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ESUcrania revoluciona la guerra con drones y robots: de la defensa a la exportaciónESLas hijas de Zapatero facturaron 561.440 euros a una empresa 'ruinosa' vinculada a VenezuelaESExjuez condenado por violencia psíquica usó denuncias contra su exmujer para ayudar al PSOE a "limpiar" institucionesESSánchez defiende a Zapatero ante las joyas millonarias y la investigación judicialESDecenas de pisos turísticos saboteados en Madrid por colectivos antisistemaESImputan a las hijas de Zapatero y a su secretaria en el caso Plus UltraESEl padre de la niña de Canet celebra el aval europeo al 25% de castellanoESOpositores venezolanos exiliados en España se reúnen con Jorge Rodríguez en CaracasESTrump's Past Criticisms Haunt New US-Iran DealESBanco de España critica las medidas de vivienda del Gobierno: "No se ataja el problema con medidas sobre la demanda"ESUcrania revoluciona la guerra con drones y robots: de la defensa a la exportaciónESLas hijas de Zapatero facturaron 561.440 euros a una empresa 'ruinosa' vinculada a VenezuelaESExjuez condenado por violencia psíquica usó denuncias contra su exmujer para ayudar al PSOE a "limpiar" institucionesESSánchez defiende a Zapatero ante las joyas millonarias y la investigación judicialESDecenas de pisos turísticos saboteados en Madrid por colectivos antisistemaESImputan a las hijas de Zapatero y a su secretaria en el caso Plus UltraESEl padre de la niña de Canet celebra el aval europeo al 25% de castellanoESOpositores venezolanos exiliados en España se reúnen con Jorge Rodríguez en CaracasESTrump's Past Criticisms Haunt New US-Iran DealESBanco de España critica las medidas de vivienda del Gobierno: "No se ataja el problema con medidas sobre la demanda"
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House of Lords

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Britain's Debate on Rejoining the EU: A Solipsistic Approach
Gelişiyor
Siyaset·3 g önceAI özeti

Britain's Debate on Rejoining the EU: A Solipsistic Approach

As the 10th anniversary of Brexit approaches, Britain debates rejoining the EU, focusing on economic benefits and political feasibility. However, the discussion largely ignores the perspectives of other European nations and the EU's own priorities, such as Ukraine and global economic challenges. While some UK politicians advocate for rejoining, the EU has other candidates and a minority who may not welcome Britain back.

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Guardian Business
Assisted Dying Bill unlikely to be resurrected via Parliament Acts
Siyaset
03.06.2026AI özeti

Assisted Dying Bill unlikely to be resurrected via Parliament Acts

Prominent MPs, including former ministers Louise Haigh, Ian Murray, and Jeremy Hunt, have indicated they do not expect the assisted dying bill to be resurrected using the Parliament Acts, which could bypass the House of Lords. The bill previously fell in the Lords after extensive amendments prevented a vote. While some MPs are considering reintroducing it, invoking the Parliament Acts faces significant opposition due to ethical concerns and procedural complexities.

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Guardian UK
Hereditary Peers Return to Lords as Starmer Offers Life Peerages to Accelerate Reform
Gelişiyor
Siyaset·30.04.2026AI özeti

Hereditary Peers Return to Lords as Starmer Offers Life Peerages to Accelerate Reform

The UK government has granted life peerages to 26 hereditary peers (15 Conservative, 2 Labour, 9 crossbenchers) whose seats were abolished, in a bid to end opposition to plans for removing the remaining hereditary peers' right to sit in the House of Lords. The move comes after 92 hereditary peers lost their seats this week, with the government offering concessions to accelerate Lords reform. The Conservative party has agreed to speed up the retirement of about half its existing life peers. The SNP has criticized the government for focusing on 'saving hereditary Lords' rather than the cost-of-living crisis.

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Guardian UK
Final hereditary peers removed from House of Lords in historic constitutional change
Siyaset
29.04.2026AI özeti

Final hereditary peers removed from House of Lords in historic constitutional change

The last 92 hereditary peers have been removed from the House of Lords after a law took effect marking the end of nearly a thousand years of British parliamentary history. The change implements a Labour manifesto commitment, completing reforms that began in 1999 when Tony Blair's government reduced hereditary peers from 759 to 92 in a Conservative compromise. Lord Speaker Lord Forsyth of Drumlean thanked hereditaries for their service, while departing peer Lord Strathclyde condemned the move as shifting too far toward political appointees.

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BBC News
UK Biobank Data Breach: Further Leaks on Alibaba, Government Warns
Gelişiyor
Teknoloji·29.04.2026AI özeti

UK Biobank Data Breach: Further Leaks on Alibaba, Government Warns

The UK government has confirmed further confidential health records of UK Biobank volunteers have been listed on Alibaba since the breach reported last week. Science minister Patrick Vallance said the government is working with Chinese officials to remove additional postings, warning there will likely be more leaks. The data of 500,000 participants was put up for sale on the Chinese marketplace. While the data is de-identified, experts warn there is a real risk of re-identification through triangulation of large datasets.

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Guardian UK
House of Lords committee urges Rachel Reeves to build bigger fiscal buffer
Gelişiyor
Siyaset·28.04.2026AI özeti

House of Lords committee urges Rachel Reeves to build bigger fiscal buffer

A House of Lords committee has urged Chancellor Rachel Reeves to aim for a significantly larger fiscal buffer, warning that the UK's public debt is on an unsustainable trajectory. The committee's report says the current £22bn headroom remains at historically low levels compared with the £30bn average between 2010-2022, and calls for larger buffers to become the norm to avoid destabilising policy changes.

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Guardian UK
Key figure in Mandelson vetting scandal will not give evidence before MPs
HABER
25.04.2026

Key figure in Mandelson vetting scandal will not give evidence before MPs

Chief property and security officer Ian Collard set to submit written answers to foreign affairs committee questionsA key figure in the row over Peter Mandelson’s appointment as UK ambassador to Washington will not appear before a parliamentary committee of MPs to give evidence.Dame Emily Thornberry had requested that Ian Collard speak to the foreign affairs committee (FAC) on Tuesday, but confirmed on Saturday that he would submit written answers instead.Whether he felt under pressure to deliver Lord Mandelson’s clearance, after Sir Olly said there was an “atmosphere of pressure” and “constant chasing” from Downing Street.Whether he had seen the cover form for Lord Mandelson’s vetting by UK Security Vetting (UKSV), the agency responsible for checks on candidates for sensitive posts, in which it had ticked two red boxes – meaning they had “high concern” and recommended “clearance denied or withdrawn”.If he was asked by anyone in the Foreign Office, Downing Street or the Cabinet Office for advice about whether Lord Mandelson required vetting for the post given he was a member of the House of Lords.If he advised on how Lord Mandelson should be treated during the period between his appointment being announced and his clearance coming through. Continue reading...

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Guardian UK
Assisted Dying Bill Promised Return After Lords Blockage
Gelişiyor
Siyaset·24.04.2026AI özeti

Assisted Dying Bill Promised Return After Lords Blockage

The terminally ill adults (end of life) bill, which passed the House of Commons in June last year, has fallen in the House of Lords after more than 1,200 amendments were tabled. Labour MP Kim Leadbeater has promised to reintroduce an identical bill in the next parliamentary session, exploiting a procedural rule that prevents peers blocking the same bill twice. Supporters called the Lords' actions a denial of democracy, while opponents said the bill had fundamental flaws.

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Guardian UK
Assisted dying bill fails as time runs out in House of Lords
Siyaset
24.04.2026AI özeti

Assisted dying bill fails as time runs out in House of Lords

The assisted dying bill for England and Wales has failed to become law after time ran out in the House of Lords. The bill, which passed the Commons in January with 314 votes to 291, could not complete its Lords scrutiny process before Parliament prorogued. Supporters of the bill, championed by Labour MP Kim Leadbeater, expressed frustration that a small number of peers blocked the democratic will of elected MPs. However, others argued the Lords was simply doing its job of scrutinising legislation. The bill cannot be automatically reintroduced next session as it's a Private Members' Bill, though another MP could bring forward similar legislation.

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BBC News
Assisted dying bill to run out of time in House of Lords on Friday
Gelişiyor
Siyaset·24.04.2026AI özeti

Assisted dying bill to run out of time in House of Lords on Friday

The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill will fail to become law after running out of time in the House of Lords on Friday, nearly 17 months after MPs first voted in favour. The bill, which passed the Commons with majorities of 55 in November 2024 and 23 in June 2025, allows terminally ill adults expected to die within six months to seek medical help to end their life. Over 1,200 amendments were tabled in the Lords, a record for a backbencher bill. Labour MP Kim Leadbeater, who introduced the legislation, said she was disappointed, upset and angry, but will consider reintroducing the bill in the next Parliament session starting 13 May or using the Parliament Acts to force it through.

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BBC News
UK-EU SPS Agreement Could Boost Scottish Seafood Exports, Reduce Trade Barriers
Gelişiyor
Business·21.04.2026AI özeti

UK-EU SPS Agreement Could Boost Scottish Seafood Exports, Reduce Trade Barriers

The UK and EU are close to finalising a sanitary and phytosanitary agreement to reduce Brexit trade barriers. The deal would end physical checks on farm produce and eliminate £200 veterinary certificates, while potentially removing "Not for EU" labelling requirements. It could significantly boost Scottish langoustine and oyster exports, though customs, VAT and safety declarations will still be required. The agreement involves "dynamic alignment" with EU rules, though critics argue the UK has leverage for a mutual recognition approach instead.

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Guardian Business