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  • PRESS RELEASE : New agency chair appointed to crack down on minimum wage underpayment and worker exploitation [October 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : New agency chair appointed to crack down on minimum wage underpayment and worker exploitation [October 2025]

    The press release issued by the Department of Business and Trade on 14 October 2025.

    Matthew Taylor to lead Government’s new Fair Work Agency from April 2026.

    • Taylor Review author Matthew Taylor appointed as first Fair Work Agency chair to support the government’s mission to kickstart economic growth.
    • New agency to transform labour market enforcement, protecting workers from bad employers who flout minimum wage and other labour laws, levelling the playing field for businesses that pay fairly.
    • Better enforcement will put more money in the pockets of working people, improving living standards as part of the Plan for Change.

    Once in a generation employment rights reforms that will benefit over 15 million UK workers came a step closer today as ministers confirmed Matthew Taylor CBE will chair the brand-new Fair Work Agency. 

    A key part of the government’s Make Work Pay plans, the Fair Work Agency will transform how employment rights are enforced across the UK.

    From using new powers to ensure the estimated 900,000 people who have holiday pay withheld each year finally receive it, to cracking down on those employers failing to pay the minimum wage, the Fair Work Agency will finally bring the ambition needed to properly tackle worker exploitation in the UK. 

    It will bring together the responsibilities of three existing enforcement bodies to create a single agency, ending the current fragmented system so that workers and employers know where to turn to for support. 

    Matthew Taylor led the influential Taylor Review of Modern Working Practices in 2016, which provided the foundation for many of the transformative reforms now being delivered through the Employment Rights Bill. His work on this review led to him being recognised in the 2019 Birthday Honours list, being appointed a CBE.  

    Since 2021 he has also served as Chief Executive of both the NHS Confederation, following a stint at the RSA and an interim period as Director of Labour Market Enforcement. This means he brings exceptional experience to this role.  

    Business Secretary Peter Kyle said: 

    The current enforcement system doesn’t deliver for businesses or working people. Our Fair Work Agency will be a game-changer in ensuring rights are properly enforced, whilst backing those businesses that already do the right thing. 

    Matthew brings exceptional leadership experience to this pivotal role and I look forward to working with him to deliver our Plan to Make Work Pay and put more money into the pockets of workers across the country.

    Employment Rights Minister Kate Dearden said: 

    Matthew Taylor’s extensive experience will be vital in ensuring this new agency delivers real change for people who’ve been let down by poor employment practices for far too long.  

    Our Fair Work Agency will make a real difference, providing a single point of contact for workers and employers, and crucially, having the teeth to take action against businesses that flout the rules.  

    This is about creating workplaces where people are treated with dignity and respect. It’s exactly the kind of backing working people in this country deserve.

    New Fair Work Agency Chair Matthew Taylor CBE said: 

    For years inside and outside Government I argued that employers and workers need a single enforcement body for employment rights.  

    It is an honour to be asked to be the first Chair of the Fair Work Agency, the body that will meet that need.  

    The Agency has a vital job in strengthening labour market compliance and enforcement. This is essential to provide workers with protection and employers with a supportive and level playing field on which to invest and grow.

    TUC General Secretary Paul Nowak said: 

    The Fair Work Agency is a vital opportunity to turn the page on the era of inadequate enforcement. For too long, bad bosses have got away with flagrantly breaking the law. This isn’t right – it fails workers and the many decent employers who play by the rules.

    That’s why the Fair Work Agency is so important. It is a chance to create a properly resourced body with real teeth to help good employers comply with the law and come down hard on those who refuse to do right by their staff.

    We look forward to working with Matthew Taylor in his role as chair to realise the Agency’s full potential, protect workers in every corner of the country and work with unions to drive up the quality of work.

    Neil Carberry, REC Chief Executive, said:

    Matthew Taylor will bring a combination of deep care for workers being treated well and an understanding that work itself is changing fast. Both workers and businesses need flexibility that goes beyond the structures of the past, while ensuring we avoid exploitation.

    The new Fair Work Agency is vital to this, so long as it builds on the expertise of its predecessor bodies, in particular the Employment Agency Standards Inspectorate. For too long, employment laws have been passed that the vast majority of firms comply with, absorbing the costs of adoption in the interests of fair treatment. But those who flout the law have found it too easy to get away with it.  That damages great firms and exposes workers to poor treatment.

    We look forward to working with Matthew and the FWA team to address this in the interest of compliant businesses across the country.

    Peter Cheese, chief executive of the CIPD, the professional body for HR and people development, said: 

    The appointment of Matthew Taylor as chair of the new Fair Work Agency is an important step toward building a more coherent, fairer system of labour market enforcement. His experience and leadership will be crucial in driving forward the agency’s mission to prevent exploitation and promote fair treatment for all workers.

    To ensure its success, the Fair Work Agency must be equipped with the right resources and a strong employer-side voice from the outset. Employers – particularly smaller businesses – need clear guidance and support to comply with the new Employment Rights Bill. At the CIPD we look forward to working with Matthew to help the Fair Work Agency deliver on its ambition.

    Notes to Editors

    • Matthew Taylor was appointed chair following a fair and open recruitment process. 
    • The Fair Work Agency will launch in April 2026. Matthew will continue in his role as CEO of the NHS Confederation until then while also working with Government, business and unions helping to shape the strategy of the new organisation.
    • The Fair Work Agency will have robust powers to investigate and tackle employers flouting the law, including workplace inspections, civil penalties for underpayments, and the ability to bring proceedings on workers’ behalf. It will also provide support to businesses on following employment laws, helping create a level playing field for all where those who want to do the right thing aren’t undercut by those who don’t. 
    • Research shows the scale of the challenge the Fair Work Agency will address: 900,000 UK workers annually have their holiday pay withheld, worth around £2.1 billion, whilst nearly 20% of minimum wage workers are underpaid.
  • PRESS RELEASE : UK and NATO nations ramp up response to Putin’s aggression in Ukraine and incursions into Europe [October 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK and NATO nations ramp up response to Putin’s aggression in Ukraine and incursions into Europe [October 2025]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 14 October 2025.

    More than 85,000 military drones have been delivered by the UK to Ukraine in just six months this year by accelerating production from British companies.

    It comes as Defence Secretary John Healey confirms, for the first time, that £600 million has been invested by the UK this year to accelerate drone delivery for Ukraine’s Armed Forces, including tens of thousands of short-range first-person view (FPV) drones that are crucial to supporting Ukraine’s front line.  

    These drones are being used for precision strikes, reconnaissance, and disrupting Russian activity behind the frontlines, countering Russia’s own attempts at massed drone tactics. 

    The Defence Secretary will say to allies that we need to “ramp up drone production to outmatch Putin’s escalation” following increased drone strikes in Ukraine and dangerous incursions into Europe.  

    National security is the foundation of this Government’s Plan for Change, and the UK is stepping up on Euro-Atlantic security, underpinned by the historic increase to defence spending to 2.6% of GDP from 2027.   

    Last month in Kyiv, the Defence Secretary and his Ukrainian counterpart Denys Shmyhal signed a first-of-its-kind industrial partnership through which the UK is jointly developing an inceptor drone already been used by Ukraine to protect civilians and critical infrastructure from Russian drones.  

    New data from the Ukrainian battlefield is now being implemented to help mass produce the Octopus interceptor, with a target to provide thousands of new-improved interceptor drones back into Ukraine each month. 

    Defence Secretary, John Healey MP, said: 

    Putin’s dangerous escalation in Ukraine and across Europe must be matched by ramping up our drone production and strengthening NATO’s air defences. 

    The UK is stepping up our support to Ukraine by delivering over 85,000 drones in the last six months and signing new industrial partnerships to rapidly develop thousands of new interceptor drones to shoot down Putin’s attacks. This is growing jobs in both the UK and Ukraine. 

    I am also extending the UK’s commitment to NATO’s Eastern Sentry air policing mission to the end of the year to continue to deter Putin from further testing the Alliance. 

    The Defence Secretary will also attend a meeting of NATO’s Defence Ministers, where he is expected to confirm the extension of the Royal Air Force’s contribution to NATO’s Eastern Sentry mission to the end of 2025. British Typhoon fighter jets have been taking part in defensive flights over Polish airspace following dangerous Russian drone incursions. 

    In total, the UK has spent £600 million this year on military drones for Ukraine – drawn from the record £4.5 billion commitment by the government this year to support Ukraine’s defence. This includes logistical drones for transporting equipment to the frontline, one-way attack drones, as well as surveillance and reconnaissance drones.  

    Significant amounts of this spend is with UK companies, supporting hundreds of specialist jobs around the country from suppliers including Tekever, Windracers, and Malloy. 

    The Drone Capability Coalition, which the UK co-leads with Latvia, is also using funding from a range of nations to procure advanced drone-interceptors to help Ukraine counter the threat of the Iranian-designed Shahed one-way attack drones.  

    Interceptors are being tested on the battlefield right now, with the Drone Capability Coalition expected to award new contracts very soon to provide Ukraine with further kit, including around 35,000 new interceptor systems in the coming months. 

    An upcoming deployment of British military counter-drone experts to Moldova will take place this month, where they will help scope requirements for Moldova’s armed forces in counter drone tactics.

    Both the Prime Minister and Defence Secretary have been clear that the UK’s national security – the foundation of the Government’s Plan for Change – starts in Ukraine.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Northern Ireland Troubles Bill to repeal and replace Legacy Act [October 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Northern Ireland Troubles Bill to repeal and replace Legacy Act [October 2025]

    The press release issued by the Northern Ireland Office on 14 October 2025.

    The new Northern Ireland Troubles Bill will put in place a fair and transparent system that enables families of victims, including those who never came home from service in Northern Ireland, to seek answers.

    • The legislation will implement reforms to build a fair, proportionate and transparent system to those seeking answers, repealing the previous legacy arrangements.
    • New measures will end the former Government’s immunity plan which would have offered immunity to terrorists
    • Veterans who served in Northern Ireland will benefit from 6 protections and safeguards which were not in place in the previous flawed Act.

    The UK Government introduces legislation today to repeal and replace the Legacy Act 2023. The new Northern Ireland Troubles Bill will put in place a fair and transparent system that enables families of victims, including those who never came home from service in Northern Ireland, to seek answers.  

    The  Bill (‘The Troubles Bill’) will establish a reformed Legacy Commission and pave the way for new information-sharing arrangements with the Irish authorities – a first which delivers on the spirit and promise of the Good Friday Agreement.

    We will deliver new protections and safeguards specifically designed and put in place for veterans who served in Northern Ireland during the Troubles.   

    The Troubles Bill will also address the UK Supreme Court ruling in Adams regarding the application of the Carltona principle in the context of interim custody orders, making clear that such orders could be made by junior Ministers as well as by the Secretary of State.

    The Bill follows extensive consultation with victims and families, community organisations and civil society, the Northern Ireland political parties and our Armed Forces community.

    It also reflects the Joint Framework that was recently announced between the UK and Irish governments, which saw unprecedented commitments made by the Irish Government to bring forward its own legislation and to co-operate with a reformed Legacy Commission. These reciprocal commitments will help deliver the Good Friday Agreement’s unrealised ambition to “address and acknowledge the suffering of victims and survivors”.

    The Government has also today introduced a draft Remedial Order which will remove from statute the previous government’s immunity scheme which proposed to allow terrorists to seek immunity from prosecution. 

    The Troubles Bill will: 

    • Establish a reformed Legacy Commission, with strengthened governance arrangements, new conflict of interest duties, and a statutory oversight board. 
    • Give the new Commission enhanced investigative powers and a fairer disclosure regime, ensuring it has all it needs to find answers for families, and the maximum possible information can be made public, subject to proportionate safeguards. 
    • Allow a small number of inquests already started to continue, with no fresh inquests beyond those already in the system. Inquests that were stopped part-heard by the Legacy Act will be able to resume. Other inquests that were halted by the Legacy Act will be referred to the Solicitor General to independently consider whether, in each case, they are most appropriately dealt with by a reformed Legacy Commission or via the coronial system.
    • Provide for new proceedings within the Commission, for cases that transfer in from the coronial system. The new mechanism, consistent with the approach in the Inquiries Act, will have provision for public hearings, the ability to consider sensitive information in closed hearings, and provide effective next of kin participation, including through legal representation;
    • Establish an Independent Commission for Information Retrieval, jointly with the Irish Government, and consistent with the Stormont House Agreement. This will, initially on a pilot basis, provide families with an additional means to retrieve information. The ICIR will not have powers to investigate; its purpose will be to privately receive information about individual cases on behalf of families.

    Included within this legislation will be robust protections for veterans who served in Northern Ireland during the Troubles.  These measures include: 

    • Right to stay at home – Changing the law to create a presumption in favour of remote evidence, so that veterans are not forced to travel to Northern Ireland to give evidence to the Commission or to an inquest.
      Protection from repeated investigations – The Commission will be under a requirement not to duplicate the work of any previous repeated investigations unless there are compelling reasons that make such duplication essential. 
    • Protection in old age – we will legislate through this Bill to require the Commission and coroners to consider the health and wellbeing of elderly witnesses – including whether it would be inappropriate for them to give evidence at all.
    • A right to anonymity – We will legislate that any veteran seeking anonymity when giving evidence will now be granted.
    • Right to have Veterans’ voices heard – There will be a statutory advisory group that will provide an opportunity for the voices of all those victims and survivors of the Troubles to be heard, including those from the armed forces and police. In addition to this, the MOD will put forward an independent advisor with operational experience to support investigations, to remove the need for veterans to give unnecessary evidence on historical context and general operational details.

    Separately to the legislation, the Government is ensuring that veterans will be protected from cold calling through two new protocols. These will ensure they are only ever contacted with the support of the MoD, meaning that from the moment of contact they are supported by the state that asked them to serve.

    The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Hilary Benn, said: 

    The Government will now put into legislation the commitments that we have made both as part of the Joint Framework and to our Armed Forces veterans.

    The purpose of all this is to help families who have waited too long to find answers about what happened to their loved ones during the Troubles.

    This is our opportunity to deliver on this final part of the Good Friday Agreement and help Northern Ireland politics and broader society to find those answers and move forward.

    The Minister for Armed Forces, Al Carns, said: 

    We promised our veterans who served with honour in Northern Ireland that we would put proper protections in place, and today’s legislation delivers on that commitment.   

    After the false promises of the last government, we are putting in place real, workable protections for veterans that the failed Legacy Act never did. We will not allow the process, like so many times before, to become the punishment for our veterans.  

    Having served for 24 years and as a serving reservist myself, I understand the importance of avoiding an endless cycle of investigations. These robust safeguards will ensure the rights of those who served their nation so honourably are protected whilst providing families with a fair and transparent system to seek answers.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK and US take joint action to disrupt major online fraud network [October 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK and US take joint action to disrupt major online fraud network [October 2025]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 14 October 2025.

    Alongside the US Government, the UK has today sanctioned a network that operates illegal scam centres across Southeast Asia.

    A network that operates illegal scam centres, which trick victims across the world out of substantial sums of money and torture their trafficked workers, is today (14 October) sanctioned by the UK and US governments. 

    Across Southeast Asia, scam centres are using sophisticated schemes, including scams in which people are lured into fake romantic relationships, to defraud victims on an industrial scale, including in the UK. Those conducting the scams are often trafficked foreign nationals, trapped and forced to carry out online fraud under threat of torture. 

    As part of the crackdown, a £12 million mansion in North London, owned by a multi-national network responsible for using forced labour to conduct online scams, has been frozen. 

    The leader of the network, Chen Zhi, and his web of enablers have incorporated their businesses in the British Virgin Islands and invested in the London property market, including a £12 million mansion on Avenue Road in North London, a £100 million office building on Fenchurch Street in the City of London, and seventeen flats on New Oxford Street and in Nine Elms in South London. 

    The sanctions will freeze these businesses and properties with immediate effect, locking Chen and his network out of the UK’s financial system. 

    Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said: 

    The masterminds behind these horrific scam centres are ruining the lives of vulnerable people and buying up London homes to store their money. 

    Together with our US allies, we are taking decisive action to combat the growing transnational threat posed by this network – upholding human rights, protecting British nationals and keeping dirty money off our streets.

    The individuals and entities targeted today include: 

    • The Prince Group and its Chairman Chen Zhi – The Prince Group is a high-profile, multi-billion-pound conglomerate with extensive business activities across Cambodia and beyond. Chen and the Prince Group have constructed casinos and compounds used as scam centres, maintain links to their operations through corporate proxies, and are implicated in laundering the proceeds
    • Jin Bei Group – A leisure and entertainment business linked to the Prince Group, whose properties include a flagship seven-storey hotel and casino in the Cambodian tourist hub of Sihanoukville, as well as multiple scam centres
    • Golden Fortune Resorts World Ltd. – The company behind a large scam compound on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, built by a Prince Group subsidiary and disguised as a “technology park”
    • Byex Exchange – A cryptocurrency platform with links to Jin Bei and Prince Group

    Scam centres in Cambodia, Myanmar and across the region use fake job adverts to attract foreign nationals to disused casinos or purpose-built compounds, where they are forced to carry out online fraud under threat of torture. Scams often involve building online relationships to convince targets to ‘invest’ increasingly large sums of money into fraudulent cryptocurrency investment schemes. The proceeds are then laundered using a sophisticated financial ecosystem that includes seemingly legitimate front businesses and online gambling platforms. 

    Today’s sanctions are being coordinated with sanctions by the US to ensure maximum impact, and follow extensive investigations by the FCDO and the United States’ Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC). 

    Fraud Minister Lord Hanson said:

    Fraudsters prey on the most vulnerable by stealing life savings, ruining trust, and devastating lives. We will not tolerate this.

    These sanctions prove our determination to stop those who profit from this activity, hold offenders accountable, and keep dirty money out of the UK. Through our new, expanded Fraud Strategy and the upcoming Global Fraud Summit, we will go even further to disrupt corrupt networks and protect the public from shameless criminals.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Knife robberies continue to fall under taskforce crack down [October 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Knife robberies continue to fall under taskforce crack down [October 2025]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 14 October 2025.

    The number of robberies involving a knife, or the threat of one, continues to fall in England and Wales.

    The government has pledged to halve knife crime over the next decade, as part of the Plan for Change. 

    The new figures show a 10% reduction in offences under this government across the 7 police forces most impacted by knife crime, with areas like West Midlands seeing a 30% drop, following targeted policing efforts.  

    Interventions include the use of hotspot policing, acting on better intelligence on offenders, increased patrols using knife arches, drones and plain clothes officers. 

    A dedicated taskforce was set up in October 2024 for an initial 6 months to turbocharge this work after seeing a stark rise in incidents between July 2023 and June 2024, bringing together the Metropolitan Police, West Midlands, Greater Manchester, West Yorkshire, South Yorkshire, Avon and Somerset, and British Transport Police.  

    With efforts continuing throughout the past year, all 7 police force areas are now seeing a reduction in robberies involving a knife since June 2024, collectively turning a 14% year-on-year increase in knife-enabled robbery into a 10% year-on-year reduction. 

    Crime and policing minister Sarah Jones said: 

    Those who have been robbed at knifepoint know how terrifying and traumatic that experience can be, and this government took immediate action through the Plan for Change to reverse this troubling trend.  

    Through relentless focus, targeted policing and strong partnerships, we are turning this worrying rise into a sustained fall, and we have also started to see a reduction in overall knife crime for the first time in 4 years. 

    But there is so much more to do, which is why we are bringing in the toughest measures yet to crack down on the online sale of weapons and invest in the futures of our young people to set them on a better path.

    As the latest figures show, between the year ending June 2024 and the year ending August 2025: 

    • West Midlands Police saw a 30% reduction, the largest percentage fall, with 771 fewer robberies
    • the British Transport Police also reported a notable fall of 107 offences, down 26% 
    • Avon and Somerset recorded a 14% drop, or 82 fewer offences 
    • South Yorkshire saw a reduction of 8%, or 49 offences
    • West Yorkshire saw a 7% decrease with 66 fewer cases
    • the Metropolitan Police recorded a 5% drop in knife-related robberies, or a decrease of 484 offences 
    • Greater Manchester Police reported a decline of 3%, or 35 offences

    The fall in these types of robberies comes alongside a series of major interventions by the Home Office and police forces to tackle knife crime more broadly.  

    In August it became illegal to possess, sell, manufacture or import ninja swords. This measure, introduced under Ronan’s Law, followed years of campaigning by the family of 16-year-old Ronan Kanda, who was murdered with a ninja sword in 2022.  

    Pooja Kanda, knife crime campaigner and mother to Ronan Kanda, said: 

    The statistics show that the government has taken a proactive approach to reducing knife-enabled robberies.  

    The significant drop we are seeing is a positive sign and a step closer to the government’s mission of halving knife crime within a decade – something I’m confident we will achieve with the continued support and hard work of campaigners and the government alike.

    This coincided with a nationwide weapons surrender scheme that saw thousands of deadly weapons handed in by members of the public. 

    The scheme included 37 new surrender bins and a mobile surrender van operated by FazAmnesty, and reached high-risk areas like London, the West Midlands and Greater Manchester.  

    Beyond the ban, Ronan’s Law is introducing age verification for online knife sales, fines for tech executives who fail to remove illegal knife content, and new offences for possession with violent intent. 

    The government is also piloting new multi-agency Prevention Partnership Panels to proactively identify and refer vulnerable teenagers – who may currently be falling through the net – to a range of different support services much earlier, including Young Futures Hubs. 

    Backed by a £2 million cash injection, 8 of these hubs will launch this year in areas with high levels of knife crime and antisocial behaviour, offering a lifeline to vulnerable young people. It is expected that 50 Young Future Hubs will be launched over the next 4 years. 

    Patrick Green, CEO for the Ben Kinsella Trust, said: 

    Reducing knife crime is about more than just bringing down crime statistics; it’s about making a profound investment in public safety and the future of our young people. When we successfully drive down knife-enabled robbery, we actively remove the fear that can often make people feel unsafe. Critically, this also helps dismantle the dangerous misconception that leads some young people to believe they must carry a weapon for ‘protection’.

    The government’s targeted strategy to reduce knife-enabled robberies is crucial, because it also addresses the clear and harmful connection between robbery and the fear it can instil in young people.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Pro-growth package unshackling Britain to get building [October 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Pro-growth package unshackling Britain to get building [October 2025]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government on 13 October 2025.

    Pro-growth changes to the government’s landmark Planning and Infrastructure Bill to get Britain building faster.

    • New measures to slash delays and get Britain building faster through landmark Planning and Infrastructure Bill 
    • New powers for Secretary of State could stop councils rejecting planning permissions, tackle blockers in the courts, alongside plans to accelerate reservoirs, windfarms and large housing schemes   
    • Turbocharging the Plan for Change to create high-paying jobs, put money back into people’s pockets, and secure more homegrown clean energy

    New homes, more clean energy, and greater water security will be within reach for hundreds of thousands of working people and families, as the government vows to sweep aside blockers standing in the way of growth and dismantle barriers to get Britain building.   

    A pro-growth package announced by the government this week (Tuesday 14 October) will look at supporting the full potential of the landmark Planning and Infrastructure Bill – a key driver for growth to slash planning delays currently shackling the UK economy.    

    If voted through, Ministers will get new powers to prevent applications being rejected by local councils while they consider using ‘call-in’ powers to decide whether or not they should be approved. Currently some councils are dragging their feet to get on and build with nearly 900 major housing schemes blocked in the past year alone.    

    New proposed measures would greenlight reservoirs faster, pumping fresh water into the taps of people’s homes, and unlocking new opportunities for housebuilding after more than 30 years without a new reservoir in the UK.  

    Pro-growth changes will pave the way for cleaner energy, including onshore windfarms, to drive millions of pounds of investment into local areas, prevent bill hikes and create thousands of new jobs.  

    Allowing Natural England to streamline its role by freeing it up to make sensible choices on when to provide advice to local authorities will free up valuable resources. This will enable the organisation to focus on higher priority planning applications and nature recovery, helping to accelerate approvals for new homes and infrastructure.   

    Under government plans builders will also receive a helping hand to stop planning permissions from being timed out on vital housing projects tied up in the courts, accelerating and unlocking stalled schemes so money can be better spent on getting spades in the ground rather than starting back at square one. 

    If passed, each of these pro-growth changes will accelerate the government’s Plan for Change to build 1.5 million homes, achieve clean power by 2030, raise living standards in every corner of the country and put more money back into working people’s pockets.

    Housing Secretary, Steve Reed said:

    “Britain’s potential has been shackled by governments unwilling to overhaul the stubborn planning system that has erected barriers to building at every turn. It is simply not true that nature has to lose for economic growth to succeed. 
      
    “Sluggish planning has real world consequences. Every new house blocked deprives a family of a home. Every infrastructure project that gets delayed blocks someone from a much-needed job. This will now end.    
      
    “The changes we are making today will strengthen the seismic shift already underway through our landmark Bill. We will ‘Build, baby, build’ with 1.5 million new homes and communities that working people desperately want and need.”

    As the landmark Planning and Infrastructure Bill rapidly continues its way through Parliament and is set to become law this year, this week’s wide-ranging package fully embraces the government’s drive to go further and faster in unleashing the biggest era of building in the country’s history. Key changes include:

    • Ministers will be able to issue ‘holding directions’ to stop councils refusing planning permission whilst they consider using their ‘call-in’ powers. Under existing rules, they can only issue these holds when council are set to approve applications. This will ensure Ministers can properly use their call-in powers where necessary to boost growth and build more homes.  
    • Speeding up the approvals for large reservoirs by enabling non-water sector companies to build reservoirs that are automatically considered as nationally significant infrastructure projects.  
    • Unlocking more onshore windfarms, securing around 3GW of onshore wind and up to £2 billion extra investment for UK based businesses, whilst safeguarding UK defence and seismic detection capabilities.
    • Stopping planning permissions from being timed out for approved major housing schemes facing lengthy judicial reviews, building on existing measures to cut back meritless legal challenges for major infrastructure projects from three to one and slashing a year off the statutory pre-consultation period.    
    • Securing a win-win across land and sea by allowing the Nature Restoration Fund to support the delivery of marine development, securing better environmental outcomes for marine habitats whilst accelerating the construction of coastal projects.  
    • Natural England is currently wasting precious resources because they are required by law to respond to every query from local authorities that relates to nature. Streamlining Natural England’s role will speed up approvals for new homes and infrastructure by reducing unnecessary duplication and allowing greater discretion to focus on applications that pose higher risks or present stronger opportunities for nature recovery, with standard guidance provided to local authorities for straightforward cases.

    Thanks to new pro-growth reforms, the government remains firmly on track to make 150 planning decisions on major infrastructure projects, with a record breaking 21 decisions in the first year of any Parliament, and has already greenlit projects including hot-off-the-wheels Gatwick airport expansion and the long-awaited Lower Thames Crossing.

    Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves said:

    “The outdated planning system has been gummed up by burdensome bureaucracy and held to ransom by blockers for too long.  

    “Our pro-growth planning bill shows we are serious about cutting red tape to get Britain building again, backing the builders not the blockers to speed up projects and show investors that we are a country that gets spades in the ground and our economy growing.”

    This announcement follows the Housing Secretary’s commitment to ‘Build, baby, build’, as the government begins to embark on the next phase of reforms to remove every barrier to build 1.5 million homes this Parliament as well as accelerate the construction of major infrastructure including roads, railways, and solar farms.    

    Planning reforms already made by the government will alone drive housebuilding to its highest level in over 40 years, and this does not account for measures to be brought forward through the Planning and Infrastructure Bill.  

    The government’s own analysis confirmed earlier this year that changes to get Britain building could benefit the economy by up to £7.5 billion over the next 10 years.

    Further information:

    The government’s package of amendments to the Planning and Infrastructure Bill can be read in full here.

    The landmark Bill is set to return to the House of Lords for its Report Stage on Monday 20 October.

    John Foster, CBI Chief Policy & Campaigns Officer, said:

    “The CBI welcomes the latest amendments to the Planning and Infrastructure Bill as an important signal that the government wants to go further and faster in reforming our inefficient planning system.  

    “Action that cuts delays to planning processes and simplifies environmental approvals is critical to getting projects moving faster and unlocking the economic growth the country needs. 

    “Allowing ministers to act decisively on major applications, streamlining Natural England oversight, and broadening investment to key assets like reservoirs will unlock significant investment across the country.” 

    Vicky Evans, UKIMEA Cities, Planning and Design Leader, Arup, said:

    “Investing in critical infrastructure, such as housing, clean energy, and water security, is crucial to unlocking economic growth and building a sustainable, low-carbon future. 

    “The amendments put down by the government today are an important step forward in streamlining the planning system which will help significantly to speed up the delivery of water and energy infrastructure, and new homes.” 

    Ana Musat, RenewableUK’s Director of Policy and Engagement said:

    “We have ambitious targets across various clean technologies and our grid infrastructure to ensure we deliver the government’s Clean Power 2030 mission, and the measures outlined today represent a vital step towards realising these whilst protecting our environment and enabling local businesses and billpayers to directly feel the benefits. 

    “Onshore wind is one of the quickest and cheapest technologies to build and we welcome these proposals to ensure we can fully capitalise on this through a more efficient planning process, potentially enabling up to 3GW of capacity and £2 billion in additional investment for local businesses. Additionally, we welcome the introduction of the Nature Restoration Fund, which will work alongside the upcoming Marine Recovery Fund to deliver a joined-up approach to protecting the UK’s precious species and habitats while we construct and connect our substantial pipeline of clean energy projects. This will dovetail with the reduced administrative burden on Natural England, which will be freeing up its resources to work collaboratively on solutions to support the deployment of renewables.”

  • PRESS RELEASE : MI5 issues guidance on countering espionage and interference [October 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : MI5 issues guidance on countering espionage and interference [October 2025]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 13 October 2025.

    MI5’s National Protective Security Authority issues new security guidance to protect democratic institutions from espionage and foreign interference.

    MI5’s National Protective Security Authority (NPSA) has today published new guidance to help protect the UK’s democratic institutions from foreign interference and espionage threats.

    The guidance outlines how state backed actors and their proxies attempt to manipulate, discredit or secretly gather information on political figures at all levels. This is done often through subtle and deceptive means that blur the line between legitimate engagement and malign activity. 

    The guidance is designed to help MPs, peers, councillors, Parliamentary staff and candidates understand the threat and take simple, effective steps to protect themselves, their teams, and the integrity of the UK’s democracy.

    While the guidance highlights that the UK is a target of strategic foreign interference and espionage from elements of the Russian, Chinese and Iranian states, it takes an actor-agnostic approach, focusing on the behaviours, methods and warning signs that should raise red flags, regardless of where the threat originates from.

    Minister for Cabinet Office and Home Office, Dan Jarvis, said: 

    I urge anyone working in government, public service or politics to be alert and trust their instincts if something does not feel right, and follow NPSA’s guidance. Foreign intelligence officers frequently operate covertly and exploit professional networking sites and personal vulnerabilities to build influence.

    This new guidance builds on the work we are already doing to tackle these issues. Those engaging in political influence on behalf of foreign powers must register under the Foreign Influence Registration scheme, as Parliament and the public have a right to know who is seeking to influence political outcomes, and in whose interests.

    Elected representatives and those who work with them may be targeted for their access to information, their ability to shape policy or public opinion, or their relationships with others of interest. This includes not only classified material but also privileged or insider knowledge that foreign intelligence services find valuable. This could be through attempts to exploit overseas travel, online activity, and financial donations as routes to access and influence.

    MI5 Director General, Sir Ken McCallum, said: 

    When foreign states steal vital UK information or manipulate our democratic processes they don’t just damage our security in the short-term, they erode the foundations of our sovereignty and ability to protect our citizens’ interests.

    Everyone reading this guidance cares deeply about the role they play in UK democracy. Take action today to protect it – and yourself.

    We have seen previous cases of political interference, including most recently the case of the former Member of the European Parliament, Nathan Gill, and previously Christine Lee, a lawyer who was working in coordination with an arm of the Chinese Communist Party.

    The guidance details key threat behaviours, including cultivation through long-term relationship building, blackmail, phishing attacks and disinformation activity.

    We encourage individuals to trust their instincts, remain alert to subtle changes in behaviour or intent, and report any suspicious interactions – however apparently minor – to their security teams.

    Engagement will now take place across Parliament, devolved administrations and local government.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Mayors and councillors to access LGPS under reforms [October 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Mayors and councillors to access LGPS under reforms [October 2025]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government on 13 October 2025.

    The Local Government Pension Scheme is one of the largest pension schemes in the world, with over 6.7 million members and £400 billion of assets.

    Ministers are consulting on restoring access to the Local Government Pension Scheme for councillors in England and extending it to mayors. 

    The proposed reforms would align England with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland where elected members already have access. 

    The proposals will show locally elected leaders the respect they deserve as dedicated public servants. This comes as local government reorganisation and devolution continue to reshape councils across England, the responsibilities held by mayors and councillors are expanding significantly. 

    Other measures being consulted on include: 

    • Making it simpler for Multi-Academy Trusts to apply for their staff from different schools to be in the same pension fund; 
    • Implementing new Fair Deal protections ensuring workers outsourced from local government keep seamless access to the Local Government Pension Scheme. 

    The LGPS is one of the largest pension schemes in the world, with over 6.7 million members and £400 billion of assets under management. The scheme serves those who work in local government including waste collectors, school staff including teaching assistants and dinner ladies, library managers and parks workers. 

    The consultation follows earlier reforms announced by the government this year focusing on investment pooling and local investment, designed to unlock the scheme’s full investment potential as it approaches £1 trillion in assets by 2030. 

    The consultation will run until December 22.

  • NEWS STORY : Kinnock Pledges “Fairer Funding, Fewer Barriers” for GPs in Strong Address at RCGP Conference

    NEWS STORY : Kinnock Pledges “Fairer Funding, Fewer Barriers” for GPs in Strong Address at RCGP Conference

    STORY

    In a speech delivered at the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) annual conference in Newport, Care Minister Stephen Kinnock laid out a forceful agenda aimed at restoring general practice and tackling stark inequalities in health.

    Kinnock described general practice as the “front door to the NHS,” noting how poor health in deprived communities manifests as missed school days, reduced work capacity, and entrenched generational disadvantage. He said closing the health gap, such as the ten-year life expectancy difference between children born in Blackpool and Hampshire, must become a national priority.

    To address this, Kinnock announced a review of the Carr-Hill funding formula through the National Institute for Health and Care Research, designed to better direct resources toward overburdened practices, particularly in disadvantaged areas.

    He reaffirmed the government’s commitment to boosting general practice capacity, highlighting an additional £1.1 billion investment in primary care and above-inflation pay increases over the past year. There are now more than 50,000 GPs nationally, with nearly 40,000 fully qualified which he claimed was the highest on record.

    Kinnock also pledged to reduce bureaucratic burdens and red tape, signalling forthcoming legislation that would enhance the professional status of GPs and place them on a more equal footing with other medical specialties.

    “We will not accept a situation where GPs can’t get a job and patients can’t see a GP,” Kinnock told conference delegates, earning applause. He pointed to rising patient satisfaction, up from 61 % to 75 % in some areas, as evidence that reforms are beginning to have an impact.

    Another central theme of his speech was the government’s vision for the new Neighbourhood Health Service. He stressed that GPs would remain at the heart of this model, with patients already benefiting from reforms that have diverted more than half a million referrals to community services such as physiotherapy and sexual health instead of hospital waiting lists. The minister acknowledged, however, that challenges remain. He praised GPs for their resilience and reaffirmed that their expertise and experience would not be taken for granted.

  • Stephen Kinnock – 2025 Speech at RCGP Annual Conference

    Stephen Kinnock – 2025 Speech at RCGP Annual Conference

    The speech made by Stephen Kinnock, the Care Minister, in Newport, Wales on 9 October 2025.

    As the front door to the NHS, it is general practice that is at the coalface of the devastation that poor health causes in the most deprived communities.

    How it leaves children too sick for school, and adults too weak to work.

    How these consequences play out over the course of a lifetime, and how they become entrenched in families generation after generation.

    This is why closing the health gap between the richest and poorest is one of this government’s top priorities.

    Because the fact that a child born in Blackpool will now live 10 years fewer than a child born in Hampshire is utterly shameful.

    I know that the injustice of this postcode lottery piles ever increasing pressure on the GP practices already bearing the brunt of historic underinvestment.

    The college’s own research last year found that in the poorest parts of the country, there are an extra 300 patients per GP, and those of you serving in some of the most deprived parts of England receive less funding compared to practices in better off places.

    This, in the very areas where great healthcare is in the greatest need.

    And so this government is committed to doing better by you and by everyone in our country, not just the wealthy few.

    The Prime Minister promised last week a Britain built for all, and that means no longer leaving grotesque health inequalities unaddressed.

    So I can confirm today that I have formally commissioned a review of the Carr-Hill formula through the National Institute for Health and Care Research.

    This will ensure that resources… [clapping]. Thank you.

    This will ensure that resources are targeted where they are most needed, so that no practice in England is left short changed and no patient is left without care.

    Now, I’ve been in this role long enough now to see the very real difference we can make to people’s lives when we come together to deliver what patients need.

    And my promise to you is that this government does not and never will take your experience and expertise, nor your loyalty to our service, to our health service, and to public service for granted.

    Which is why we hit the ground running from day one [political content removed].

    We invested an additional £1.1 billion into general practice, the biggest increase in over a decade, and funded 2 above-inflation pay increases.

    And in one of our first decisions, Wes Streeting and I reformed the ARRS to provide you with greater flexibility and entrust you with putting together the staff your practices need.

    Part of those changes included an extra £82 million – the first step to hiring an extra 2,000 GPs.

    In fact, we now have the highest number of GPs on record: more than 50,000, of which about almost 40,000 are fully qualified.

    And we’re increasing the number of GP training places in line with the campaign that the RCGP announced today.

    That is a win for practices and a win for patients. We will not accept a situation where GPs can’t get a job and patients can’t see a GP [clapping]. Thank you.

    We also swept away a swathe of meaningless and unnecessary targets, because your time is valuable and should be spent caring for patients, and we will shortly be consulting on legislation that finally recognises and honours GP status, expertise and parity with other specialties.

    Amidst all of this, patient satisfaction in general practice has gone from 61% last year to 75% this year.

    You should be applauding yourself, because that is a credit to all of the hard work that you are putting in.

    It shows that after more than a decade of cuts, we are putting general practice back on the road to recovery. So, thank you all very much.

    Thank you for all that you have done to get us from where we were 14 months ago to where we are today.

    We are moving in the right direction, step by step, and as we fix the foundations, we’re looking forward with a 10 year plan that offers a vision of the truly modern health service that you are crying out for.

    One of the key enablers of our 10 year plan is the move to the Neighbourhood Health Service, which we’re clear will only work with GPs at the heart of it. Just look at the difference that so many of you are already making for patients by taking advantage of the reforms we made to the Advice and Guidance scheme.

    Figures released today show that more than half a million people have now been referred to services like dieticians, physiotherapists and sexual health experts instead of being dumped onto hospital waiting lists.

    For patients, it all adds up to quicker treatment, closer to home. That’s fewer wasted journeys, fewer cancelled appointments and fewer people left in limbo.

    It also frees up hospitals to focus on the most urgent cases. And it stops GP practices seeing the same patients time and time again while they wait for hospital treatment.

    That is what a neighbourhood health service looks like. It is emphatically not about bringing an end to the partnership model, which we absolutely support and where it is working well, it should and it will continue.

    But we’re also creating an option to work over larger geographies, leading to new neighbourhood providers with teams of skilled professionals.

    We will introduce the new neighbourhood contract starting next year and arrangements for the multi-neighbourhood provider will follow.

    We are already making the shift from hospital to community a reality, and I firmly believe that the Neighbourhood Health Service offers a potentially game changing opportunity for GPs to shape the future of care, a future where you’re liberated from the parts of the job that you hate, the form filling and the box ticking, and you can focus on what you came into the profession to do, where you have the tools, the equipment, and the autonomy to provide world class care and where you’d be proud to treat patients in world class facilities. Where you come in for a shift with a sense of purpose, and you go home with a sense of achievement.

    That is the promise that comes with this government.

    An NHS back on its feet and fit for the future.

    And the stakes could not be higher. According to a survey published in the summer, half of millennials in the UK are planning to use private healthcare in the next year.

    Young professionals aged 35 to 44 are increasingly opting for employment with medical insurance. Forget company cars, career progression or holidays. Nowadays, job seekers are lured by fast and easy access to a doctor and routine tests at their convenience.

    That presents an existential threat to the NHS. Because if a generation of patients opt out, they will eventually ask why are they paying so much tax for a service that they no longer use?

    That is the path to 2-tier healthcare, which would widen the health inequalities that we all want to close, and would put the future of the NHS itself at risk by turning it into a poor service for poor people.

    So there is simply no getting away from the fact that we have to move with the times and, in particular, make the shift from analogue to digital.

    And standardising online access and triage is a vitally important element of that shift. It is also key to our manifesto pledges to end the ‘8am scramble’ by widening the window that patients have to request appointments, and to bringing back the family doctor, by in many cases giving patients the option to choose a specific GP when they make that online booking.

    So I am really pleased that as of last financial year, 85% of PCNs said all their practices already had online consultation available for admin and clinical requests, at least for the duration of core hours.

    I saw one for myself just recently: the Grand Union Health Centre in Paddington, while another London surgery reduced waits from 14 days to 3, with 95% of patients seen within a week thanks to the introduction of online facility.

    They, like many practices up and down the country, have really got this cracked and they’re offering a better service to patients as a result of giving them the choice to phone up, walk in or log on.

    But don’t just take my word for it.

    I was delighted to read this week your support for online access, Kamila, while Dr Joe McMannus, a GP and clinical director in Oxfordshire, calls it a game changer for staff and patients.

    Dr Duncan Gooch, chair of the primary care network at the NHS Confederation, said the system can and, I quote, help ensure fair access to advice and treatment, adding that many of our members are operating in this way already and have been positive about the impact.

    Managing demand and providing better access reduces stress on staff, reduces conflict with patients and creates a positive environment where job satisfaction is high, he says.

    I’m sure he speaks for many of you, and I’m grateful to the overwhelming majority who have enthusiastically embraced this move to modernisation.

    Of course, we fully understand that there are practices which, for varying reasons, are struggling to get their systems up and running. For them, we have put in place a mix of tailored support measures available nationally, both online and directly from ICBs.

    These include funding for software, peer to peer support, webinars and hands-on help with workflows, staff training and processes through the General Practice Improvement Programme, which currently has 600 practices taking part.

    All these tools and more are still on offer, so please do take advantage of them if you need to. But ladies and gentlemen, what I simply cannot get my head around and what we will not tolerate is the rump of refuseniks and their cheerleaders and the BMA who are intent on whipping up this issue.

    And I suspect that patients are just as mystified. Here are the facts.

    We negotiated and agreed a contract package in February that included the requirement to have online access available throughout core hours.

    We agreed to delay the implementation by 6 months to give practices time to prepare. We established clear safeguards that mean GPs can divert those with urgent needs to the telephone. And we insisted that surgeries must remain fully accessible by phone and walk in.

    So we are profoundly puzzled as to why this has suddenly blown up as an issue. The BMA claims that GPs are terrified. Really?

    And they say the patients are at risk from an avalanche of online requests that will lead to hospital style waiting lists.

    But neither of these doomsday scenarios have so far materialised.

    Indeed, research recently published in the BMJ examining 10.5 million patient contacts found no evidence of supply-induced demand, with practices able to tailor a care according to need, safely and with fair prioritisation.

    Even the HSSIB notes that significant benefits of using online consultation tools include improved access, reduced telephone call volumes, more effective allocation of clinical time, and improved health and wellbeing.

    So you can imagine how taken aback I was then to read one GP with 20 years’ experience saying, and I quote, the new system feels almost like modern day slavery.

    I mean, come on, we’re asking GPs to allow patients online consultations, and of course, you’re entitled to your views on that and how it might affect your working practices.

    But to suggest that it is akin to being forced into prostitution or coerced to work on a cannabis farm for zero pay and zero control over your life – that is, frankly, too much and going too far.

    We’re always happy to have discussions with the BMA to understand their concerns and to talk about how we can work through them together.

    What we will not do is unpick the contract that we agreed with them in February, nor will we abandon modernisation and turn the NHS into a museum for 20th century healthcare.

    That would be a betrayal of the patients all of us here are fighting for.

    Look, I know that everything in the garden is definitely not rosy. When we said that the NHS was broken, we didn’t just mean for patients.

    General practice in particular is still recovering from years of being underfunded, undervalued and overstretched.

    But as the Secretary of State for Health has said, the NHS is hanging by a thread.

    And instead of pulling on that thread, we should all be pulling in the same direction. We’re clear that the future of the NHS depends on building a health service that values GPs, invests in GPs and supports GPs.

    And so we will uphold our commitment to developing a new contract within this Parliament.

    Ladies and gentlemen, the truth is that for the first time in a very long time, you have a government that is on your side.

    If we are to close the widening gap, expand access to primary care and catapult the NHS into the 21st century, then we need to be on the same side.

    Because restoring the NHS founding promise to provide first class healthcare for everyone, whoever you are, whatever your background and wherever you live, is truly a team effort.

    And only by working together as partners will we pull it off and rescue the NHS from the biggest crisis in its history.

    Thank you very much.