platforms will be affected at a later date.

    The proposals are expected to place renewed attention on age assurance and the duties of technology companies. A Government source told the Guardian that ministers did not comment on speculation, while the report said Downing Street had received more than 116,000 responses to the consultation.

  • NEWS STORY : UK Sets 2027 Deadline For Russian Fuel Import Ban

    NEWS STORY : UK Sets 2027 Deadline For Russian Fuel Import Ban

    STORY

    The UK Government has said a full ban on diesel and jet fuel made in Russia will take effect by 1 January 2027. Reuters reported that the announcement sets a timeline for ending a temporary licence covering Russian oil products refined in third countries.

    The Government had previously allowed imports of diesel and jet fuel refined from Russian crude in third countries after citing supply pressures linked to the Iran war. Ministers said existing sanctions were not being lifted and that the new restrictions were being phased in.

    The Department for Business and Trade said the temporary licence would continue to be reviewed every two weeks. The Government said it intended to lift the licence earlier if conditions allowed.