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The House Opinion Article | The government must be bolder on the energy crisis

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The government must be bolder on the energy crisis
The government must be bolder on the energy crisis


4 min read

This Labour government must emulate the boldness shown by Gordon Brown nearly two decades ago and convene an International Energy Summit.

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Even while staying out, the UK cannot avoid the consequences of the Iran war. Economic pain is rapidly approaching, and a long-threatened era of energy scarcity has begun.  

As a government advisor during the financial crash, I was sceptical when Gordon Brown convened G20 world leaders. But he proved the doubters wrong and emerged with a framework for action and an even worse catastrophe averted.

The energy crisis sparked by Donald Trump’s war threatens a crisis as big as the financial crash, and which requires a response of equal magnitude. This is not simply a temporary price spike. Gulf energy underpins the world economy, with Qatar supplying a fifth of the world’s liquefied natural gas and a fifth of all oil and gas passing through the Strait of Hormuz.

For the second time since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, global dependency on vulnerable fossil fuel supply chains has been brutally exposed. Even if the war stopped tomorrow, experts warn it could take years for things to stabilise. We are entering a new era of global energy insecurity that threatens living standards, economic stability and national security. Hostile powers that control fossil fuels understand the power they hold; economic hardship and public resentment provide ideal conditions for extremist politics to flourish.

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The Prime Minister’s announcement that the UK is convening 35 nations to discuss reopening the Strait of Hormuz is a good step forward. But this crisis is global, and Britain must respond globally.

We need an International Energy Summit, convened by Britain with the same boldness as Brown’s summit in 2009. The UK has the credibility to lead the response to this crisis, with deep energy expertise and renewable energy potential. We are also living proof of the stakes, with limited gas storage, declining domestic fossil fuel production and a population that has already endured one energy price shock in recent memory.

We could be convening major global players to secure agreement to stabilise energy markets, safeguard supply chains, coordinate reserves and speed up the shift to renewables. We could also be securing consensus that energy security is global security, and the alternative is a ‘Hunger Games’ world of resource conflict, scarcity and coercion.

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We cannot have a dangerous race-to-the-bottom. If the wealthiest countries pay to hoard fossil fuels, we will all pay the price. Our economy depends on supply chains that stretch across countries like Bangladesh, Vietnam and the Philippines. If energy prices push those economies into blackouts or recession, we will quickly feel it here too — through goods shortages, higher prices and economic disruption.

The UK must therefore adopt a war footing to protect the British people — not just immediately, but for the long term. The route to national resilience is reducing our exposure to fossil fuels, because homegrown power cannot be held hostage by dictators, petrostates or erratic American presidents. We must accelerate the move to clean power, with a modern energy system that is decentralised, efficient and flexible. Plug-in domestic solar panels should become as central to strengthening energy security as Anderson shelters were to the 1939-45 war effort, enabling ordinary people to contribute to our shared resilience while also cutting their bills.

But even if we generate more energy at home, Britain will not fully benefit until we break the link between the price of gas and energy bills. Right now, even as fossil fuel usage falls, our bills remain tied to the volatile price of gas, inflicting pain on ordinary billpayers. We must break that link so we can drive down energy costs for households and businesses.

The direction of travel is clear, but the government must be bolder. From our global convening power to tackling our domestic energy crisis, no option should be off the table – even those once dismissed as too radical. This is not simply about bills. It is about security, stability and the enduring necessity of global cooperation in an increasingly fractious world.

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Polly Billington is Labour MP for East Thanet 

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‘Good Riddance’: Lawmakers Celebrate Pam Bondi’s Firing In Rare Bipartisan Moment

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'Good Riddance': Lawmakers Celebrate Pam Bondi’s Firing In Rare Bipartisan Moment

Donald Trump’s decision to sack Pam Bondi as attorney general is one of the few he’s made as president that actually got some sort of bipartisan support.

In a statement on his Truth Social platform, the president praised Bondi as “a Great American Patriot and a loyal friend, who faithfully served as my Attorney General over the past year,” adding that she is being transitioned to “a much needed and important new job in the private sector, to be announced at a date in the near future.”

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche will be taking over Bondi’s job as acting attorney general, and he praised his former boss on social media, saying that she “led this Department with strength and conviction and I’m grateful for her leadership and friendship.”

Bondi also received support from former Congressman Matt Gaetz, who was briefly considered for the attorney general post before withdrawing after several Republican senators objected to his nomination on ethical grounds.

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“Pam Bondi will be known as one of the great crime fighters of our time,” he posted on X. “She is a patriot who has all of our appreciation.”

Bondi made her own social media post after her firing was announced, saying, in part, that she remains “eternally grateful for the trust that President Trump placed in me to Make America Safe Again.”

Over the next month I will be working tirelessly to transition the office of Attorney General to the amazing Todd Blanche before moving to an important private sector role I am thrilled about, and where I will continue fighting for President Trump and this Administration.…

— Attorney General Pamela Bondi (@AGPamBondi) April 2, 2026

However, most of the social media responses from politicians on both sides of the aisle expressed overwhelming support for Bondi’s canning, often in very harsh terms.

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Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer began his post with the words, “Good riddance.”

Good riddance. Pam Bondi was the wrong choice from the start.

But the rot at the Department of Justice begins and ends with Donald Trump. As long as his focus is on using DOJ as a tool for revenge and not law enforcement, the cover up of the Epstein files, along with the… https://t.co/kywfB2CAlW

— Chuck Schumer (@SenSchumer) April 2, 2026

House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries also went scorched earth against Bondi, calling her “a partisan, petulant, political hack.”

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Pam Bondi is a partisan, petulant, political hack.

And now she’s GONE.

Keep the pressure on every single one of these extremists. pic.twitter.com/PamKKov0ek

— Hakeem Jeffries (@hakeemjeffries) April 2, 2026

House Republicans also applauded Bondi getting booted, with South Carolina’s Nancy Mace griping about how the handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files “seriously undermined President Trump.”

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BREAKING: Attorney General Pam Bondi FIRED.

Bondi handled the Epstein Files in a terrible manner and seriously undermined President Trump.

She has stonewalled every effort to hold the guilty accountable. The American people deserve an Attorney General who is transparent and… pic.twitter.com/zPOO7jOQpz

— Rep. Nancy Mace (@RepNancyMace) April 2, 2026

I support Trump firing Pam Bondi.
Do you?

I hope the next AG will release all the Epstein files according to the law and follow up with investigations, prosecutions, and arrests.

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— Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) April 2, 2026

Other politicians chimed in to cheer Bondi’s removal as AG:

That’s nice. Still doesn’t get her out of testifying to Congress about Epstein.

We must also investigate the continued breaking of the law around the DOJ STILL hiding Epstein files from the public.

This isn’t over. https://t.co/UHXAN7vR1d

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— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) April 2, 2026

Pam Bondi turned our Department of Justice into the Department of Corruption, protecting pedophiles and going after Trump’s enemies list at the expense of the American people.

Good riddance. Now, fire Hegseth. https://t.co/iUJyrbUW28

— Tammy Duckworth (@SenDuckworth) April 2, 2026

Well… first it was Kristi Noem, now it’s Pam Bondi… it would be too much like right that Pete be next. I see a theme. He will throw the incompetent women under the bus a lot faster than the incompetent men 🤷🏾♀️.

Let’s just agree that America needs a “do over.” The President…

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— Jasmine Crockett (@JasmineForUS) April 2, 2026

Dear @WhiteHouse: Pam Bondi would be wonderful at the super prestigious position you can create called the “Very Special Attorney General for the Shield of the Americas.” https://t.co/eCJq2x4bey

— Ted Lieu (@tedlieu) April 2, 2026

Pam Bondi oversaw an unprecedented weaponization of the Justice Department that brought our nation’s rule of law to its knees.

Countless and baseless political investigations, hundreds of career law enforcement professionals purged, a massive cover-up of the Epstein files, and a…

— Adam Schiff (@SenAdamSchiff) April 2, 2026

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Instead of upholding the law, Pam Bondi weaponized the DOJ to avoid accountability, break the law, and go after Trump’s political enemies.

She should be fired. But then again, she never should have been hired.

Oh, and one more thing: RELEASE. THE. EPSTEIN. FILES.

— Rep. Shontel Brown (@RepShontelBrown) April 2, 2026

Attorney General Pam Bondi was just fired for the Epstein files coverup. The new AG must release all the files & prosecute the abusers. pic.twitter.com/gVMPwBJ9fc

— Rep. Ro Khanna (@RepRoKhanna) April 2, 2026

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Pam Bondi helped carry out the most egregious cover up in American history. That’s why I introduced Articles of Impeachment against her.

She may be fired, but she is not above the law. Bondi must still comply with our subpoena and testify before the Oversight Committee about… pic.twitter.com/mLOnUPDFTR

— Congresswoman Yassamin Ansari (@RepYassAnsari) April 2, 2026

Pam Bondi and Donald Trump may think her firing gets her out of testifying to the Oversight Committee.

They are wrong – and we look forward to hearing from her under oath. https://t.co/PVtvjlny5Q

— Congressman Robert Garcia (@RepRobertGarcia) April 2, 2026

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MAGA Attorney General Pam Bondi cashed in her integrity to keep her job and now leaves with neither.

It’s a lesson for people who fall for Trump.

— Sheldon Whitehouse (@SenWhitehouse) April 2, 2026

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London Defence conference to face protests

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London Defence conference to face protests

On Friday 10 April at 12:00 pm, students and activists will mobilise outside Bush House at King’s College London (KCL) to protest against the London Defence Conference and to condemn the genocidal companies and speakers invited to the on-campus event.

London Defence Conference

First launched in 2023, the London Defence Conference is held annually and often hosts political leaders, military officials, and the defence industry to advance military strategy, spending, and lobbying. Not only were genocide-enablers such as Keir Starmer, David Lammy and many more invited to speak at the London Defence Conference in previous years, but murderous companies such as Palantir, BAE Systems, and more also sponsor or support the conference. These conferences create an atmosphere in which people in power can discuss, justify, and promote an increase in military spending.

Despite criticisms of being discriminatory by the UN, European countries and rights groups, ‘Israel’ has recently legalised the death penalty for Palestinian resistance fighters whilst continuously bombing Gaza, Iran, Lebanon, and brutally murdering thousands of innocent people in pursuit of their colonial expansionist plan.

Meanwhile, Keir Starmer’s United Kingdom continues to license over £500 million worth of military exports to ‘Israel’ and provide approximately 15% of the components in the F-35 fighter jets, which are used in airstrikes across the occupied Palestinian territory.

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Our government is complicit in genocide.

As students, we refuse to let warmongers conduct their blood business on our campus, making deals where every handshake results in the dropping of bombs on houses, hospitals and schools.

Corporate complicity in genocide

However, it is not just our government that is guilty.

London Defence Conference’s sponsors and partnership companies are the epitome of brutality, violence and war. For example, Palantir has been a supporter and sponsor of the conference, with its executive vice chair and head, Louis Mosley, invited on stage each year. Palantir is one of ICE’s top corporate collaborators. ICE paid Palantir $30 million to build tools which allow them to identify and find people they want to deport.

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In 2024, Palantir renewed its contract with the IDF and continued to provide them with AI systems designed to support precise military targeting, which their CEO, Alex Karp, would call “digital kill chains”, boasting of their effectiveness.

Another key supporter of the London Defence Conference is The Pinsker Centre. It was founded using AIPAC money, and originally named The Pinsker Centre for Zionist Education. It was explicitly created to counter pro-Palestinian activism on UK campuses. AIPAC channels money through the Centre to reshape campus debate. After 7 October, they co-authored a letter explicitly acknowledging that “innocent Palestinians will die” yet called on the UK government to support ‘Israel’ regardless.

‘We will not be bystanders’

A spokesperson for students at KCL said:

We are not naive about what this conference represents. The cycle is not complicated: arms companies fund conferences, conferences legitimise arms companies, governments sign contracts, and bombs fall on Gaza, on Lebanon, on Iran. What happens in occupied Palestine does not begin at the border. It begins here, at the centre of the empire, in the lecture halls and conference rooms of our own universities. King’s College London is not neutral ground. Every sponsorship deal struck within Bush House, every handshake between a defence executive and a politician, is a link in a chain that ends in rubble and mass graves.

Students at KCL refuse to be bystanders to this. We refuse to let the London Defence Conference proceed as business as usual while the institutions and companies it platforms continue to arm and enable genocide. The struggle for Palestinian liberation and all peoples suffering under the violence that conferences like this one bankroll, that struggle is our struggle too. It does not stay overseas. It starts right here.

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KCL Stands For Justice (S4J) have organised a peaceful student-led protest outside Bush House at 12:00pm on Friday 10t April 2026, the first day of the London Defence Conference. This is in collaboration with over 80 other groups including Palestinian Youth Movement, Campaign Against Arms Trade, Defend Our Juries, and many more.

Featured image via the Canary

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‘Totally Unhinged’: Trump’s Communications Chief Loses It After TV Host Tears Into President

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White House Communications Director Steven Cheung reacts to Abby Phillip's comments on "CNN NewsNight" in a post on Wednesday.

White House Communications Director Steven Cheung whined on social media after CNN host Abby Phillip called out President Donald Trump over the Iran war and his head-spinning foreign policy since he returned to office.

“Totally unhinged @abbydphillip of CNN has no sense at all,” Cheung wrote Wednesday on X.

His comments came minutes after the “CNN Newsnight” host responded to Republican ex-Representative Peter Meijer’s suggestion that the jump in oil prices in recent weeks is “so much less dramatic” than the administration’s expectations, and that Trump’s low polling numbers would still be similar even if Iran capitulated on Day 1.

“But don’t you think Americans are rational about paying a dollar more per gallon at the gas [pump]?” Phillip asked.

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She went on: “I think they’re saying very clearly they do not think that this step needed to be taken.”

Phillip’s show aired not long after Trump wrapped up his prime-time address on the war, and she noted that the president’s speech lacked “new insights” on his administration’s objectives.

“The president basically repeated a lot of the things that he’s been saying in Truth Social posts, except he said it out loud,” the host said.

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She later teed up a discussion on Trump’s insistence that America’s allies in Europe clean up his mess in the Strait of Hormuz, despite the president not consulting Nato before diving headfirst into the conflict in late February.

She proceeded to argue that Trump threw Nato’s future into question by not asking Denmark to expand US access to military bases in Greenland before threatening to annex the semi-autonomous Arctic territory, escalating an international crisis late last year.

That’s around the time when Cheung made his post on X.

“Complete lightweight who has no idea what she is talking about on foreign policy,” he continued. “It’s now clear why her ratings are in the shitter.” (“CNN NewsNight” was the network’s top show in the adult 25-54 demographic in February, per Nielsen data reported by Adweek.)

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White House Communications Director Steven Cheung reacts to Abby Phillip's comments on "CNN NewsNight" in a post on Wednesday.
White House Communications Director Steven Cheung reacts to Abby Phillip’s comments on “CNN NewsNight” in a post on Wednesday.

Cheung’s latest meltdown on X joins several more of his gripes and grievances over the past year.

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What Is ‘Deadzoning’? The 2026 Travel Trend All About Logging Off For Real

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Opting to travel and not be highly accessible to work is growing in popularity.

We’ve all seen it: the person at the airport gate loudly telling their boss their Wi-Fi isn’t strong enough for video calls, clearly pretending to be stuck at home. Or that friend who, between bottomless mimosas at brunch, is furiously tapping out Slack messages.

Thanks to flexible schedules and “work-from-anywhere” policies, we technically can work from anywhere — even while on vacation. And yet that freedom has become a trap. Why bother using PTO when you can save it and fire off emails from a New York hotel room or an Airbnb on a bachelorette weekend?

The result: We’re traveling more than ever, but actually vacationing less than before.

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Opting to travel and not be highly accessible to work is growing in popularity.

AleksandarNakic via Getty Images

Opting to travel and not be highly accessible to work is growing in popularity.

Between lagging Wi-Fi, comped breakfast buffets with unanswered Slack threads, and the ever-present fear of looking unproductive, we’re realizing that something has to change. Welcome to 2026, the year we all start “deadzoning.”

What is ‘deadzoning’?

Despite catching flights, not feelings, we’re all exhausted, because we’re blending business and pleasure a little too seamlessly. We’re permanently switched on: curating the perfect Instagram carousel, tracking breaking news alerts, fielding a relentless stream of group chat messages. “Deadzoning” is the antidote, the art of switching off and traveling in intentional silence.

“Deadzoning reflects a broader cultural shift away from constant connectivity and burnout,” Christina Bennett, a consumer travel trends expert at Priceline, told HuffPost. “After years of being ‘always on,’ travellers are actively seeking vacations that allow them to fully disconnect — mentally and digitally.”

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“It’s especially resonating with Gen Z and millennials, who are increasingly prioritising mental health and presence over productivity,” she continues. “In fact, more than a third say they wish devices could be banned entirely while on vacation. At its core, deadzoning is about reclaiming time, focus, and real rest by choosing trips to destinations that force you to unplug and reset.”

How can we start ‘deadzoning’?

As always, it’s easier said than done. We all want to put our phones away… and yet somehow end up clocking 14 hours of screen time a day. Are we even awake for that long in a day?

My first real experience of “deadzoning” came post-breakup, as most breakthroughs do. I got dumped over text by someone who had recently told me he loved me (bold), and I felt the familiar urge to download every dating app going just to reaffirm my value. Instead, I booked a tiny cabin, borrowed my sister’s dog and disappeared off-grid.

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I didn’t switch my phone off entirely — I was a single woman traveling alone, and my family was already convinced I was spiralling — but I did turn off the internet. The only thing I allowed myself was one daily text to my sister, confirming that her dog and I were very much alive. It was glorious. Within hours, the phantom urge to check my phone evaporated. No refreshing inboxes. No stalking his Instagram followers. Just trees, silence and a dog who couldn’t care less about my attachment issues.

“Travelers can set better work-life boundaries by being intentional before the trip starts,” Bennett said. “That includes setting a clear out-of-office message, delegating responsibilities in advance, and being upfront about limited availability. Destination choice matters, too — places like mountain towns, national park gateways, and quiet coastal escapes make it easier to step away from screens.”

Which trips are best for ‘deadzoning’?

Now, you don’t have to disappear to a tiny cabin with only a dog for company — though I highly recommend it. Entire businesses have been built around the art of switching off. One such brand is Unplugged, which specialises in off-grid cabin stays designed specifically for digital detoxing.

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“Unplugged cabins are entirely off-grid and have no phones, Wi-Fi, or technology, and they provide all the offline essentials such as a phone lockbox, books, a physical map and an instant camera,” Unplugged co-founder Hector Hughes told HuffPost. “It’s much easier to be without your phone and laptop when the space is intentionally built for that purpose.”

In other words: If temptation isn’t there, you can’t give in to it.

“Booking a remote location in nature where the signal is naturally low is also a great choice,” Hughes continues. “There is no Wi-Fi or 5G in the mountains, so you are physically unable to check your phone.”

And it’s not just about going off-grid, it’s about choosing the right kind of environment. Alex Oldfield, co-founder of Curated Spaces — the world’s first booking platform powered by tastemakers — also shared a few guiding principles for planning the ultimate “deadzoning” escape:

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  • Places with permission to slow down.
    Rural farm stays, remote cottages, coastal hideaways, cabins in the woods. Anywhere the pace of life is naturally gentle.
  • Design-led spaces that encourage presence.
    Homes with big windows, long communal tables, outdoor baths, and crackling fireplaces. When a space feels good to inhabit, you stop reaching for distraction.
  • Experiential rather than itinerary-heavy trips.
    The best “deadzoning” trips revolve around simple, tactile pleasures: swimming in the sea before breakfast, foraging walks, garden grazing, star-filled evenings, meals that stretch lazily into the afternoon.
  • Somewhere slightly out of reach.
    A winding country road, a ferry crossing, a slow train journey — just enough distance to create a psychological gap between everyday life and vacation time.

Because ultimately, deadzoning isn’t about punishment or proving you can survive without your phone. It’s about engineering a break that feels genuinely different from your normal life, one where the silence isn’t awkward, it’s restorative.

What are some tips for ‘deadzoning’ on your next trip?

My personal recommendation? Get dumped over text by a man who once said he loved you and borrow — or gently steal — someone’s dog for a few nights. Highly effective. Questionable scalability.

For those seeking something slightly less niche, here are expert-backed ways to engineer the perfect “deadzoning” vacation:

Lock away your phone

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“If you can, lock your phone away so distraction is not an option,” recommends Hector Hughes.

You can even take a more inexpensive, less-addictive “replacement dumb-phone out with you” for emergencies, he suggested.

Airplane mode is your friend

Many of us can’t go fully off-grid. Safety, family, work — life still exists.

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Hughes acknowledged this: “If you can’t lock your phone away, turn off all email and social media notifications or put your phone on Do Not Disturb or airplane mode. Put it in your bag (not your pocket) so you don’t feel the urge to pick it up out of habit.”

Go in with a plan

“Leave a rock-solid handover so nothing’s hanging over you, and tell people you’ll be offline (bonus points if your destination truly has no signal),” Oldfield said. “Don’t do the ‘feel free to ping me if anything comes up’ line — we’ve all said it, and we all regret it. Boundaries are completely fine, as long as you’re clear upfront and leave no room for confusion.”

Think of it like telling your partner you’re going to that 6 a.m. spin class. The second someone knows about it, you’re suddenly far more committed to following through.

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Pick the right setting

“Switching off is way easier when the place itself helps you shake off your usual rhythm,” Oldfield said. “Maybe it’s a cabin surrounded by fields with no signal, a coastal cottage where you can live the fisherman aesthetic IRL, or a hotel where you can disappear into the spa and order room service after. It starts with choosing somewhere that makes slowing down feel natural.”

Environment is everything: You are far less likely to check Slack while staring at sheep.

Go analog

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“Bring that book you’ve been meaning to read,” Oldfield suggested. “Cook something from an old recipe book, go for a long hike, play cards by the fire. Go for a mooch in the local town, get a little lost and ask for directions, shriek your way into a cold wild swim, write a letter. If you feel like you’re in a Jane Austen novel, you’re doing it right.”

Because at its core, deadzoning isn’t about rejecting modern life. It’s about remembering that we’re allowed to step away from it, even briefly, without the world collapsing in our absence.

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Polling Expert Warns Labour Faces Major May Election Losses

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Polling Expert Warns Labour Faces Major May Election Losses

Labour is heading for “a total bloodbath” in the elections on May 7, according to a polling expert.

Voters will go to the polls in England, Scotland and Wales for the biggest test of public opinion since Keir Starmer won a landslide general election victory less than two years ago.

Since then, however, Labour and the prime minister’s popularity has plummeted following a series of gaffes, ministerial resignations, controversies and scandals.

Ben Walker, co-founder of polling analysts Britain Elects and a Labour councillor, said May 7 is shaping up to be disastrous for his party as well as the Conservatives.

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In a post on X, he said: “Putting together the English local election forecast. Scotland and Wales done.

“I have to say, and not to give a sneak peak, but to affirm what’s been written elsewhere: this May is going to be absolutely terrible for the Tories. But a total bloodbath for Labour.”

Putting together the English local election forecast. Scotland and Wales done.

I have to say, and not to give a sneak peak, but to affirm what’s been written elsewhere: this May is going to be absolutely terrible for the Tories. But a total bloodbath for Labour.

— Ben Walker (@BNHWalker) April 3, 2026

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Labour is facing defeat once again to the SNP in the Scottish Parliament elections, and could even come third behind Reform UK.

The party is also set to lose power in the Welsh Senedd for the first time since it was set up in 1999, with Plaid Cymru on course to form the next government.

Around 5,000 council seats are up for election on the same day, with analysis by the Financial Times last month suggesting Labour could lose nearly 2,000 as Reform and the Greens make major gains.

A by-election held on Thursday for a seat on Rossendale Borough Council provided a foretaste of what Labour can expect on May 7.

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The party’s vote share plunged by nearly 28% as they lost the seat to the Greens.

Meanwhile, Reform polled 34.5% from a standing start, 15 points more than Labour.

Hareholme & Waterfoot (Rossendale) Council By-Election Result:

🌍 GRN: 37.7% (+9.2)
➡️ RFM: 34.5% (New)
🌹 LAB: 19.2% (-27.9)
🌳 CON: 6.8% (-17.6)
🔶 LDM: 1.8% (New)

Green GAIN from Labour.
Changes w/ 2024.

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— Election Maps UK (@ElectionMapsUK) April 2, 2026

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5 Ways To Make Walking Even Healthier

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5 Ways To Make Walking Even Healthier

The more I learn about the health benefits of walking, the more I understand why the NHS calls the exercise “overlooked”.

Walking as few as 2,337 steps a day can reduce your risk of heart attack and stroke, while a 1.6km stroll is linked to denser bones.

It can help your sleep, joints, and immune system, and may even lower your cravings for sweet foods. Walking for half an hour daily may add 1.4 years to women’s lives, and 2.5 to men’s.

But if you want to make a great thing even better for you, it turns out there are some simple changes – like bringing a friend on your walk, or taking a hilly route – that could be worth your while.

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How can I make my walk healthier?

1) Walk briskly

All walking is good for us. But in one study, brisk walking was linked to a 20% reduction in premature death compared to just 4% for slower walkers.

The NHS said that we should aim for a 4.8km/hour pace. Speaking to HuffPost UK previously, Dr Hussain Ahmad said brisk walking “means you’re walking fast enough to feel warmer and breathe a bit harder, but [are] still able to hold a conversation”.

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2) Take a hilly route if you can

“Incline walking,” or walking on a slope, seems to engage more muscles and raise heart rates higher than walking on a flat surface.

Speaking to HuffPost UK previously, GP Dr Suzanne Wylie said: “For many people, especially those who are new to exercise, carrying excess weight, managing joint pain or recovering from injury, incline walking can provide meaningful cardiovascular benefit and muscle engagement.”

Even downhill walking may benefit us, especially as we age.

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3) Bring a friend

Speaking to the University of Oxford, Dr Arran Davis said that fatigue is much more determined by how we feel than by the actual condition of our muscles.

Social support helps to reduce and delay that perceived fatigue, helping us to push ourselves for longer. The effect is so strong that even seeing a photo of a supportive friend makes us feel less tired.

4) Try ‘Japanese walking’

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10,000 steps a day is a marketing tool – scientists have since found that around 7,000 paces daily is enough to lower your risk of all-cause mortality by 47%.

But “Japanese walking,” a type of interval walking that involves walking for three minutes at a fast pace and then slowly for another three minutes until you reach a half-hour walking, may be one of the most beneficial ways to reach that goal.

A 2007 paper found that among middle-aged participants, people who followed that pattern enjoyed lower blood pressure, stronger thigh muscles, and better aerobic ability than those who walked 8,000 steps a day at a steady pace.

5) Walk for at least half an hour a day if you can (but remember that something is better than nothing if you can’t)

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The NHS recommends getting 20-30 minutes of moderate-intensity activity, like walking, a day.

A 2023 review found that “Meeting current physical activity guidelines by walking briskly for 30 min per day for 5 days can reduce the risk of several age-associated diseases”; in post-menopausal women, for instance, half an hour’s walk a day was linked to a 40% lower risk of hip fracture.

Of course, until about 9,800 steps a day – when health benefits max out – more walking is generally better. But the NHS points out that “a brisk 10-minute daily walk has lots of health benefits,” and a recent study found that 4.5 minutes extra movement a day can reduce your heart attack risk.

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Wes Moore criticizes Trump for talking about Medicare cuts

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Wes Moore criticizes Trump for talking about Medicare cuts

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore said it was “nonsense” for President Donald Trump to say that the United States should not have to pay for Medicare or day care because the nation was busy fighting wars.

“That’s nonsense,” Moore said in an interview that aired Sunday on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” “And that’s not what any of us want. We don’t want to be fighting foreign wars while you’re taking away our health care.”

Moore was responding to a question by Ed O’Keefe about a statement the president made Wednesday at an Easter luncheon at the White House. “It’s not possible for us to take care of day care, Medicaid, Medicare, all these individual things,” Trump told that gathering. “They can do it on a state basis. You can’t do it on a federal. We have to take care of one thing: military protection. We have to guard the country.”

Video of the president’s remarks was posted on the White House online, but subsequently deleted.

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In addressing those remarks, Moore said no state had the capability of replacing the federal government as a provider for everything.

“So many of the decisions that this White House is making, they are making with a clear understanding that no state has a budget to say, ‘OK, well, we’ll just take on health care,’ or ‘We’ll just take on food insecurity,’” he said.

Moore, who served in the 82nd Airborne Division in Afghanistan, also challenged how Trump has handled the Iran war — and all the side effects the war has caused.

“I think the president still does not have a full articulation as to why gas prices are going up in the first place, or what’s going to be necessary or required to be able to bring them down,” he said.

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Farage Wrongly Says Simon Dudley Was Only Reform Housing Contact For Two Weeks

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Farage Wrongly Says Simon Dudley Was Only Reform Housing Contact For Two Weeks

Nigel Farage has wrongly claimed that a senior Reform UK official sacked for offensive comments about the Grenfell tragedy was only in his post for two weeks.

Simon Dudley was dumped by Farage as the party’s housing spokesman following a furious backlash to his remarks.

A major overhaul of building regulations took place after 72 people were killed in Grenfell Tower in west London in 2017.

But in an interview with trade publication Inside Housing, Dudley said the pendulum had “swung too far the wrong way”.

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He said the Grenfell fire was a “tragedy” but added: “Sadly, you know, everyone dies in the end. It’s just how you go, right?”

Farage announced his sacking during a press conference on Thursday.

He said: “He’s no longer a spokesman for the party. That has been dealt with.”

In a bad-tempered interview afterwards with Sky News, Farage said: “He was appointed two weeks ago, he’s made these comments, he’s no longer there.”

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But Reform actually announced Dudley had been handed the role on March 10.

In a press release, deputy leader Richard Tice said: “He understands planning, finance and regeneration. He knows how to get projects moving. That is exactly what we need. ”

Elsewhere in his Sky News interview, Farage tried to shift the blame for the row onto Tice.

He said: “I met [Dudley] once for two minutes, I don’t know the guy. Richard’s in charge of development, housing, economics. He thought he was the right person to put in place because of his considerable expertise in the area. That’s undoubted.

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“But whether you’ve got expertise and media skills, where you’re not going to say something that trips yourself up, they’re different.”

Nearly 24 hours on from Farage announcing Dudley’s sacking, Tice has yet to publicly comment.

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Why Raspberries Have Black Sheets But Strawberries Don’t

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Why Raspberries Have Black Sheets But Strawberries Don't

It’s amazing how much of everyday life I didn’t question for years – like what “wi-fi” really means, where we get paprika from, and what ASDA actually stands for.

And opening my fridge this afternoon, another banal mystery confronted me. What’s that squidgy black mat at the bottom of raspberry trays for, and why isn’t it in the bottom of my strawberry tray?

It seems I’m not alone. Posting to r/NoStupidQuestions, Redditor u/GrumpyOldSophon asked about the addition, wondering why you “never find this in packages of blueberries or strawberries”.

The sheet is absorbent, but it may have other qualities

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It probably won’t shock you to learn that the sheet is there to absorb some moisture. Packaging specialists Packaging World described these sheets as “dual ply absorbent” material, “applied to a totally absorbent, yet sealed, topcoat”.

They’re designed for softer fruits, like raspberries and blueberries, as these aren’t as hardy as, e.g., strawberries or grapes. Speaking to Eating Well, Robert Schueller, a produce expert at Melissa’s Produce, said: “A raspberry is one of the most delicate fruits out there, so they have to be packaged very carefully”.

They provide some cushioning for the delicate fruits as they’re transported, too. And because they wick away moisture, they can help to prevent mould.

It makes sense for it to be black or red as it’s designed to catch berry juices, which would otherwise stain it.

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Though there may be another, unexpected benefit here: pitching their black cartonboard packaging for strawberries, MM Karton said: “The contrast of black cartonboard and red strawberries is a real eye-catcher at the point of sale”.

Perhaps the red berry/black sheet colour combo makes our raspberries look more inviting, too.

That’s also why raspberries are packed into smaller containers

I have enjoyed many a mega-size box of strawberries this year.

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But it turns out retailers aren’t being stingy for limiting their raspberry carton sizes; the berries are too delicate to be stacked on top of each other, unlike strawberries and even blueberries.

And, Schueller added, “you need to allow space for air in each package, too”.

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UN Condemns Trumps Iran Threats As War Crimes

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UN Condemns Trumps Iran Threats As War Crimes

A senior United Nations officials has warned Donald Trump that targeting key civilian infrastructure in Iran would be “war crimes”.

The US president said bridges and power plants could be destroyed unless the regime in Tehran agrees a peace deal to end the conflict.

His comments, in a post on Truth Social, came nearly five weeks after the war began with a wave of Israeli and US strikes.

Trump said: “Our Military, the greatest and most powerful (by far!) anywhere in the World, hasn’t even started destroying what’s left in Iran. Bridges next, then Electric Power Plants! New Regime leadership knows what has to be done, and has to be done, FAST!”

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But speaking on Radio 4′s Today programme, Tom Fletcher, the UN’s under-secretary general for humanitarian affairs, said that would be a clear violation of international law.

He said: “This is infuriating. We’re dealing with the intended and unintended consequences of this reckless conflict, and I think what everyone is observing now is that war is not a television game show.

“Peacemaking is not a real estate deal and the world is not a casino and these actions have real consequences.”

Fletcher added: “This has been a gradual and then very sudden deterioration in the way that we talk about protection of civilians, the way that we talk about international humanitarian law.

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“This stuff isn’t negotiable. You don’t hit civilian infrastructure.

“You don’t hit schools, you don’t hit energy sources, you don’t hit bridges. Those are war crimes. That is absolutely clear in international law.

“But somewhere along the way we seem to have thrown that all aside and we’ve chosen impunity, indifference, game show gambling over solidarity and humanity.”

“You don’t hit schools, you don’t hit energy sources, you don’t hit bridges: those are war crimes.”

UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher criticises actions in the Iran war and says leaders have chosen ‘game show gambling’ over humanity by hitting civilian infrastructure. pic.twitter.com/boGJjSsZbp

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— BBC Radio 4 Today (@BBCr4today) April 3, 2026

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