Welcome to HUBFX Women in Tech Site

Welcome to HUBFX, a Hubpy Services company.

Hello, since 2022 HUBFX  has started different programmes and campaigns to support Women in Tech. In our organisation we have Female Professional all cross the UK and the EU region. The mission of the  HUBFX FinTech Services is to enable our clients to manage their funds movement seamlessly using the most advanced technology in the world. We work with Currency Cloud, a Visa Solution, the University of York and the University of Oxford and many other universities in Europe. 

About HUBFX

Multi-Currency accounts

GBP, EUR, USD, KES, NOK, DKK etc, creating in a few clicks. You can manage all your received currencies and paying currencies in one place.

Communication

For HNWIs and Corporates, FX requirements are often different case by case. We can speak to you online and offline via any means that suits your need.

Data Automation

We automatically feed your data to your database, any type of your choice. We also run data analytics using machine learning to help you understand your data better.

Resource Optimisation

We basically save you from using extra human resource or financial resource to manage your FX exposure. We are your out-sourced FX department.

About HUBFX Women in Tech

We launched our HUBFX Exchange App in 2022. Meanwhile, we are working closely with Websummit.com to push the products to the next level. Whilst working happily with male and female co-workers. We want to recognise our female partners/friends’ contribution and work by offering them a FREE websummit ticket (worth approx. £900) to encourage more female involvement to the business.

You may find the conference below and enter the draw for getting the ticket by enter your details.

Date: Tue, 1 Nov 2022 – Fri, 4 Nov 2022
Attendance: 70,000+
Location(s): Lisbon

All Communication is Protected and Monitored according to our Compliance and Regulatory Guidelines. Services we provide are regulated by the FCA, the Bank of the Nertherlands, FinCEN, and Fintrac respectively in the UK, EU, US and Canada.

Find us also at Karren Brady's Women in Business and Tech

What is Web Summit?

a company from Dublin, Ireland, that holds events across the world: Web Summit in Lisbon, Web Summit Rio in Rio de Janeiro, Collision in Toronto, and RISE in Hong Kong.

Politico has said we run “the world’s premier tech conference”,
the Atlantic that Web Summit is “where the future goes to be born”, and the New York Times that we assemble “a grand conclave of the tech industry’s high priests.”

At a time of great uncertainty for many industries and, indeed, the world itself, we gather the founders and CEOs of technology companies, fast-growing startups, policymakers, and heads of state to ask a simple question: Where to next?

Who is coming?

and 900 more industry leaders are coming.

Product Roadmap

The Exchange Portal

MayKick-off
JulyDesign & Build
SeptemberMVP Launch

Our expertise

We help Clients deal with:

Major Currencies

Minor Currencies

Exotic Currencies

See Full Currency List

Seamlessly Receiving and Paying
FX Risk Management
Your named accounts
Collecting Pounds, Euros, Dollars
Collecting other Currencies

Latest Blogs

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  • All Post
  • “A Private Spy
  • ” a 16-year-old becomes more fascinating in death than she was in life.
  • ” a collection of the British writer’s letters
  • ” a satirical novel exploring lofty ideas about nostalgia.
  • ” the party said.
  • 000 a year
  • 000 workers. The food and farming sectors have been hit particularly hard.
  • 2022 episode of “The Ezra Klein Show”
  • 2023.
  • a Brexit provision negotiated with the European Union
  • A certain redheaded maniac returns to the scene for the series’s concluding season. Let the final showdowns begin.
  • A closer look at the state of the war in Ukraine.
  • a Conservative
  • A deal bringing disaffected unionists back into the government in Belfast has left Prime Minister Rishi Sunak with one less thing to worry ab
  • A dispute left over from the Britain-European Union split has chilled relations
  • a divisive symbol of the Conservative government’s immigration stance.
  • A documentary from Ken Loach sees the end of World War II as a brief moment of possibility for socialism in Britain.
  • A family of Syrian refugees connects with a once-thriving mining town in Ken Loach’s moving drama.
  • a folk form with origins in the 15th century
  • A former speaker of the U.S. House and the British prime minister have struggled to corral the extreme right factions of their parties.
  • A generation of young people grew up experiencing increasingly scary and cascading crises set off by their government’s actions. Is it any wo
  • A key figure in the reunification of East and West Germany
  • A little-understood trade agreement now looks like a serious diplomatic blunder.
  • a party with historic ties to the Irish Republican Army — was once unthinkable. On Saturday
  • a persistent issue that is causing Britain’s economy to go “into reverse.”
  • a political insurgent and ally of Donald J. Trump
  • a political victory for Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.
  • a proud symbol of Britain’s welfare state
  • A psychologist at Tulane University offers insights into just how powerfully sporting events can get into our heads.
  • a right-leaning network that pitches itself as an alternative to mainstream British broadcasters.
  • A rocket launched from a Virgin Orbit jumbo jet is expected to put satellites into orbit
  • A Saturday night bash hosted by Mr. Bannon was the main social event in an otherwise subdued weekend at the conservative convention.
  • A sense of fatalism surrounds Britain’s prime minister.
  • A small acceleration in the second quarter was better than analysts had expected.
  • A small group of migrants were transferred to the Bibby Stockholm
  • a step for Britain into the space launch business.
  • A three-judge court of appeals said the African country was not a safe country for migrants seeking asylum. The government is now expected to
  • a well-known lawmaker.
  • according to a government whose leader was clearly on the campaign trail in announcing them.
  • adding to a shortfall of about 330
  • After 14 years of Conservative government
  • After accusations were published in Britain
  • after being charged with non-recent sexual offenses.
  • After Britain’s next election
  • After embracing several right-wing dividing lines
  • After more than a year as prime minister
  • After the prime minister of Greece called for the British Museum to return the Parthenon marbles
  • Along Ireland’s coast
  • Also
  • ambitiously structured new novel.
  • America’s ambassador to Britain says several top officials have called her to discuss the hit show
  • America’s neighbor to the north will ban most foreigners from buying residential property for two years. Why?
  • Americans support marijuana legalization
  • amid fears that Russia poses an existential threat to Europe.
  • Amid growing anger within his governing Conservative Party
  • Amid political change in Scotland
  • An agreement by the Democratic Unionist Party to return to power-sharing with Sinn Fein after a two year boycott was greeted by widespread re
  • An angry speech by Vladimir Putin.
  • An E.U. summit on aid for Ukraine.
  • An important element of the agreement known as the Windsor Framework
  • An Israeli raid on Al-Shifa Hospital.
  • anachronism is a feature
  • analysts said.
  • And everything else you need to know to hold forth on fashion month at a cocktail party.
  • and for whom.
  • and headlining festivals abroad. Yet Britpop’s swaggering sense of national self-belief feels like a distant memory.
  • and his itinerary
  • and how to share its burdens
  • and is likely to prompt the Bank of England to raise interest rates again.
  • and little expansion is expected in the years ahead.
  • and making friends is part of the experience.
  • and may expand them into America.
  • and not just because of Brexit
  • and starts by putting his ducks in a row.
  • and the leading candidate is a fedora-wearing leftist firebrand.
  • and the quirky moments that defined earlier editions have gone.
  • and threatens the future of its automotive industry.
  • Andrew Bailey
  • another mass shooting in California and New Zealand’s next leader.
  • another stinging blow from the fallout of lockdown-breaking parties during the pandemic.
  • antitrust regulators in Europe and the United States took different approaches. Now
  • Appointing people to the House of Lords can be complicated.
  • are stalled
  • Arts
  • as bad weather in Spain leads to shortages.
  • As Ireland reimagines itself
  • As it commemorates a quarter-century since the Good Friday Agreement
  • As it turns 75
  • As long as there has been a monarchy
  • As Milan gets more glamorous
  • As Spain prepares for elections
  • As the European Union’s first ambassador in London
  • As the government’s chief financial cabinet member
  • As the party climbs
  • at the heart of talks with President Biden.
  • auctions and shows without parallel.
  • Australia loses to France and lockdowns spread across China.
  • autocrats are using lesser-known systems to pursue dissidents.
  • beating the $104.3 million that a Giacometti sculpture brought in 2010.
  • Beginning Jan. 1
  • Being the England manager was never an easy job. And that was before the country started falling apart.
  • Beneath the gilded continuity of the coronation celebrations
  • Benjamin Netanyahu is poised to lead Israel again and the week in culture.
  • Biden administration officials are watching whether the British government’s attempt to salvage its Rwanda asylum policy risks undermining th
  • big losses for the Conservative Party could signal a difficult general election later this year.
  • Blaming supply chains
  • bolstering the future of Britain’s auto industry.
  • Books
  • Books by Maryse Condé and Eva Baltasar are among six nominees for the prestigious award for fiction translated into English.
  • Boris Johnson called the use of imperial measurements “an ancient liberty” and pledged to bring them back after Brexit. The public didn’t wan
  • Boris Johnson told a powerful committee that his statements over parties at his office were “made in good faith.” His political future may be
  • Branding
  • Briefing
  • Britain and the E.U. agree on a Northern Ireland trade deal and winter devastates Afghanistan.
  • Britain’s former prime minister
  • Britain’s former prime minister will face tough questions when he testifies this week before an official inquiry into the pandemic.
  • Britain’s head of state is said to want a more accessible
  • Britain’s historic financial district
  • Britain’s most revered institution plays ball with one of its most revolting institutions
  • Britain’s new monarch and his wife
  • Britain’s new sanctions program against Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has proved shaky. Some oligarchs have received generous exemptions. Offi
  • Britain’s Parliament passed contentious legislation to allow the deportation of asylum seekers to the African country
  • Britain’s prime minister unveiled emergency legislation to salvage a highly contested scheme to deport asylum seekers to the African country.
  • Britain’s stubbornly high inflation rate has come to symbolize a deeper economic malaise — a morass of problems
  • Britain’s voters appear hungry for change. And Prime Minister Rishi Sunak seems unable to persuade them otherwise.
  • British seafood is prized in France and Spain far more than at home. Britain’s exit from the European Union hasn’t halted exports
  • Burberry
  • Business Day
  • but a rare show of defiance by the unelected upper house showed the depth of opposition.
  • but backing for Scotland remaining part of the United Kingdom is fragile
  • but he is being harried by Liz Truss and Boris Johnson
  • but his timing
  • but it still faces potential stumbling blocks before becoming law.
  • but it’s hard for C.E.O.s to engage without getting clobbered.
  • but many of their political leaders do not.
  • but more hurdles lie ahead.
  • but none of the contenders has anything like her stature.
  • but some pressing problems
  • but springtime in the Big Apple brings a concentration of fairs
  • but the government can create a place in the House of Lords to satisfy that requirement.
  • but the passage of a contentious bill by Britain’s Parliament puts the country closer to sending asylum seekers to the African nation.
  • but the path from sea to stovetop is fraught with new obstacles.
  • but The Times’s chief diplomatic correspondent recognizes references to many real despots and failed states.
  • but uncertainty remains about the sector’s future in the country.
  • Calls to protect hospitals in Gaza.
  • Camilla
  • Can it do the same for America?
  • can return to France feeling buoyed by a warm reception and unity on Ukraine.
  • Charles and Camilla
  • citing “personal and political reasons.”
  • Cleverly is generally seen as less ideological and more of a team player than his predecessor in the Home Office
  • Climate. Refugees. Crime. With an election looming next year
  • Concerns about U.S. spending on aid to Ukraine.
  • Corrections
  • Corrections that appeared in print on Wednesday
  • Crispin Odey was severed from his own investment firm
  • Crosswords & Games
  • Cupid’s arrow follows a new path.
  • Currencies
  • cutlery and other items. Environmental advocates are pushing for a more comprehensive measure.
  • Daniel Lee makes his debut at the ultimate British brand
  • David Cameron called the 2016 referendum that led to Brexit. Since he left Parliament
  • David Lammy is likely to be foreign secretary. He’s setting out a “progressive realist” policy — and forging ties on the U.S. right
  • DealBook lists its favorite podcasts and books for getting smarter about business and the economy.
  • dealing with a difficult start to his second term
  • Dec. 27
  • Default settings on devices allow the tech ind to keep collecting and using data as it wants.
  • Defections in the once solidly Conservative southern “blue wall” drove large losses in recent municipal elections.
  • defy easy solutions.
  • democracy and economy.
  • Design
  • Despite his populist promises
  • Despite post-Brexit restrictions and government vows to control it
  • Despite tough talk
  • Did the Northern Ireland trade deal end Brexit politics with a whimper?
  • Dilara Findikoglu has dressed Margot Robbie and Cardi B and has been embraced by the fashion industry. Why would she cancel her runway show a
  • Donald Trump faces major new charges.
  • Douglass Mackey tried to trick Black people into thinking they could vote by text in the Clinton-Trump presidential election
  • driven by war
  • echoing the new British leader’s personal style and reflecting the country’s changed global status.
  • Economic growth was unchanged in the fourth quarter
  • Economic zones are fundamental to understanding modern-day capitalism.
  • economists see elevated borrowing costs lasting through 2024.
  • Education and validation aren’t the same.
  • Elections next week will tell us how much trouble the Tories are in.
  • Erdem and Simone Rocha flew the flag for British design talent this season as LFW celebrated a milestone.
  • Europe
  • Europe’s economic giant is making a historic attempt to revitalize its armed forces. It has a long way to go.
  • Europe’s economic recovery.
  • Europeans used to flock to London for restaurant jobs. Now
  • even if family members are hurt.
  • Even with much of Hollywood on strike
  • Ever since Britain voted to leave the European Union
  • experts say.
  • explains why Britain is suffering more than its neighbors.
  • exposed his bank for dropping him over “reputational risks.” Some analysts say he could parlay his situation into a comeback.
  • exuberantly designed places to stay.
  • failing to prevent child labor.
  • Fashion & Style
  • few in the United States will be celebrating the philosopher’s 300th birthday. But Kant’s writing shows that a free
  • fishing has been a way of life for generations. But changes to the industry — including a cut in quotas after Brexit and a government plan to
  • Five major grocery chains are restricting the number of some produce items
  • For all their differences
  • forward-looking and inclusive monarchy. It’s not an easy message to convey through golden relics and ancient rituals.
  • four months after the signing of the Good Friday Agreement.
  • Four years after Britain officially left the E.U.
  • Frank Hester
  • fresh outposts for major galleries and the city’s relative affordability.
  • From the Marais to the Champs-Élysées
  • Georgi Gospodinov won the prestigious International Booker Prize this year for “Time Shelter
  • Georgi Gospodinov’s acclaimed satire
  • Hamas’s campaign of sexual violence.
  • Harry and Meghan focused their ire in their Netflix documentary on the tabloids they say have hounded them out of remorseless greed and scarc
  • has failed to close a yawning gap in the polls. On Monday he did something new.
  • Have demographics and Brexit made unification inevitable?
  • have raised questions about the signal they send to a close ally.
  • Having been proved right about Russian aggression
  • he helped shape German politics for decades and was once seen as a likely chancellor.
  • he helped stave off a broader economic collapse amid the global turmoil set off in 2008
  • he may have to wrap his head around success.
  • he says.
  • he will outline the priorities of the prime minister at the opening of Parliament — including
  • Hear tracks by Tainy and Bad Bunny
  • here it is.
  • Here’s what you need to know at the end of the day.
  • Here’s what you need to know.
  • his British counterpart abruptly called off their meeting.
  • his business dealings have also attracted scrutiny.
  • His clever
  • His promises represented an effort to regain momentum at a time of steep challenges for Britain
  • How fears over the future led to a tech-world coup.
  • How medieval politics explains the social media war.
  • how the war in Ukraine changed Europe and Iranian women are removing their hijabs.
  • IFT
  • immigration to Britain reached an all-time high in 2022
  • implausibilities and all. Now she’s meeting with Keri Russell
  • In 1973
  • In a major policy speech
  • In a setback to Scottish nationalists
  • In addition to removing an obstacle to London-Brussels relations
  • in an effort to override a ruling by Britain’s highest court that Rwanda is not safe for refugees.
  • In Argentina
  • In Eliza Clark’s novel “Penance
  • In keeping with tradition
  • In parliamentary systems like New Zealand’s
  • In seeking to override the U.K.’s highest court
  • In the years since Britain voted to quit the E.U.
  • including Airbnb and Live Nation
  • including in areas that could sway the next national election. Here’s a guide to the ballots and how to interpret them.
  • inflation and changing weather patterns
  • is accused of making the comments about Diane Abbott
  • is aimed at ending a post-Brexit dispute between Britain and the European Union over trade rules for Northern Ireland.
  • is back in favor with his party
  • is expected to offer plans to promote greater work force participation.
  • is in the deepest crisis of its history.
  • is now turning to limiting some pathways for legal migrants.
  • is opening up to younger dancers who approach it as a living tradition.
  • is pushing its ally to stand firm against President Vladimir V. Putin
  • is the first Bulgarian novel to win the prestigious award.
  • is transforming its skyline with “best in class” office towers.
  • Israeli allegations about Hamas’s tactics.
  • it became reality.
  • it is the norm for leaders to step down when doing so may serve their party’s electoral prospects. In other political systems
  • it would be difficult to disentangle the royal family from British identity.
  • It’s a lively time for the art world in the French capital
  • It’s become difficult to build anywhere in the U.K.
  • It’s harder than ever to misuse red notices. With an Interpol election looming
  • It’s in a state of serious decline
  • its rivals
  • Jeffrey Donaldson
  • Jeremy Hunt
  • Jimmy Kimmel joked that President Biden declared the pandemic’s end “about a year after the rest of us did.”
  • João Vale de Almeida had to fight even for official recognition. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and the Windsor Framework are changing things
  • Joe Kennedy III will need to tread carefully in Belfast.
  • just and moral life is possible — and that’s relevant everywhere.
  • just in case.
  • JW Anderson
  • Keir Starmer
  • King Charles is diagnosed with cancer.
  • known as the Windsor Framework
  • Labour
  • leading many to wonder how much the split with the European Union is to blame.
  • leaning into the newly potent issue of meeting climate goals without raising costs for hard-pressed Britons.
  • leaving office early is rare.
  • Leery of Russian aggression
  • Leo Varadkar
  • like the National Health Service
  • like the National Health System
  • Literary influences suffuse this year’s festival of avant-garde performance. Artists from six shows share the stories that inspired them.
  • Magazine
  • many bigwigs are keeping the faith that it couldn’t really happen here.
  • many Eastern Europeans have left the country
  • many establishments are becoming desperate.
  • Many people who want to work can’t because of long-term health problems
  • Market News
  • Marketing
  • melancholic mind produced some of the most enduring heroes in spy fiction. Here are his best books.
  • migration to the U.S. and the threat to art from A.I.
  • military tensions in the Arctic.
  • Ministers in Britain have to hold a seat in Parliament
  • more fossil fuel extraction.
  • Morris dancing
  • Movies
  • Mr. Donaldson resigned as party leader on Friday
  • Mr. Galloway is likely to be a thorn in the main opposition party’s side. Labour was forced to disown its candidate in the special election o
  • Municipalities across England will face voters
  • musicians including the singer Lisa O’Neill and the band Lankum are reimagining the island’s music with an ever-growing sense of pride.
  • Natan Last rolls up with a heart-thumping themeless puzzle.
  • Net migration to Britain has exceeded 600
  • Netanyahu’s new government plan to overhaul the judiciary will harm Israel’s security
  • new figures show
  • New rules curtailing protests have alarmed some who fear an erosion of civil rights. They come as environmental protesters have intensified t
  • New York
  • newcomers come to its celebrated design scene.
  • Nicola Sturgeon’s resignation removes one of the most formidable figures from British politics
  • Nigel Farage
  • Niger faces a coup and intrigue surrounds an ousted Chinese official.
  • not a bug.
  • NPR
  • NYT
  • Ofcom said it would investigate a commentator’s remarks on GB News
  • offers glimpses of unguarded moments and ruffled feathers.
  • often a wingman to the United States in defense
  • On one of the most Parisian streets in the city
  • one of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s most loyal political allies
  • one of several Murdoch media properties he’s spoken with as he prepares a possible presidential bid.
  • one who has dedicated her life to the cause of Scottish independence.
  • Opinion
  • Other cities have game
  • others longstanding
  • our columnist says.
  • paralyzed Northern Ireland’s government
  • Parliament is all but certain to approve the government’s plan
  • Peace here is a matchstick tower. And in the last few years there has been a shifting of the ground below.
  • pivotal campaigns in Britain and the United States.
  • Plus
  • Plus Saudi Arabia defeats Argentina
  • Podcasts
  • Policymakers approved a quarter-point increase
  • politics and economics.
  • possibly handing independence backers a potent weapon.
  • President Biden
  • President Biden and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak of Britain share a challenge: operating in the wake of a larger-than-life predecessor. They ha
  • President Biden and the European Commission president are set to discuss how to effectively counter Russia and a potential trade deal for ele
  • President Biden is expected to mark the anniversary of a landmark peace accord
  • President Biden will commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement in Northern Ireland before shifting focus to his ancestry.
  • President Biden will host executives from several companies
  • President Emmanuel Macron
  • president of the European Commission
  • Pressure is building in Britain for the bank’s governor
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak appeared to be closing in on an agreement with E.U. negotiators. The backing of some in his own party looked less
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has dropped Boris Johnson’s bombastic approach to foreign policy
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak hopes his governing party’s annual conference can lift his ailing poll numbers. Predecessors and would-be successo
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is 20 percentage points behind in opinion polls. But history suggests the timing of a vote might make a difference
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is now promoting more conciliatory figures.
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak of Britain made moves to recharge his government
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak signaled that voters will go to the polls in the fall
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak vowed to eliminate the country’s backlog of asylum claims.
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak went to Belfast to work on a trade agreement with the European Union.
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s Conservative Party is trailing the opposition Labour Party in opinion polls.
  • Prime Minister Viktor Orban used E.U. rules on unanimous decisions to sink a $52 billion package strongly backed by larger countries.
  • Proposed legislation may keep them from ever finding out.
  • prosecutors said.
  • rather than risk delays caused by more rigorous passport checks for Britons.
  • Readers discuss the attention on the Sussexes as the prince’s memoir is published. Also: The Virginia school shooting; the Korean War memoria
  • Readers respond to a judge’s guest essay. Also: The Trump inquiry costs; Rudy Giuliani; legacy admissions; Joe Biden’s dog; a Briton’s strugg
  • Real Estate
  • Record numbers of legal immigrants came to Britain from outside the E.U. in recent years. Some on the right call that a “Brexit betrayal.”
  • Rishi Sunak
  • Rishi Sunak’s government is following other nations in a trend that can damage democracy
  • Rishi Sunak’s reshuffle was a bold attempt to win back more moderate Conservatives. But it could backfire
  • risked a trade war and even caused friction between London and Washington.
  • Russia under President Vladimir Putin.
  • Russia’s invasion presents immediate threats.
  • Russia’s response to drone strikes on Moscow.
  • said he had been charged with “allegations of an historical nature
  • said he would resign as leader of the country and of his party
  • said she would step down after 27 years in Parliament.
  • Sampha
  • Science
  • Scotland’s popular leader
  • setting up the possibility of parallel
  • Seven killed in another mass shooting in California.
  • Seven women say that a star columnist groped them or made unwanted sexual advances. But Britain’s news media has a complicated relationship w
  • she carved her own leftist identity with a seat in the European Parliament and as a British government minister.
  • She has seen the deep state up close and knows what needs to be done.
  • Shows hosted by former politicians from opposing parties are offering a sense of civility in a polarized country.
  • shows that Britain’s cost-of-living crisis persists
  • so the government settled for pint-size wine.
  • some liberal European politicians fear that the hard-right Vox party could become the first right-wing party since the Franco era to enter Sp
  • some new
  • Some of the biggest ’90s bands are playing major gigs across Britain again
  • some of the most deprived communities remain disillusioned about the opportunities that failed to materialize.
  • Some said the meeting conflicted with the king’s apolitical role because it came at the time Ursula von der Leyen
  • SourceHUB
  • Spain is the latest European country to end its program
  • spending cuts and a recession.
  • Sports
  • Starting in October
  • stirring tensions in a government that has promised both to stem arrivals and to revive a sluggish economy.
  • Stung by inflation and bracing for tax increases
  • Style
  • Suella Braverman.
  • Support for Scottish independence has dipped
  • Syria and Iraq.
  • SYYA
  • T Magazine
  • Technology forged by private markets won’t solve the world’s problems. It’ll only amplify them.
  • that are stymying Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.
  • that’s changing.
  • The actions on both sides of the Atlantic
  • The American president wants Britain’s squabble with Europe over Northern Ireland trade issues settled before the 25th anniversary of the pea
  • the archbishop of Canterbury and a member of the House of Lords
  • the Armed and others.
  • The author of the “Slow Horses” series says he relates more with failures. With millions of books sold and the third season of the series air
  • The battle for Bakhmut.
  • The belief that individual rights are “self-evident” is being challenged
  • The biggest challenge to Britain’s prime minister comes from his own divided party
  • The bipartisan debt limit deal still isn’t assured of passing.
  • The books they read this year that have stayed with them.
  • The British government’s plan to send asylum seekers to Africa is back in Parliament this week. Here’s a guide to some of the difficult reali
  • The British prime minister faces a test of his authority as a divided Parliament prepares to vote on his flagship immigration policy.
  • The British prime minister is trying to redefine himself as a conviction politician
  • The British prime minister’s contentious proposal to send asylum seekers to the African country moved forward a step
  • The British prime minister’s plan to send refugees to Rwanda passed a critical vote
  • the chancellor of the Exchequer
  • The changes are the biggest shake-up to Britain’s alcohol levies in 140 years
  • The City of London
  • The city’s art market is shrinking and some major players have left. But young dealerships presenting work by emerging artists are springing
  • The company behind “Pod Save America” is starting a British version of the popular liberal show.
  • The company said it would build three electric models at its plant in northeast England
  • the country is in the midst of its gravest slump in a generation
  • the country will prohibit plastic plates
  • The country’s leading politicians support the war in Gaza. Much of its public does not.
  • The country’s new prime minister must now persuade ordinary Britons that they should support his government through a painful ordeal of tax i
  • The Daily Telegraph and The Spectator
  • The deal
  • The Dec. 2
  • The decision is a big victory for the families of the 29 people who died in the attack in August 1998
  • The decision left Scottish politicians angered by what they saw as London’s thwarting the will of their Parliament
  • The Democratic Unionist Party has no legal power to hold up the agreement
  • The Democratic Unionist Party walked out of government in 2022 over post-Brexit trade rules. But on Tuesday
  • the Democratic Unionists
  • The disorder in Ireland’s capital on Nov. 23 may have appeared to come from nowhere. But experts say it reflected long-running social problem
  • The divorce between Britain and the European Union has become the dark thread that
  • The Duchess of Rutland learned the art of running a castle on the job. Then she started interviewing other duchesses on how they make it work
  • The effects of the war in Ukraine on Europe.
  • The event has become unashamedly commercial
  • The F.T.C. argued that noncompetes don’t just harm workers. They also harm society.
  • The failure of Britishvolt is a blow to Britain’s plans to promote the manufacture of electric cars
  • the fair is leaning into its location.
  • The far right is moving into the halls of power.
  • The financier Sir James Goldsmith created two lavish retreats in Mexico that are now hotels. A writer checked in to get a peek inside the wor
  • The Florida governor granted a rare interview to The Times of London
  • the former British prime minister
  • The former prime minister may lose his pass to Parliament
  • The former prime minister quit after getting a confidential report about whether he had lied to lawmakers about lockdown-breaking parties.
  • the French capital is suddenly full of small
  • The French president goes to Washington with differences over how to end the war in Ukraine
  • The governing Conservative Party has long promised to reduce arrivals. It said Brexit would help. But the numbers in 2022 were the highest ev
  • The governing Conservative Party trails badly in national opinion polls. The municipal races offer a clue to its fate in an upcoming general
  • The governing Conservative Party was long seen as entrepreneurs’ natural ally and lobbyists’ most important target. With an election on the h
  • The government
  • The hard-line Brexiteer
  • The HBO show is set in a fictional European country
  • The high-speed train service under the English Channel is leaving many seats unfilled
  • The idea of a first minister who supports closer ties to the Republic of Ireland — let alone one from Sinn Fein
  • The indictment last week of Donald J. Trump has not changed the calculations of many world leaders who view his political resilience as inevi
  • The Italian prime minister helped persuade the Hungarian leader
  • the judges ruled that a second referendum on breaking away from London needed the consent of the British Parliament.
  • The king’s tie-in to a divisive Brexit-related trade issue drew angry recriminations from critics who viewed it as an improper foray into Bri
  • the Labour Party leader
  • The Labour Party scored several significant victories in Conservative strongholds in votes viewed as a test of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s p
  • The larger themes behind the protests in Israel
  • the leader of the Democratic Unionist Party and a backer of strong ties with the U.K.
  • the leading supporter of Britain’s Conservative Party
  • The Most Rev. Justin Welby
  • The move is a boost for Britain’s car industry
  • the N.H.S.
  • The nation is at the center of the current turmoil in the Middle East.
  • The nation’s school system still sees the country’s pupils starkly divided by their religious backgrounds
  • The newest Basel offshoot popped up when it was least expected. Now in its sophomore edition
  • the Northern Ireland trade deal could remove Brexit from the center of British politics after seven divisive years.
  • The offshore wind industry continues to grow as nations look to change Europe’s oil and gas hub into a major source of renewable energy.
  • The outcome of the debt ceiling conflict is genuinely uncertain.
  • the party said it would return to power-sharing after negotiating with the British government.
  • The plan has been in the works for years
  • The playwright thought News International’s phone-hacking scandal could make for a sweeping thriller. Twelve years later
  • The political taboo around Bregret.
  • the President’s new fusion of contemporary culture war with throwback libertarianism is entrancing global elites.
  • The price was the highest for a public sale in Europe
  • the prime minister and his party are turning to populist issues.
  • The prime minister testified at an official inquiry into the Covid pandemic on Monday while also defending a flagship immigration policy from
  • the queen consort
  • the question of Northern Ireland’s border has bedeviled prime ministers. Rishi Sunak’s effort to broker a deal is already under threat.
  • The rapport between Emmanuel Macron of France and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak of Britain hints at a mending of their countries’ relationship.
  • The rate
  • The recently opened Bacchanalia serves a feast inspired by ancient Rome in an unabashedly luxurious setting that Nero would have loved.
  • the region is searching for its place and trying to move on from a legacy of bloody divisions.
  • The report offered a damning verdict on Boris Johnson
  • The review
  • The rise of populism is testing corporations’ relationship with government
  • The ruling said that a new British law aiming to foster reconciliation over decades of sectarian conflict in Northern Ireland would be a viol
  • The scandal is another blatant display of royal double standards.
  • The separatist movement needs a new chief after the surprise resignation of Nicola Sturgeon
  • The settled will of the Scottish people is to remain a profoundly unsettled people.
  • The Supreme Court could strike down a program meant to help 40 million borrowers.
  • The Supreme Court will announce on Wednesday whether the government’s contentious plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda can go ahead. It has
  • The traction gained by ultranationalist parties over the past decade may be a sign that an important consensus is breaking down.
  • The U.K.
  • The U.K. government hopes to pass a bill this week
  • the U.K. government on Wednesday published the details of a deal to restore the power-sharing government in Belfast.
  • The U.K. prime minister is under pressure to establish post-Brexit Britain as a reliable global player and is looking to strengthen economic
  • the U.K.’s tough new immigration plan and a fight over U.S. labor unions.
  • The U.S. continues to play a crucial role in the Good Friday Agreement.
  • The U.S. Energy Department’s report identifying the Wuhan Institute of Virology as the likely source of the coronavirus has already generated
  • The veteran Conservative Party lawmaker
  • The veteran TV executive is poised to take control of two prominent British news outlets
  • the Wellington boot brand stumbled toward the brink of extinction this week. Can it be saved by a new (American) owner?
  • The wife of the Labour leader Neil Kinnock
  • Theater
  • there have been questions about its legitimacy. But for many people
  • there were signs that both Britain and its royal family are preparing for a new era.
  • there will be plenty of notable new and returning shows arriving in the next few months.
  • There’s an alternative to suffering.
  • There’s more than blarney in Caoilinn Hughes’s riotous
  • they’re on the same page — which some experts say makes closing deals harder.
  • this year
  • Tips
  • to 4.25 percent
  • to announce new efforts to end so-called junk fees as inflation remains high.
  • to go along with a landmark fund for Ukraine. It was a big moment for Europe. And for her.
  • to many
  • to show that policymakers have a handle on the inflation problem.
  • told Parliament that the government’s plan to deal with immigration is “morally unacceptable.”
  • too.
  • too. Nicola Sturgeon’s arrest leaves the fate of the movement in flux.
  • translated by Angela Rodel
  • Travel
  • Travelers to the British capital can take part in the supper club scene
  • Treasuries have been threatened by a possible U.S. debt default
  • two interior designers create a new kind of French fantasy.
  • two years after the plan was first unveiled
  • U.S.
  • Ukraine begins the “big test” of its counteroffensive
  • Uncategorized
  • underscored the escalation of cyberconflict between Western allies and Beijing.
  • Unlike in Europe
  • Until recently
  • Uri Geller claimed to bend metal with his mind on live television. Skeptics couldn’t beat him. Now they’ve joined him.
  • Viktor Orban
  • Vincent Bevins’s “If We Burn” and Robert D. Kaplan’s “The Loom of Time” consider protest movements of the past and the drive for democracy in
  • visited the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin to start their three-day trip to Germany.
  • visited the French President just days after a high-profile gathering in Montreal. But efforts to improve European ties in the wake of Brexit
  • Volodymyr Zelensky’s return to Ukraine.
  • Voters are going to the polls in a district near Manchester to choose a new member of Parliament
  • Voters choose local officials in England and Wales this week. Their verdicts could be an important clue to the shape of Britain’s looming gen
  • Warsaw is savoring its newfound influence in NATO and on Ukraine policy.
  • was finalizing the new Brexit deal.
  • was found by an independent inquiry to have mistreated subordinates.
  • was roundly endorsed in the British Parliament.
  • What’s changed for formerly welcoming cities are the sheer numbers involved.
  • When he was prime minister
  • When it comes to some national spectacles
  • where home cooks and would-be restaurateurs create meals in their homes or other locales
  • which brought in billions of euros from real estate investors seeking residency status but worsened a housing crisis for locals.
  • which had been expected to edge lower in May
  • which has been mostly focused on asylum seekers crossing the English Channel
  • which hopes his political skills can be an advantage as an election nears.
  • which included sanctions
  • which is now dissolving itself.
  • which is triggering resignations and a mutiny over immigration.
  • which means any compromise that could revive its power-sharing national government may remain elusive.
  • which was led by Ben S. Bernanke
  • which would simplify post-Brexit trade rules. But a rejection could sabotage efforts to restart Northern Ireland’s government.
  • while affirming that British banks were “resilient.”
  • While economic corporation the challenges posed by artificial intelligence are on the agenda
  • While the ballots were still being counted on Friday
  • While the Good Friday Agreement brought undeniable progress
  • who are not fading away.
  • who has ancestral ties to Ireland
  • who left Downing Street widely unpopular
  • who plays her role.
  • who quit as a lawmaker in the face of a possible suspension for misleading statements about pandemic gatherings
  • who quit Parliament last week.
  • whose Fine Gael party has struggled in the polls
  • whose time as leader was plagued by Brexit turmoil
  • Why educational attainment is increasingly the best predictor of how Americans will vote
  • Why is British inflation so high?
  • will attend state banquets in Paris and Berlin later this month.
  • will have a voice in The Daily Mail.
  • will mark the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement in Northern Ireland before heading south.
  • Will this be the end of middle-class privilege?
  • With a mandate to drum up American investment but avoid the many political pitfalls
  • with doors to migrants largely closed after Britain left the European Union
  • with large parts of the world instead prioritizing collective benefits.
  • with new art foundations
  • With the central bank set update its interest rate forecast
  • Wokeness is an American ideology. Why does it seem so powerful in Britain and Canada?
  • World
  • years after the Good Friday Agreement brought an end to sectarian strife.
  • yet they remain more attractive than just about everything else
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