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Reeves eyes Gulf trade pact as ‘next deal,’ Bank of England’s Pill says pace of interest rate cuts ‘too rapid’ – business live | Business

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Reeves eyes Gulf trade pact as UK government’s ‘next deal’ after EU summit

Rachel Reeves said the UK government is closing in on a trade pact with six Gulf nations, including Qatar and Saudi Arabia, as its next major deal.

The chancellor told the BBC the agreement would be the government’s “next deal” as it looks to boost trade ties following Brexit.

Reeves suggested economic growth would be strengthened through recent trade deals with the United States, the EU and India, all inked within a fortnight.

Britain is in a better place than any other country in the world in terms of deals with those countries.

The first deal and the best deal so far with the US, we’ve got the best deal with the EU for any country outside the EU, and we’ve got the best trade agreement with India.

The chancellor also said the UK was “not looking to have trade negotiations with China”.

In early April, foreign secretary David Lammy said Labour was continuing discussions with the Gulf over a trade deal, which were started by the previous Conservative government.

Reeves’ comments come after a new trade deal with Brussels was struck on Monday.
The Prime Minister hailed his deal, set out at a summit in London, as a “win-win” for both parties, which would be the start of a “new era” in the UK-EU relationship.

The wide-ranging deal will allow more British travellers to use passport e-gates when going on holiday to Europe, while farmers will get swifter, easier access to trade on the continent as a result of an agreement on animal and plant product standards.

A “youth experience scheme” allowing young Britons to study and live in Europe, and a new security and defence partnership were also agreed.

But the deal has been met with criticism after the UK agreed to grant European fishing trawlers a further 12 years’ access to British waters.

Sir Keir Starmer hailed a “mood change” in the relationship with the bloc, saying: “The EU and the UK wanting to work together, all of us prepared to say let yesterday be yesterday, we are looking forward to tomorrow.

We are not going to litigate old arguments, we are going to go forward in the spirit of what we do together, we do better.

Conservative party leader Kemi Badenoch said, however:

This deal will mean Britain becoming a rule-taker, accepting dynamic alignment, giving up fishing rights and paying new money to the EU.
Nobody has lost more than the fishermen.

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Post Office data leak: hundreds of Horizon victims offered up to £5,000 compensation

Hundreds of former post office operators will be compensated by the Post Office after it accidentally leaked their names and addresses last June.

The Post Office has confirmed that individual payouts will be capped at £5,000, although higher claims may still be pursued.

It comes almost a year after 555 victims of the Horizon IT scandal had their personal details published on the Post Office’s corporate website.

The Post Office said victims would receive £5,000 or £3,500 depending on whether the address published was current.

In a statement, it said:

We have written to all named individuals either directly, or via their solicitors.

If there are any individuals whose name was impacted by last year’s breach, but who have not received information about the payment for some reason, they can contact us or ask their solicitors if they have legal representation.

The law firm Freeths said that 348 clients, out of the total 420 it represented, who had their data breached had already received payment. Freeths said it had been told most of those affected would receive a “significant interim compensation payment”.

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