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The UK’s culture and media department will stop using X because the site “now favours abuse and misinformation over meaningful debate”, Lisa Nandy has announced.

The culture secretary’s department is the UK’s second to quit the Elon Musk-owned platform over increasing concerns about the way it highlights and prioritises often inaccurate far-right and racist content and is used to incite violence and division.

Two weeks ago the Guardian revealed that Richard Hermer, the attorney general for England and Wales, had told his office to no longer post on X, a decision prompted in part by the platform’s role in stoking disorder in Southampton and Belfast earlier in June.

In a statement on her own X account, Nandy said: “I’ve decided to leave this platform and my department will too. A platform originally designed for free speech and expression now favours abuse and misinformation over meaningful debate. It isn’t healthy for our democracy or our communities and I don’t want to support it.”

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Exclusive: Infrastructure cuts to pay for defence will cost UK 10,000 jobs, analysis shows

Keir Starmer’s decision to cut billions of pounds of infrastructure spending to pay for more defence equipment will end up costing the UK 10,000 jobs, according to an analysis of the government’s own figures.

The prime minister announced this week he was putting an extra £15bn into defence investment to revamp the country’s armed forces and boost British manufacturing.

The long-awaited defence investment plan (Dip) was designed to cement Starmer’s legacy in foreign policy and security as he prepares to depart Downing Street. But it also raised questions about where the funding would come from, given £6.8bn is being raised by unidentified cuts to departmental investment programmes and another £4.7bn is entirely unaccounted for.

The analysis, by researchers at the Transition Security Project, shows that while the extra defence investment will generate about 10,000 jobs by 2029-30, taking the money away from other sectors will cost nearly double that.

The findings cast doubt on claims by Starmer and his chancellor, Rachel Reeves, that they are boosting British jobs by reallocating large chunks of government spending to the Ministry of Defence (MoD).

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'There is room for movement on tax,' says Burnham in first interview since becoming MP

Good morning and welcome to our live coverage of UK politics.

Andy Burnham, the lead contender to succeed prime minister Keir Starmer, has hinted at some of his tax proposals as he draws up plans to revitalise Britain’s high streets.

In his first interview since being elected MP for Makerfield, Burnham told LBC there is “some room” in the Labour manifesto for “movement on tax”. While he reaffirmed his commitment to “stick” to the promises made by the manifesto of not raising income tax, VAT or national insurance personal contributions, he suggested there was flexibility for other taxes to rise, such as business rates on warehouses.

“I stick by the manifesto and the promises that it made. So, let me be absolutely clear about that, but there is some room within that manifesto for movement on tax,” he said.

“So if you take business rates, for instance, I believe there is a case for higher business rates on warehouses and the major developments we see on the outskirts of our cities, so that we can cut business rates for pubs, and I’ve proposed a 20 per cent cut and lift some high street businesses out of business rates altogether.”

He added that he wanted to prioritise and reward businesses that “bring social benefit and bring people together”, listing bars, restaurants, coffee shops and hairdressers.

“The high street really needs to get more of our attention,” he said.

Also in the interview last night, he promised to ease the cost of living if he becomes prime minister, saying he would look at bringing down water and energy costs by de-privatising companies and making bus travel free for 16- to 18-year-olds.

You can read our write-up of that interview here:

Burnham is expected to answer more questions today from the public in a “Ask Me Anything” (AMA) on Reddit. The AMA event on the r/UKPolitics sub-reddit is scheduled to start at 5pm.

Users have written in with some questions ahead of the AMA, a number of them asking whether he would scrap the state pension triple lock. Others have asked about his plans to “re-instil [the] hope so many of us had back in 2024”, his thoughts on the “future with our relationship with the US”, and his “favourite flavour of crisps”.

Updated