FINANCE MINISTER PASCHAL Donohoe has hinted that we may see a return of the rent tax credit in this year’s Budget.
While Donohoe was coy with reporters today about the status of the credit in this year’s Budget, he did say he wanted to “emphasise my recognition of the importance of that credit” when it comes to lowering the bills for tenants.
It was initially worth €500 when it was introduced in 2022, but was doubled and backdated for anyone who hadn’t claimed the initial credit.
Budget Day is just a few weeks out and details have emerged on numerous measures.
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Donohoe gently lifted the lid on the role of the rent tax credit today when he told reporters of the benefits it has played for renters over recent years.
“I am well aware of the importance of the rent tax credit and the really valuable role that it has played in supporting tenants with rising rents,” Donohoe said.
The rent tax credit is due to come to an end at the end of this year and while no decisions have yet been made on any tax measure, I just emphasise my recognition of the importance of that credit and the role that it plays in supporting tenants.
While last year’s pre-election budget was described as a give-away by some, expectations for this year’s Budget on 7 October are being tempered.
The Government has been at pains to emphasise uncertain economic winds that might be coming our way, and with US tariffs coming in at 15% a more cautious approach is being taken.
This year’s €9.4 billion package includes €1.5 billion in tax cuts and a €7.9 billion spending package, an increase of 7.3% for next year.
Despite these figures being modelled at a 0% US tariff scenario, Taoiseach Micheál Martin indicated this week that he didn’t think the numbers would change. But we’ll see as we get closer to October.
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Digital ID will be mandatory in order to work in the UK, as part of plans to tackle illegal migration.
Sir Keir Starmer said the new digital ID scheme would make it tougher to work in the UK illegally and offer “countless benefits” to citizens, while his senior minister Darren Jones said it could be the bedrock of the modern state”.
However, opposition parties argued the proposals would not stop people crossing the Channel in small boats.
The prime minister set out his plans in a broader speech to a gathering of world leaders, in which he said it had been “too easy” for people to work illegally in the UK because the centre-left had been “squeamish” about saying things that were “clearly true”.
Addressing the Global Progressive Action Conference in London – attended by politicians including Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney – Sir Keir said it was time to “look ourselves in the mirror and recognise where we’ve allowed our parties to shy away from people’s concerns”.
“It is not compassionate left-wing politics to rely on labour that exploits foreign workers and undercuts fair wages,” he said.
“The simple fact is that every nation needs to have control over its borders. We do need to know who is in our country.”
In a conversation following the speech, Sir Keir said he wanted the next election to be an “open fight” between Labour and Reform UK.
In response to the prime minister’s speech, Reform UK said the public was “waking up to the fact Starmer is just continuing the Tory legacy of high taxes and mass immigration”.
Despite having only five MPs, Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party has been leading in the opinion polls for several months.
The prime minister suggested facing the challenge of Reform would be a big focus when he addresses party members at the Labour Party conference next week.
Sir Keir’s government has been under pressure to tackle the issue of illegal migration, with more than 50,000 migrants arriving on small boats since Labour came to power.
Announcing his plans for the new digital ID scheme, Sir Keir said: “A secure border and controlled migration are reasonable demands, and this government is listening and delivering.”
“Digital ID is an enormous opportunity for the UK. It will make it tougher to work illegally in this country, making our borders more secure.
“And it will also offer ordinary citizens countless benefits, like being able to prove your identity to access key services swiftly – rather than hunting around for an old utility bill.”
Jones, who is the PM’s chief secretary, said: “If we get this digital ID system working and the public being with us, that will be the bedrock of the modern state and will allow for really quite exciting public service reform in the future.”
The government has said it wants to ensure the scheme works for those who are not able to use a smartphone and will launch a consultation on how the service will be delivered later this year.
The consultation is expected to last three months, with legislation being introduced to Parliament early next year.
There will be no requirement for individuals to carry their ID or be asked to produce it, Downing Street said.
However, digital ID will be mandatory as a means of proving right to work in the UK by the end of the Parliament, expected to be 2029 at the latest.
The new digital ID will be held on people’s phones, in a similar way to contactless payment cards or the NHS app.
It is expected to include a person’s name, date of birth, nationality or residency status and a photo.
The consultation will also consider whether additional information such as an address should be included.
Employers already have to carry out checks on prospective candidates.
Since 2022, they have been able to carry out checks on passport-holding British and Irish citizens.
There is also a Home Office online scheme which can verify the status of a non-British or Irish citizen, whose immigration status is held electronically.
However, it is understood that officials have been exploring whether a digital ID scheme could reduce the use of fake documents and provide a more consistent approach to verifying workers’ identity.
The government said the roll-out would eventually make it simpler to apply for services like driving licenses, childcare and welfare – as well as streamlining access to tax records.
Another Labour prime minister, Sir Tony Blair, tried to introduce compulsory ID cards but the idea was scrapped by the Conservative – Lib Dem coalition in 2010.
However, Sir Keir has recently said he believes the debate has “moved on in the last 20 years… we all carry a lot more digital ID now than we did”.
Labour believes its new proposal has public support, although more than a million people have signed a petition against the idea.
Conservative shadow work and pensions secretary Helen Whately said she could “see the rationale” for ID to make sure people are living in the UK legally but that her party was “opposed to mandatory, compulsory ID cards”.
She told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme the Labour government’s proposals would “make law-abiding people have to jump through more hoops and employers have more red tape, while in the grey economy illegal working will just go on”.
“That’s why it is not an answer to the problem of stopping the boats,” she added.
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said his party would “fight tooth and nail” against the scheme which would “add to our tax bills and bureaucracy, whilst doing next to nothing to tackle channel crossings”.
A Reform UK spokesperson said that government plans were a “cynical ploy to fool voters that something is being done about illegal immigration”.
The SNP-led Scottish government has said it is “opposed to the introduction of any card that is compulsory to have, compulsory to carry or that anyone can demand to see, including that of a digital ID”.
First Minister of Northern Ireland, Michelle O’Neill, called the proposal “ill-thought out” and “an attack on the Good Friday Agreement and on the rights of Irish citizens in the North of Ireland”.
‘Everyone hacks everything’
BBC Newsbeat has been asking young people for their thoughts on the government’s plans.
Emlyn Jenkins, 23, is against digital IDs, describing the plan as “fascistic and horrible”.
“How will people who are homeless be affected if they don’t have access to a smartphone or they don’t have access to consistent internet?” she asked.
Arianwen Fox-James, 20, says she can see some practical benefits but is uncomfortable with the idea of a “centralised hub of all the data”.
“If the government really wanted to deal with people working illegally, they’d make the immigration process easier and they’d make it more accessible for people,” she says.
Amy, 22, says she and her friends would welcome having digital ID on a night out.
“It’s the one thing people do forget,” she says. “But if it’s on your phone, people always have it in their hand.”
But she also worries about data safety. “Every time these things get launched they get hacked,” she says. “Everyone hacks everything.
David DeansWales political reporter, The Old Bailey
The former leader of Reform UK in Wales has pleaded guilty to bribery charges relating to making statements in favour of Russia while being an elected member of the European Parliament.
Nathan Gill, 52, from Llangefni on Anglesey, admitted eight counts of bribery between 6 December 2018 and 18 July 2019, but denied one charge of conspiracy to commit bribery.
It was alleged he made statements in the European Parliament which were “supportive of a particular narrative” which would “benefit Russia regarding events in Ukraine”.
Gill will be sentenced in November and his defence barrister said he expected jail.
The charges stated that Gill, as an elected member of the European Parliament for the constituency of Wales in the UK, “agreed to receive financial advantage, namely money”, which constituted “the improper performance” as the holder of an elected office.
He also made these statements in opinion pieces to news outlets, such as 112 Ukraine.
The court was told he was tasked by Ukrainian Oleg Voloshyn on at least eight occasions to make specific statements in return for money and there was evidence of WhatsApp messages between the two men.
Mr Voloshyn is a former member of the Ukrainian parliament for the pro-Russian Opposition Platform for Life party.
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The conspiracy to commit bribery alleged Gill conspired with Mr Voloshyn and “others” between 1 January 2018 and 1 February 2020, and that he accepted “quantities of money in cash” which was “improper performance by him of his function or activity as the holder” of a position in the European Parliament.
Prosecutor Mark Heywood KC said the guilty pleas were “satisfactory” because the bribery charges reflected the criminal activities, and agreed to lie the conspiracy charge on file.
They emerged after Gill was stopped at Manchester Airport on 13 September 2021 under the Counter Terrorism and Border Security Act 2019.
Peter Wright KC, speaking for Gill, told, the court: “It is recognised that it is inevitable that the defendant will receive an immediate sentencing to prison.”
Mrs Justice Cheema-Grubb told the court: “This is a serious matter.”
She said Nathan Gill had “admitted having asked questions, made statements and carried out other activities” in or connected with the European Parliament in support of pro-Russian parties in the Ukraine conflict.”
She added that he had pleaded guilty on the “full facts” as disclosed by the Crown.
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Cdr Dominic Murphy, head of the Met’s Counter Terrorism Command, which led the investigation, said the team uncovered an elected MEP was “taking payments to peddle narratives” that would have had the effect of being beneficial towards Russian interests.
“The strength of the case put together by our investigation team working with the prosecutors has led to Gill pleading guilty to these offences today,” he said.
“This case goes to the heart of our democratic values and as we’ve shown here, we will not hesitate to investigate and disrupt anyone seeking to harm or undermine these values and our national security.”
Who is Nathan Gill?
Nathan Gill served as a UKIP and Brexit Party MEP between 2014 and 2020, and was leader of UKIP Wales between 2014 and 2016.
He then served leader of Reform UK Wales between March and May 2021, leading the party’s Senedd/Welsh Parliament election campaign.
A 22-year-old nursery worker has been jailed for eight years for multiple counts of child cruelty after abusing 21 babies.
Roksana Lecka, from Hounslow, west London, admitted seven counts of cruelty to a person under the age of 16 and was convicted after a trial of another 14 counts over her “gratuitous” and “sadistic” actions at two nurseries. She was found not guilty of three counts of child cruelty.
Her crimes were discovered in June last year after she was sent home for pinching a number of children at Riverside Nursery in Twickenham, south-west London.
Parents of Lecka’s victims told of their feelings of heartbreak, guilt and distrust in victim impact statements at Kingston Crown Court.
Judge Sarah Plaschkes KC told the defendant: “You committed multiple acts of gratuitous violence.
“You pinched, slapped, punched, smacked and kicked them. You pulled their ears, hair and their toes. You toppled children head first into cots. You caused bruising and lingering red marks.
“When you committed these acts of cruelty you would look at the other members of staff to make sure that they were not watching you.
“Often the child would be quietly and happily minding their own business before you deliberately inflicted pain causing the child to cry, arch, try to get away or writhe around in distress.”
Metropolitan Police
Lacka pinched several children dozens of times in the course of one day, causing them to cry and flinch away from her, the Crown Prosecution Service previously said.
On one occasion she kicked a little boy in the face several times. She was also seen to push babies head first over cots and cover a toddler’s mouth when they started to cry.
Police said she had abused children at two nurseries between October 2023 and June 2024 – one of the counts related to Little Munchkins in Hounslow, with the remainder linked to the Riverside Nursery in Twickenham, which has since closed.
‘Totally helpless’
A number of parents took to the stand on Friday to address a packed court over the impact of Lecka’s abuse.
One mother looked directly at Lecka as she said: “These children were so innocent and vulnerable.
“They couldn’t speak, they couldn’t defend themselves and they couldn’t tell us as parents that something had happened to them.
“They were totally helpless and Roksana preyed upon them.”
‘Threat to society’
Another mother, referencing the CCTV footage, said: “This really highlighted how defenceless all the children were and how sickening Roksana’s crimes were to target such young babies.”
A different mother said: “I think Roksana is a huge threat to society.
“It is objectively shocking that she has been hiding in plain sight in society up until she was arrested. I think all of us can agree that only the worst kind of human would assault vulnerable babies.”
Parents detailed the guilt they feel about placing their children in Lecka’s care, with one mother, whose son the defendant kicked in the face, telling the court: “We weren’t there to protect them.”
The court heard one family has moved away from London altogether, while other sets of parents have suffered breakdowns in their relationship after Lecka’s actions.
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Arlette Piercy, representing Lecka, said her client had expressed remorse and cited her previous good character and young age in mitigation.
The court heard Lecka wrote a letter to the court saying she had reflected on her actions, wanted to apologise to parents and that cannabis turned her into a different person.
Ms Piercy told the court that Lecka had been attacked in custody, describing her experience in prison as having been “extremely challenging”, and said she had spent time in the vulnerable prison wing.
Lecka worked at Riverside Nursery between January and June 2024, with a number of parents reporting unusual injuries and bruising in March and May that year.
The court heard she was addicted to cannabis and vaping around that time, which she did not tell the nursery.
Det Insp Sian Hutchings, from the Met Police, said: “Today’s sentencing concludes a complex and emotional investigation.
“The victims in this case are just babies, with the youngest being just 10 months at the time of the offences.”
She said officers investigating Lecka’s actions were shocked by “Roksana’s lack of accountability and her inability to explain her unjustifiable actions”.
“I want to commend the strength of the parents throughout this investigation. I can’t imagine how horrendous it’s been to sit in court and listen to the abuse that Lecka inflicted on their children,” Det Insp Hutchings added.
‘Serious questions remain’
Jemma Till, a lawyer representing families, said: “Those parents we’re supporting remain devastated by the ordeal their children have been put through by Lecka. She abused her position of trust in the cruellest way over a number of months.”
She said that while families welcomed Lecka’s sentence, “serious questions remain as to how Lecka’s abuse was allowed to go unchecked for several months”.
“Our focus is now on securing families, who will continue to be affected by Lecka’s actions for years to come, with the further answers they deserve,” she added.
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