Donald Trump said he would on Monday impose 25 per cent tariffs on all steel and aluminium imports, expanding his trade conflicts to the metals sector in a new burst of protectionism from Washington.
That salience of potholes in the real world is partly why Keir Starmer mentioned them in his FT op-ed championing what AI can do for “national renewal”. Labour is turning to AI to tackle its manifesto ...
The public is losing trust in the UK’s tax authority due to its poor customer service and the difficulties of complying with ...
Piyush Gupta, DBS's long-serving chief executive, signed off his 16-year tenure at south-east Asia’s biggest bank with record ...
In “Something of Shakespeare in Trump’s lawyers purge?” (Letters, February 4), your correspondent refers to Dick the Butcher ...
Drax said on Monday it had agreed a contract for difference with the government for a minimum electricity price of £113 per megawatt hour between 2027 and 2031. The deal will mean that Drax, which ...
Plus, Mandelson becomes the UK’s man in Washington while political and business leaders debate AI developments in Paris ...
Home secretary to release videos of people being deported as Nigel Farage’s populist grouping spooks main parties ...
China’s retaliatory tariffs on the US have gone into effect, hitting about $14bn worth of goods and dashing hopes that a ...
Sam Nujoma, who fought against apartheid and for Namibian independence and was known officially as the country’s “founding ...
Explain President Trump’s comment ‘the UK is out of line; I think that one can be worked out. But the European Union, it’s an ...