
A chance for Labour to honour its pledge on international development
In just the first half of 2025 alone, USAID has been dismantled, and the UK, France, Germany and Canada have all scaled back their development budgets. Many lower-income countries are still reeling from crises that they did not cause, spending more on debt repayments than on healthcare or education.
Although the UK aid budget is not likely to increase any time soon, the government still has a chance to honour its manifesto pledge 'to rebuild Britain's reputation on international development'. It must set a bold agenda by championing debt relief and reforms to the global economic system, including making the international tax system fairer, in order to scale up countries' public financing. The recent Financing for Development summit in Spain was a missed opportunity. With a concerted effort to build public support, the UK government must show that international solidarity is not a thing of the past.Romilly GreenhillCEO, Bond, the UK network for NGOs
Regarding Simon Tisdall's article (The UN is our best defence against a third world war. As Trump wields the axe, who will fight to save it? 6 July), the UN is probably weaker than it has ever been, but it is needed as never before, as is internationalism more generally, expressed in dialogue, cooperation and the solidarity of financial aid. That our prime minister has 'slashed its aid budget by £6bn, to pay for nuclear bombs', and plans to build six new arms factories, boasting that the defence industry will become 'an engine for economic growth', shows how unlikely it is that the UK will contribute to the growth of internationalism and strengthening of the UN.
War's ever-greater barbarity and destruction at the human level is at the same time a massive assault on nature, causing pollution and carbon emissions on a grand scale. Who will fight to strengthen and reform the UN, build global cooperation and create a future for the world's children? We must, all of us, in an international movement of the willing and the caring, before it really is too late.Diana FrancisBath
Have an opinion on anything you've read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


ITV News
21 minutes ago
- ITV News
Chancellor defends UK Government funding for Wales
Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves has defended the level of the UK Government's spending in Wales during a visit to a coal tip remediation site near Port Talbot. Meeting Welsh Finance Secretary Mark Drakeford MS, she pointed to £118m allocated in the recent Spending Review over three years to improve disused coal tips across Wales. "The whole of the United Kingdom has benefited from coal in Wales and therefore it's right that the UK make sure that these communities are now safe" she said. The visit comes just one day after Eluned Morgan completed one year as First Minister, during which time she insisted she would "call out" Labour MPs in Westminster if they "get it wrong for Wales". Reeves said she continues to work closely with the First Minister and said the partnership has provided money for rail improvements in North and South Wales, "the biggest settlement since devolution", and a fall in NHS waiting lists in England and Wales. She also defended the UK Government's controversial rise in employers' National Insurance contributions. Previously Mark Drakeford called out the decision and said it was "wrong" that Wales' public services faces a shortfall of up to £65m due to the increases. Reeves justified the move, saying it was necessary to improve public services in Wales and England. She said: "We have now delivered millions more appointments in England and Wales over the last year in our NHS but that was only possible because we raised the money..." "I do recognise the challenges raises in National Insurance creates but without that money we would not be able to secure our public finances."


The Independent
21 minutes ago
- The Independent
Missing out on £54m research fund ‘undermines' northern universities, say mayors
Universities in northern England face having their contribution to the economy undermined after they missed out on a share of £54 million, eight mayors have warned. A total 12 institutions have access to the money to help attract 60 to 80 leading researchers into the UK. But the mayors, including Labour's Andy Burnham in Greater Manchester, Steve Rotheram in Liverpool and Tracy Brabin in West Yorkshire, have called on the Government to build a 'new funding model that truly reflects the strengths and aspirations of all of our regions'. They warned that investment was 'concentrated disproportionately in London and the South East'. According to the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology, the money is intended to bolster industrial strategy by helping universities to back research in sectors such as life sciences, defence and the creative industries. Beneficiaries include Oxford and Cambridge universities, the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology, which is also based in Cambridge, Imperial College London and the University of Birmingham. Queen's University Belfast in Northern Ireland, the University of Strathclyde in Scotland and Cardiff University in Wales are also listed as being in line for money from the fund. But northern universities' 'exclusion from the Global Talent Fund undermines their contribution to the UK's economic success, as well as the Government's stated commitment to rebalance our economy', the mayors wrote in a joint statement. They said: 'We are deeply disappointed that universities in the north of England, some of the best and brightest in the world, have once again been overlooked in the allocation of national innovation funding, despite their research credentials. 'The North is home to some of the UK's most innovative, high-performing universities. These institutions drive the development of life-changing technologies and work hand in hand with industry to create good jobs and grow the economy.' The cross-party group added: 'As mayors, we stand ready to support the Government in its mission to make the UK a global science superpower. 'But to truly deliver on that mission, investment in innovation must reflect the full breadth and depth of talent that exists across the country, not continue to be concentrated disproportionately in London and the South East. 'We are calling for urgent reform to ensure greater transparency and fairness in how public research and innovation funding is allocated. 'Strategic funds like this must support national growth, and that means recognising and investing in the full potential of the North of England and the 15 million people we collectively represent. 'We urge UK Research and Innovation to think again, review this disappointing decision and work together with us on creating a new funding model that truly reflects the strengths and aspirations of all of our regions, to build a brighter Britain that works for us all.' Reform UK mayor of Hull and East Yorkshire, Luke Campbell, and Conservative mayor of Tees Valley, Lord Houchen of High Leven, joined the Labour politicians – who also include the South Yorkshire, North East and York and North Yorkshire mayors Oliver Coppard, Kim McGuinness and David Skaith – in signing the statement. Backing the fund last month, science minister Lord Vallance said 'genius is not bound by geography'. He continued: 'But the UK is one of the few places blessed with the infrastructure, skills base, world-class institutions and international ties needed to incubate brilliant ideas, and turn them into new medicines that save lives, new products that make our lives easier, and even entirely new jobs and industries.'


Daily Mail
22 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Intel stock drops as Trump demands CEO resigns
Intel's stock tumbled Thursday morning after Donald Trump demanded the resignation of CEO Lip-Bu Tan in a fiery post on Truth Social. 'The CEO of Intel is highly CONFLICTED and must resign, immediately,' Trump posted on Truth Social. 'There is no other solution to this problem. Thank you for your attention to this problem!' The stock was down 3.1 percent mid-morning in New York. Trump's post followed a letter from Senator Tom Cotton to Intel Chairman Frank Yeary, accusing Tan of having financial ties to Chinese chip companies linked to the Chinese Communist Party and the People's Liberation Army. Cotton flagged Tan's previous role at Cadence Design Systems, which admitted in July it had sold technology to a Chinese military-affiliated university in violation of US export controls. Tan took over as Intel's CEO in March. 'Mr. Tan reportedly controls dozens of Chinese companies and has a stake in hundreds of Chinese advanced-manufacturing and chip firms. At least eight of these companies reportedly have ties to the Chinese People´s Liberation Army.' The controversy comes as Intel is slashing 25,000 jobs this year as it battles to turn around its flagging fortunes. The chipmaking giant — which makes processors that power millions of Dell, HP, and Lenovo computers — will shrink its workforce from about 99,500 to 75,000 by the end of 2025. Bosses said the layoffs come alongside plans to abandon factory projects in Germany and Poland, slow the pace of construction on major facilities in Ohio, and consolidate operations in Costa Rica into bigger hubs in Vietnam and Malaysia. The company first warned of cuts in April as it grapples with mounting competition and slowing demand. The confirmation i July of the the scale of the layoffs came as Intel updated Wall Street on its earnings over the past three months. It posted a loss of $2.9 billion. Bosses said Intel has slashed 15,000 jobs so far this year — suggesting another 10,000 are set to go. These are the second major round of job cuts at Intel in the past two years. In December, the company ousted its CEO while cutting 15 percent of its workforce in 2024.