Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Budget ‘won’t lead to an early election’

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The study, published in the journal Gut, found the effect was more pronounced among youngsters who used the drugs for a prolonged period.

Data on more than 333,000 infants was examined. NEW ZEALAND has developed a “real connection” with the royal family and the question of becoming a republic “doesn’t sit at the fore” for Kiwis, the country’s prime minister said.

Jacinda Ardern’s comments came as the Duke and Duchess of Sussex followed in the footsteps of William and Kate as they took in Auckland, the penultimat­e stop on their 16-day royal tour.

Harry and Meghan faced off in a welly-wanging contest before heading to the Viaduct for a public walkabout where 10-year-old Max Henry added to his royal photo collection.

The royal fan held up laminated pictures of himself meeting the duke and duchess of Cambridge in 2014 which caught the eye of Harry.

Today is the final day of Harry and Meghan’s tour. The mother and father-to-be will head home after visiting Rotorua.

Speaking before a reception at the Auckland War Memorial Museum, Ms Ardern said: “There’s a real connection between particular­ly William and Harry in recent years, so it’s nice to have been able to host them in such close proximity.”

New Zealand, like Australia, is a constituti­onal monarchy and as such the Queen is their head of state, represente­d by a governor-general.

When asked if the question of whether the Duke and Duchess’s visit has changed views on New Zealand becoming a republic, Ms Ardern said: “It just really doesn’t come up as much.

“What you’ll pick up from the New Zealand public is that there is a real affinity for the Queen and a real strength of feeling around members of the royal family.” PRIME MINISTER Theresa May has rejected suggestion­s that Chancellor Philip Hammond’s giveaway Budget was designed to pave the way for an early general election.

The Chancellor used Monday’s statement to announce a £100 billion loosening of the purse-strings, with income tax breaks for 32 million voters, help with business rates for the High Street, support for Universal Credit and the promise of increased public spending over the coming years.

The package prompted speculatio­n that the Government was preparing the way for an early general election to provide Mrs May with a solid majority in the House of Commons as Brexit comes into effect in the spring.

Asked at a press conference in Oslo whether she was planning to ask voters to go back to the polls, Mrs May responded emphatical­ly: “No. We are not preparing for another general election. That would not be in the national interest.”

Mrs May was in the Norwegian capital for the Northern Future Forum summit of north European states.

The Chancellor also insisted that his Budget tax cuts and spending hikes were not intended to woo voters ahead of an early poll.

Asked if the giveaway Budget was a marker for a possible general election, Mr Hammond said: “I hope not. What we are preparing for is Britain’s future.

“We’ve now turned a corner and we are able to give Britain a bit of good news.”

Shadow chancellor John McDonnell said the Budget could signal a general election ahead.

He said: “The Tories usually do this. If a general election is coming, what they’ll do is they’ll splash out some money and then if they win the election they then start cutting it back again.”

Mr McDonnell dismissed the Chancellor’s claim austerity is coming to an end as he insisted it is “rolling out still”. He said: “I think people will be crushingly disappoint­ed at yesterday because it certainly wasn’t the end of austerity.”

Mr McDonnell said Labour would support tax cuts, but make the system fairer if the party won power.

Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said Mr Hammond had “got lucky” because tax revenues were better than expected.

He said: “He’s just simply decided to spend all of that. I think he has abandoned any idea of getting to budget balance by the mid-2020s.”

Mr Johnson said there were big increases in NHS spending over the coming years but “he hasn’t found any money” for other public services.

Mr Hammond insisted the deficit will decline in every year of the forecast period.

He said: “We retain an ambition to balance the budget.”

The Chancellor dismissed suggestion­s that he had chopped down the “magic money tree” and burnt the lot.

“You are painting a picture here that is designed to show that I’m abandoning fiscal rectitude,” he said. “I’m not.”

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