"By the way, I do think at the end of the day, there will be an across-the-board tariff imposed by Trump," says Mr Moore.
Rachel Reeves is suddenly in a rush.She'd hate the comparison, but the way she's been talking over recent weeks sounds more like a Conservative chancellor.
She wants to get rid of barriers to business and make it harder for green groups to put the brakes on big development. She's easing off plans to make life more expensive for wealthy non-doms – and is expected to approve new airport runways and cut welfare.It doesn't sound much like Reeves', in which she raised whopping taxes, increased spending on public services and reminded us, time and time again, how much trouble the economy was in and how the Conservatives – she claimed – had left that
So why the switch in focus?Treasury insiders say in private that almost as soon as she sat down after the Budget, she was banging the table with officials and pushing for more ideas to get the economy growing. After all, she and Sir Keir Starmer always said
The plan for her big speech next Wednesday – in which she is expected to unveil more changes to cut back planning rules and announce a new runway at London's Heathrow – was hatched back then, and she's only come under more pressure since to respond to the howls of business.
One City source told me: "Labour did a great job of pretending to be pro-business up until [the Budget]. No one would say they are now."Police confirmed no arrests had been made.
Images shared on social media showed a lock on the store at food bank in Gordon Road had been broken off.The break-in sparked outrage in the local community and the food bank has since been inundated with donations and support.
"Out of a really sad time there's some really amazing things going on which push back on some of the bad news you hear in society," Mr Doxat-Purser said.Among the supporters is tattoo artist, Beki Ess, who moved to Wimborne from Burnley last year.