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How Has Mandelson’s Downfall Endangered Starmer?

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Ex-Prime Minister and Labour Party leader, Gordon Brown, right, and then-Business Secretary Peter Mandelson react as they speak to the media about economy in a press conference in London, Monday, April 19, 2010.

Keir Starmer’s premiership is hanging by a thread this weekend as new details about Peter Mandelson’s friendship with the convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein continue to drip into the public consciousness.

When the prime minister sacked Mandelson as the UK’s ambassador to Washington over his Epstein ties in September, he must have hoped the scandal was dealt with. The events of the past week show how wrong he was.

The latest chapter in the saga was triggered by the US Department of Justice publishing more than three million documents on the late sex offender and his connections to the rich and powerful.

The files revealed that Mandelson was even more entwined with the disgraced financier than previously assumed – putting Starmer’s judgement in appointing him to the plum diplomatic role into sharp focus.

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Amid mounting anger from the public and his own MPs, the prime minister ended up apologising on Thursday for ever believing Mandelson’s “lies”.

Here’s a breakdown of how we got to this point – and what might happen next.

Who Is Peter Mandelson?

Mandelson has been in Labour circles for decades, often referred to as the “Prince of Darkness” because of his ruthless nature, capacity for scandals and love of political intrigue.

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He worked as the director of communications to then-party leader Neil Kinnock in the 1980s before being elected as the Labour MP for Hartlepool in 1992.

A key architect of the New Labour project, he helped Tony Blair win the party leadership in 1994 and ran Labour’s successful general election campaign in 1997.

Blair rewarded Mandelson with the post of minister without portfolio, a roving commission which gave him enormous power over the government machine.

However, the personal frailties – and the attraction to money – which would later bring about his downfall led to his resignation after barely a year when he failed to declare a loan from a cabinet colleague whose business dealings Mandelson’s own department was investigating.

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After a year on the backbenches licking his wounds, Blair brought him back into the cabinet as Northern Ireland secretary the following year, at the time a key role as the peace process faltered.

But once again, barely a year later, Mandelson was forced to resign, this time for lying about his role in brokering a British passport for a wealthy donor to the Millennium Dome project.

After famously declaring he was “a fighter, not a quitter” when retaining his Hartlepool seat in 2001, Mandelson stood down as an MP in 2004 to become a European trade commissioner, a post he held until he made another dramatic political comeback in 2008.

Gordon Brown, who had succeeded Blair the previous year, stunned Westminster by making Mandelson – his New Labour nemesis – a life peer and appointing him business secretary and de facto deputy prime minister.

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He finally left frontline politics, apparently for good, when Labour lost the 2010 general election.

Ex-Prime Minister and Labour Party leader, Gordon Brown, right, and then-Business Secretary Peter Mandelson react as they speak to the media about economy in a press conference in London, Monday, April 19, 2010.
Ex-Prime Minister and Labour Party leader, Gordon Brown, right, and then-Business Secretary Peter Mandelson react as they speak to the media about economy in a press conference in London, Monday, April 19, 2010.

How Did Mandelson Come Back Into Government?

Despite his complete lack of diplomatic experience, Mandelson was appointed the UK’s ambassador to Washington a year ago.

He quickly established a rapport with President Donald Trump and was a key figure in negotiations on a UK/US trade deal and technology partnership.

Mandelson also helped to smooth over American concerns around the UK government’s decision to hand sovereignty over the strategically-important Chagos Islands to Mauritius.

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His return to the heart of British politics was seen as a reward for his years of behind-the-scenes work with Morgan McSweeney – now Starmer’s chief of staff – to help return Labour to government.

McSweeney is known to have pushed the PM to give Mandelson the ambassador’s role, a judgement call which has intensified calls from Labour MPs for him to be sacked.

What Was Mandelson’s Relationship To Epstein?

The nature of their friendship has come out in drips and drabs over the years. Here’s a breakdown of what is currently public knowledge – and when it was first revealed.

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June 2023

A Financial Times report from June 2023 unveiled how an internal JP Morgan report, dating back to 2019, noted Epstein’s “particularly close relationship with Prince Andrew the Duke of York and Lord Peter Mandelson, a senior member of the British government”.

The report was commissioned to shed light on JPMorgan’s 15-year relationship with Epstein and refers to a range of meetings between the disgraced financier and Mandelson.

The dossier also found Mandelson had stayed at Epstein’s lavish townhouse in Manhatten when he was the UK’s business secretary while the convicted criminal was in prison for soliciting underage sex from a minor.

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In this image provided by the New York State Sex Offender Registry, Jeffrey Epstein has his photo taken March 28, 2017.
In this image provided by the New York State Sex Offender Registry, Jeffrey Epstein has his photo taken March 28, 2017.

February 2025

Mandelson was appointed as US ambassador in February last year, after going through routine due diligence and security vetting.

When asked about his Epstein connection by the Financial Times’ George Parker during an extensive interview, the former Labour cabinet minister said: “I regret ever meeting him or being introduced to him by his partner Ghislaine Maxwell.”

Maxwell is currently in prison for recruiting and trafficking underaged girls for the financier.

Mandelson added: “I regret even more the hurt he caused to many young women.”

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However, according to the FT report, “an icy chill” then descended during their conversation on the train, and Mandelson added: “I’m not going to go into this. It’s an FT obsession and frankly you can all fuck off. OK?”

When later asked about Mandelson’s language, the prime minister’s spokesperson told reporters: “The prime minister has made clear the expertise and the experience Lord Mandelson has in relation to becoming ambassador to the US.”

September 2025

The seeds of Mandelson’s political demise were sown last autumn, when US lawmakers released a tranche of documemts relating to Epstein.

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They included a “birthday book” which contained a message from Mandelson in which he described Epstein as his “best pal”.

But it was a further revelation, that Mandelson told Epstein in an email that “your friends stay with you and love you” even as he was facing child underage sex charges in 2008, that proved to be the final straw.

Despite telling MPs that he had “confidence” in his ambassador, Starmer eventually sacked Mandelson, just seven months after appointing him.

“The emails show that the depth and extent of Peter Mandelson’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein is materially different from that known at the time of his appointment,” the Foreign Office said.

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President Donald Trump, left and former UK ambassador to the United States Peter Mandelson, in the Oval Office.
President Donald Trump, left and former UK ambassador to the United States Peter Mandelson, in the Oval Office.

January 2026

Despite being sacked in disgrace, Mandelson appeared poised to make another remarkable comeback thanks to a series of high-profile media appearances at the start of this year.

They included an interview on Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg, the BBC’s flagship political programme.

However, he caused outrage when he failed to apologise to Epstein’s victims, saying only that he was sorry “for a system” which did not listen to victims’ voices.

“That system gave him protection but not them,” he said. “If I had not known, or if I was in any way complicit or culpable, of course I would apologise for it.”

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After an angry backlash, Mandelson rowed back the following day, saying: “I did not want to be held responsible for his [Epstein’s] crimes of which I was ignorant, not indifferent, because of the lies he told me and so many others.

“I was wrong to believe him following his conviction and to continue my association with him afterwards. I apologise unequivocally for doing so to the women and girls who suffered.”

February 2026

A new tranche of documents from the US’s Department of Justice (DoJ) came out at the start of February and finally sealed Mandelson’s fate.

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They appeared to show he had accepted $75,000 from the disgraced financier between 2003 and 2004, though Mandelson has said he has no recollection of receiving those payments and did not know if the documents were genuine.

But amid mounting public anger, he announced he was quitting the Labour Party to avoid “further embarrassment” last Sunday.

The scandal has only intensified since then, with Mandelson now facing a criminal investigation over allegations he passed market sensitive information to Epstein when he was business secretary and the government was dealing with the aftermath of the global financial crash.

Responding to the revelations, Starmer said Mandelson had “betrayed” Britain.

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Other emails show Mandelson and Epstein sharing crude jokes when the latter was released from prison – an occasion described as “Liberation Day” by the peer.

Lord Mandelson described Jeffrey Epstein’s release after he served his sentence for child sex offences as ‘Liberation Day!’

Mandelson asked Epstein how they should celebrate

Epstein responded with a crude joke about two strippers: ‘With grace and modesty (these are the names of… pic.twitter.com/i4WuDmP5ZK

— Steven Swinford (@Steven_Swinford) February 4, 2026

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How Has Mandelson Responded?

Mandelson announced last Tuesday that he was quitting the House of Lords, although it will require a special law to be passed to formally remove his title.

In a self-pitying interview with The Times carried out before the latest revelations, he tried to portray himself as a victim over his sacking as US ambassador.

“It was like a 5.30am drive-by shooting,” he said. “I was at the edge of something. Suddenly, I was put at the centre of it — as a result of historical emails of which I have no memory and no record.”

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Suggesting he still had a contribution to make to British politics, he said: “Hiding under a rock would be a disproportionate response to a handful of misguided historical emails, which I deeply regret sending.

“If it hadn’t been for the emails, I’d still be in Washington. Emails sent all those years ago didn’t change the relationship that I had with this monster.

“I feel the same about the recent download of Epstein files, none of which indicate wrongdoing or misdemeanour on my part.”

What Happens Next?

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After a Labour rebellion, the government has agreed to publish all documents relating Mandelson’s appointment as ambassador.

It’s thought there could be close to 100,000 government files related to the former Labour peer.

The police inquiry into Mandelson is also likely to continue for months, if not years, drawing out the political pain for Starmer and his government.

Scotland Yard confirmed on Friday they are searching two properties in their investigation, but Mandelson has not been “arrested and enquiries are ongoing”.

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What Does This Mean For Starmer?

Questions about Starmer’s judgment – which was already in doubt after a slew of government U-turns – have only intensified over the Mandelson scandal.

While the PM says he was lied to by Mandelson, his critics say the warning signs were already there long before the decision was taken to send him to Washington.

Harriet Harman, for the former Labour deputy leader and a party loyalist, told the Electoral Dysfunction podcast: “He’s got to stop blaming Mandelson and saying ‘he lied to me’ because actually he should never have been considering him in the first place.

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“And to say ‘he lied to me’ makes it look weak and naive and gullible. So it’s just completely the wrong thing.”

She added: “If he doesn’t take the path which is necessary, yes, this will finish him off and that will be a tragedy for the government, a tragedy for the country and tragedy for Keir Starmer.”

Mutinous Labour MPs believe Morgan McSweeney’s sacking is a necessary first step in repairing the huge political damage caused by the Mandelson scandal.

However, questions about Starmer’s own future continue to swirl, and are only likely to intensify in the days ahead.

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One MP told HuffPost UK: “Taking refuge in constituency stuff this weekend seems appealing.

“But trying to pretend it’s all a bad dream for a few days won’t work, as constituents will be taking the chance to make very clear how they feel about Starmer and Mandelson and that’ll end up feeding into things back in parliament next week.”

While his rivals sharpen their knives, Starmer tried to win back public favour by issuing a frank apology on Thursday, telling Epstein’s victims he’s “sorry” for ever believing Mandelson.

Will it be enough to save him, or is this scandal going to bring him down?

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This Mushroom Coffee Stopped My Caffeine Jitters

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This Mushroom Coffee Stopped My Caffeine Jitters

We hope you love the products we recommend! All of them were independently selected by our editors. Just so you know, HuffPost UK may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page if you decide to shop from them. Oh, and FYI — prices are accurate and items in stock as of time of publication.

Since I finished my GCSEs (throwback), I’ve been drinking around four cups of coffee a day.

I like to blame it on my five years of coffee shop shifts, but the truth is that every morning (and afternoon) I can’t help but top up my caffeine levels with just one more cup.

My addiction is so real that colleagues and friends have even commented on my intake, and when I get sick I find myself getting withdrawal headaches. You know the drill, I’m sure.

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Until now, I haven’t minded so much. But I’m getting to the point in my life where I notice the impact that much caffeine has on me more than ever.

I’m talking severe afternoon crashes, crazy caffeine jitters, an unwelcome boost to my anxiety and stomach issues, plus I need to pee a thousand times a day. To top it all off, my afternoon coffee habit means it often takes me a while to fall asleep at night.

Not to mention that I notice it impacts me differently at certain stages of my cycle. (Betcha didn’t know that taking the contraceptive pill makes you more sensitive to caffeine.)

So when I heard about London Nootropics’ mushroom coffee, I was curious to try it, especially as there is currently 20% off everything on their site with the code ‘HUFFPOST’.

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Benefits of mushroom coffee

Thanks to being packed with adaptogens, London Nootropics promises their coffee won’t give you the same afternoon crash as regular coffee.

Each of its blends includes a different combination of adaptogens to target specific concerns, like increasing energy, focus and mental clarity; reducing stress; and improving physical strength and endurance.

While caffeine, by design, increases our alertness and makes us feel more awake, it can also boost our cortisol levels and make us feel more stressed and anxious – like anyone needs that.

It’s also absorbed into the bloodstream quickly, which is why it’s common to experience a caffeine crash.

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However, London Nootropics claims that adding adaptogens like L-theanine, cordyceps, and ashwagandha could help to offset the more negative side effects of coffee while still making you feel more awake.

How I tested London Nootropics

Honey Jane Wyatt

Determined to see if mushroom coffee could make a difference to my work week, I switched out my morning and afternoon coffees with London Nootropics for a week.

I averaged around three coffees a day while drinking London Nootropics. Depending on how I felt each day, I chose between Mush Love (to ‘elevate your morning,’ with a blend of cordyceps and lion’s mane for energy and cognitive balance) and the Selection Box, which contains three different blends.

  • Flow: For ‘mental clarity and balance’ with a blend of lion’s mane and rhodiola;
  • Mojo: For ‘endurance and vitality’ with a blend of cordyceps and siberian ginseng;
  • Zen: For ‘calm and balance’ with a blend of l-theanine and ashwagandha.

Not one to disobey instructions, I reached for Mush Love for my first coffee of the morning, unless I was going to the gym or a Pilates class, when I drank Mojo. Zen and Flow were my drinks of choice for my post-lunch slump.

Review of London Nootropics mushroom coffee

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One thing about me is I’m fussy about my coffee, so I was a little sceptical about whether or not I’d enjoy the taste of London Nootropics.

As a firm instant coffee avoider, it was slightly concerning that all blends come in a sachet. Once I tried it, though, my fears were eliminated.

Now, when I’m in the office I’m used to drinking a black americano from a coffee machine, which we all know is not exactly the pinnacle of good coffee.

While that isn’t really hard to beat, I can safely say this coffee tastes much better than that. It’s not quite as good as my preferred filter coffee, but the flavour is so inoffensive I didn’t feel drawn to add any milk or sugar like I’d thought I might have to.

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Even more notable than that, I noticed my caffeine jitters completely disappeared. I was so used to that being a daily occurrence that I hadn’t stopped to think of it as concerning, nor had I considered that it was an option to drink coffee without feeling shaky afterwards.

But somehow, London Nootropics didn’t make me feel at all wobbly after drinking it, and I definitely noticed that I didn’t have an afternoon slump in the same way as I would with another black coffee.

I also drank less cups than I normally would as a result, because just one cup was enough to make me feel awake and more tapped in in the mornings thanks to not feeling quite so wired.

Another welcome and unexpected side effect was that I didn’t have to pee quite so much. That was a real blessing in disguise – I hadn’t realised how much the ramped up anxiety and need for pretty much hourly toilet breaks was getting to my head.

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Final verdict

Pros:

  • Easy to make
  • Reduced jitters
  • No afternoon slump
  • Can take it in your bag with you

Cons:

  • I wish there was an option to make it in a French press
  • More expensive than regular coffee you’d make at home

My favourite London Nootropics blend was Mush Love. It was the perfect start to my day, and if I still found myself needing another cup of coffee to wake up, Flow helped me get my head in the game.

While I didn’t find myself reaching for Mojo quite so much, Zen was great for a post-lunch pick me up. I will almost certainly be refreshing my supply of London Nootropics, I just might need to cut down to just one of their sachets a day as they’re slightly more spenny than I would like for a cup of coffee.

But with 20% off its whole site with the code ‘HUFFPOST’, and the impact it had on my overall wellbeing, it’s definitely worth it.

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Trump’s Comms Chief Slams George Clooney’s ‘War Crime’ Remark

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George Clooney's Democratic politics have made him a frequent target of President Donald Trump's social media attacks.

George Clooney drew the ire of the White House this week after deeming President Donald Trump’s public rhetoric on Iran a “war crime.”

Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform early Tuesday that “a whole civilisation will die” if no deal between the US and Iran could be reached by that evening. A two-week ceasefire between the two nations was agreed upon later that day, though foreign policy experts say its specifics are highly questionable.

Clooney, a longtime critic of Trump and the GOP at large, condemned the president’s threats while speaking at a Wednesday event for about 3,000 high school students in Italy, organised by the Clooney Foundation for Justice.

“Some say Donald Trump is fine. But if anyone says he wants to end a civilisation, that’s a war crime,” he said, per Variety. “You can still support the conservative point of view, but there must be a line of decency, and we must not cross it.”

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It didn’t take long for White House Communications Director Steven Cheung to clap back at Clooney’s remarks.

“The only person committing war crimes is George Clooney for his awful movies and terrible acting ability,” he wrote Wednesday on X, in response to Variety’s article.

George Clooney's Democratic politics have made him a frequent target of President Donald Trump's social media attacks.
George Clooney’s Democratic politics have made him a frequent target of President Donald Trump’s social media attacks.

Clooney, a 2005 Oscar winner for Syriana, wasn’t deterred, and doubled down on his initial criticisms in a lengthy statement to Deadline.

“Families are losing their loved ones. Children have been incinerated. The world’s economy is on a knife’s edge,” he said. “This is a time for vigorous debate at the highest levels. Not for infantile name calling. I’ll start. A war crime is alleged ‘when there is intent to physically destroy a nation,’ as defined by the Genocide Convention and the Rome Statute.”

He concluded his statement with a bit of self-deprecating humour, adding: “What is the administration’s defence? [besides calling me a failed actor which I happily agree with having starred in ‘Batman and Robin’?]”

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The Ocean’s Eleven actor’s Democratic politics have made him a frequent target of Trump’s social media attacks. After Clooney and his wife, human rights lawyer Amal Clooney, were granted French citizenship last year, the president deemed the couple “two of the worst political prognosticators of all time.”

“Clooney got more publicity for politics than he did for his very few, and totally mediocre, movies,” he wrote on Truth Social. “He wasn’t a movie star at all, he was just an average guy who complained, constantly, about common sense in politics.”

Interestingly, Clooney acknowledged being on friendly terms with Trump long before the real estate mogul and reality TV personality entered the political arena.

“I knew him very well,” Clooney told Variety in a separate interview last year. “He used to call me a lot, and he tried to help me get into a hospital once to see a back surgeon. I’d see him out at clubs and at restaurants. He’s a big goofball. Well, he was. That all changed.”

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Politics Home | Labour MP Says “Harmful” Jury Trial Reforms Are A “Distraction” As Rebellion Grows

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Labour MP Says 'Harmful' Jury Trial Reforms Are A 'Distraction' As Rebellion Grows
Labour MP Says 'Harmful' Jury Trial Reforms Are A 'Distraction' As Rebellion Grows


3 min read

The plan to reduce the use of jury trials is a “distraction” from the real reasons for the court backlog, a Labour MP has said, as the government braces for the prospect of a major backbench rebellion over the reforms.

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Writing in The House on Friday, Labour MP Cat Eccles said that the proposal is “not only misguided but harmful”, and that the focus should be on addressing “chronic underinvestment, poor coordination, and systemic inefficiencies” in the justice system.

The MP for Stourbridge said she had recently visited Birmingham Crown Court, the second-largest court in the country, where one barrister told her: “You won’t find a single person in this building who thinks juries are an issue.” 

Justice Secretary David Lammy has said that the reforms are a bold but necessary way to help tackle the national court backlog in England and Wales.

Under the changes, announced by the Labour government in December, juries would no longer be used for crimes with sentences of less than three years. More extreme offences, such as rape and murder, will still be put before a jury, however.

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The government has sought to stress that around three-quarters of all trials going to the Crown Court will continue to be heard by juries under the proposals, and points to the fact that many countries, including Sweden, Canada and France, only use juries in some cases.

However, ministers are seemingly facing a growing Labour backbench rebellion.

This week, Labour MPs tabled an amendment to the Courts and Tribunals Bill, putting forward plans to introduce specialist rape courts, which would have both a jury and a specialist judge. The amendment, revealed by The Times, is reported to have the support of as many as 90 Labour MPs, and is seen as the main route to “kill off” the jury trials policy.

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The proposals are in the name of Charlotte Nichols, the Labour MP who waived her right to anonymity last month and spoke publicly for the first time about being raped, accusing Lammy of “weaponising” the experiences of others like herself to push through the reforms.

It is supported by Labour MP Stella Creasey, who said on Thursday that it was possible to “cut the backlog and improve the experience of victims in our courts without compromising due process”.

Writing in The House, Eccles listed what she described as the actual reasons for delays in the legal system, citing unused courtrooms, long distances between prisons and court buildings where defendents’ cases are heard, and cases being listed before they are ready for trial.

“Ultimately, the focus on jury trials as the cause of court delays is a distraction,” she wrote.

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“The real issues lie in chronic underinvestment, poor coordination, and systemic inefficiencies that span the entire justice process. Reform is undoubtedly needed, but it must target these root causes, not one of the system’s most vital safeguards.”

Veteran MP Karl Turner recently lost the Labour Party whip after weeks of voicing strong opposition to the jury reforms and severe criticism of the Keir Starmer government.

However, party sources insisted that his suspension was over a pattern of behaviour, not a specific incident.

 

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Too many women are being remanded into custody

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Too many women are being remanded into custody

The use of remand (holding a person in custody before trial or sentencing) is at its highest level in over 50 years. Today, one in four women in prison are being held on remand. Women on remand are less likely than men to be granted bail, and racially minoritised and migrant women are significantly overrepresented in the remand population.

Court delays mean women can wait months in detention, sometimes longer, without knowing their future. Even a short period in custody can lead to a woman losing her job, housing and care of her children.

A briefing by the Howard League for Penal Reform noted that for women remanded by magistrates:

almost two-thirds … go on to be found not guilty or do not receive an immediate custodial sentence.

A new key findings paper by the chief inspector of prisons reinforces the scale of the problem. People on remand now make up 19% of the total adult prison population. Suicide is more common among this group and the report also found that 67% of people on remand report mental health difficulties.

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Together with six other women-led organisations working for justice, Women in Prison has formed The Remand Collective. The other organisations are:

This is a bold new partnership committed to ending the unjust, unsafe and unfair use of remand for women. Together, we are calling for fewer women to be imprisoned whilst awaiting trial or sentencing, and for alternatives that are based in care, safety and trust.

One woman involved in the Remand Collective highlights its importance:

I’ve never been asked what I need to feel safe – only told what’s expected of me. This space was different.

Change is possible and it starts by listening to women and investing in alternatives that keep women safe while upholding justice and dignity.

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Featured image via the Canary

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Does The ‘Military Method’ Really Help You Sleep In 2 Mins?

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Does The 'Military Method' Really Help You Sleep In 2 Mins?

This year, I’ll be trying sleeping tricks to see whether they actually improve my insomnia. Check back in on this series, Rest Assured, to see how I get on.

I have been struggling with sleep maintenance insomnia for years. That means I struggle to stay asleep, though I usually nod off just fine.

But in the past week, I’ve had trouble nodding off to begin with, thanks to a cold (mild short-term insomnia is a common symptom of the virus).

We’ve written before at HuffPost UK about the “military sleep method,” which promises sleep in two minutes flat.

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So, I figured I’d give it a try this week.

What is the military sleep method?

It originally came from Relax and Win: Championship Performance, a 1981 book by coach Bud Winter. He helped to develop a relaxation technique that he said helped the US Navy airmen-to-be fall asleep in 120 seconds during WWII.

It’s a combination of progressive muscle relaxation, deep breathing, and visualisation.

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Lie on your back, imagine something pleasant (I went with a treehouse in a rainy forest) and “Move from the top of your body to the bottom when relaxing your muscles, picturing yourself sinking into your bed,” the University of Minnesota Medical School said.

Does the military sleep method actually work?

Speaking to Real Simple, psychologist Dr Victoria Bangieva said that “I don’t know of any study that has looked at the effectiveness or benefits of this method”.

I couldn’t find any that definitely proved its two-minute claim.

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But, as Dr Bangeiva added, “the science behind it is based on proven relaxation techniques, such as deep breathing, progressive muscle relaxation, and visualisation”.

Indeed, some studies have shown that progressive muscle relaxation can lead to lead to faster sleep onset, while slow, deep breathing and “imagery distraction” (picturing nice thoughts) can also help you fall asleep sooner.

Still, in the original book, Winter said it took six weeks of practice to achieve a reported 96% success rate. I only had one.

My verdict

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The first night, I found my mind wandering too much: I would relax my muscles one by one, but by the time I reached my elbows, I had forgotten what I was doing and restarted the process at least twice.

By the fourth night, though, even starting the process seemed to make it more relaxing.

And on the final night, I think I fell asleep in about 10 minutes (much better than the two or so hours at the beginning of the week).

Again, my form of insomnia doesn’t usually mean I find the first nod-off hard. But even when I woke up at 3am, I found the “military method” made it slightly easier to fall back to sleep.

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So, no, in my experience, it didn’t lead me to fall asleep in an astounding two minutes, but it was still worth a go.

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The Liquidation of Lebanon

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The Liquidation of Lebanon

In the realm of international relations, negotiation is traditionally regarded as the art of extracting the possible from the impossible.

However, in the political lexicon of the current Lebanese administration, this process has devolved into a demonstrable act of political folly – a reckless gambit that transcends mere incompetence to border on a deliberate conspiracy against the very survival of the state.

By scurrying towards ‘direct negotiations‘ with the Israeli enemy, the authorities are not only flouting the 1955 Anti-Israeli Boycott Law, which criminalises the slightest contact. They are placing the entire Lebanese entity, spearheaded by its military, into the firing line of a comprehensive civil war.

The art of exchange or the trap of liquidation?

At its core, negotiation is a trade-off – a quid pro quo. The Israeli enemy – a power that has never offered ‘charitable gifts’ – will not be satisfied with mere technical or maritime border arrangements.

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The transparent Israeli demand, which lies beneath every diplomatic overture, is the total dismantlement of the Resistance.

Here, the ‘political idiocy’ of the government is laid bare: how can a decaying authority negotiate the disarmament of a force that is fundamentally beyond its executive reach? How can it promise what it does not possess, unless it is planning a suicidal bet that gambles with the blood of its own citizens?

The fatal trap

Any negotiated outcome that mandates the Lebanese army to disarm the Resistance, raid its depots, or arrest its combatants is, in reality, a death warrant for the military institution itself.

The administration, believing it can appease ‘foreign agendas’ through such commitments, is effectively pushing the army into an inevitable collision with the very people it is sworn to protect.

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This path leads to three catastrophic certainties:

  1. The Fragmentation of the Military: The collapse of the army along sectarian and ideological lines at the first sign of internal confrontation.
  2. The Disintegration of the State: Lebanon’s transformation from a political entity into an open ‘militia playground’, where the central government loses the final vestiges of control.
  3. An Israeli Playground: Once the army falls and sedition is ignited, Lebanon becomes a security vacuum, totally vulnerable to the enemy’s whims, allowing them to achieve through internal strife what they failed to secure through direct military aggression.

Slaughtered National Pact and legal treachery

The purported consent of the President cannot be used as a shield to bypass this ‘legal treason‘.

The Anti-Israeli Boycott Law is not a mere detail to be sidestepped by a ‘political understanding’; it is a pillar of the Lebanese national doctrine. To circumvent it through direct talks is to demolish the foundation of Lebanon as a state of confrontation.

Furthermore, the ‘National Pact’ (Mithaqiya) is slaughtered the moment a faction in power decides to gamble with the fate of an entire people. By turning the Lebanese people against one another, they seek to satisfy external diktats that view Lebanon as nothing more than a ‘security file’ to be liquidated.

Perpetuating conflict, not ending it

This trajectory does not lead to peace; it perpetuates war in its most hideous form: internal strife.

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The rush to negotiate from a position of profound weakness, devoid of a vision that preserves national unity, renders the government a mere tool for the implementation of the Zionist agenda to fragment Lebanon.

Sovereignty is not reclaimed by tearing the national fabric, and dignity is not preserved by conspiring against those who defend the land.

Those who believe the path to ‘stability’ passes through the destruction of Lebanon’s elements of strength and the dismantling of its army are either political simpletons or agents for hire, driving the country toward the ultimate abyss.

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A Two-Week Internet Detox May Reduce Brain Age By 10 years

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A Two-Week Internet Detox May Reduce Brain Age By 10 years

Some researchers think spending too much time on your phone might age your brain faster. One study found that “passive” scrolling may be linked to an increased dementia risk; another found that excessive use could lead to thinning of the cerebral cortex, which processes memories and handles decision-making.

According to a 2025 PNAS study, though, those changes don’t have to be permanent.

In their research, blocking mobile internet for two weeks appeared to result in better subjective well-being, mental health, and sustained attention, “as much as being 10 years younger”.

What did the research involve?

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In this study, 467 participants used an app that turned their smartphones “dumb” again: in other words, it took away their internet access, but kept their ability to make and receive calls and texts. (While they used a specific app, you can enjoy a similar effect by disabling the mobile data and wi-fi on your device).

The average age of the participants was 32.

After the 14-day period, people’s screen time had almost halved (from 314 minutes a day to 161 minutes).

They also had fewer depression and anxiety, an effect the paper said was “more than antidepressants”.

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And subjective well-being, or how good the participants said they felt, leapt up too.

The scientists said they think that some of these results could be due not to digital detoxes per se, but “by the mediators of time use, social connection, self-control, and sleep” that reducing time online facilitates.

But “none of them explained a significant portion of the intervention’s effects on sustained attention,” the researchers said (which, as we mentioned before, was equivalent to a 10-year brain ageing wipe).

You don’t need to be perfect

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Good news for people who aren’t sure they could stick to this scheme: people who didn’t stick really strictly to the programme still saw benefits.

“Even those who did not fully comply with the intervention experienced significant, though more modest, improvements,” the paper reads.

This “suggests that fully blocking mobile internet is not necessary to produce benefits. Rather, simply reducing mobile internet use may be sufficient.”

They ended, “Balancing the practical benefits that smartphones offer against these significant negative consequences is an important task for smartphone users. Our results suggest that, for many people, spending less time with their device can help achieve this balance.”

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Israeli occupation soldiers and settlers bully Palestinian man daily

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Israeli occupation soldiers photographed against a backdrop of rocky hills in April 2026

Maher Rizq Abdullah Naasan lives in the village of al Mughayyir, north east of Ramallah, in the occupied West Bank. His home is in the south of the village, only 100 metres from his sizable plot of land.

Two kilometres away in the al Khaleel valley is a newly established illegal settler grazing outpost and, unfortunately for Naasan, 60, the settlers have now constructed a dirt track.

He said:

This dirt track runs from the outpost to our area, almost to the edge of my house. Every day, the settlers are with their sheep, damaging the olive trees growing on our land, many of which are more than 100 years old.

The army then turns up to protect the settlers and expels us from our land. They prevent us from taking care of our land and when they see us with our olive trees, they fly a drone overhead.

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Israeli occupation soldiers photographed against a backdrop of rocky hills in April 2026

Naasan had recently found himself being filmed by a drone. Then, five minutes later, a Hummer vehicle belonging to Israeli occupation soldiers arrived on the scene. They dropped gas bombs on the homes close to Nassan’s. Settlers then appeared and began grazing their livestock on his land.

Several days later on 2 April, at 1pm, the Israeli occupation vehicle again arrived in the area, this time with five soldiers inside and went straight to Naasan’s house.

He said:

I didn’t leave the house because if I did, they would have assaulted me. These aren’t regular soldiers but a militia dedicated to protecting settlers. My car was parked in front of my home and I have video footage documenting what they did to it.

They searched the car first, then opened the bonnet and put a substance in the oil reservoir to destroy the engine. They cut all the wires and cables inside the car, including to the battery, and they damaged the fan. After that they withdrew.

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Israeli attacks on Palestinians exceeded 23,800 in 2025

 

‘The goal is to seize our land and surround our homes’

Naasan, who said there was no reason for this behaviour because his car was legal, added that the drone was hovering above him taking pictures when he made the video of his damaged vehicle.

The reason for all this harassment is to remove us from our land, and for the occupation’s soldiers and settlers to let us know that they can do whatever they want.

The goal, in general, is slow evacuation — to seize our land and surround our homes. The army is protecting these settlers while their livestock are eating the olive trees. They have plenty of land already but now come to ours to make us leave it.

Surveillance cameras have now been placed on a tall tower to monitor Naasan and other Palestinians when they go to their land.

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“The soldiers then arrive and start firing heavy gas at us,” Naasan added.

A 2022 report by Israeli human rights organisations, Kerem Navit and Peace Now, says that huge areas of land are stolen through the use of grazing outposts. A huge 70% of all Palestinian land seized by settlers has been taken under the guise of grazing activities. These grazing outposts either directly displace farmers and shepherding communities from their land or use violence, harassment and intimidation to force them away.

Nearly one in four people in the West Bank are settlers

The Colonisation and Wall Resistance Commission’s new report states that the Israeli occupation now controls more than 42% of the West Bank through settlements, outposts, bypass roads and military zones.

It adds that more than 780,000 illegal Israeli settlers live in more than 540 settlements and outposts across the area.

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Almost 60 outposts were established in 2025 alone. Attacks by colonial settlers have become a “functional tool to reshape geography in the West Bank, particularly in Bedouin and agricultural communities,” Mu’ayyad Shaaban, head of CWRC, said. This undermines projects for a viable Palestinian state.

Data from the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics indicates Israeli occupiers now make up more than 23% of the West Bank population, so nearly one in four.

The organisation also shared that in 2025:

  • More than 23,800 attacks were carried out against Palestinians by Israeli occupation authorities and settlers
  • Some 5,770 of these attacks involved the killing of civilians, burning of homes, facilities and vehicles, and property theft
  • There were 16,664 attacks on individuals and nearly 1,400 attacks on land and natural resources
  • More than 35,000 trees, including about 26,990 olive trees were damaged, bulldozed and uprooted during these attacks

Attacks on Palestinians are continuing at unprecedented levels, with nearly 3,800 attacks recorded in January and February of this year alone.

The sole purpose of this land theft is to forcibly displace Palestinians and ethnically cleanse the West Bank.

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Featured image via the Canary

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Greens Organise pledge against austerity

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Greens Organise pledge against austerity

Overflowing bins. Closed sports centres. Libraries run by unpaid volunteers. That’s the reality in towns and cities up and down Britain. Austerity is the cause, introduced by the Conservative-LibDem coalition.

Labour have continued with austerity. Reform have promised austerity on steroids, with something between £40 billion and £150 billion of cuts per year, but they refuse to specify how or where.

The pressure group Greens Organise have launched their pledge to oppose austerity for the local elections.

Four principles

The pledge commits Green councillors to four principles:

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  1. Hold an emergency summit to make our communities heard to kick-start a mass campaign.
  2. Community organisation and mobilisation to push for long-term national solutions.
  3. Democratic control of local assets, including a full range of Community Wealth Building approaches.
  4. Transparency over spending and responsible use of financial powers. At the moment, council finances can be impenetrable, even to elected councillors.

A false logic

Austerity is a false logic. It takes money out of local economies. 13,649 shops closed for good in 2024, costing 119,405 jobs. 17,349 shops closed in 2025, costing 201,953 jobs. As a result, councils receive less in business rates. High streets become run down.

Infrastructure is effected too. In December 2024, Gateshead Council closed a major road flyover with zero notice. A lack of inspections led to deterioration going unnoticed. It created havoc, closing the Metro tunnels underneath it for weeks. Fifteen months later, it’s still closed with diversions in place.

There are also countless undocumented stories about inadequate healthcare and spiralling mental health crises.

Councils end up spending time and money fixing what could have been prevented.

National solutions

The solutions are national. Any government with a sovereign currency can earn, borrow, tax or create money. The use of monetary policy in conjunction with wealth taxes could reverse austerity. All of us would live in a cleaner, safer, more prosperous country. Sure, a handful of people might have to buy a smaller yacht. But we’d have a healthier, happier, more skilled workforce. We’d also have cheaper energy and infrastructure that works.

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Local councils don’t have the same freedom to implement these measures. But it’s not much good throwing your hands up and saying there’s nothing we can do. We’re all sick of politicians blaming the last lot who were in power.

Community Wealth Building

In local government, Community Wealth Building has been proven to work. It’s perhaps best known for making sure anchor institutions – councils, hospitals, etc. – spend their money with local suppliers. Whether this is a local joinery firm or a co-operative of education psychologists, this keeps money from leaking out of local economies.

This needs work – the big outsourcing companies have professional bid writers. Small, local firms often don’t know where to start. The pledge means making it easier for local firms with diverse ownership to compete with the billionaire-owned multinationals. In fact, the Social Value Act allows councils to weight procurement in favour of social impact. Contracts are awarded extra points if they create jobs locally.

It means standing up to the business-as-usual approach of doing quick and easy deals with developers. As Regional Mayor, I stopped £3.5 million of public money subsidising luxury apartments and a hotel right next to St James’ Park. Newcastle’s Labour council had signed it off, but I refused to put any money into a project that had no affordable housing.

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Rebalancing the economy

Care homes are perhaps the single biggest source of wealth extraction from our councils. Care workers are paid a pittance and around 30% of staff leave every year. Yet companies are structured so very rich people make profits by running them into the ground. Councils are left to clean up the mess. We need a National Care Service. In the meantime, we should restructure these deals.

Community energy companies are working across the UK. Community housing trusts can convert old town halls into flats that are collectively owned by all residents. They pay their rent into their joint cooperative, preventing landlordism and property speculation.

As Mayor, I set up venture capital deals where the Combined Authority financially supported start-ups in return for equity stakes. It made millions of pounds for the Combined Authority. Every £1 invested returned more than £3 to in payroll taxes alone. I’d like to see more community bonds and regional finance institutions.

Rebalancing the economy, reversing austerity, ending rip-off Britain. Whatever you call it, there is no lever in No. 10 that you can switch from ‘capitalism’ to ‘socialism’. We need a cohort of leaders at every level with the skills and motivation to run the economy in the interests of the people who do the work.

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You can read the full text of the Pledge to Oppose Austerity in Local Government here.

Featured image via the Canary

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Olivia Munn Calls Out Male Co-Star Who Derailed Filming

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Olivia Munn can currently be seen on the Apple TV+ series "Your Friends & Neighbors," co-starring Jon Hamm.

Olivia Munn is opening up about her experience with a male actor who felt uncomfortable with a film’s seemingly feminist slant.

Appearing on The Drew Barrymore Show this week, the X-Men: Apocalypse actor said she’d pledged long ago to focus on film and TV projects featuring female characters who weren’t reliant on their male counterparts.

One such project, Munn said, required her to appear alongside a male co-star who objected to a scene in which his character’s life would be spared, thanks to Munn’s character’s aid.

“If you read the script, it was that he was guarding his side, I was guarding my side, then we switch sides and then there’s a guy that was coming for him — he was gonna shoot him in the back — so I shoot him,” she recalled. “And then we’re about to shoot, and somehow, I guess he didn’t read the script, and in that moment, he realised, ‘Wait, wait, wait. Hold on. She can’t save me. No, no. She can’t save me.’”

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Watch Munn’s Drew Barrymore Show appearance below.

Though Munn did not identify the co-star by name, she described his subsequent on-set behaviour as “obnoxious,” noting that he quickly grew “combative with the director.” After the actor delayed the shoot for about 45 minutes, Munn decided to reframe the specifics of the scene to meet her co-star’s approval.

“I said, ‘OK, how about instead of my character saving you, it’s just that we switch because it’s time for us to switch and so this is my guy to get,’” she said. “And he was like, ‘OK.’”

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She went on to note: “Now here’s the interesting thing: Nothing changed. It’s just what he thought. I was doing the exact same thing.”

Munn, who is married to actor-comedian John Mulaney, has been outspoken about having endured less-than-optimal treatment on Hollywood sets for some time.

Appearing on Dax Shepard’s Armchair Expert podcast last year, she recalled an unnamed director on HBO’s The Newsroom who smeared her work ethic after she disagreed with his suggestions of how her character, Sloan Sabbith, would behave alongside Don Keefer (played by Thomas Sadoski) in a scene.

Olivia Munn can currently be seen on the Apple TV+ series "Your Friends & Neighbors," co-starring Jon Hamm.
Olivia Munn can currently be seen on the Apple TV+ series “Your Friends & Neighbors,” co-starring Jon Hamm.

TheStewartofNY via Getty Images

“I was on the one-yard-line for the movie and my manager calls me and says, ‘Hey, you’re gonna get the role. But first, I guess there’s another director who they know and he says that on ‘The Newsroom’ you were late all the time and really combative,’” she said at the time. “I was like, ‘I know who this is.’”

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These days, Munn can be seen on the Apple TV+ crime drama series Your Friends & Neighbours, which also stars Jon Hamm. Speaking to The Hollywood Reporter in an interview published last week, she said she hoped to set an example for other female actors by standing up for herself in the film industry.

“I can’t change the world and I cannot change how women have been portrayed and received for however long we’ve been on earth,” she told the outlet. “So I’ve realised that I’m going to handle [these situations] in a way that is going to be the best outcome for me.”

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