Politics
Are Supermarkets ‘Taking The Mickey’ With Olive Oil Prices?
In 2024, Miguel Guzmán, the chief sales officer of Deoleo (a huge olive oil producer which owns brands like Bertolli), said prices were expected to drop by as much as half in early 2025.
That’s because growing conditions had improved in Spain. “The market is expected to begin to stabilise, and normality is expected to be gradually restored as the new harvest progresses and supply increases,” he said at the time.
But over a year on, Filippo Berio director Walter Zanre has said that supermarkets are “taking the mickey” with the prices they expect customers to pay for the product, despite lower wholesale costs.
“We brought prices down twice last year and it’s not all been passed on to the consumer, which is a huge frustration,” he told Sky News.
He added, “The supermarket was surprised at how resilient the shopper was at high prices, so the view is they don’t need to give it all away for nothing”.
In other words, he suggested high prices made them realise just how much more UK shoppers would spend on the product, and they aren’t willing to give that up just because their costs are lower.
We asked the UK Food Council, who said they’d noticed “an upward trend in all food costs” to weigh in on the topic, which they’re “watching closely”.
Why are olive oil prices so high?
“The prediction that prices would halve in 2024 was based on a reasonable expectation,” a UK Food Council spokesperson told us.
“Spain’s harvest was forecast to rebound significantly, and wholesale costs did indeed begin to fall. The problem is that retail prices tend to follow wholesale costs on the way up much faster than they do on the way down.”
To some extent, they added, that can be a reasonable buffer against future risk. In 2022 and 2023, growing conditions in Spain (the biggest producer of olive oil in the world) were so poor that the country only exported half its usual output.
“Supermarkets are understandably cautious – they lock in contracts in advance and factor in hedging costs,” the spokesperson said.
Nonetheless, “the scale of the gap between what brands like Filippo Berio are now charging and what’s sitting on shelf does raise real questions”.
Zanre said that he expected olive oil sales to “fall off a cliff” when they reached their recent price highs. But he added that UK sales only dropped by 20% or so.
“To put it in context: a 500ml bottle of Filippo Berio extra virgin olive oil retailed at around £3.75 in 2022, peaked at roughly £10.50 at the start of 2025, and has since come down to around £7.50 as wholesale prices eased,” the UK Food Council member said.
“That’s still double what it was three years ago, even as the underlying commodity cost has fallen sharply. ONS data from late 2025 showed retail olive oil prices down about 16% year-on-year – meaningful progress, but arguably not proportionate to how far wholesale costs have dropped.”
This is “suggestive”, said the UK Food Council
“Are supermarkets taking advantage of consumers who’ve adjusted to higher prices? It’s difficult to prove intent, but the economics are suggestive. Once shoppers have normalised paying £9 or £10 for a bottle, there’s less commercial pressure to drop back towards £5,” the spokesperson stated.
“That said, increased competition – particularly from Greek and Portuguese oils gaining shelf space – may do more to force prices down than any public pressure campaign.”
Speaking to The Independent, Andrew Opie, director of food and sustainability at the British Retail Consortium, said that supermarkets are doing their best to pass savings on to customers and “operate on very tight margins, reflecting a market driven by savvy customers.
“Olive oil, like many everyday products, is something shoppers can compare across brands and retailers to take advantage of promotions or switch to alternatives that suit their budget”.
Politics
Angie Craig builds fundraising lead in Minnesota Senate primary
Rep. Angie Craig (D-Minn.) holds an edge over Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan in fundraising, well ahead of the state’s Democratic primary in August.
Craig raised $2.5 million in the first quarter of the year, according to Federal Elections Commission filings, besting Flanagan’s haul of $1.3 million. That sets up Craig with $4.8 million in cash on hand, more than the $1.1 million Flanagan has in the bank.
Flanagan’s filing also shows her burning money at a rapid rate: Her campaign spent more than $1 million in the first quarter, nearly as much as it raised.
Campaign contributions are poised to become a wedge issue in the competitive Democratic primary. Flanagan has attacked Craig for accepting contributions from corporate PACs and has pledged not to take their money.
Politics
Sherrod Brown posts big cash advantage over Jon Husted
Former Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown’s fundraising haul is dwarfing his opponent’s, keeping Democrats’ hopes of flipping the Ohio Senate seat alive.
Brown raised $10.1 million in the first quarter of the year compared with GOP Sen. Jon Husted’s $2.9 million, according to Federal Elections Commission filings. Brown carries $16.5 million in cash on hand, more than doubling Husted’s $8.2 million in cash reserves heading into both parties’ uncontested primaries in May.
Senate Republicans are planning major investments to help Husted win his first election after he was appointed to Vice President JD Vance’s former seat last year. Senate Leadership Fund, the top Senate GOP super PAC, pledged to spend $79 million in Ohio.
Democrats are hoping Brown, who served in Congress for over 30 years before he lost reelection to Sen. Bernie Moreno in 2024, can put the red-leaning state back within reach.
Politics
Cornyn heads into Texas Senate runoff with more money than Paxton
Texas GOP Sen. John Cornyn boasts a significantly larger war chest than his primary opponent, putting the embattled incumbent in a stronger financial position ahead of the May runoff.
Cornyn ended the first quarter of the year with more than $8 million in cash on hand, compared with Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s $2.6 million in the bank, according to disclosures filed with the Federal Election Commission.
The Cornyn-Paxton face-off has grown nasty and highly personal as Republicans grow uneasy about beating James Talarico, the Democratic Senate nominee who raised an extraordinary $27 million last quarter and has about $9.9 million cash on hand. President Donald Trump has so far declined to endorse in the race, despite teasing a pick for several weeks.
Cornyn’s joint fundraising committees comprised the vast majority of his roughly $9 million fundraising haul. Paxton reported raising $2.2 million.
Politics
Trans insanity lives on, despite the Supreme Court ruling
I was in the courtroom when the UK Supreme Court judgment on gender was handed down a year ago today. It felt like witnessing a pivotal moment in history.
After years of politicians, institutions and a vocal minority of the public insisting we go along with the pretence that men could be women, the judges stated something that should never have been in doubt: that in equality law, the term ‘sex’ means biological sex.
Like many people, I assumed that the ruling would settle things – that people would stop pretending not to know what a woman is, and that sanity would return to public life. I imagined the NHS would quietly drop its talk of ‘chest feeding’ and ‘cervix havers’, and that women could object to the intrusion of a bearded man in a dress into their changing room without fear of being labelled a bigot. Having lost my own livelihood for taking issue with the phrase ‘pregnant people’, I also hoped the ruling might mark the end of language policing. Soon, I thought, we’d all be laughing about those absurd times when ‘misgendering’ could get you into trouble at work. Families and friends might even stop falling out over whether humans can or cannot change sex. When some of my own relationships had fractured due to my gender-critical views, it had been a painful affair.
But I was naive. A year on, very little seems to have changed. Britain might have achieved legal clarity on sex, but what it doesn’t yet have is the will to enforce it.
Don’t get me wrong, there have been a few positive developments: puberty blockers have been restricted. The International Olympic Committee has moved to protect female sporting categories. Further to that, a number of high-profile women’s rights violations have cut through. The stories of Sandie Peggie and the Darlington Nurses, who were forced to take legal action over a man using their workplace changing rooms, have appeared in the press and on TV. The experience of nurse Jennifer Melle, who was suspended for ‘misgendering’ a male patient (a convicted paedophile who had racially abused her, no less), went viral. But the pattern has been depressingly similar in every case: the women who raise concerns are routinely accused of being unkind, exclusionary and treated as the problem. All in an era when we’re told we ought to ‘believe women’.
I was reminded of how little the ruling actually registered on a freezing January morning, when I covered a protest outside a gym in Southwark. A woman had been banned from the premises for raising complaints about a man in the women’s changing room. A counter-protest of masked trans activists was present, who shouted and swore at us female journalists for having the audacity to cover the event.
Even some apparent victories have not felt as such. When Girlguiding and the Women’s Institute announced last December, just one day apart, that they would no longer accept males into their ranks, it seemed like progress. But having covered what happened next for the Telegraph, it soon became clear that both organisations were more focussed on managing their own public image than in implementing the ruling – or protecting the girls and women they exist to serve.
Astonishingly, Girlguiding set up a 500-strong ‘taskforce’ to support the biological men and boys who were no longer able to take part. At the same time, dissatisfied activists within its own ranks have created a splinter group, Guiders Against Trans Exclusion (GATE), and have encouraged children to attend its protests. Several such protests took place across the UK at the weekend, with photos emerging of very young children holding political placards and chalking ‘Trans girls are girls’ on pavements.
The Women’s Institute is not much different. It continues to push ‘sisterhood’ groups – open to biological men as well as women – while CEO Melissa Green openly insists that ‘transwomen are women’. This position, of course, sits rather awkwardly with the organisation’s own constitution.
But what exactly is holding these institutions back from implementing what is now the law? Officially, it’s a lack of guidance. The long-awaited update from the Equality and Human Rights Commission has left organisations in a convenient holding pattern. Though the equalities minister, Bridget Phillipson, is on record saying the government intends to uphold the Supreme Court ruling (including that organisations need not wait for the updated guidance to do so), many continue to take their sweet time.
It seems that admitting gender ideology went too far is profoundly difficult for those who played along. More than just a policy shift, this is a reckoning. It will mean acknowledging ideas once presented as ‘progressive’ now seem confused at best, and deeply harmful at worst.
For individuals – parents, friends, family – it means holding their hands up and saying they got it wrong. For institutions, the road will be far more difficult. Hence the stalemate we now find ourselves in. While we may have legal clarity on the surface, denial still pervades everywhere else.
Janet Murray is a journalist writing on women, culture and public policy. Follow her on X: @jan_murray.
Politics
Roy Cooper far outraises Michael Whatley in North Carolina Senate race
In North Carolina, former Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper continues to far outraise Republican Michael Whatley, growing a massive cash disparity in one of the most closely watched Senate races this year.
Cooper raised $13.8 million to Whatley’s $5 million in the first quarter of the year, according to disclosures filed with the Federal Election Commission. That encompasses both the run-up to and aftermath of their effectively uncontested primaries in early March.
Cooper entered the second quarter with $18.5 million in cash on hand while Whatley reported having more than $2.5 million in the bank.
North Carolina is a top target for Democrats. Cooper, the swing state’s most recent governor, draws on his broad name ID to pull in a sizable fundraising haul. Most polling shows him with a double-digit lead over Whatley.
National Republicans are planning to give Whatley, the former RNC chair, a major boost. Senate Leadership Fund has pledged $71 million to the Senate race.
Politics
Fuel protests a chance to ‘rattle our failed status quo’
Protestors have blocked numerous major roads across the north of Ireland in response to fuel price increases resulting from the illegal US-Israeli led war on Iran. The highly effective disruptive actions mirror those that have taken place in the south of the island over the past week. Slow moving tractors held up traffic on the Sydenham bypass and West Link in the Belfast area. The Belfast Telegraph reported protests still ongoing in County Tyrone well into Tuesday evening. There were at least eight sites of protest in total.
The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) responded by issuing fines. In a statement, they said:
…a number of other persons were cautioned for public order offences.
People Before Profit (PBP) MLA Gerry Carroll said the police had behaved “disgracefully”. The West Belfast Assembly member also highlighted how the:
Irish Government’s majority has been shrunk by the cost of living protests.
Taoiseach Martin hit by backlash on cost of living failures
This is in reference to the fallout following a confidence vote on Taoiseach Micheál Martin’s regime that resulted in two TDs leaving the government for the opposition benches. Leading licker-of-the-US boot Martin now has 92 TDs backing him. 87 are needed for a majority in the Dáil. The government ultimately won the confidence vote by a margin of 92 to 78.
The Irish government responded in brutish fashion at the weekend to fuel protests. They brought in the army, while the Garda needlessly deployed pepper spray, including against a 14 year old boy.
Martin has faced intense criticism, both for the response to the blockades, and for allowing things to escalate to that point. Sinn Féin’s leader Mary Lou McDonald described the government as:
Arrogant and incompetent. Half measures don’t cut it. We need to see the maximum reduction in fuel prices at the pumps. The people have no confidence in this useless government. They should back their bags and go.
Martin ultimately said the government would provide €505 million in funds to tackle the fuel price crisis his government helped to generate.
Carroll concluded his X post by saying all the above showed:
…a simple truth: a cost of living movement can rattle our failed status-quo. Workers & unions can lead the charge!
In a longer statement, People Before Profit called on those groups to step forward:
We must demand that our unions enter the fight. Workers did not cause this crisis. Energy companies, war-makers and a government that serves corporate interests did. The unions have the membership, the resources and the leverage to force real change on the cost of living. It is time to use them. Every trade union branch, every shop steward, every community organisation should be discussing what action can be taken and building for it now.
Belfast — Far right hijacking protests fuel protests
They criticised unions for failing to lead thus far on the cost of living crisis, leaving a vacuum for the far right to exploit::
Some of the loudest figures attaching themselves to these protests are cheerleaders for Trump, for racism, and in some cases for Israel. They want to blame migrants, LGBT people or whoever else is convenient, instead of the profiteers, war-makers and politicians actually responsible.
Failed presidential aspirant Conor McGregor is one such clown. The washed-up ex-MMA fighter has previously voiced anti-immigrant ‘Ireland for the Irish’ views. In an X post, McGregor gave his support to protestors, while attempting to push immigration as a central woe alongside the cost of living. He railed against:
[The government’s] complete failure on housing, their refusal to ease the crushing cost of living crisis, the disastrous handling of immigration that has overwhelmed their communities and services and the shocking way that they have treated ordinary Irish people in recent days.
A farmer protesting near Belfast was quoted by the BBC offering a similar formulation:
We have money for everything else – we can spend overseas, we can help people coming to this country, we can’t help our own people.
As we’ve recognised before, the class configuration of the protests is complex. PBP suggest that the movement is currently:
…led by people who own companies, employ workers and have access to expensive machinery.
Nonetheless, they correctly point to:
…a real mix of people in and around this movement, including many working class people looking on sympathetically.
The imperfect politics of those involved shouldn’t be a reason for the left not to seize low hanging fruit for progressive organisers – the cost of living crisis exacerbated by illegal wars abroad.
Pro-Palestine group BDS Belfast had an idea along those lines, showing the similar treatment Palestine protestors and fuel protestors received, even if the latter were granted slightly more leeway by the state. In an Instagram post, they said:
We’re all bearing the costs of illegal US and Israeli violence. The Irish government must end its support for these crimes NOW!
One struggle, against those in power harming us all.
Solidarity
![]()
Featured image via the BelfastTelegraph
Politics
Declassified files show Zionist terror group’s desire to work with Nazi Germany
A file released by the ‘Israeli’ government shows the notorious Zionist terror group Lehi, also known as the Stern Gang, attempted to partner with the Nazis to fight Britain during World War 2.
The Haganah, a larger and more organised Zionist terror force, created the documents in 1941 while spying on Lehi. The Haganah largely cooperated with Britain during the war against the Axis powers. They were later involved a series of murderous attacks against British forces in Palestine, and gave their approval for the bombing of the King David Hotel.
Haaretz say the file was:
…kept in the IDF [sic] archives and later transferred to the State Archives. About three years ago, Haaretz requested that it be declassified. It was recently scanned and uploaded.
In it, the Haganah’s founder Eliyahu Golomb reports discovering that Lehi leader Avraham Stern had connections with the Nazi regime. A document in the file lays out Stern’s strategy:
With the outbreak of World War II… Stern argued that there is no better time for a war of independence than during wartime. Britain’s forces are tied down… and it would be possible to overcome them. The question of orientation seemed simple to him.The Jews are a party in the war and therefore cannot be neutral. Britain betrayed the Jewish people and will never allow the establishment of a Jewish state. On the other hand, Germany has no special interest in Palestine, and since the Nazis want to cleanse Europe of Jews, nothing is simpler than transferring them to their own state.
Stern: attempted Nazi pact to counter British conniving
Stern’s notion of British betrayal likely relates to the switch in stance Britain adopted towards Jewish groups in Palestine in the late 1930s. Concerned that Arab support was ebbing away due to their backing of a Jewish homeland in this part of West Asia, Britain began to change its policies.
Most notably, the then-hegemon produced the White Paper of 1939, which restricted Jewish immigration to Palestine and made it harder to sell land to non-Arab peoples. This callous imperial manoeuvring that varyingly produced resentment on all sides was key to Palestine’s grim fate that worsens to this day.
Stern’s views were far from novel. Years earlier in 1933, Zionists had signed the Transfer or Haavara Agreement. This was a deal with:
…the Nazi government that allowed some wealthy German Jews to immigrate to Palestine in exchange for purchasing German goods that were then exported to the Jewish community in Palestine.
At the time, Jewish groups worldwide had set up a boycott of German goods in response to the Nazis’ racist policies. The agreement suited both signatories. The Nazis would take a step towards the ethnic cleansing of Germany and gain much needed capital. The Zionists would get equipment to aid the development of their proto-state, and an influx of new people who could assist in their ultimate goal of ethnically cleansing Palestine.
To this day, the Zionist settler-colony is happy to partner with anti-semites if it suits the narrow interests of its fanatical, expansionist land theft project. Stern’s wartime plans were along much the same lines, looking to “reach a practical agreement with the Germans” in a belief that the:
…Jews of Europe should be recruited into a special army that would fight its way to Palestine and conquer it from the British.
Lehi foresaw:
…shared interests between German policy and Jewish national aspirations.
However, Haaretz claim:
Lehi’s contacts with the Nazis ultimately came to nothing.
Vicious Zionist terror legacy continues
Post-war, the Stern Gang played an infamous role in the Nakba. This was the ethnic cleansing of Palestine in which Zionist terrorists killed 15,000 Palestinians and drove around 750,000 from their homes. The Gang helped carry out the Deir Yassin massacre, where Zionist murderers slaughtered over 100 Palestinians. Those killed “were tied to trees and burned to death”. Others were “lined up against a wall and shot by submachine guns” including “women, children and the elderly”. Ex-Lehi member Yitzhak Shamir went on to serve twice as prime minister of so-called ‘Israel’.
The terror group dissolved after World War 2, but its vicious, racist mentality lives on in contemporary ‘Israel’. Stern may not have got his wish to partner with the Nazis, but the Zionist entity has gone one better — it has become the closest modern equivalent to the Third Reich, as it continues its holocaust in Gaza.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Anti-genocide protesters denied bail, first hearing 1 May
A group of three anti-genocide protesters have been imprisoned without bail until at least 1 May, after appearing at Westminster magistrates’ court on the morning of 14 April. The three, members of People Against Genocide, have been charged over a direct action protest against Keysight Technologies. A supporter explained why they took the action:
View this post on Instagram
People Against Genocide reports that the US-owned company makes radar and electronic systems that it supplies to Israeli murder-drone makers Elbit Systems. The group shared footage of the action, which was featured on Channel 4 News:
People Against Action has targeted other locations belonging to Keysight Technologies have been targeted in the UK over the past year.

The three people charged are Steven Davies, 57 (pictured above), Ian Roberts, 51, and Dolores Gnapi, 34. The firm claims that they caused more than £2m of damage to its facility during the protest.
The refusal of bail fits the Starmer government’s pattern of attempting to “make the process itself the punishment.” This is part of the government’s ‘lawfare’ war on anti-genocide and pro-Palestine journalism, speech and protest.
Featured image via Barold
By Skwawkbox
Politics
Sunderland Left Alliance to host May Day heritage festival
A day of family fun, unity and heritage is coming to Wearside this May Day Weekend. On Saturday 2 May, Sunderland Left Alliance will host Sunderland May Day Fest in the heart of the city centre.
The event, running across two locations in Sunniside, will celebrate Sunderland’s May Day heritage.
From 11am – 2pm Port Independent will be filled with family friendly heritage crafts such as rosette and placard making, Hope Stars, and talks on the history of May Day. There will also be an Indy book sale from PM Press and a book swap with Sunderland Literacy Aid.
Then from 2pm onwards, Diego’s Joint will be host to live music, theatre and speeches from some of the city’s brightest talents. Forum Theatre will present an interactive piece on how to talk to your right wing family.
There will be music from Slalom D, James Thoroughgood and many others, with poetry and speeches from organisations across the region.
The event will come just days before all 75 seats in Sunderland Council are up for re-election. In this turbulent political climate, Sunderland Left Alliance aims to remind residents of not only our heritage, but how much the city can thrive when we come together for good.
Founder of Sunderland Left Alliance Auburn Langley said:
Politics is more than just elections. To build the world we want, we not only need to relearn how to work together, but have some fun with it!
Sunderland May Day Festival will take place on Saturday 2nd May from 11 am. To find out more visit the Facebook page.
Featured image supplied
By The Canary
Politics
‘Labour Together’ sabotage outfit now run by former IOF soldier peer
The Labour peer now running right-wing, Zionist sabotage outfit ‘Labour Together’ has been revealed to be a former IOF soldier and ‘religious Zionist’. Activist journalist Jody McIntyre uncovered financier Jonathan Kestenbaum’s record, which has not been mentioned by Labour or Labour Together.
McIntyre believes Kestenbaum’s military history has been mostly ‘scrubbed’ from the web. However, he found one remaining mention of Kestenbaum’s training in the use of clubs and tear gas on Palestinians and his participation in a “brutal” curfew imposed to “break the spirit” of a Palestinian town in the occupied West Bank:
Kestenbaum was national secretary of the [religious Zionist] Bnei Akiva movement in his native England, and studied at the London School of Economics and at Cambridge University. He settled in Israel three years ago, is married, and has recently become a father.
He was called to serve a stint in the IDF reserves in August, and found an outlet for his frustrations in the diary below, a record of his day-to-day anguish. Kestenbaum says the very thing he and his colleagues were not prepared for were the moral questions posed by service in the administered territories, although they were taught how to use clubs and tear.
Coloniser in uniform
Kestenbaum’s unit was ordered to bring the town “to heel”, isolating it and cutting off power:
McIntyre noted that Kestenbaum’s Wikipedia page was updated minutes after his revelations went public, to include a mention of his period in the IOF:
View this post on Instagram
Kestenbaum’s activities were also mentioned in a 1998 US article, which quotes him recording his “shame”:
The hatred [for the IDF] is not surprising, considering that during the last 17 months, the army has shot and killed about 400 Palestinians, wounded thousands of others, thrown more than 6000 of them into prison, blown up more than 200 of their homes, and kicked 45 of them out of the country.
It is not only that, as the reservist Jonathan Kestenbaum wrote in a diary he kept of his time in the West Bank town of Qabatiya last year, ‘When a child of 3 looks at me with hatred, I feel ashamed of what I am doing.’
Kestenbaum appears to have recovered from his “shame”, however. He went on to hold a directorship of pro-Israel propaganda outfit BICOM for seven years.
Labour Together at the centre of it again
Labour Together was exposed as a key player in the anti-Labour sabotage campaign to lose the 2019 general election in order to oust then-leader Jeremy Corbyn. Morgan McSweeney, who admitted using the ‘Labour antisemitism’ scam as a primary tool of this sabotage, went on to become Keir Starmer’s leadership campaign manager and then his chief of staff. However, McSweeney resigned in disgrace in February 2026 over his part in plush senior jobs Starmer gave to corrupt pal of child-rapist Jeffrey Epstein, Peter Mandelson.
Before McSweeney’s resignation, while Labour Together was being managed by Josh Simons, another Starmer front-bencher, the organisation paid a US firm to spy on and attempt to discredit journalists who were investigating Labour Together’s funding and activities. Simons resigned from the front bench after being outed. Front-benchers Steve Reed and Lisa Nandy continue to be closely linked to the group.
Labour Together declined to comment.
Featured image via the Canary
By Skwawkbox
-
Politics5 days agoUS brings back mandatory military draft registration
-
Sports5 days agoMan United discover Nico Schlotterbeck transfer fee as defender reaches Dortmund agreement
-
Fashion5 days agoWeekend Open Thread: Veronica Beard
-
Politics6 days agoMalcolm In The Middle OG Turned Down ‘Buckets Of Money’ To Appear In Reboot
-
Politics4 days agoWorld Cup exit makes Italy enter crisis mode
-
Crypto World7 days agoCanary Capital Files SEC Registration for PEPE ETF
-
Business5 days agoTesla Model Y Tops China Auto Sales in March 2026 With 39,827 Registrations, Beating Cheaper EVs and Gas Cars
-
Crypto World2 days agoThe SEC Conditionalises DeFi Platforms to Be Avoided for Broker Registration
-
Crypto World2 days agoSEC Signals Exemption for Crypto Interfaces From Broker Registration
-
News Videos19 hours agoSecure crypto trading starts with an FIU-registered
-
NewsBeat3 days agoPep Guardiola and Gary Neville agree over Arsenal title problem that benefits Man City
-
Business6 days agoOpenAI Halts Stargate UK Data Centre Project Over Energy Costs and Copyright Row
-
Business4 days agoIreland Fuel Protests Enter Day 5 as Blockades Spark Shortages and Government Prepares Support Package
-
Crypto World5 days agoFederal judge blocks Arizona from bringing criminal charges against Kalshi
-
Politics6 days agoLBC Presenter Mocks Trump Over Iran War Failures
-
NewsBeat4 days agoJD Vance announces ‘no agreement’ with Iran over nuclear weapons fear
-
Crypto World2 days agoSEC Proposes Certain Crypto Interfaces Don’t Need to Register as Brokers
-
NewsBeat2 days agoTrump and Pope Leo: Behind their disagreement over Iran war
-
Tech6 days agoA version of Windows 10 released a decade ago is now eligible for additional security patches
-
Business5 days agoIMF retains floor for precautionary balances at SDR 20 billion

You must be logged in to post a comment Login